this post was submitted on 27 Apr 2026
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Abstract

From 1875 to 1878, concurrent multiyear droughts in Asia, Brazil, and Africa, referred to as the Great Drought, caused widespread crop failures, catalyzing the so-called Global Famine, which had fatalities exceeding 50 million people and long-lasting societal consequences. Observations, paleoclimate reconstructions, and climate model simulations are used 1) to demonstrate the severity and characterize the evolution of drought across different regions, and 2) to investigate the underlying mechanisms driving its multiyear persistence. Severe or record-setting droughts occurred on continents in both hemispheres and in multiple seasons, with the “Monsoon Asia” region being the hardest hit, experiencing the single most intense and the second most expansive drought in the last 800 years. The extreme severity, duration, and extent of this global event is associated with an extraordinary combination of preceding cool tropical Pacific conditions (1870–76), a record-breaking El Niño (1877–78), a record strong Indian Ocean dipole (1877), and record warm North Atlantic Ocean (1878) conditions. Composites of historical analogs and two sets of ensemble simulations—one forced with global sea surface temperatures (SSTs) and another forced with tropical Pacific SSTs—were used to distinguish the role of the extreme conditions in different ocean basins. While the drought in most regions was largely driven by the tropical Pacific SST conditions, an extreme positive phase of the Indian Ocean dipole and warm North Atlantic SSTs, both likely aided by the strong El Niño in 1877–78, intensified and prolonged droughts in Australia and Brazil, respectively, and extended the impact to northern and southeastern Africa. Climatic conditions that caused the Great Drought and Global Famine arose from natural variability, and their recurrence, with hydrological impacts intensified by global warming, could again potentially undermine global food security.

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[–] Anarchitect@lemmy.zip 1 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)
  1. Fate of the Badhak Specifically By the Late Victorian period, the "Badhak" as a cohesive entity had been largely shattered by the earlier anti-Thuggee campaigns (1830s–1850s). Assimilation & Hiding: Survivors had likely assimilated into other related groups like the Bawaria or Sansi to escape the specific "Badhak" bounty hunters. Indentured Labor: Many were funneled into the "coolie" trade, shipped off to plantations in the Caribbean or Fiji, effectively "deporting" the problem. The "Badhak" Legacy: Their specific survival techniques—rapid movement, disguise, and tight information networks—lived on in the groups that absorbed them. The British obsession with "hereditary criminal tribes" was, in part, a paranoid fear that the Badhak thugees had never really gone away, but had just morphed into these famine-resistant bands.
[–] Anarchitect@lemmy.zip 2 points 2 weeks ago

yes the above is AI slop but it gets it started for people interested in the subject