Saturday, January 16, 2010

Like Today

clipped from www.geocraft.com
Earth Temps Over Last 800,000 Years
As
long as the continent of Antarctica exists at the southern pole of our
planet we probably will be repeatedly pulled
back into glacial ice ages
. This occurs because ice caps, which cannot
attain great thickness over open ocean, can and do achieve great thickness
over a polar continent-- like Antarctica. Antarctica used to be located
near the equator, but over geologic time has moved by continental
drift
to its present location at the south pole. Once established,
continental polar ice caps act like huge cold sinks, taking over the climate
and growing bigger during periods of reduced solar output. Part of the
problem with shaking off the effects of an ice age is once ice caps are
established, they cause solar radiation to be reflected back into space,
which acts to perpetuate global cooling.
Continental polar ice caps seem to play a particularly important role
in ice ages when the arrangement of continental land masses restrict the
free global circulation of equatorial ocean currents