We are still in an ice age. When the polar ice and alpine ice is gone, then and only then have we left the ice age.
And meanwhile
Toronto beats temperature record as students swelter in schools without AC
https://www.ctvnews.ca/canada/toron...dents-swelter-in-schools-without-ac-1.4081007
Will that happen ? How soon ?We are still in an ice age. When the polar ice and alpine ice is gone, then and only then have we left the ice age.
Imagine, warm weather in Toronto in early September. Who knew?
Says who?? How about when the ice-cap is getting smaller we are coming out of an ice-age and when it is getting bigger we are entering an ice-age.We are still in an ice age. When the polar ice and alpine ice is gone, then and only then have we left the ice age.
We'll just keep reporting the NEWS Bar.
Record-breaking September cold hits northern Minnesota
https://www.yahoo.com/news/record-breaking-september-cold-hits-northern-minnesota-165017798.html
We are still in an ice age. When the polar ice and alpine ice is gone, then and only then have we left the ice age.
▲This analysis brought to you by the internet global warming expert....B S▲
Ridiculous eh?
An ice age is a long period of reduction in the temperature of the Earth's surface and atmosphere, resulting in the presence or expansion of continental and polar ice sheets and alpine glaciers. Within a long-term ice age, individual pulses of cold climate are termed "glacial periods" (or, alternatively, "glacials" or "glaciations", or colloquially "ice ages"), and intermittent warm periods are called "interglacials".
In the terminology of glaciology, ice age implies the presence of extensive ice sheets in both northern and southern hemispheres.[1] By this definition, we are in an interglacial period—the Holocene—of the current ice age.
The current ice age began 2.6 million years ago at the start of the Pleistocene epoch, and the Greenland, Arctic, and Antarctic ice sheets still exist.[2]