PLEISTOCENE EPOCH

plīˈstəsēn, 6th epoch of the Cenozoic era of geologic time (see Geologic Timescale, table). According to a classification that considered its deposits to have been formed by the biblical great flood, the epoch was originally called the Quaternary. Analyses of the magnetic polarity in deep-sea sediment cores indicated that the Pleistocene began more than 1.8 million years ago—much earlier than had previously been suspected (see glacial periods). Since the interglacial periods of the Pleistocene were of longer duration than the time elapsed since the end of the Pleistocene 11,000 years ago, it is sometimes suggested that the Holocene, or Recent, epoch, which is occurring now, may be merely another such interglacial stage and that the glaciers may return at some future time.

An Ice Age

The Pleistocene is the best-known glacial period (Ice Age) of the earth's history. Its ice sheets at one time covered all of Antarctica, large parts of Europe, North America, and South America, and small areas in Asia. In North America they stretched over Greenland and Canada and over the United States as far south as a line drawn westward from Cape Cod through Long Island, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania, along the line of the Ohio and Missouri rivers to North Dakota, and through N Montana, Idaho, and Washington to the Pacific. The ice sheets of Europe radiated from Scandinavia and covered Finland, NW Russia, N Germany, and the British Isles. Glaciers distinct from the main sheets were formed in the Rockies and the Alps. In South America, Patagonia and the S Andes lay under an extension of the antarctic sheet, while in Asia the Caucasus, the Himalayas, and other mountain regions were glaciated.

The glaciation of the Pleistocene was not continuous but consisted of several glacial advances interrupted by interglacial stages, during which the ice retreated and a comparatively mild climate prevailed. In all probability there were actually only four glacial stages, the Iowan and Bradyan being included in the Wisconsin as one complex stage. Carbon-14 analysis of fossils shows that the last glacial period ended about 11,000 years ago.

Topographic and Climatic Changes during the Pleistocene

The characteristic formation laid down in the glacial stages of the Pleistocene, as in all glacial periods, is the drift. The interglacial stages were marked by the weathering of the till of the drift to form a sticky, heavy soil called the gumbotil and by the deposition of peat and loess. Peat is plentiful in the Aftonian, Yarmouth, and Sangamon interglacial stages in North America.

The Pleistocene glaciers made important alterations in the topography of the glaciated regions, leveling hilly sections to low, rolling plains, both by erosion and by deposition of drift, eroding hollows that later became lakes, and forcing rivers to cut new channels by filling their former beds. Among the characteristic surface features formed in the Pleistocene are the drumlin, kame, esker, and moraine. The retreat of the ice after the Wisconsin glacial stage was followed by the formation, at the edge of the melting glaciers, of lakes, such as the extinct Lake Agassiz and the Great Lakes. The further retreat of the ice led to the flooding by the Atlantic of the NE United States and SE Canada, which had been depressed below sea level by the weight of the ice. In the areas of North America not covered by ice, the Pleistocene was marked chiefly by erosion, with only very slight marine transgressions over the coast.

During the various glacial stages many areas not covered with ice, including the arid and semiarid parts of the W United States, had periods of increased rainfall and lessened evaporation. Called pluvial periods, they were characterized by the spread of vegetation and the formation of many lakes. Heavy precipitation in the West was responsible for two great lakes—Lake Lahontan of Nevada and Lake Bonneville of Utah (which today forms the Great Salt and Utah lakes). During the Pleistocene, volcanic activity and warping of the earth's surface occurred on the Pacific coast. The cutting of the Grand Canyon took place chiefly in Pleistocene time.

Fauna of the Pleistocene

Among the characteristic Pleistocene mammals of North America were at least four species of elephants, including the mastodon and the mammoth, true horses, of the same genus as the domestic horse though not of the same species, saber-tooth carnivores, large wolves, giant armadillos and ground sloths, bisons, camels, and wild pigs. Among the arctic mammals that ranged far south in the glacial stages were the musk ox in North America and the woolly mammoth in Europe. The Pleistocene saw the beginning of the trend toward the extinction of many mammal species, which continued into historic times. The Pleistocene is noted also for the first appearance of modern humans approximately 500,000 years ago and the migration of humans to the American continents.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Pleistocene Epoch  - 361 results

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...during their first few weeks in Pleistocene Park. The scientists expect...the mammoth steppe during the Pleistocene Epoch down to isolated parts of northern...tigers would feast on the bison in Pleistocene Park, helping to cull the herd...
...explained, in part, as a pre-Pleistocene structural depression...post-rhyolite-pre-Pleistocene faults in other places support...have been drained before Pleistocene time. During the last interglacial epoch the drainage was probably...
...SULLIVAN, B. 1971 , "Post Pleistocene levels of the East China Sea...26. ----- 1968 , "The Pleistocene Epoch and the evolution of man...FLINT, R. F. 1963 , "The Pleistocene record", in M. N. Hill ed...
...start of the Pliocene. The earliest Pleistocene (2.0-0.7 Ma) saw the loss of...for hunting. In the Middle and Late Pleistocene (0.7-0.1 Ma and <0.1 Ma...extinctions is only 9 and 7 genera. The Early Pleistocene extinctions seem likely to have been...
The epoch also determines rock formation...deformation.During the early Pleistocene epoch (Q1), loess accumulation...appeared. During the middle Pleistocene epoch (Q2), a great...rare. During the later Pleistocene (Q3), loess accumulation...
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journal articles on: Pleistocene Epoch  - 66 results

