Submitted by mydriase t3_11l889n in dataisbeautiful
Comments
[deleted] t1_jbb0s9r wrote
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[deleted] t1_jbb1ood wrote
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diemos09 t1_jbbdpp9 wrote
Wish I new what the thin blue line is that crosses from Seattle to Maryland.
[deleted] t1_jbbgdm6 wrote
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SensorAmmonia t1_jbbgkvv wrote
North of that line the climate was more than 12 degrees colder than today forcing settlers to move south.
venerable4bede t1_jbbi8lw wrote
Small typo, you wrote “hoping” when I think you meant “hopping” but it’s cool
Just-10247-LOC t1_jbbtb49 wrote
Nice job. I learned a bit, you made it easy.
gael12334 t1_jbc7uq3 wrote
"Laurentides ice sheet" tbrnk pensais pas que les laurentides allaient aussi loin que ça
onegunzo t1_jbc8ik3 wrote
Just looks like every winter to me :)
Thanks for doing this.
Tenbroekmj t1_jbc9wyz wrote
Can you do the same for the ice sheets over Europe and Asia?
one_salty_cookie t1_jbcc96k wrote
Dang, that must have been better than what we have now...
Beatnikdan t1_jbcdpg8 wrote
You might make an adjustment to your map.
The Puget Lobe of the Cordilleran Ice sheet stretched at least as far as south as Olympia. It carved out the Puget sound and was estimated to be 3000 feet thick in Seattle.
srv50 t1_jbch32z wrote
New England skiing musta been awesome!
bappleky t1_jbcjgjt wrote
You are a fantastic cartographer!!
TinKicker t1_jbcrnm1 wrote
So I’ve been hiking all over Manitoulin Island in Ontario for pretty much my entire life. (It’s in northern Lake Huron).
Even if you’re well off any trails, you never need a compass. The glaciers pushed down from the north, and left deep gouges in the exposed rock as they pushed south.
Just look for the gouges in the exposed fossilized coral reefs. They’re all north/south. The entire island is a compass.
Crembrelay t1_jbd3on8 wrote
Man, America must have been so pristine and beautiful back them. Especially places like Oregon, California and Washington before western settlements… not that it isn’t today, (ill spare you the 21st century dread.) it was just pure untouched natural glory.
LGZee t1_jbd4dzw wrote
Canadians be living even closer to the US
RunninglikeNaruto t1_jbd5l4h wrote
This is such a good poster!!!!! I made my first academic poster not long ago and it was good, but this is phenomenal
mydriase OP t1_jbd8sy6 wrote
Tout le Canada être comme : TOKEBECICCITE
[deleted] t1_jbd9fdj wrote
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Ambitious-Event-5911 t1_jbdmx3v wrote
This. And it extended farther South almost to Spokane. An ice dam formed where the Clark Fork empties into Lake Pend Orellie, forming glacial Lake Missoula, and leading to epic flossing during the thaw.
ltethe t1_jbfj6o1 wrote
I would love to plumb the 18,000 BC shoreline for settlements.
[deleted] t1_jbgw6ju wrote
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mydriase OP t1_jbgygav wrote
Not enough moisture in this region, too dry !
Specialist_Orchid387 t1_jbi0sgq wrote
Excellent work of art and science
mydriase OP t1_jbaz7ui wrote
I made that map with ice sheets / glaciers extent data from the University of Cologne, I got the lakes on Canada.ca and many other shapefiles (borders mostly) from divagis.org
I got the information from the encyclopedia britannica and I read a couple of research papers.
I used QGIS for the basemap layer and Adobe Illustrator for everything else
Feedback welcome !
If you like maps, I have many more on my website :)
cheers !