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During interglacial, there is decreasing weight on land. This reduces tectonic activity. The result is decreasing heat under the ocean and consequently decreasing temperature. This is how interglacials trigger glacials.
During glacial, there is increasing weight on land. This increases tectonic activity. The result is increasing heat under the ocean and consequently increasing temperature. This is how glacials trigger interglacials.
We know, the ocean is one of the two biggest sources of heat on Earth. The other being the Sun. This is why places near the sea, like Iceland, is much warmer, about 30 C warmer, than places of similar latitude but far from the sea, like Siberia.
This chart shows the alternating occurrences of glacials and interglacials.
https://wattsupwiththat.files.wordpress.com/2012/04/400000yearslarge1.gif
You can see in this tool that the ocean is one of the drivers of climate. It is one of the main sources of heat on Earth. Even if there is no Sun, Earth would be considerably warmer than the Moon.
earth :: a global map of wind, weather, and ocean conditions
What do you think?
During glacial, there is increasing weight on land. This increases tectonic activity. The result is increasing heat under the ocean and consequently increasing temperature. This is how glacials trigger interglacials.
We know, the ocean is one of the two biggest sources of heat on Earth. The other being the Sun. This is why places near the sea, like Iceland, is much warmer, about 30 C warmer, than places of similar latitude but far from the sea, like Siberia.
This chart shows the alternating occurrences of glacials and interglacials.
https://wattsupwiththat.files.wordpress.com/2012/04/400000yearslarge1.gif
You can see in this tool that the ocean is one of the drivers of climate. It is one of the main sources of heat on Earth. Even if there is no Sun, Earth would be considerably warmer than the Moon.
earth :: a global map of wind, weather, and ocean conditions
What do you think?