Re: Pole Shifts vs Ice Ages (Revisited)
In Article <BEdj7.403$k7.6321@reggie.win.bright.net> Thomas McDonald wrote:
> I quoted documentation that Siberia had summers typical
> of modern arctic summers in terms of temperature and length.
> While Europe was in the grip of an ice age, and was often
> glaciated as far south as northern France and Germany, Siberia
> had a climate much like it does now.
Thomas, you did not address my point. My point was that while Europe
and Greenland got warmer 11,000 years ago (and suddenly, I might add),
on the opposite side of our globe, at the SAME LATITUDE, it got colder.
Your prior response was that Wrangle Island and other places where
frozen mammoth corpses are being dug up got warmer at that time. Below,
this quote of yours, and below that, what Im asking you to address.
Put the globe in your hands, and tip Europe and Greenland north into the
Artic Circle, and see where that puts Wrangle Island! The crust
shifted!
In Article <NbWc7.19$k7.326@reggie.win.bright.net> Thomas McDonald wrote:
> In Article <3B73F43D.7DF66774@zetatalk.com> Nancy Lieder wrote:
>> 2. the mammoths were eating vegetation that formerly grew
>> in the area, please deal with why this vegetation is not
>> found there TODAY
>
> At the end of the last ice age, as part of the great
> geological and climatological changes that took place with
> the melting of the continental ice sheets, the great
> ecosystem termed the "Mammoth steppe" changed as well.
WRANGLE ISLAND, Lat 70, Long 180
Equivalent to Barrow, Alaska and further north than any
part of Sweden or Norway. In the Arctic Sea. Most of the
island sustains lichens, at best.
=> GOT MUCH COLDER 11,000 years ago
Discovery Magazine
April 1999
to the end of the last ice age 11,000 years ago. Mammoths
thrived .. in Siberia, where dry grasslands once
stretched for hundreds of miles, supporting a vibrant
ecosystem of mammoths, bison, and other jumbo
herbivores. .. The mammoth fossils on Wrangel Island ...
GREENLAND, Lat 60-85, Long 45
Cold until 11,700 years ago when last ice age ended.
Warmed until 7,000 years ago, then stabilized.
16 degree warmup at end of last [European] Ice Age
=> WARMED UP SIGNIFICANTLY 11,700 years ago
Discover Magazine - March 1998
Empires in the Dust, by Karen Wright
until 11,700 years ago, when the last ice age ended and
the current warm era...
Climate Can Change Quickly
Associated Press, Oct 28, 1999
Greenland glaciers shows ... a 16-degree abrupt warming
at the end of the last ice age, ... happened within just a
couple of decades.
EUROPE, Lat 45-60, Long 0
Last Ice Age ended 11,000 years ago or so.
=> GOT MUCH WARMER