Submitted by CDNEmpire t3_11jm4sd in askscience
I’ve read that during the last ice age, ice thousands of meters thick covered Canada and most of the United States.
- How long would it have taken for those ice sheets to form? Like a decade? A century?
- And what is it that happens exactly? Snow falls in the winter, doesn’t quite melt in the summer, and more snow falls on it next winter?
- Or do we completely lose temperature variants between seasons, and it just stays cold all the time?
- What was going on in central and South America? Or Africa? Was it just business as usual for life down there? The regular flow of seasons and such, unaffected by the ice sheets?
ParatusLetum t1_jb3xrdx wrote
I was briefly a Geology Major long ago so some info may not be up to date.
1a. A quick look at that last glacial maximum shows time frames on 10’s of thousands of years. So the ice would be accumulating for around ~10-15 thousand years then declining to where we see it today possibly.
1b. Sounds about right. The “warm season” is not sufficient to erase the previous winters snow fall. A lot of these cycles seem to work on positive feedback loops. More ice > more light reflected back to space > colder weather > more ice etc. the condition will accelerate its effects until another factor steps in like natural variation in the earths tilt and orbit, or volcanic activity etc. which may cause a warming cycle to begin causing the ice age to diminish. Technically I believe we are still in an Ice Age as we have ice caps where as in the distant past earth did not have such caps year round possibly.
1c. Less significant variations than you may see today across the globe seems to most plausible.
All very cool questions. Keep on digging.