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...interior to coast. KEYWORDS: Pleistocene, faunal analysis, climate...and nearby islands into the Pleistocene epoch (Allen 1996; Allen and OConnell...dropping sea level during the Pleistocene epoch was associated with lower average...
...Caves in Peninsular Thailand in the Late Pleistocene and Early and Middle Holocene. by Douglas...inhabited by spirit forces. In late Pleistocene times, dating from before than 40...prehistory, Southeast Asia, late Pleistocene, early Holocene, mid Holocene, caves...
...Changing Marine Exploitation during Late Pleistocene in Northern Wallacea: Shell Remains...seafarers. Recent excavations at late Pleistocene sites in south and eastern Wallacea...Tanudirjo 2001, 2005). Unlike the Pleistocene coast of Sunda Shelf which is submerged...
Is There a Pleistocene Archaeological Site at Cuddie Springs...a stratified and undisturbed Late Pleistocene archaeological site, as proposed...Keywords: extinction, megafauna, Pleistocene, seed-grinding, palaeochannels...
...A Matter of Balance: An Overview of Pleistocene Occupation History and the Impact of...subsistence records from cave sites with Pleistocene-aged deposits in East Timor and the...Aru Islands, eastern Indonesia, Pleistocene fauna. FIGURE 1 OMITTED Recent research...
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magazine articles on: Pleistocene Epoch  - 37 results

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Pleistocene America. There are no cheetahs running...collaborators have begun arguing for "Pleistocene re-wilding," in which "megafauna...his 11 coauthors write: "we advocate Pleistocene rewilding--reinstituting ecological...
Pleistocene Archaeology. by Bradley T. Lepper...for evolutionary psychologists is the Pleistocene epoch, which is "well outside of any reliable...rhetorical wave of his hand, the entire Pleistocene and Pliocene archaeological records...
...000 years ago). The scientists saw an excess of neon about 25,000 to 40,000 years ago, coinciding with the last Pleistocene Ice Age, as well as an extraordinary peak of neon associated with a flood of groundwater 14,000 to 17,000 years ago...
...relatively moist during much of the Pleistocene epoch, which lasted from roughly 1...glaciation that characterized the Pleistocene, when snow cover and glacial...from soon after the end of the Pleistocene. These sediments must have been...
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newspaper articles on: Pleistocene Epoch  - 7 results

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...The American mink made its appearance on the mammalian scene in the Pleistocene epoch, some 1 to 2 million years ago. Surviving the mass extinctions of the late Pleistocene, the American mink evolved in its niche as a fearless predator that...
...evidence of human habitation in the Palermo area going back to 8,000BC, with the presence of cave paintings from the Pleistocene Epoch. But the city itself dates from when the Phoenicians built a settlement around the natural harbour facing the Tyrrhenian...
...history textbook, I would later find out. By the age of 10, I knew the history of the world, beginning from the Pleistocene Epoch to the end of World War II with the surrender of the Japanese Empire on the USS Missouri. In seventh grade, I perfected...
...evidence of human habitation in the Palermo area going back to 8000BC, with the presence of cave paintings from the Pleistocene Epoch. But the city itself dates from a Phoenician settlement, possibly called Ziz, on the natural harbour facing the...
...prehistoric colony of rats was disturbed and the rats emerged into daylight for the first time since the end of the Pleistocene epoch, when Strom Thurmond was a mere freshman in the Senate. The rats were delighted to find Dumpsters filled with the...
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encyclopedia articles on: Pleistocene Epoch  - 35 results

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PLEISTOCENE EPOCH pli st sen, 6th epoch of the Cenozoic...sea sediment cores indicated that the Pleistocene began more than 1.8 million years...Since the interglacial periods of the Pleistocene were of longer duration than the time...
HOLOCENE EPOCH hol sen or Recent epoch, most recent of all subdivisions...of the glaciers of the preceding Pleistocene epoch . During the Holocene epoch...have first appeared in the late Pleistocene. All of the races of modern humans...
PLIOCENE EPOCH pli sen, fifth epoch of the Cenozoic era of geologic time...than that of the preceding Miocene epoch , in California. The Pliocene formations...foreshadowed the glacial climates of the Pleistocene epoch . The life of the Pliocene...
EPOCH unit of geologic time that...subdivision of a period. The Pleistocene and Holocene epochs, for...of the Quaternary period. Epoch is also used to describe a...occurrence, such as the glacial epoch. See geology ; Geologic Timescale...
...the Americas by the end of the Pleistocene epoch , but the date of their original...emerged several times during the Pleistocene. The Asian derivation of the...9000 8500 b.c. During the Pleistocene, glaciers covered much of North...
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