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- Wisconsin glaciation - Wikipedia
The Wisconsin glaciation, also called the Wisconsin glacial episode, was the most recent glacial period of the North American ice sheet complex, peaking more than 20,000 years ago
- Ice Age Geology – WGNHS – UW–Madison
Near the end of the cycle, beginning about 31,500 years ago, the glacier began its advance into Wisconsin It expanded for 13,500 years before temperatures warmed again and it began to melt back It took another 7,000 years before the ice finally retreated from northern Wisconsin
- Ice Age National Scenic Trail Wisconsin | Ice Age Alliance
Our mission is to conserve, create, maintain, promote the Ice Age National Scenic Trail Become a member to support our mission get members-only perks
- Wisconsin Glacial Stage | Time, Map, Facts | Britannica
Wisconsin Glacial Stage, most recent major division of Pleistocene time and deposits in North America, beginning between about 100,000 and 75,000 years ago and ending about 11,000 years ago
- Ice Age National Scenic Trail (U. S. National Park Service)
The Ice Age National Scenic Trail spans 1,200 miles, traverses some of Wisconsin's finest geologic and glacial features, and passes through the ancestral lands of 15 Tribes
- ICE AGE NATIONAL SCENIC TRAIL - Wisconsin DNR
The trail traverses some of Wisconsin’s most scenic landscapes and helps tell the story of the last Ice Age by highlighting Wisconsin's unique glacial features
- What Was the Wisconsin Glaciation? (with pictures)
The Wisconsin glaciation (also known as the Devensian, Midlandian, Würm, and Weichsel glaciation in different areas around the world) was the last Ice Age, during which glaciers extended as far south as modern-day California, New York, France, Germany, and Poland
- Glacial Geology - Wisconsin Department of Transportation
The last glacial advance is named the Wisconsin glaciation, because of the many prominent land features left in the state by this advance The Wisconsin glacial advance is thought to have occurred from about 75,000 years bp to about 8,000 years bp
- Wisconsin Ice Age - townofstgermain. org
Near the end of the cycle, beginning about 31,500 years ago, the glacier began its advance into Wisconsin It expanded for 13,500 years before temperatures warmed again and it began to melt back It took another 7,000 years before the ice finally retreated from northern Wisconsin
- Ice Age Deposits of Wisconsin - WGNHS
IN WISCONSIN The Pleistocene Epoch or Ice Age began about 1,700,000 years ago which, in terms of geologic time, is not long ago There were many separate glaciations during the Ice Age, each followed by a period when the ice sheets (except those on Greenland and Antarctica) melted away
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