Researchers from the University of Cambridge and the Leibniz Institute for the History and Culture of Eastern Europe in ...
Hidden inside the narrow growth rings of Pyrenees trees lies the strongest evidence yet for what set the Black Death in ...
A volcanic explosion, somewhere in the tropics, may have increased European trade with central Asia—which brought fleas ...
Ash from the explosion may have led to crop failure and famine in southern Europe, leading some Italian cities to import ...
New data suggests an eruption cooled Europe, disrupted harvests and pushed Italian states into grain trades that may have ...
The Black Death ravaged Europe, and scientists and historians are still working to understand how it became so deadly ...
Understanding the complex network of preceding events and their consequences is the only way to get a clearer picture of the ...
A volcanic eruption around 1345 may have set off a chain reaction that unleashed Europe's deadliest pandemic the Black Death, ...
The study suggested that a volcanic eruption set off a chain of environmental changes that ultimately contributed to the Black Death’s spread.
A newly analyzed set of climate data points to a major volcanic eruption that may have played a key role in the Black Death’s ...
Regina Barber and Emily Kwong of NPR's Short Wave discuss an Earth-sized exoplanet, how ant colonies deal with disease and a possible link between volcanoes and the Black Death.
A large volcanic eruption or cluster of eruptions in the mid-1340s triggered severe climate anomalies that drove harvest ...