Synopsis:
A look at past Ice Age eras that Earth has experienced throughout its
existence; how the slightest changes in the planet's orbit and angle of
rotation can bring them about; how long they can last, and when the
Earth will endure another.
An ice age, or more precisely, a
glacial age, is a period of long-term reduction in the temperature of
the Earth's surface and atmosphere, resulting in the presence or
expansion of continental and polar ice sheets and alpine glaciers.
Within a long-term ice age, individual pulses of cold climate are termed
"glacial periods" (or alternatively "glacials" or "glaciations" or
colloquially as "ice age"), and intermittent warm periods are called
"interglacials". Glaciologically, ice age implies the presence of
extensive ice sheets in the northern and southern hemispheres. By this
definition, we are still in the ice age that began 2.6 million years ago
at the start of the Pleistocene epoch, because the Greenland, Arctic,
and Antarctic ice sheets still exist.
There are three main types of evidence for ice ages: geological, chemical, and paleontological.
Geological
evidence for ice ages comes in various forms, including rock scouring
and scratching, glacial moraines, drumlins, valley cutting, and the
deposition of till or tillites and glacial erratics. Successive
glaciations tend to distort and erase the geological evidence, making it
difficult to interpret. Furthermore, this evidence was difficult to
date exactly; early theories assumed that the glacials were short
compared to the long interglacials. The advent of sediment and ice cores
revealed the true situation: glacials are long, interglacials short. It
took some time for the current theory to be worked out.
The
chemical evidence mainly consists of variations in the ratios of
isotopes in fossils present in sediments and sedimentary rocks and ocean
sediment cores. For the most recent glacial periods ice cores provide
climate proxies from their ice, and atmospheric samples from included
bubbles of air. Because water containing heavier isotopes has a higher
heat of evaporation, its proportion decreases with colder conditions.
This allows a temperature record to be constructed. However, this
evidence can be confounded by other factors recorded by isotope ratios.
The
paleontological evidence consists of changes in the geographical
distribution of fossils. During a glacial period cold-adapted organisms
spread into lower latitudes, and organisms that prefer warmer conditions
become extinct or are squeezed into lower latitudes. This evidence is
also difficult to interpret because it requires (1) sequences of
sediments covering a long period of time, over a wide range of latitudes
and which are easily correlated; (2) ancient organisms which survive
for several million years without change and whose temperature
preferences are easily diagnosed; and (3) the finding of the relevant
fossils.
Despite the difficulties, analysis of ice core and ocean
sediment cores[citation needed] has shown periods of glacials and
interglacials over the past few million years. These also confirm the
linkage between ice ages and continental crust phenomena such as glacial
moraines, drumlins, and glacial erratics. Hence the continental crust
phenomena are accepted as good evidence of earlier ice ages when they
are found in layers created much earlier than the time range for which
ice cores and ocean sediment cores are available.
In 1742 Pierre
Martel (1706--1767), an engineer and geographer living in Geneva,
visited the valley of Chamonix in the Alps of Savoy. Two years later he
published an account of his journey. He reported that the inhabitants of
that valley attributed the dispersal of erratic boulders to the fact
that the glaciers had once extended much farther. Later similar
explanations were reported from other regions of the Alps. In 1815 the
carpenter and chamois hunter Jean-Pierre Perraudin (1767--1858)
explained erratic boulders in the Val de Bagnes in the Swiss canton of
Valais as being due to glaciers previously extending further. An unknown
woodcutter from Meiringen in the Bernese Oberland advocated a similar
idea in a discussion with the Swiss-German geologist Jean de Charpentier
(1786--1855) in 1834. Comparable explanations are also known from the
Val de Ferret in the Valais and the Seeland in western Switzerland and
in Goethe's Scientific Work. Such explanations could also be found in
other parts of the world. When the Bavarian naturalist Ernst von Bibra
(1806--1878) visited the Chilean Andes in 1849--1850 the natives
attributed fossil moraines to the former action of glaciers.
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