PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

MIT study reveals climatic fingerprints of wildfires and volcanic eruptions

In research that could help elucidate humans’ role in global warming, scientists showed how three major natural events impacted global atmospheric temperatures

2026-02-23
(Press-News.org) CAMBRIDGE, MA -- Volcanoes and wildfires can inject millions of tons of gases and aerosol particles into the air, affecting temperatures on a global scale. But picking out the specific impact of individual events against a background of many contributing factors is like listening for one person’s voice from across a crowded concourse.

MIT scientists now have a way to quiet the noise and identify the specific signal of wildfires and volcanic eruptions, including their effects on Earth’s global atmospheric temperatures.

In a study appearing this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the researchers report that they detected statistically significant changes in global atmospheric temperatures in response to three major natural events: the eruption of Mount Pinatubo in 1991, the Australian wildfires in 2019-2020, and the eruption of the underwater volcano Hunga Tonga in the South Pacific in 2022.

While the specifics of each event differed, all three events appeared to significantly affect temperatures in the stratosphere. The stratosphere lies above the troposphere, which is the lowest layer of the atmosphere, closest to the surface, where global warming has accelerated in recent years. In the new study, Pinatubo showed the classic pattern of stratospheric warming paired with tropospheric cooling. The Australian wildfires and the Hunga Tonga eruption also showed significant warming or cooling in the stratosphere, respectively, but they did not produce a robust, globally detectable tropospheric signal over the first two years following each event. This new understanding will help scientists further pin down the effect of human-related emissions on global temperature change.

“Understanding the climate responses to natural forcings is essential for us to interpret anthropogenic climate change,” says study author Yaowei Li, a former postdoc and currently a visiting scientist in MIT’s Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences (EAPS). “Unlike the global tropospheric and surface cooling caused by Pinatubo, our results also indicate that the Australian wildfires and Hunga Tonga eruption may not have played a role in the acceleration of global surface warming in recent years. So, there must be some other factors.”

The study’s co-authors include Susan Solomon, the Lee and Geraldine Martin Professor of Environmental Studies and Chemistry at MIT, along with Benjamin Santer of the University of East Anglia, David Thompson of the University of East Anglia and Colorado State University, and Qiang Fu of the University of Washington.

Extraordinary events

The past several years have set back-to-back records for global average surface temperatures. The World Meteorological Organization recently confirmed that the years 2023 to 2025 were the three warmest years on record, while the past 11 years have been the 11 warmest years ever recorded. The world is warming, due mainly to human activities that have emitted huge amounts of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere over centuries.

In addition to greenhouse gases, the atmosphere has been on the receiving end of other large-scale emissions, including sulfur gases and water vapor from volcanic eruptions and smoke particles from wildfires. Li and his colleagues have wondered whether such natural events could have any global impact on temperatures, and whether such an effect would be detectable.

“These events are extraordinary and very unique in terms of the different materials they inject into different altitudes,” Li says. “So we asked the question: Do these events actually perturb the global temperature to a degree that could be identifiable from natural, meteorological noise, and could they contribute to some of the exceptional global surface warming we’ve seen in the last few years?”

In particular, the team looked for signals of global temperature change in response to three large-scale natural events. The Pinatubo eruption resulted in around 20 million tons of volcanic aerosols in the stratosphere, which was the largest volume ever recorded by modern satellite instruments. The Australian fires injected around 1 million tons of smoke particles into the upper troposphere and stratosphere. And the Hunga Tonga eruption produced the largest atmospheric explosion on satellite record, launching nearly 150 million tons of water vapor into the stratosphere.

If any natural event could measurably shift global temperatures, the team reasoned, it would be any of these three.

Natural signals

For their new study, the team took a signal-to-noise approach. They looked to minimize “noise” from other known influences on global temperatures in order to isolate the “signal,” such as a change in temperature associated specifically with one of the three natural events.

To do so, they looked first through satellite measurements taken by the Stratospheric Sounding Unit (SSU) and the Microwave and Advanced Microwave Sounding Units (MSU), which have been measuring global temperatures at different altitudes throughout the atmosphere since 1979. The team compiled SSU and MSU measurements from 1986 to the present day. From these measurements, the researchers could see long-term trends of steady tropospheric warming and stratospheric cooling. Those long-term trends are largely associated with anthropogenic greenhouse gases, which the team subtracted from the dataset.

What was left over was more of a level baseline, which still contained some confounding noise, in the form of natural variability. Global temperature changes can also be affected by phenomena such as El Niño and La Niña, which naturally warm and cool the Earth every few years. The sun also swings global temperatures on a roughly 11-year cycle. The team took this natural variability into account, and subtracted out the effects of these influences.

