For values of "no-one" that approximate to 4081 dead (give or take: it's an estimate).
When it comes to the number of deaths that usually result from famine or total infrastructure collapse? Yeah, it was effectively nothing. China's Great Leap Forward is an example of a self-inflicted loss of critical tools, and the result was 20 million (or more) dead. Easter Islanders suffered the permanent loss of a necessary component of their civilization, and the result was famine and cannibalism before finally stabilizing at 10% of its prior population. Quite a few others, the Maya and Anasazi come to mind, disappeared entirely.
Greenland around 1700 AD is noteworthy because it played host to two separate groups of humans with vastly different economies when the climate cooled. The Inuit was more or less hand-to-mouth and survived, while the Norse was heavily networked with continental Europe and failed when the shipping lanes closed.
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