「glaciation」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
該当件数 : 69件
| fornia, dated to the last ice age, Wisconsin | glaciation about 13,000 years ago. |
| urian periods, culminating in the Hirnantian | glaciation and the Ordovician extinction event. |
| ue to thin, rocky soil following Pleistocene | glaciation and a slightly cooler climate, although upla |
| a was missed by the most recent Wisconsonian | glaciation, and therefore is a region of deep river val |
| ed to as 'knobs', may have partially escaped | glaciation and resemble the rugged and forested hills o |
| ng that Karl Schimper originated the idea of | glaciation and proposed the radical idea that ice sheet |
| nd and gravel as a result of the Pleistocene | glaciation and the consequent re-routing of Pittsburgh' |
| The Laurentian Abyss is a product of | glaciation and water currents from the Saint Lawrence S |
| his region was ice-free during the Wisconsin | glaciation and underwent hundreds of thousands of years |
| o species survived the most recent period of | glaciation and inhabited Europe as recently as 10,000 y |
| cal terrain shows obvious evidence of recent | glaciation and is covered by thin soil and acidic peat. |
| end moraines that were formed in the Saalian | glaciation and Weichselian Ice Age. |
| arents-Kara Ice Sheet during the Weichselian | Glaciation, approximately 80,000 years ago. |
| the Lake Superior basin during the Wisconsin | glaciation around 10,000 B.P. (Before Present). |
| fore edge of the ice sheet of the Wisconsin | glaciation, as the lobe of the Laurentide ice sheet beg |
| Glacial grooves stemming from the Wisconsin | glaciation at Kelleys Island, Ohio |
| The Huronian (Makganyene) global | glaciation began at the start of the Rhyacian and laste |
| carbonate appears at the top of the Gaskiers | Glaciation, believed by many to be global in extent. |
| ere on flows through a wide valley formed by | glaciation but with a broad flat base formed from re-wo |
| as found to be present after the Wisconsinan | glaciation, but is not a current taxon of this former P |
| During this time, | glaciation caused the climate to rapidly fluctuate and |
| es formed when this area was at the limit of | glaciation during the last Ice Age. |
| he regional landscape was strongly marked by | glaciation during the Wisconsinan ice period. |
| akawea marks the maximum southwest extent of | glaciation during the ice age. |
| Area, an area of North America which escaped | glaciation during the last ice age. |
| s, led him to recognize multiple episodes of | glaciation during the Pleistocene. |
| w it and similar plants were able to survive | glaciation events during the ice ages. |
| te of the late Precambrian showed some major | glaciation events spreading over much of the earth. |
| This region escaped the | glaciation experienced by areas to the east and west du |
| poor of nutrients but relict flora from the | glaciation grasslands grow favorably. |
| ock layers representing different periods of | glaciation, had long been known and published in Englan |
| his led subsequently to the recognition that | glaciation had affected southern England. |
| ries which first led to the recognition that | glaciation had once reached southern England. |
| Several periods of | glaciation have carved Teewinot Mountain and the other |
| Several periods of | glaciation have carved Middle Teton and the other peaks |
| Several periods of | glaciation have carved South Teton and the other peaks |
| Several periods of | glaciation have carved Mount Owen and the other peaks o |
| of the surrounding area was once subject to | glaciation, Hemlock Stone could have been the outcome o |
| sheet during the later phases of the Saalian | glaciation, i.e. during the so-called Drenthe II stage |
| imply flows through a landscape opened up by | glaciation in the last Ice Age. |
| over and rising sea levels - at the end of a | glaciation increase the rate of precipitation. |
| ly thought only to consist of the Hirnantian | glaciation itself, but has now been recognized as a lon |
| evels were lower than today's due to distant | glaciation locking up the Earth's water during ice ages |
| Later | glaciation made the valleys steeper and smoother. |
| Widespread evidence of | glaciation may be seen in the U-shaped form of various |
| When a period of | glaciation modifies the landscape by creating glacial t |
| of time, which includes the Pre-Illinoian B | glaciation of North America. |
| C4c Stage of Europe and the Pre-Illinoian J | glaciation of the early Pre-Illinoian Stage of North Am |
| A legacy of the | glaciation of this area during the last ice age is the |
| C5-6 Stage of Europe and the Pre-Illinoian I | glaciation of the early Pre-Illinoian Stage of North Am |
| Glaciation or increased snow in mountain ranges around | |
| sent in northern Arizona in late Wisconsinan | glaciation period. |
| that its origin was overlapping, interlobate | glaciation retreat, between the Lake Ontario Lobe and t |
| ned the open tundra habitat as the Wisconsin | glaciation retreated far to the north. |
| nited States, south of where the Wisconsinan | glaciation spread about 11,000 years ago. |
| t advance of ice sheets during the Illinoian | glaciation stopped just north of Garden of the Gods. |
| This formed the last gasp of the Devensian | glaciation, the final stage of the Pleistocene epoch an |
| glaciated valley (as a sidenote, because of | glaciation, the valley is also experiencing post-glacia |
| da Bog is a wetland created by the Wisconsin | glaciation, the most recent of the so-called ice ages t |
| eek publication gave a name to the Illinoian | glaciation, the southernmost penetration of glacial ice |
| ited the mountain and recognised evidence of | glaciation there . |
| as one of the few parts of England to escape | glaciation, tin ore was readily available on the surfac |
| ade the transition from the last Pleistocene | glaciation to the current interglacial, or Holocene. |
| The Huronian | glaciation took place in the Siderian between 2400 Mya |
| e presence of such polish indicates that the | glaciation was relatively recent (in geologic time scal |
| ence in sea level caused by the Wisconsinian | glaciation was likely around -400 feet (120 m) from the |
| have been formed at the end of the Wisconsin | glaciation, when retreating glaciers provided large amo |
| ch of the ‘Proto-Soar' until the Pleistocene | glaciation when the valley was blocked by sands and gra |
| eved to have been formed by the processes of | glaciation where a combination of ice sheet advances, m |
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