The summer temperatures of the subatlantic are generally somewhat cooler (by up to 1.0 °C) than during the preceding subboreal, the yearly average temperatures reduced by 0.7 °C. At the same time the winter
precipitations augmented by up to 50%. Overall the climate during the subatlantic therefore tends to cooler and wetter conditions. The lower limit of the
glaciers in
Scandinavia descended during the subatlantic by 100 to 200 meters. The beginning of the subatlantic opened at the middle of the first millennium BC with the so-called
Roman Warm Period which lasted to the beginning of the 4th century. This corresponds broadly to
classical antiquity. The optimum is marked by a temperature spike centered around 2,500 BP. As a consequence in Europe the winter temperatures were raised by 0.6 °C during this period, yet on average were still by 0.3 °C lower than during the subboreal.
Ice cores from
Greenland also demonstrate a distinct temperature rise after the younger subboreal. The cooling that followed coincides with the
Migration Period. It was not very pronounced and of short duration – an average temperature drop of 0.2 °C and a winter temperature drop of 0.4 °C center around 350 AD (or 1,600 years BP). This climatic deterioration with the establishment of drier and cooler conditions might have forced the
Huns to move west thus in turn triggering the migrations of the
Germanic tribes. At about the same time the
Byzantine Empire reached its first acme and
Christianity established itself in Europe as the leading
monotheistic religion. After this relatively short cool interlude the climate ameliorated again and between 800 CE and 1200 CE almost reached the values of the Roman Warm Period (used temperature proxies are sediments in the North Atlantic). This warming happened during the
High Middle Ages wherefore this event is known as
Medieval Global Warming or the
Medieval Warm Period. This warmer climate peaked around 850 AD and 1050 AD, and raised the
tree line in
Scandinavia and in
Russia by 100 to 140 meters; it enabled the
Vikings to settle in
Iceland and
Greenland. During this period the
Crusades took place and the Byzantine Empire was eventually pushed back by the rise of the
Ottoman Empire. The end of the Medieval Warm Period coincides with the early 14th century reaching a temperature minimum around 1350, and by the
Crisis of the Late Middle Ages. Many settlements were
abandoned and left
deserted. As a consequence, the population in
Central Europe drastically receded by as much as 50 percent. After a short warming pulse around 1500, the
Little Ice Age followed, lasting from c. 1550 until 1860. The
Northern Hemisphere snow line descended by 100 to 200 meters. Human history during this time includes
the Renaissance and the
Age of Enlightenment, and also major rebellious events like the
Thirty Years War and the
French Revolution. The beginning of the
Industrial Revolution also dates back to this period, while
Southeast Asia experienced the
Post-Angkor Period. From 1860 onwards, the temperatures started to rise again and initiated the modern climatic optimum. This warming was severely amplified by anthropogenic influences (i.e. increasing industrialisation,
greenhouse gas emissions and
global warming). The modern warming shows a distinct temperature rise from the 1970s onwards. According to NASA, this is not expected to change within the 21st century. == Atmosphere ==