loess deposits
Land once covered by glaciers might have features such as moraines, glacial erratics, and u-shaped valleys, as well as evidence of glaciation in the form of striations and polished bedrock. In comparison, places that never had glaciers may have smoother topography and lack these distinctive glacial landforms.
Michigan was once covered by glaciers, which put an enormous amount of weight on the ground, compressing it. With the glaciers gone the ground is rebounding, and the resulting shifts can produce earthquakes. There may also be old faults left over from the formation of the continent or produced by stresses within the North American plate.
yes rocks contain fossil.
That is impossible to answer. There is nothing to compare the Earth to if that scenario happened.
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When the ice age ended, the land that was once covered in ice was now covered in vegetation and water. This led to the formation of lakes, rivers, and forests as the glaciers retreated. The land also became suitable for habitation by various species of plants and animals.
Glaciers once covered most of Wisconsin and parts northward. The warming over this period certainly made Canada more livable.
Like most of the northern hemisphere, Iceland was once much colder than it is now. Most of the island was covered by glaciers. Later on, temperatures increased, the glaciers melted, and new areas became available to plant life.
Glaciers are found on every continent except Australia. Some of the largest concentrations of glaciers are in Antarctica, Greenland, the Arctic, and high mountain ranges like the Alps, Andes, and the Himalayas.
Areas of the crust that were once covered by continental glaciers are likely still experiencing rebound, a process known as isostatic rebound. This is the slow uplift of land due to the removal of the weight of the ice sheets, causing the crust to rise.
It's Asia! Don't you look at maps!? Sorry, sometimes I'm rude like that.