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The little Ice Age

created Sep 14th 2020, 14:31 by Aboslymanalhalmy


3


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589 words
32 completed
00:00
Several possible causes of the Little Ice Age
The Little Ice Age was a period of unusually cold temperatures in many parts of the world that lasted
from about the year 1350 until 1900 C.E. There were unusually harsh winters, and glaciers grew larger in
many areas. Scientists have long wondered what caused the Little Ice Age. Several possible causes have
been proposed.
Lecture
Unfortunately the arguments of the reading passage are a little out of date. Scientists now have new
information that shows that none of the ideas the reading passage discusses could account for the Little
Ice Age.
 
Reading
First, the cooling may have been caused by disruption of ocean currents. Before the Little Ice Age, there
was a period of unusually warm weather during which glaciers melted. These melted glaciers sent a
large amount of cold freshwater into the Gulf Stream, a large ocean current that strongly affects Earth's
climate. Some scientists believe that this freshwater was enough to temporarily disrupt the Gulf Stream
current. Such a disruption could have caused the Little Ice Age.
Lecture
First, about the Gulf Stream. Scientists now know that disrupting the Gulf Stream would cause cooling
only in Europe and North America. But the Little Ice Age also affected the Southern Hemisphere—in
places like New Zealand and southern Africa, for example. Since the disruption of the Gulf Stream
cannot explain why these southern areas became colder, it cannot explain the Little Ice Age.
Question
 
Reading
Second, volcanic eruptions could have caused the Little Ice Age. When volcanoes erupt, they send dark
clouds of dust and sulfur gas into the atmosphere. These clouds, which can spread over great areas,
block some sunlight from reaching Earth's surface. This can decrease the global temperatures. Scientists
know of several volcanic eruptions that took place during the Little Ice Age.
Lecture
Second, the volcanoes theory. It's true that if volcano eruptions put enough dust into the atmosphere,
the result can be a cooler climate. But large amounts of volcanic dust in the atmosphere would have also
produced striking visual effects that people would have noticed at the time. For example, dramatically
colorful sunsets, or snow being gray or brown instead of white. But there are almost no reports of
anything like that routinely happening during the Little Ice Age. So it seems that the volcanic eruptions
during that period were simply not strong enough to release the large amounts of dust needed to lower
global temperatures.
 
 
 
 
Reading
Third, substantial decreases in human populations may have contributed indirectly to the cooling of the
climate. For a variety of reasons (disease, warfare, social disruption), the human population just before
the Little Ice Age and during the early part of it was lower than it had been in a long time. Forest trees
started growing on fields that were no longer used for agriculture. Since trees absorb carbon dioxide, a
greenhouse gas, they decrease the greenhouse effect that keeps Earth warm. With more forest trees
and less carbon dioxide, Earth became cooler.
 
Lecture
 
Third, about forests on farm land stopping the warming greenhouse effect by removing carbon dioxide.
There just was not enough time for this effect to work. The human population grew back to previous
levels fairly quickly, which meant that forests were soon being cut down again to clear fields for the
crops needed to feed the growing population. As a result, we know that the forests mentioned in the
reading passage were not there long enough to cause the long-term global cooling of the climate.

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