Urstrom

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The Urstrom is a geologists' name for a great glacial age river of the Polish and north German plain, which drained the combined melt-waters from the northern headwaters of the Alps and the southern part of the Scandinavian ice during the Devensian ice age. [1]

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The Penultimate Glacial Period (PGP) is the glacial age that occurred before the Last Glacial Period. The penultimate glacial period is officially unnamed just like the Last Glacial Period. The word penultimate simply means second to last. While the PGP is a part of the ongoing Quaternary ice age, which began 2.58 million years ago, the PGP lasted from ~194,000 years ago, to ~135,000 years ago. The PGP also occurred during the Marine Isotope age 6 (MIS6). At the glacial ages’ height, it is known to be the most extensive expansion of glaciers in the last 400,000 years over Eurasia, and could be the second or third coolest glacial period over the last 1,000,000 years, as shown by ice cores. Due to this, the global sea level dropped to between 92 and 150 metres below modern-day global mean sea level. The penultimate glacial period expanded ice sheets and shifted temperature zones worldwide, which had a variety of effects on the world's environment, and the organisms that lived in it. At its height, the penultimate glacial period was a more severe glaciation than the Last Glacial Maximum. The PGP is an unofficial name for the last period of the Saalian glaciation, called the Wolstonian Stage in Britain.

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References

  1. K Reicherter, N Froitzheim, M Jarosiński, J Badura, H-J Franzke, M Hansen, C Hübscher, R Müller, P Poprawa, J Reinecker, W Stackebrandt, T Boigt, H von Eynatten & W Zuchiewicz, "Alpine tectonics north of the Alps" in Tom McCann (ed), The Geology of Central Europe: Mesozoic and Cenozoic , vol 2, Geological Society of London, 2008, Chap 19, pp 1233–1234