The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Volcanic eruption ‘helped decide the Battle of Waterloo’

New evidence suggests ash led to downpour of heavy rain across Europe

- JOHN VON RADOWITZ

A volcanic eruption in Indonesia contribute­d to Napoleon Bonaparte’s downfall at the Battle of Waterloo, scientists believe.

New evidence suggests electric ally charged volcanic ash altered the Earth’ s weather in 1815, causing a June downpour of heavy rain across Europe.

The wet and muddy conditions played a key role in the French emperor’s defeat at Waterloo, an event that changed the course of European history.

Two months before the battle, the volcano Mount Tambora erupted on the Indonesian island of Sumbawa, killing 100,000 people and sending huge amounts of ash 62 miles into the atmosphere.

Electrifie­d ash “short circuited” the ionosphere, the upper atmospheri­c layer responsibl­e for cloud formation, the new research has shown.

The resulting “pulse” of cloud formation led to heavy rain across Europe.

Lead scientist Dr Matthew Genge, of Imperial College London, said: “Previously, geologists thought that volcanic ash gets trapped in the lower atmosphere, because volcanic plumes rise buoyantly.

“My research, however, shows that ash can be shot into the upper atmosphere by electrical forces.”

A series of experiment­s and computer simulation­s showed charged volcanic ash particles smaller than 0.2 millionths of a metre in diameter could reach the ionosphere.

Disturbanc­es to electrical currents in the ionosphere led to unusual levels of cloud formation and rain, according to the findings published in the journal Geology.

Similar ionosphere disturbanc­e was reported after the 1991 eruption of Mount Pinatubo in the Philippine­s.

Dr Genge said: “Victor Hugo in the novel Les Miserables said of the Battle of Waterloo: ‘an unseasonab­ly clouded sky sufficed to bring about the collapse of a world’.

“Now we are a step closer to understand­ing Tambora’s part in the battle from half a world away.”

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