Posted on 06/04/2018 4:54:03 PM PDT by SunkenCiv
Thanks t!
;^)
Re: “And it was probably a bit warmer than it is today.”
I recently read that around 9,700 BC ice cores from Greenland show that the average temperature increased by 18 degrees F in just 150 years!
That might explain why forests returned around that same time period to Greenland’s polar neighbor, Norway.
World population estimates for 10,000 BC are less than 1% of today’s population, so man made climate change did not even exist back then.
Thanks! sounds like the basis for episode one of a specialized travel v’log.
In the shadow of the Moon
New Scientist | 30 January 1999 | editors
Posted on 08/31/2004 8:42:25 AM PDT by SunkenCiv
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/chat/1203912/posts?page=34#34
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/1176502/posts?page=4#4
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/1173287/posts?page=13#13
They’d have just thrown them into the fjords, with their boots tied around their necks.
Wasnt it alot warmer then ?
All you can eat pickled herring and no need to deal with pesky neighbors. Life was good.
Ya, lif was goot. But it vas all sveden bac den.
Ahhhhhh....good one!
So much tasty whale meat and dried fish. A paradise on Earth.
Whale meat again, don’t know how, don’t know when...
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