https://egusphere.copernicus.org/preprints/2026/egusphere-2026-546/

*Authors: *Thomas J. Aubry, Michael Sigl, Matthew Toohey, Man Mei Chim,
Magali Verkerk, Anja Schmidt, and Simon A. Carn

*11 February 2026*

*Abstract*
Explosive volcanic sulfur emissions into the stratosphere form sulfate
aerosol particles which are an important driver of climate variability.
Volcanic sulfur emissions are required both by climate models using
interactive stratospheric aerosol schemes, as well as simpler volcanic
aerosol models typically used to provide stratospheric aerosol optical
properties for climate models which cannot simulate stratospheric aerosols
interactively from precursor emissions. Here we present an
upper-tropospheric and stratospheric volcanic sulfur emission inventory
covering the period 1750 to 2023, made for phase 7 of the Coupled Model
Intercomparison Project (CMIP7). CMIP7 stratospheric aerosol optical
properties, presented in a companion paper, are directly derived from this
emission inventory for the 1750–1978 pre-satellite period. For the
satellite era, the emission inventory is primarily derived from satellite
observations. For the pre-satellite period, the inventory is derived from a
bipolar ice-core dataset, which captures well eruptions injecting on the
order of 10 Tg SO2 or more, complemented by a high-resolution Greenland
ice-core and the geological record, which support the inclusion of
eruptions injecting on the order of 0.1–1 Tg SO2. We use satellite-era
eruptions and older eruptions confidently matched to sulfate deposition
records in ice-cores to derive empirical relationships to attribute
injection height from SO2 mass and injection latitude from polar deposition
asymmetry when these parameters are missing. The final CMIP7 emission
inventory includes 463 eruptive eruptions injecting a total of 428.2 Tg SO2
into the upper troposphere-stratosphere over 1750–2023, corresponding to a
mean flux of 1.56 Tg SO2 yr-1. For the pre-satellite era, around 25 % of
CMIP7 volcanic sulfur emissions originate from small-to-moderate magnitude
eruptions, defined here as injecting ≤ 3 Tg SO2, which not captured in many
available ice core arrays. Comparing the CMIP7 inventory with other
inventories available for specific time periods, we highlight the large
uncertainties characterizing volcanic emissions over the historical period.
However, we show that CMIP7 is less biased in terms of the
frequency-magnitude distribution of small-to-moderate magnitude eruptions
which are largely underestimated in other pre-satellite era inventories.
Although the long-term mean emissions associated with these eruptions is
consistent with the satellite era in CMIP7, we show that their
frequency-magnitude distribution likely remains biased with a lack of
small-magnitude eruptions injecting on the order of 0.1 Tg SO2, and
potentially too many moderate-magnitude eruptions injecting on the order of
1 Tg SO2. We discuss other key sources of uncertainties and directions for
improvements for the dataset, including the addition of non-sulfur and
non-volcanic stratospheric aerosol precursors, as well as needs for
operationalizing the dataset production. To support consistent
implementation of the dataset in stratospheric aerosol models, we also
provide recommendations for the temporal, horizontal, and vertical
distribution of emissions associated with each eruption.

*Source: EGUsphere*

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