Watch an ancient ice sheet cover the British Isles then vanish, in eerie time-lapse animation

The rapid decline of the British-Irish Ice Sheet thousands of years ago may hold lessons for how melting ice sheets in Greenland and Antarctica will influence sea-level rise in the future.

Over tens of thousands of years, a massive ice sheet covered and then exposed land masses in northwestern Europe.
Over tens of thousands of years, a massive ice sheet covered and then exposed land masses in northwestern Europe.
(Image credit: BRITICE-CHRONO Project/Chris Clark)

In an animation that spans tens of thousands of years, an ancient ice sheet grows to envelope land masses that would one day be known as Great Britain and Ireland. After thousands of years elapse, the ice then retreats to expose the land once more.

Known as the British-Irish ice sheet, the frozen mass began its relentless march about  33,000 years ago. Around 10,000 years later, the land was covered in ice half a mile thick. But just 5,000 years after that, the glacier had melted away, vanishing in a mere blink of geological time. Human populations that had fled a millennia-long winter returned to settle the thawing land just as the last ice age drew to a close.

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Joshua A. Krisch
Live Science Contributor

Joshua A. Krisch is a freelance science writer. He is particularly interested in biology and biomedical sciences, but he has covered technology, environmental issues, space, mathematics, and health policy, and he is interested in anything that could plausibly be defined as science. Joshua studied biology at Yeshiva University, and later completed graduate work in health sciences at Cornell University and science journalism at New York University.