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Last Glacial Maximum

The Last Glacial Maximum refers to the time of maximum extent of the ice sheets during the last glaciation, approximately 21 thousand years ago. At this time, all of Northern Europe, almost all of Canada and the northern half of the West Siberian Plain were covered by huge ice sheets extending roughly to the southern boundary of the Great Lakes in North America and to a line from the mouth of the Rhine River through Kraków, Moscow up to the mouth of the Anabar River in Russia.

Ice sheets covered the whole of Iceland and all but the southern extremity of the British Isles, whilst the Patagonian Ice Sheet covered southern Chile down to about 41 degrees south. Ice sheets also covered Tibet, Baltistan, Ladakh and the Andean altiplano. In Africa, the Middle East and Southeast Asia, many smaller mountain glaciers formed, especially in the Atlas, the Bale Mountains , and New Guinea.

The Ob and Yenisei Rivers had their flows stopped by the vast ice sheets, creating huge lakes.

Permafrost covered Europe south of the ice sheet down to present-day Szeged and Asia down to Beijing. In North America, latitudinal gradients were so sharp that permafrost did not reach far south of the ice sheets except at high elevations.

Despite having present-day climates similar to those of glaciated areas in North America, East Asia and parts of Alaska were unglaciated except at the highest elevations. This anomaly has three causes:

- The fact that the Pacific Ocean became much warmer than the Atlantic Ocean because the flow of cold water via the Oyashio Current was blocked by the Bering Land Bridge.

- The fact that East Asia's precipitation shows so pronounced a summer maximum that snowfalls are much lower than in similar areas of Europe or North America.

- The fact that East Asia's high east-west mountain ranges prevented ice sheets from moving southwards easily.

In warmer regions of the world, climates at the Last Glacial Maximum were extremely dry and generally cold. In extreme cases, such as South Australia and the Sahel, rainfall could be diminished by up to ninety percent, with floras diminished to almost the same degree as in glaciated areas of Europe and North America. Even in less affected regions, rainforest cover was greatly diminished, especially in West Africa where a few refugia were surrounded by tropical grassland. The Amazon rainforest was split into two large blocks by extensive savanna, and it is probable that the tropical rainforests of Southeast Asia were similarly affected, with deciduous forests expanding in their place except on the east and west extremities of the Sundaland shelf. Only in Central America and the Chocó region of Colombia did tropical rainforests remain substantially intact - probably due to the extraordinarily heavy rainfall of these regions today.

Most of the world's deserts expanded, except in the American West, where changes in the jet stream brought heavy rain to areas that are now desert (this may also have occurred in North Africa but it remains uncertain). In Australia, shifting sand dunes covered fifty percent of the continent, whilst the Chaco and Pampas in South America became similarly dry. Present-day subtropical regions also lost most of their forest cover, notably in eastern Australia, the Atlantic Forest of Brazil, and southern China, where open woodland became dominant due to drier conditions. In northern China - unglaciated despite its present cold climate - a mixture of grassland and tundra prevailed, and even here, the northern limit of tree growth was at least twenty degrees further south than today.

Though the last ice age is popularly seen as a long period, in fact the conditions of the Last Glacial Maximum are now believed to have persisted only for a very short time, probably only two thousand years. In the period immediately before the Last Glacial Maximum, many areas that became completely barren desert were actually wetter than they are today, notably in southern Australia where Aboriginal occupation is believed to coincide with a wet period between 40,000 and 60,000 years BP.

See also

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12-03-2008 10:22:39
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