P700:6, 61:7.1 Throughout the glacial period
other activities were in progress, but the action of the ice overshadows
all other phenomena in the northern latitudes. No other terrestrial activity
leaves such characteristic evidence on the topography. The distinctive
boulders and surface
cleavages, such as
potholes, lakes, displaced stone,
and rock flour, are to be found in connection with no other phenomenon
in nature. The ice is also responsible for those gentle
swells, or surface
undulations, known as
drumlins. And a glacier, as it advances,
displaces
rivers and changes the whole face of the earth. Glaciers alone leave behind
them those telltale drifts -- the ground, lateral, and terminal moraines.
These drifts, particularly the ground moraines, extend from the eastern
seaboard north and westward in North America and are found in Europe and
Siberia.
P701:1, 61:7.2 750,000
years ago the fourth ice sheet, a union of the North American central and
eastern ice fields, was well on its way south; at its height it reached
to southern Illinois, displacing the Mississippi River fifty miles to the
west, and in the east it extended as far south as the Ohio River and central
Pennsylvania.
P701:2, 61:7.3 In Asia the
Siberian ice sheet made its southernmost invasion, while in Europe the
advancing ice stopped just short of the mountain barrier of the Alps.
P701:3, 61:7.4 500,000
years ago, during the fifth advance of the ice, a new development accelerated
the course of human evolution. Suddenly and in one generation the
six colored races mutated from the aboriginal human stock. This is a doubly
important date since it also marks the arrival of the Planetary Prince.
P701:4, 61:7.5 In North
America the advancing fifth glacier consisted of a combined invasion by
all three ice centers. The eastern lobe, however, extended only a short
distance below the St. Lawrence valley, and the western ice sheet made
little southern advance. But the central lobe reached south to cover most
of the State of
Iowa. In Europe this invasion of the ice was not so extensive
as the preceding one.
P701:5, 61:7.6 250,000
years ago the sixth and last glaciation began. And despite the fact that
the northern highlands had begun to sink slightly, this was the period
of greatest snow deposition on the northern ice fields.
P701:6, 61:7.7 In this invasion
the three great ice sheets coalesced into one vast ice mass, and all of
the western mountains participated in this glacial activity. This was the
largest of all ice invasions in North America; the ice moved south over
fifteen hundred miles from its pressure centers, and North America experienced
its lowest temperatures.
P701:7, 61:7.8 200,000
years ago, during the advance of the last glacier, there occurred an episode
which had much to do with the march of events on Urantia -- the Lucifer
rebellion.
P701:8, 61:7.9 150,000
years ago the sixth and last glacier reached its farthest points of southern
extension, the western ice sheet crossing just over the Canadian border;
the central coming down into Kansas,
Missouri, and Illinois; the eastern
sheet advancing south and covering the greater portion of Pennsylvania
and Ohio.
P701:9, 61:7.10 This is
the glacier that sent forth the many tongues, or ice
lobes, which carved
out the present-day lakes, great and small. During its retreat the North
American system of Great Lakes was produced. And Urantian geologists have
very accurately deduced the various stages of this development and have
correctly surmised that these bodies of water did, at different times,
empty first into the Mississippi valley, then eastward into the Hudson
valley, and finally by a northern route into the St. Lawrence. It is thirty-seven
thousand years since the connected Great Lakes system began to empty out
over the present Niagara route.
P702:1, 61:7.11 100,000
years ago, during the retreat of the last glacier, the vast polar ice sheets
began to form, and the center of ice accumulation moved considerably northward.
And as long as the polar regions continue to be covered with ice, it is
hardly possible for another glacial age to occur, regardless of future
land elevations or modification of ocean currents.
P702:2, 61:7.12 This last
glacier was one hundred thousand years advancing, and it required a like
span of time to complete its northern retreat. The temperate regions have
been free from the ice for a little over fifty thousand years.
P702:3, 61:7.13 The rigorous
glacial period destroyed many species and radically changed numerous others.
Many were sorely sifted by the
to-and-fro migration which was made necessary
by the advancing and retreating ice. Those animals which followed the glaciers
back and forth over the land were the bear, bison, reindeer, musk ox, mammoth,
and mastodon.
P702:4, 61:7.14 The mammoth
sought the open
prairies, but the mastodon preferred the sheltered fringes
of the forest regions. The mammoth, until a late date, ranged from Mexico
to Canada; the Siberian variety became wool covered. The mastodon persisted
in North America until exterminated by the red man much as the white man
later killed off the bison.
P702:5, 61:7.15 In North
America, during the last glaciation, the horse, tapir, llama, and saber-toothed
tiger became extinct. In their places sloths, armadillos, and water
hogs
came up from South America.
P702:6, 61:7.16 The enforced
migration of life before the advancing ice led to an extraordinary commingling
of plants and of animals, and with the retreat of the final ice invasion,
many arctic species of both plants and animals were left stranded high
upon certain mountain peaks, whither they had journeyed to escape destruction
by the glacier. And so, today, these dislocated plants and animals may
be found high up on the Alps of Europe and even on the Appalachian Mountains
of North America.
P702:7, 61:7.17 The
ice age is the last completed geologic period, the so-called
Pleistocene,
over two million years in length.
P702:8, 61:7.18
35,000
years ago marks the termination of the great ice age excepting in the polar
regions of the planet. This date is also significant in that it approximates
the arrival of a Material Son and Daughter and the beginning of the Adamic
dispensation, roughly corresponding to the beginning of the
Holocene
or
postglacial period.
P702:9, 61:7.19 This
narrative, extending from the rise of mammalian life to the retreat of
the ice and on down to historic times, covers a span of almost fifty million
years. This is the last -- the current -- geologic period and is known
to your researchers as the Cenozoic or recent-times era.
P702:10, 61:7.20 [Sponsored
by a Resident Life Carrier.]