AntarcticPilot
Well-Known Member
Via a tsunami (IIRC, but not 1st hand!)...
There's been some rowing back on that one. Of course, it devastated the Minoan settlement at Akrotiri on Santorini, but even there, the evidence is that they made an orderly evacuation - very few portable artefacts have been found, so the population did get warning. It wasn't like Pompeii where the inhabitants were caught by surprise. But it seems that the damage to Minoan settlements on Crete was much less than first thought, and the Minoans had rebuilt their palaces (or whatever - palace probably isn't a good description) well before they were invaded by the Mycenaeans. After all, many of the palace sites are far from the coast and at substantial elevation; what is apparently the second most important (Phaistos) is on the south coast. Ash wouldn't have been a major problem - it was only inches at most on Crete. So the hypothesis that the Thera eruption devastated Crete doesn't hold up very well.Circa 1500BC, often related to the sudden disappearance of Minoan civilisation.
There is one thing though - there is a significant discrepancy between archaeological dating and radiometric dating of the eruption. But the archaeological dating is dependent on Ancient Egyptian dating, and it happens that it was during a period when the dating of events in Ancient Egypt is a bit shaky.