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Description - The Little Ice Age by Jean Grove

Since The Little Ice Age was published in 1988, interest in climatic history has grown rapidly and research in the area has flourished. A vast amount of new data has become available from sources such as ice cores, speleothems and tree-rings. The picture that we have of past climates and glacier oscillations has extended further into the past and has become more detailed. However, the knowledge of climate change on the decennial and centennial time-scale, to which glacier history can contribute, is scarce and is in demand for attempting to predict future change, especially with regard to global warming. New chapters and material have been included throughout the book, which tend to confirm and elaborate on the earlier conclusions of the first edition. The glacial evidence has been presented in the context of the oceanographic and icecap studies that have provided such exciting results.
Little Ice Ages is structured in three parts: The first details the evidence for glacier variations in the last thousand years in different parts of the world and the associated climatic fluctuations, The second brings together the evidence for the timing of glacier variations in the course of the Holocene, The third views the Holocene record in a longer time context, especially as it appears in ice cores and goes on to consider the likely causes of climatic variability on a little ice age time scale and some of its physical, biological and human consequences. It becomes apparent in Little Ice Ages , that the glacier record provides a valuable indication of the nature of climatic fluctuations on the land areas of the globe. The record points to periods of cooling which were more numerous and less continuous than was believed to be the case 20 years ago. There appears to be no single explanation for the variability. Volcanism, solar variability and ocean currents have all played their parts and the possibility of prediction continues to present many problems.
Some authorities have thrown doubt on the existence of the Little Ice Age, but Little Ice Ages makes the case for a climatic sequence that can usefully be called the Little Ice Age and which had predecessors occurring at intervals of several centuries throughout much of the last 10, 000 years.

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