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The
Great Ice Age
About
a million years ago, the Earth entered a period of cooling
and widespread glaciation. Ice sheets gripped most of northern
Europe and North America and left ample evidence of their
presence as they finally retreated about 11,000 years ago.
Naturalists began piecing together geologic evidence of what
they would dub the Great Ice Age as long ago as the 18th Century.
Ice ages seem to occur at regular intervals in geologic history
- about every 200 million years
or so
- and it's likely that a number
of factors interact to trigger their onset. First, changes
in the Earth's orbit around the sun, orientation to the sun,
or changes within the sun itself could lead to significant
changes in the Earth's climate.
A
second factor is the distribution of Earth's landmasses. Changes
in the world's geography alter ocean and air mass circulation
patterns. For example, mountain ranges can block moisture-laden
air masses, encouraging glaciation on one side of the range,
while discouraging it on the other. Also, since temperatures
are lower at high altitudes, glaciers can cover mountains
at low latitudes where they would not form at sea level. Finally,
once ice sheets start to form, they reflect more and more
sunlight back into space, causing the Earth to cool further.
This positive feedback loop has caused some scientists to
speculate that the planet could switch from temperate to ice-bound
in just a few years or decades. So the mild planet we know
today could turn cold and inhospitable without much warning.
Click on a thumbnail picture to learn about another
great moment in global climate change:
     

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