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A new theory for the great ice ages

OCT 01, 1954
Mankind, in one place or another, has had to contend with a lot of ice during the last million years without knowing where it came from. The author, a Baltimore metallurgist, has a suggestion.

DOI: 10.1063/1.3061397

Carl A. Zapffe

With the exception of the Hiroshima bomb and Darwin’s voyage on the Beagle, few developments of science have had as great an impact upon the human imagination as Agassiz’s announcement in 1837 that currently habitable portions of the earth had been covered in geologically recent times by ice sheets thousands of feet in thickness and covering millions of square miles. At first hotly contested, the postulate finally gained universal acceptance because of such indisputable evidence as typically glacial till, drift, and boulders transported hundreds of miles from their bed‐rock origins; deep abrasion markings on the surface of bed‐rock recording the grinding flow; moraines and hills of glacial deposits along with typical lakes, rivers, and so forth.

More about the Authors

Carl A. Zapffe. Baltimore.

This Content Appeared In
pt-cover_1954_10.jpeg

Volume 7, Number 10

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