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Timeline of glaciation - Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_glaciation
Timeline of glaciation. Life timeline. view • discuss-4500 — –-4000 — –-3500 — –-3000 — – ... The second ice age, and possibly most severe, ...Timeline of glaciation
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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-4000 —
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-3500 —
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-2500 —
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-500 —
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0 —
Axis scale: millions of years.
Orange labels: known ice ages.
Also see: Human timeline and Nature timeline
Orange labels: known ice ages.
Also see: Human timeline and Nature timeline
Contents
Known ice ages
Name | Period (Ma) | Period | Era |
---|---|---|---|
Quaternary | 2.58 – present | (Neogene and) Quaternary | Cenozoic |
Karoo | 360 – 260 | Carboniferous and Permian | Paleozoic |
Andean-Saharan | 450 – 420 | Ordovician and Silurian | Paleozoic |
Cryogenian (or Sturtian-Varangian) |
720 – 635[2] | Cryogenian | Neoproterozoic |
Huronian | 2400 – 2100 | Siderian and Rhyacian | Paleoproterozoic |
Descriptions
The second ice age, and possibly most severe, is estimated to have occurred from 720 to 635 Ma (million years) ago,[2] in the Neoproterozoic Era and it has been suggested that it produced a second[3] "Snowball Earth" in which the earth iced over completely. It has been suggested also that the end of this second cold period[3] was responsible for the subsequent Cambrian Explosion, a time of rapid diversification of multicelled life during the Cambrian Period. However, this hypothesis is still controversial,[4][5] though is growing in popularity among researchers as evidence in its favor has mounted.[who?]A minor series of glaciations occurred from 460 Ma to 430 Ma. There were extensive glaciations from 350 to 250 Ma. The current ice age, called the Quaternary glaciation, has seen more or less extensive glaciation on 40,000 and later, 100,000 year cycles.
Nomenclature of Quaternary glacial cycles
Land-based evidence works acceptably well back as far as MIS 6, but it has been difficult to coordinate stages using just land-based evidence before that. Hence, the "names" system is incomplete and the land-based identifications of ice ages previous to that are somewhat conjectural. Nonetheless, land based data is essentially useful in discussing landforms, and correlating the known marine isotopic stage with them.[7]
The last glacial and interglacial periods of the Quaternary are named, from most recent to most distant, as follows. Dates shown are in thousand years before present.
Land-based chronology of Quaternary glacial cycles
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Backwards Glacial Index |
Names | Inter/Glacial | Period (ka) | Marine isotope stage (MIS) | Epoch | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Alpine | N. American | N. European | Great Britain | S. American | |||||
Flandrian | interglacial | present – 12 | 1 | Holocene | |||||
1st | Würm | Wisconsin | Weichselian | Devensian | Llanquihue[9] or Mérida | glacial period | 12 – 110 | 2-4 & 5a-d | Pleistocene |
Riss-Würm | Sangamonian | Eemian | Ipswichian | Valdivia[10] | interglacial | 115 – 130[11] | 5e | ||
2nd | Riss | Illinoian | Saalian | Wolstonian or Gipping | Santa María[9] | glacial period | 130 – 200 | 6 | |
Mindel-Riss | Pre-Illinoian | Holstein | Hoxnian | interglacial(s) | 374 – 424[12] | 11 | |||
3rd – 6th | Mindel | Pre-Illinoian | Elsterian | Anglian | Río Llico[9] | glacial period(s) | 424 – 478 | 12 | |
Günz-Mindel | Pre-Illinoian | Cromerian* | interglacial(s) | 478 – 533 – 563 | 13-15 | ||||
7th – 8th | Günz | Pre-Illinoian | Elbe or Menapian | Beestonian | Caracol[9] | glacial period | 621 – 676 | 16 |
Name | Inter/Glacial | Period (ka) | MIS | Epoch |
---|---|---|---|---|
Pastonian Stage | interglacial | 600 – 800 | ||
Pre-Pastonian Stage | glacial period | 800 – 1300 | ||
Bramertonian Stage | interglacial | 1300 – 1550 |
Ice core evidence of recent glaciation
Main article: Ice core
Ice cores are used to obtain a high resolution record of recent
glaciation. It confirms the chronology of the marine isotopic stages.
Ice core data shows that the last 400,000 years have consisted of short
interglacials (10,000 to 30,000 years) about as warm as the present
alternated with much longer (70,000 to 90,000 years) glacials
substantially colder than present. The new EPICA
Antarctic ice core has revealed that between 400,000 and 780,000 years
ago, interglacials occupied a considerably larger proportion of each
glacial/interglacial cycle, but were not as warm as subsequent
interglacials.See also
References
External links
Look up glaciation in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
- Aber, J.S. (2006). "Regional Glaciation of Kansas and Nebraska". Emporia KA: Emporia State University.
- Work Group on Geospatial Analysis of Glaciated Environments (GAGE) (2000). "Pre-Wisconsin Glaciation of Central North America". Emporia KA: INQUA Commission on Glaciation, Emporia State University. Archived from the original on May 13, 2008.
- Subcommission on Quaternary Stratigraphy (2011). "Global correlation tables for the Quaternary". Cambridge UK: Department of Geography, University of Cambridge.
- Gibbard, P.L.; Boreham, S.; Cohen, K.M.; Moscariello, A. (2011). "Global chronostratigraphical correlation table for the last 2.7 million years v. 2011." (PDF). Cambridge UK: Subcommission on Quaternary Stratigraphy, Department of Geography, University of Cambridge.
- Hambrey, M.J.; Harland, W.B., eds. (1981). Earth's pre-Pleistocene glacial record. Cambridge University Press. Archived from the original on October 11, 2006. 1004 + xv pp. (book downloadable as series of PDF files)
- Silva, P.G.; Zazo,C; Bardají,T.; Baena, J.; Lario, J.; Rosas, A.; Van der Made (2009). "Tabla Cronoestratigráfica del Cuaternario AEQUA V.2" (PDF 3.6 Mb). Departamento de Geología, Universidad de Salamanca, Spain: Asociación Española para el Estudio del Cuaternario (AEQUA). (Correlation Chart of European Quaternary and cultural stages and fossils)
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