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Volcanic Blasts May Be to Blame for Strange Blue Rings in Norway’s Trees

Learn more about these signs of summertime cold, perhaps tied to volcanic activity in 1877 and 1902.

BySam Walters
Taken from a tree in Norway, this stained tree sample shows a blue ring from 1902. (Credit: Pawel Matulewski and Liliana Siekacz) Pawel Matulewski and Liliana Siekacz

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Human skin isn't the only thing that can change color after facing the cold. Trees and shrubs change colors, too, taking on a special blue tinge after they are sampled and stained. That’s according to a new study in Frontiers in Plant Science, which found strange blue rings in samples of trees and shrubs from the northern treeline in Norway.

“Blue rings look like unfinished growth rings, and are associated with cold conditions during the growing season,” said Agata Buchwal, a study author and dendrochronologist at Adam Mickiewicz University in Poland, in a press release.

In fact, the study authors say that their findings testify to two cold seasons almost 150 and 125 years ago, perhaps caused by a pair of volcanic eruptions.

Read More: What Causes Volcanic Eruptions: Can We Predict Them?

Trees and shrubs struggle to grow when their summertime growing seasons are cold. That’s because the cell ...

  • Sam Walters

    Sam Walters is a journalist covering archaeology, paleontology, ecology, and evolution for Discover, along with an assortment of other topics. Before joining the Discover team as an assistant editor in 2022, Sam studied journalism at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois.

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