News

During the last Ice Age,roughly between 26,000 and 19,000 years ago, the Earth was dramatically different from today. Vast ...
The Robberg is one of southern Africa's most distinctive and widespread stone tool technologies. Robberg tools—which we found at the Knysna site—are thought to be replaceable components in composite ...
Around 10,000 years ago, as the last Ice Age drew to a close, the drifting of the continent of North America, and spreading in the Atlantic Ocean, may have temporarily sped up—with a little help ...
A typical ice age lasting 100,000 years can be characterised into periods of advancing and retreating ice -- the ice grows for 80,000 years, but it only takes 20,000 years for that ice to melt.
Researchers have estimated that sea-level rose by an average of about 1 meter per century at the end of the last Ice Age, interrupted by rapid "jumps" during which it rose by up to 2.5 meters per ...
Nearly 10,000 years ago, Earth came out of its most recent ice age. Vast, icy swaths of land around the poles thawed, melting the glaciers that had covered them for nearly 100,000 years. Why ...
The European Journal of Sports Science suggests the benefits of the ice bath – a technique which has been used in numerous sports disciplines (track-and-field, soccer, NFL, cricket, rugby and ...
A new study shows that just after the Ice Age, there were at least five types of dog with distinct genetic ancestries – and these ancestries can still be found in the dogs of today.
The circumstances that ended the last ice age, somewhere between 19,000 and 10,000 years ago, have been unclear. In particular, scientists aren't sure how carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas, played ...
The Ice Age was coming to a close and human hunters were starting early settlements. Which leads to an intriguing question: ... 14,000 years ago, around the end of the Ice Age.
Around 10,000 years ago as the last Ice Age drew to a close, the drifting of the continent of North America, and spreading in the Atlantic Ocean, may have temporarily sped up—with a little help from ...
Melting glaciers at the end of the Ice Age may have sped up continental drift, fueled volcanic eruptions. University of Colorado at Boulder. Journal Nature DOI 10.1038/s41586-025-08846-x.