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Giant icebergs the size of cities once drifted off the coast of Britain, scientists find - Research could indicate how ...
A new study reveals there was a time when massive icebergs, like the ones we see in Antarctica today, were drifting less than ...
Geological evidence off the coast of Iceland suggests climate change as a key factor in the decline of the Roman Empire.
Giant icebergs once scraped the seafloor near Britain, offering clues about ancient ice shelves and future sea-level rise.
A trio of researchers has found evidence of the impact of the Late Antique Little Ice Age on Iceland almost 1,500 years ago.
similar to the Appalachian Trail on the East Coast. In 1958, Zillmer founded the Ice Age Park & Trail Foundation, now known as the Ice Age Trail Alliance, to help make the idea come alive.
Or could they? According to a study in Geology, a collection of rocks on Iceland's coast reveals the severity of the Late Antique Little Ice Age - a period of climate change that may have contributed ...
But just how severe was this Late Antique Little Ice Age? Pretty severe, the new Geology study finds. Showing that large, round rocks — or cobbles — on the coast of Iceland came all the way from the ...
Unusual rocks on an Icelandic beach were dropped there by icebergs, adding to evidence that an unusually cool period preceded the collapse of the Roman Empire ...
Stone tools crafted by ancient humans between 24,000 and 12,000 years ago that were recovered from coastal South Africa's ...
The region that is now the coast of South Africa was several miles ... She added, "People living around the last ice age were very similar to people today." Accessing the caves was a challenge ...