Into the Icehouse
The frozen lands of the north are an unforgiving place for humans to live. The Inuit view of the cosmos is that it is ruled by no one, with no gods to create wind and sun and ice, or to provide punishment or forgiveness, or to act as Earth Mother or Father. Amid those harsh landscapes, belief is sup...
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croxfordunivpr:10.1093/oso/9780199593576.003.0013 2023-05-15T14:13:07+02:00 Into the Icehouse Zalasiewicz, Jan Williams, Mark 2012 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199593576.003.0013 unknown Oxford University Press The Goldilocks Planet book-chapter 2012 croxfordunivpr https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199593576.003.0013 2022-08-05T10:27:58Z The frozen lands of the north are an unforgiving place for humans to live. The Inuit view of the cosmos is that it is ruled by no one, with no gods to create wind and sun and ice, or to provide punishment or forgiveness, or to act as Earth Mother or Father. Amid those harsh landscapes, belief is superfluous, and only fear can be relied on as a guide. How could such a world begin, and end? In Nordic mythology, in ancient times there used to be a yet greater kingdom of ice, ruled by the ice giant, Ymir Aurgelmir. To make a world fit for humans, Ymir was killed by three brothers—Odin, Vilje, and Ve. The blood of the dying giant drowned his own children, and formed the seas, while the body of the dead giant became the land. To keep out other ice giants that yet lived in the far north, Odin and his brothers made a wall out of Ymir’s eyebrows. One may see, fancifully, those eyebrows still, in the form of the massive, curved lines of morainic hills that run across Sweden and Finland. We now have a popular image of Ymir’s domain—the past ‘Ice Age’—as snowy landscapes of a recent past, populated by mammoths and woolly rhinos and fur-clad humans (who would have been beginning to create such legends to explain the precarious world on which they lived). This image, as we have seen, represents a peculiarly northern perspective. The current ice age is geologically ancient, for the bulk of the world’s land-ice had already grown to cover almost all Antarctica, more than thirty million years ago. Nevertheless, a mere two and a half million years ago, there was a significant transition in Earth history—an intensification of the Earth’s icehouse state that spread more or less permanent ice widely across the northern polar regions of the world. This intensification— via those fiendishly complex teleconnections that characterize the Earth system—changed the face of the entire globe. The changes can be detected in the sedimentary strata that were then being deposited around the world. Book Part Antarc* Antarctica inuit Oxford University Press (via Crossref) Three Brothers ENVELOPE(-36.803,-36.803,-54.290,-54.290) |
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Oxford University Press (via Crossref) |
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description |
The frozen lands of the north are an unforgiving place for humans to live. The Inuit view of the cosmos is that it is ruled by no one, with no gods to create wind and sun and ice, or to provide punishment or forgiveness, or to act as Earth Mother or Father. Amid those harsh landscapes, belief is superfluous, and only fear can be relied on as a guide. How could such a world begin, and end? In Nordic mythology, in ancient times there used to be a yet greater kingdom of ice, ruled by the ice giant, Ymir Aurgelmir. To make a world fit for humans, Ymir was killed by three brothers—Odin, Vilje, and Ve. The blood of the dying giant drowned his own children, and formed the seas, while the body of the dead giant became the land. To keep out other ice giants that yet lived in the far north, Odin and his brothers made a wall out of Ymir’s eyebrows. One may see, fancifully, those eyebrows still, in the form of the massive, curved lines of morainic hills that run across Sweden and Finland. We now have a popular image of Ymir’s domain—the past ‘Ice Age’—as snowy landscapes of a recent past, populated by mammoths and woolly rhinos and fur-clad humans (who would have been beginning to create such legends to explain the precarious world on which they lived). This image, as we have seen, represents a peculiarly northern perspective. The current ice age is geologically ancient, for the bulk of the world’s land-ice had already grown to cover almost all Antarctica, more than thirty million years ago. Nevertheless, a mere two and a half million years ago, there was a significant transition in Earth history—an intensification of the Earth’s icehouse state that spread more or less permanent ice widely across the northern polar regions of the world. This intensification— via those fiendishly complex teleconnections that characterize the Earth system—changed the face of the entire globe. The changes can be detected in the sedimentary strata that were then being deposited around the world. |
format |
Book Part |
author |
Zalasiewicz, Jan Williams, Mark |
spellingShingle |
Zalasiewicz, Jan Williams, Mark Into the Icehouse |
author_facet |
Zalasiewicz, Jan Williams, Mark |
author_sort |
Zalasiewicz, Jan |
title |
Into the Icehouse |
title_short |
Into the Icehouse |
title_full |
Into the Icehouse |
title_fullStr |
Into the Icehouse |
title_full_unstemmed |
Into the Icehouse |
title_sort |
into the icehouse |
publisher |
Oxford University Press |
publishDate |
2012 |
url |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199593576.003.0013 |
long_lat |
ENVELOPE(-36.803,-36.803,-54.290,-54.290) |
geographic |
Three Brothers |
geographic_facet |
Three Brothers |
genre |
Antarc* Antarctica inuit |
genre_facet |
Antarc* Antarctica inuit |
op_source |
The Goldilocks Planet |
op_doi |
https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199593576.003.0013 |
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1766285519886483456 |