Mars ice cap...

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Discussion

Mojocvh

Original Poster:

16,837 posts

262 months

Thursday 3rd April 2014
quotequote all
Christopher Go has imaged the Red planet,

http://astro.christone.net/mars/index.html

quite interesting view of the [shrinking] polar ice cap...

Eric Mc

122,029 posts

265 months

Thursday 3rd April 2014
quotequote all
It's all those rovers.

Mojocvh

Original Poster:

16,837 posts

262 months

Thursday 3rd April 2014
quotequote all
Eric Mc said:
It's all those rovers.
I thought Mars had already had it's global warming catastrophe...

hehe

Eric Mc

122,029 posts

265 months

Thursday 3rd April 2014
quotequote all
So did we.

55 million years ago there were no ice caps at all.

Moonhawk

10,730 posts

219 months

Friday 4th April 2014
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Eric Mc said:
So did we.

55 million years ago there were no ice caps at all.
Indeed - it has happened several times in Earth's history.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greenhouse_and_icehou...

Interestingly - Earth only spends about 20% of its time with permanent ice caps. The "greenhouse" state appears to be the normal state for this planet.

Simpo Two

85,422 posts

265 months

Friday 4th April 2014
quotequote all
Greenhouse, mmm. Could bloody do with one ths week! Maybe I'd get some grapes that were bigger than lentils too.

Mojocvh

Original Poster:

16,837 posts

262 months

Friday 4th April 2014
quotequote all
4.5C ave today, still waiting to plant first crop of earlies ho hum.....

moreflaps

746 posts

155 months

Thursday 10th April 2014
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Moonhawk said:
Eric Mc said:
So did we.

55 million years ago there were no ice caps at all.
Interestingly - Earth only spends about 20% of its time with permanent ice caps. The "greenhouse" state appears to be the normal state for this planet.
I think your've got that wrong -UGS: "Four fairly regular glacial-interglacial cycles occurred during the past 450,000 years. The shorter interglacial cycles (10,000 to 30,000 years) were about as warm as present and alternated with much longer (70,000 to 90,000 years) glacial cycles substantially colder than present. "

Being ice bound is something we need to prevent because we seem to be due to leave the current warm period based on previous cycles...


Eric Mc

122,029 posts

265 months

Thursday 10th April 2014
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The earth has existed for 4.5 billion years. What has been the ice coverage in all that time?

Gandahar

9,600 posts

128 months

Thursday 10th April 2014
quotequote all
Eric Mc said:
The earth has existed for 4.5 billion years. What has been the ice coverage in all that time?
This is about Mars, please keep on topic, there are plenty of threads where you can hit your keyboard in support of your chosen agenda.

Thanks

Eric Mc

122,029 posts

265 months

Friday 11th April 2014
quotequote all
What "agenda" is that?


Understanding what makes Mars' ice caps ebb and flow may well be very useful in helping us understand how ours fluctuate.

Please don't tell me what I can or can't post on thread please - especially when it is relevant.