When was the last ice age ?
??
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Since writing this post Tilli.. may have helped people, but has not within the last 4 days. Tilli.. is a verified member, has been around for 12 months and has 6 posts and 57 replies to their name.
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Where were you?
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We are still coming out of it I believe. :)
Lol, no problem. Don’t you hate it when you spend forever looking for something and it takes someone two seconds to find it?
Quaternary glaciation
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“The Ice Age” redirects here. For other uses, see Ice age (disambiguation).
“Last ice age” redirects here. This term is also used for the last glacial period of the Quaternary glaciation.
Northern Hemisphere glaciation during the Last Glacial Maximum. The creation of 3 to 4 km (1.9 to 2.5 miles) thick ice sheets caused a global sea level drop of about 120 m (390 feet).
Quaternary glaciation, also known as the Pleistocene glaciation, the current ice age or simply the ice age, refers to the period of the last few million years (2.58 Ma to present) in which permanent ice sheets were established in Antarctica and perhaps Greenland, and fluctuating ice sheets have occurred elsewhere (for example, the Laurentide ice sheet). The major effects of the ice age were erosion and deposition of material over large parts of the continents, modification of river systems, creation of millions of lakes, changes in sea level, development of pluvial lakes far from the ice margins, isostatic adjustment of the crust, and abnormal winds. It affected oceans, flooding, and biological communities. The ice sheets themselves, by modifying the albedo, constituted a major feedback on the climate.
During the Quaternary Period, the total volume of land ice, sea level, and global temperature has fluctuated initially on 41,000- and more recently on 100,000-year time scales, as evidenced most clearly by ice cores for the past 800,000 years and marine sediment cores for the earlier period. There have been approximately 80 glacial cycles over this time. All of this time is referred to as an ice age because at least one permanent large ice sheet—Antarctica—has existed continuously. There is uncertainty over how much of Greenland was present during the previous and earlier interglacials. During the colder episodes—referred to as glacial periods—large ice sheets also existed in Europe, North America, and Siberia. The shorter and warmer intervals between glacials are referred to as interglacials.
Graph of CO2 (green), reconstructed temperature (blue), and dust (red) from the Vostok ice core for the past 420,000 years.
Currently, the earth is in an interglacial period, which marked the beginning of the Holocene epoch. The current interglacial began between 10,000 and 15,000 years ago, which caused the ice sheets from the last glacial period to begin to disappear. Remnants of these last glaciers, now occupying about 10% of the world’s land surface, still exist in Greenland and Antarctica. Global warming has exacerbated the retreat of these glaciers.
During the glacial periods, what we see as the normal (i.e. interglacial) hydrologic system was completely interrupted throughout large areas of the world and was considerably modified in others. Due to the volume of ice on land, sea level is approximately 120 meters lower than present. The evidence of such an event in the recent past is robust. Over the last century, extensive field observations have provided evidence that continental glaciers covered large parts of Europe, North America, and Siberia. Maps of glacial features were compiled after many years of fieldwork by hundreds of geologists who mapped the location and orientation of drumlins, eskers, moraines, striations, and glacial stream channels. These maps revealed the extent of the ice sheets, the direction of flow, and the locations of systems of meltwater channels, and they allowed scientists to decipher a history of multiple advances and retreats of the ice. Even before the theory of worldwide glaciation was generally accepted, many observers recognized that more than a single advance and retreat of the ice had occurred. Extensive evidence now shows that a number of periods of growth and retreat of continental glaciers occurred during the ice age, called glacials and interglacials. The interglacial periods of warm climate are represented by buried soil profiles, peat beds, and lake and stream deposits separating the unsorted, unstratified deposits of glacial debris.
OOO YEahhh lol i have been sitting here for like 1 hour now .. and trying to find it lol and u did it in like few secs lol Thanks again =D i got this stupid test tomorrow in Geography .. Ice age crap
0_o oh LORD littlenick i already got like 40 pages to read :O cant read all that
littlenick wrote:
That should take you about 7 minutes to read!
7? Took me 1… 7?
Laina1312 wrote:
littlenick wrote:
That should take you about 7 minutes to read!7? Took me 1… 7?
7 minutes if you want to actually understand what you read!
i have just read throw like 20 pages of this crap .. dont get a **** + not written in book =\
UCreateUrReality wrote:
I have a question. When is the last time you did your own homework?
When was the last time you weren’t a jerk?
littlenick wrote:
Laina1312 wrote:7 minutes if you want to actually understand what you read!
littlenick wrote:7? Took me 1… 7?
That should take you about 7 minutes to read!
I did… glaciers, greenland, etc.
No fighting people! If you are not going to be nice here don’t reply! We are all friends here, OK?
Why So Steve? wrote:
‘Ice Age: The Meltdown’ was released in 2006.
hee hee.
Why So Steve? wrote:
Why So Steve? wrote:Not even a titter :(
‘Ice Age: The Meltdown’ was released in 2006.
You’re such a dork! he he he he he!
Why So Steve? wrote:
Laina1312 wrote:My night is now complete :D
Why So Steve? wrote:hee hee.
‘Ice Age: The Meltdown’ was released in 2006.
You’re welcome!!
WHY SO STEVE i just got what u said hahahaha u talking abt the movie =D hehehe
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