Enlightenment · Europe · Disaster

1783

Laki Eruption in Iceland

June 8, 1783

The Laki fissure tore open and poured lava and poisonous gas across southeastern Iceland for eight months. A quarter of Iceland's population died; livestock perished by the hundreds of thousands. The sulfuric haze drifted across Europe, dimming the sun, killing crops, and contributing to the famine that helped ignite the French Revolution six years later.