Skip to main content
Home
Explore the Ice Age Midwest
.....plants and animals of the Pleistocene
  • About
    • M3 Project
  • Home
  • Mammals
    • Artiodactyls
    • Carnivores
    • Insectivores (Soricomorpha)
    • Lagomorphs
    • Proboscideans
    • Rodents
    • Xenarthra
  • Plants
    • Conifers
    • Deciduous Trees
    • Flowering Plants
  • Paleoclimate
    • What is an Ice Age
    • When have Ice Ages occurred?
    • Why do Ice Ages happen?
  • Paleoecology
    • Forest Tundra
    • Spruce Ash Forest
    • Spruce Parkland
    • Spruce Pine Forest
    • Steppe Tundra
Feed aggregator >

Sources

Science Daily

  • A Greenland glacier is cracking open in real time 3 days 18 hours old
  • Did an exploding comet wipe out the mammoths? 1 week 11 hours old
  • Scientists found a dangerous feedback loop accelerating Arctic warming 1 week 3 days old
  • Hidden heat beneath Greenland could change sea level forecasts 1 week 5 days old
  • Global warming could trigger the next ice age 2 weeks 5 days old
More

BackyardPaleo Blog

  • History, Salt, and MASTODONS!!! 8 years 6 months old
  • How Many Mammoths? 9 years 8 months old
  • The Elephant in the corner of the room (and other thoughts on dating the Pleistocene extinctions) 10 years 10 months old
  • Excuses, excuses, excuses… 10 years 10 months old
  • Natural History Collections for future Ecosystems 11 years 9 months old
More
Subscribe to OPML feed

This material is based in part on work supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant No. 1050638. 

Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation. The Mammoths and Mastodont Project Team gratefully acknowledges their support.

  • Home
  • ISM
  • Privacy
  • Accessibility
  • IDNR
  • About

User login

  • Request new password
  • About
  • Home
  • Mammals
  • Plants
  • Paleoclimate
  • Paleoecology
  • Log In