Mount Toba, ancient volcano located in the Barisan Mountains, north-central Sumatra, Indonesia. A massive eruption sometime between 71,000 and 74,000 years ago expelled an estimated 2,800 cubic km (about 670 cubic miles) of ash and lava. That event is considered by many volcanologists to be the largest volcanic eruption in all of human history, and some scientists maintain that it sent the planet into a severe ice age that nearly caused the extinction of modern humans. Ice-core evidence suggests that average air temperatures worldwide plunged by 3–5 °C (5.4–9.0 °F) for years after the eruption. Some model simulations estimate that this temperature decline may have been as much as 10 °C (18 °F) in the Northern Hemisphere in the first year after the event. A study of the remains of a human settlement located in southern Africa and dated to the time of the eruption suggests that some areas of Earth with a plentiful food supply may have served as refuges for human beings in the years following the eruption. The remnants of the volcano’s caldera contain present-day Lake Toba.