Abstract
The Dalton Minimum (1790-1830) was a period with reduced solar irradiance and strong volcanic
eruptions. Additionally, the atmospheric CO concentrations started to rise markedly
from the background level of previous centuries. In this period most empirical climate reconstructions
indicate a minimum in global or hemispheric temperatures. Here, we analyze several
simulations starting in 1755 with the coupled atmosphere-ocean model ECHO-G driven by different
forcing combinations to investigate which external forcing could have contributed more
strongly to the cold temperatures during the Dalton Minimum. Results indicate that on global
and hemispheric scales, the volcanic forcing seems to be largely responsible for the temperature
drop in this period, especially during its second half, whereas changes in solar forcing and the
increasing atmospheric CO concentrations were of minor importance. At regional scales, the
impact of volcanic forcing is much less discernible due to the large regional variability, a finding
that agrees with empirical temperature reconstructions.