An ice age is one of the main reason to the massive changes to the Earth’s surface. Glaciers grew to be more than 12,000 feet thick as sheets expand across Scandinavia, Canada, South America and Russia. But all of that was demolished with the increasing solar radiation levels which contributed to global warming, also associated with the plate tectonic activities. The shifting of the Earth’s plates produces large-scale alterations to continental masses, which effects the atmospheric currents and oceans, and activates volcanic activity that releases carbon dioxide into the
An ice age is one of the main reason to the massive changes to the Earth’s surface. Glaciers grew to be more than 12,000 feet thick as sheets expand across Scandinavia, Canada, South America and Russia. But all of that was demolished with the increasing solar radiation levels which contributed to global warming, also associated with the plate tectonic activities. The shifting of the Earth’s plates produces large-scale alterations to continental masses, which effects the atmospheric currents and oceans, and activates volcanic activity that releases carbon dioxide into the