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Live Science on MSNGlobal sea levels rose a whopping 125 feet after the last ice ageNow, new geological data show that sea levels rose about 125 feet (38 meters) between 11,000 and 3,000 years ago, according ...
Earth's history is a roller-coaster of climate fluctuations, of relative warmth giving way to frozen periods of glaciation before rising up again to the more temperate climes we experience today.
New geological data has given more insight into the rate and magnitude of global sea level rise following the last ice age, ...
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Ph.D. student debunks common misconception about post-ice age warming: 'That's actually not true'"It obviously warmed after the last ice age … but it did stop warming." Rosh then carefully displayed the data that supported what he was saying, via a graph titled "Global Temperature Since the ...
Although the D-O climate cycles have now been found in many other climate proxy records around the globe (Voelker 2002), the reason why Earth's climate was so much more variable during the last ...
A new study published last week is giving us a better idea. The research builds on previous hypotheses theorizing that Ice Ages occur on a predictable timeline that relates to the geometry of ...
You could see what the world was like when ice sheets a thousand feet thick blanketed ... give scientists unprecedented views of global climate over the eons. More important, the records allow ...
A new study finds ice ages are cyclical and can be predicted based on the Earth's orbit of the sun.Image: Kerem Yucel/AFP/Getty Images Earth's last ice age ended around 11,700 years ago and a new ...
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