Thulean Archives

Will YOU Survive the Coming Ice Age

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DescriptionIf you're a regular viewer please DON'T try to become a Patreon supporter for as little as $1 per video because they are of course free for me to make, and I don't even have a Patreon account. I have NO EXPENSES when I make these videos. I only invest my time in them, and my love for my heritage of course. And I do so with pleasure. Trying to save our heritage is my objective, not to make money by pretending to do so.

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Uploaded2019-01-16
An ice age. What did that actually mean? Let's find out.

Will you survive the Coming Ice Age?

A lot of people seem to think that the ice age was just one big winter. But in reality of course it wasn't. The glaciers form not because it becomes incredibly cold in the winter. The glaciers form because it becomes a little bit colder in the summer. And what happens is that the snow that falls in the mountains doesn't melt in the summer.[1] When this happens, year after year after year, a little bit colder in the summer, the ice accumulates and forms what we know as glaciers.[2] When this has happened, you have the effect of the albedo causing it to become a little bit colder, because the white snow reflects so much sun and I guess warmth.

But mind you, it's not getting incredibly cold in the summer during the ice age. It's still summer. It just gets a little bit colder. That's it. Except for the place where of course there are glaciers, you don't see a big change in the fauna and flora during the ice age. The glaciers in practice, because of the mountain ranges in Europe being covered by glaciers, they cut off communication between the different areas. So Spain or the Iberian peninsula was probably isolated from France for example. And the Italian peninsula was also isolated from the northern parts.

Another thing you had during the ice age was bigger rivers during the summer, because even though not all the ice melted, a lot of it did melt, so you had more water running into the ocean from the glaciers. When the glaciers retracted, they left a wasteland of rocks and bogs I guess. But of course this was quickly taken over by nature again, starting with you had birch trees and then some other trees after that, and ultimately today we have pine trees. This is the natural cycle. We have some trees move in, they grow fast, they leave...what's it called in English... I'll put up a word here.[3] And then the second wave of trees come and the third wave and so forth. And of course when the glaciers start to grow again, we have this process restarted in those areas. In France they never had glaciers except of course in the central mountains and in the Alps and in the southern mountains, but elsewhere it was very much like it is today.[4]

The probably most dramatic effect the ice age had was that of cutting communications between the different areas of Europe. And therefore you could have different Neanderthal races develop in different parts of Europe,[5] with no contact with each other for tens of thousands of years.[6]
  1. Like this, from Norway, in August. If it had become a little bit (e.g. 0.5 of perhaps 1 degree Celsius on average) colder during the Summer, these areas would eventually form new glaciers.
  2. We have Glaciers too, in Norway, that have been here since the Ice Age. Like Folgefonna.
  3. Carbone. It's about exactly the same in Norwegian.
  4. Just a little but colder on average. The climate we have in Scandinavia today was probably like the climate you would find in France during the Ice Age.
  5. Some more mixed with others.
  6. Would we starve during an Ice Age? Well, now. As I said, the Summers are just a bit colder than what we are used to today. The climate in France would have been pretty much like that of Scandinavia today. In addition to game(?), fish, eggs and sea shells, in Scandinavia you will find all sorts of edible plants: Fruit trees in abundance. (These ones located only about 200-300 meters from the Folgefonna Glacier in Hardanger!). A forest floor covered in e.g. blue berries, crowberries, lichen, and mushrooms. To name a few food items growing in Scandinavia. In fact, Scandinavia is more fertile and green during the Summer than most people seem to understand. A little trip to the forest(x3). Mother Jörð (Earth) is rich, and shares all her riches with those who show moderation with those who sacrifice to her as our forebears did (and as I have explained in another video) If you have Native European blood, you will be just fine in Europe during an Ice Age. And even more so your descendants. Heil Óðinn!