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Climate change, society, and pandemic disease in Roman Italy between 200 BCE and 600 CE

Karin A F Zonneveld, Kyle Harper, Andreas Klügel, Liang Chen, Gert J. de Lange, Gerard J M Versteegh

2024Science Advances26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Records of past societies confronted with natural climate change can illuminate social responses to environmental stress and environment-disease connections, especially when locally constrained high-temporal resolution paleoclimate reconstructions are available. We present a temperature and precipitation reconstruction for ~200 BCE to ~600 CE, from a southern Italian marine sedimentary archive-the first high-resolution (~3 years) climate record from the heartland of the Roman Empire, stretching from the so-called Roman Climate Optimum to the Late Antique Little Ice Age. We document phases of instability and cooling from ~100 CE onward but more notably after ~130 CE. Pronounced cold phases between ~160 to 180 CE, ~245 to 275 CE, and after ~530 CE associate with pandemic disease, suggesting that climate stress interacted with social and biological variables. The importance of environment-disease dynamics in past civilizations underscores the need to incorporate health in risk assessments of climate change.

Topics & Concepts

Climate changePandemicPaleoclimatologyPrecipitationGeographyRoman EmpireDiseasePhysical geographyHistoryCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)ArchaeologyEcologyBiologyInfectious disease (medical specialty)MeteorologyMedicinePathologyTree-ring climate responsesYersinia bacterium, plague, ectoparasites researchPaleopathology and ancient diseases
Climate change, society, and pandemic disease in Roman Italy between 200 BCE and 600 CE | Litcius