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To: <1/1,000,000th%
That wasn’t an ice age. It was a short term cooling event. No glaciers came south.

The Little Ice Age brought bitterly cold winters to many parts of the world, but is most thoroughly documented in Europe and North America. In the mid-17th century, glaciers in the Swiss Alps advanced, gradually engulfing farms and crushing entire villages. The River Thames and the canals and rivers of the Netherlands often froze over during the winter, and people skated and even held frost fairs on the ice. The first Thames frost fair was in 1607; the last in 1814, although changes to the bridges and the addition of an embankment affected the river flow and depth, hence the possibility of freezes. The freeze of the Golden Horn and the southern section of the Bosphorus took place in 1622. The winter of 1794/95 was particularly harsh when the French invasion army under Pichegru could march on the frozen rivers of the Netherlands, whilst the Dutch fleet was fixed in the ice in Den Helder harbour. In the winter of 1780, New York Harbor froze, allowing people to walk from Manhattan to Staten Island. Sea ice surrounding Iceland extended for miles in every direction, closing that island's harbors to shipping.

76 posted on 01/23/2008 10:56:07 AM PST by Ditto (Global Warming: The 21st Century's Snake Oil)
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To: Ditto

Yes, but there weren’t 2 mile high glaciers in Chicago.

The ground still rises 2 inches a year here now that the weight of the ice is off.


141 posted on 01/24/2008 5:29:22 AM PST by <1/1,000,000th%
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