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πŸŒ‹ Minoan Eruption

Science & Nature Greece Europe

πŸŒ‹ Minoan Eruption
The Thera eruption of c. 1600 BCE and its impact on the Mediterranean


πŸ• 4 min read Β· Updated 9 Apr 2026 at 15:25
πŸ“Œ Fast Facts
  • Location: Thera (Santorini), Aegean Sea, Greece
  • Date: Circa 1600 BCE; range 1700–1500 BCE
  • Magnitude: VEI 6–7; 20–40 cubic kilometers of material ejected
  • Impact: Caldera collapse, tsunamis, ashfall across eastern Mediterranean

The Minoan Eruption is a volcanic catastrophe that occurred around 1600 BCE on the island of Thera in the Aegean Sea, fundamentally altering the geology and societies of the Bronze Age Mediterranean. The explosion was one of the most powerful recorded in human history, ejecting vast quantities of rock, ash, and pumice into the atmosphere and triggering a massive caldera collapse. As of 2026, the eruption remains a focal point for volcanology, archaeology, and ancient history research, with ...

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