After minimizing such noise from their dataset, the team reasoned that whatever temperature changes remained could be more easily traced to the three large-scale natural events and quantified. And indeed, when they pinned the events to the temperature measurements, at the times that they occurred, they could plainly see how each event influenced temperatures around the world.

The team found that Pinatubo decreased global tropospheric temperatures by up to about 0.7 degree Celsius, for more than two years following the eruption. The volcanic sulfate aerosols essentially acted as many tiny reflectors, cooling the troposphere and surface by scattering sunlight back into space. At the same time, the aerosols, which remained in the stratosphere, also absorbed heat that was emitted from the surface, subsequently warming the stratosphere.

This finding agreed with many other studies of the event, which confirmed that the team’s approach is accurate. They applied the same method to the 2019-2020 Australian wildfires, and the 2022 underwater eruption — events where the influence on global temperatures is less clear.

For the Australian wildfires, they found that the smoke particles caused the global stratosphere to warm up, by up to about 0.77 degree Celsius, which persisted for about five months but did not produce a clear global tropospheric signal.

“In the end we found that the wildfire smoke caused a very strong warming in the stratosphere, because these materials are very different chemically from sulfate,” Li explains. “They are particles that are dark colored, meaning they are efficient at absorbing solar radiation. So, a relatively small amount of smoke particles can cause a dramatic warming.”

In the case of the Hunga Tonga, the underwater eruption triggered a global cooling effect in the middle-to-upper stratosphere, of up to about half a degree Celsius, lasting for several years.

“The Australian fires and the Hunga Tonga really packed a punch at stratospheric altitudes, and this study shows for the first time how to quantify how strong that punch was. I find their impact up high quite remarkable, but the ongoing issue is why the last several years have been so warm lower down, in the troposphere — ruling out those natural events points even more strongly at human influences.”

###

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

A shift from the sandlot to the travel team for youth sports

2026-02-23
COLUMBUS, Ohio – Pickup basketball and neighborhood kickball are less common now than for generations past, giving way to more organized and formal youth sports intended to help kids get ahead, a new study suggests. Researchers found that compared to people born in earlier decades, youths born in the 1990s spent more of their recreational time playing formal sports – coached by adults and wearing uniforms – than with friends and neighbors playing informal matchups organized by kids. “Overall, there’s been a pretty healthy mix across generations and among our respondents in playing both informal and formally organized sports, ...

Hair-width LEDs could replace lasers

2026-02-23
LEDs no wider than a human hair could soon take on work traditionally handled by lasers, from moving data inside server racks to powering next-generation displays. New research co-authored by UC Santa Barbara doctoral student Roark Chao points to a practical path forward. “We’re talking about devices that are literally the size of a hair follicle,” said Chao, who studies electrical engineering. “If you can engineer how the light comes out, those microLEDs can start to replace lasers in short-distance data communication.” The work builds on UCSB’s longstanding strengths in gallium nitride research and optoelectronics. Chao is co-advised by Steven ...

The hidden infections that refuse to go away: how household practices can stop deadly diseases

2026-02-23
AURORA, Colo. (February 23, 2026) – A 13-year study led by the Colorado School of Public Health at the University of Colorado Anschutz reveals why a deadly parasitic infection targeted for elimination in China persisted in some areas even after decades of control. The research, which used artificial intelligence (AI) and classic “shoe-leather” investigations, investigated some of the last pockets of disease in the country. They found that farming practices and unsafe sanitation contributed to disease spread. Additionally, as the region approached ...

Ochsner MD Anderson uses groundbreaking TIL therapy to treat advanced melanoma in adults

2026-02-23
NEW ORLEANS – Ochsner MD Anderson Cancer Center at The Gayle and Tom Benson Cancer Center in New Orleans announces a milestone in advanced cancer treatment, as the first institution in Louisiana to provide an adult patient with tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) therapy for advanced melanoma.   Advanced melanoma is classified as stage III or IV metastatic melanoma and is a form of skin cancer that has spread ...

A heatshield for ‘never-wet’ surfaces: Rice engineering team repels even near-boiling water with low-cost, scalable coating

2026-02-23
Superhydrophobic surfaces — those famously “never-wet” materials that make water bead up and roll away — have a stubborn weakness: hot water. Once temperatures climb above roughly 40 degrees Celsius, many superhydrophobic coatings abruptly lose their magic. Instead of skittering off, hot droplets start sticking, soaking into the surface texture and leaving behind wet patches and residue. A new study from mechanical engineers at Rice University describes a surprisingly straightforward ...

