Before our current, carbon-fueled global warming trend took off during the 20th century, the most consequential temperature bump in recorded history was the Medieval Warm Period. This week, scientists ...
My children often ask: Why is history so important? For which I regularly answer — because the past is rich with information and lessons. From about AD 800 to 1300 the Earth underwent a slight warming ...
We are living in a world that is getting warmer year by year, threatening our environment and way of life. But what if these climate conditions were not exceptional? What if it had already happened in ...
The best location for a monastery was one that was close to water and wood. Many monastic chroniclers mention this.
Learn how ancient DNA and tooth enamel are rewriting England’s medieval history and showing connections between climate ...
In regards to the Medieval warming period, it should be noted that while parts of Europe did experience a period of warmer temperatures during the Medieval ages, it was a limited regional phenomenon, ...
In the Dec. 7 News article, “Cold water thrown on Viking theory,” University at Buffalo professor Jason Briner maintains the Medieval Warm Period was a “patchy”regional phenomenon. But doesn’t the ...
England was never as isolated as many history books once suggested. New research shows that people moved into and across ...
(a) Comparison of wet/dry between the Medieval Climate Anomaly and the Little Ice Age; (b) Differences in wet/dry between the Medieval Climate Anomaly and the Little Ice Age; (c) Wet/Dry changes in ...
Migration into England was continuous from the Romans through to the Normans and men and women moved from different places ...
While people today are living through the first human-caused global warming event, we aren’t the first to ever live through climate change. For example, between the years 800 and 1400, the world was ...