“We now have direct evidence that not only was the ice gone, but that plants and insects were living there,”…Near‑complete melting of Greenland’s ice over the next centuries to a few millennia would lead to some 23 feet of sea‑level rise.

  • kalkulat@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    One -possible- different past. Of course, we may be wrong about what caused it to be much warmer -in Greenland- -at that time- .

    One simpler example: the Earth’s North polar axis may once have farther from Greenland. Plate tectonics has made this a much different planet than it was 200Million or 400M or 600M years ago, and there was possibly a time when Greenland was much farther from the pole … and had no ice.

    Or (if Charles Hapgood was right), much of the Earth’s crust may have shifted it’s position (think an orange-skin no longer firmly attached to the orange) over, say, 100,000 years or so.