Skills from being a birder may change—and benefit—your brain

2026-02-23
Research shows that as individuals learn and acquire a new skill, their brain structure and activity changes. But how do more complex skills involving multiple learning processes influence the brain? New from JNeurosci, researchers led by Erik Wing, from Baycrest Hospital, compared the brains of 29 expert birders with 29 age- and sex-matched beginners. Because birding requires a keen eye, attention, and strong memory, this work may have implications for ...

Waterloo researchers turning plastic waste into vinegar

2026-02-23
Researchers at the University of Waterloo have discovered a way to turn plastic waste into acetic acid, the main ingredient of vinegar, using sunlight.  The breakthrough offers a promising new approach to reducing plastic pollution through photocatalysis, while simultaneously creating a useful, value-added chemical product through a process inspired by nature.  “Our goal was to solve the plastic pollution challenge by converting microplastic waste into high-value products using sunlight,” said Dr. Yimin Wu, a professor of mechanical and mechatronics engineering and ...

Measuring the expansion of the universe with cosmic fireworks

2026-02-23
Munich astronomers image and model extremely rare gravitationally lensed supernova Measuring the expansion of the universe with cosmic fireworks An image that could solve a long lasting cosmic mystery Unprecedented chance to measure the growth of the universe Collaboration between TUM, LMU and Max Planck Institutes That the universe is expanding has been known for almost a hundred years now, but how fast? The exact rate of that expansion remains hotly debated, even challenging the standard model ...

How horses whinny: Whistling while singing

2026-02-23
A horse’s whinny is an unusually distinctive mix of sounds including both high and low frequencies. Reporting in the Cell Press journal Current Biology on February 23, researchers demonstrate how horses produce high-frequency sounds that defy their large size while simultaneously producing lower tones: they whistle through their larynx while vibrating their vocal folds as a human does while singing. Horses likely ...

US newborn hepatitis B virus vaccination rates

2026-02-23
About The Study: The findings of this study indicate declines of more than 10 percentage points in newborn hepatitis B virus (HBV) vaccination in the last 2 years, following 6 years of growth. These estimates derived from large-scale hospital and clinic electronic health records align with WHO and CDC coverage through 2022 and provide interim surveillance for 2023-2025, a period not yet reflected in national or global reports. Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Joshua M. Rothman, MD, MS, email jmrothman@health.ucsd.edu. To access the embargoed study: ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

ACES marks 150 years of the Morrow Plots, our nation's oldest research field

Physicists open door to future, hyper-efficient ‘orbitronic’ devices

$80 million supports research into exceptional longevity

Why the planet doesn’t dry out together: scientists solve a global climate puzzle

Global greening: The Earth’s green wave is shifting

You don't need to be very altruistic to stop an epidemic

Signs on Stone Age objects: Precursor to written language dates back 40,000 years

MIT study reveals climatic fingerprints of wildfires and volcanic eruptions

A shift from the sandlot to the travel team for youth sports

Hair-width LEDs could replace lasers

The hidden infections that refuse to go away: how household practices can stop deadly diseases

Ochsner MD Anderson uses groundbreaking TIL therapy to treat advanced melanoma in adults

A heatshield for ‘never-wet’ surfaces: Rice engineering team repels even near-boiling water with low-cost, scalable coating

Skills from being a birder may change—and benefit—your brain

Waterloo researchers turning plastic waste into vinegar

Measuring the expansion of the universe with cosmic fireworks

How horses whinny: Whistling while singing

US newborn hepatitis B virus vaccination rates

When influencers raise a glass, young viewers want to join them

Exposure to alcohol-related social media content and desire to drink among young adults

Access to dialysis facilities in socioeconomically advantaged and disadvantaged communities

Dietary patterns and indicators of cognitive function

New study shows dry powder inhalers can improve patient outcomes and lower environmental impact

Plant hormone therapy could improve global food security

A new Johns Hopkins Medicine study finds sex and menopause-based differences in presentation of early Lyme disease

Students run ‘bee hotels’ across Canada - DNA reveals who’s checking in

SwRI grows capacity to support manufacture of antidotes to combat nerve agent, pesticide exposure in the U.S.

University of Miami business technology department ranked No. 1 in the nation for research productivity

Researchers build ultra-efficient optical sensors shrinking light to a chip

Why laws named after tragedies win public support

[Press-News.org] MIT study reveals climatic fingerprints of wildfires and volcanic eruptions
In research that could help elucidate humans’ role in global warming, scientists showed how three major natural events impacted global atmospheric temperatures