How many ice ages has the Earth had, and could humans live through one?

How many ice ages has the Earth had, and could humans live through one?
This article was originally published at The Conversation. (opens in new tab) The publication contributed the article to Space. com's Expert Voices: Op-Ed & Insights .
Denise Su (opens in new tab) , Associate Professor, Arizona State University How many ice ages has the Earth had, and could humans live through one? — Mason C. , age 8, Hobbs, New Mexico First, what is an ice age (opens in new tab) ? It's when the Earth has cold temperatures for a long time — millions to tens of millions of years — that lead to ice sheets and glaciers covering large areas of its surface. We know that the Earth has had at least five major ice ages (opens in new tab) .
The first one happened about 2 billion years ago and lasted about 300 million years. The most recent one started about 2. 6 million years ago, and in fact, we are still technically in it.
So why isn't the Earth covered in ice right now? It's because we are in a period known as an "interglacial. " In an ice age, temperatures will fluctuate between colder and warmer levels. Ice sheets and glaciers melt during warmer phases, which are called interglacials, and expand during colder phases, which are called glacials.
Right now we are in the most recent ice age's warm interglacial period, which began about 11,000 years ago. When most people talk about the "ice age," they are usually referring to the last glacial period, which began about 115,000 years ago and ended about 11,000 years ago with the start of the current interglacial period. During that time, the planet was much cooler than it is now.
At its peak, when ice sheets covered most of North America, the average global temperature was about 46 degrees Fahrenheit (opens in new tab) (8 degrees Celsius). That's 11 degrees F (6 degrees C) cooler than the global annual average today. That difference might not sound like a lot, but it resulted in most of North America and Eurasia being covered in ice sheets.
Earth was also much drier, and sea level was much lower (opens in new tab) , since most of the Earth's water was trapped in the ice sheets. Steppes (opens in new tab) , or dry grassy plains, were common. So were savannas (opens in new tab) , or warmer grassy plains and deserts.
Many animals present during the ice age (opens in new tab) would be familiar to you, including brown bears, caribou and wolves. But there were also megafauna that went extinct at the end of the ice age, like mammoths, mastodons, saber-toothed cats (opens in new tab) and giant ground sloths (opens in new tab) . There are different ideas about why these animals went extinct (opens in new tab) .
One is that humans hunted them into extinction when they came in contact with the megafauna. Yes, people just like us lived through the ice age. Since our species, Homo sapiens , emerged about 300,000 years ago in Africa (opens in new tab) , we have spread around the world.
During the ice age, some populations remained in Africa and did not experience the full effects of the cold. Others moved into other parts of the world, including the cold, glacial environments of Europe. And they weren't alone.
At the beginning of the ice age, there were other species of hominins — a group that includes our immediate ancestors and our closest relatives — throughout Eurasia, like the Neanderthals (opens in new tab) in Europe and the mysterious Denisovans (opens in new tab) in Asia. Both of these groups seem to have gone extinct before the end of the ice age. There are lots of ideas about how our species survived the ice age when our hominin cousins did not.
Some think that it has to do with how adaptable we are, and how we used our social and communication skills and tools (opens in new tab) . And it appears that humans didn’t hunker down during the ice age. Instead they moved into new areas.
For a long time it was thought that humans did not enter North America until after the ice sheets started to melt. But fossilized footprints (opens in new tab) found at White Sands National Park (opens in new tab) in New Mexico show that humans have been in North America since at least 23,000 years ago — close to the peak of the last ice age. This article is republished from The Conversation (opens in new tab) under a Creative Commons license.
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