It shaped much of New England.
Huge amounts of gravel were pushed around, creating Long Island.
It covered Canada under thousands of feet of ice.
30%
Well lake Erie branches off of the city of Erie Pennsylvania, same with Ontario Canada, and Michigan state, Huron, Superior............. H.O.M.E.S Huron, Ontario, Michigan, Erie, Superior
north pole , ( the last person answer this , " yes or no " question is wrong.) it is north pole
His last was in Figueres north of Barcelona, Spain.
August 31, 2010
Last Glacial Maximum
Glaciers from the last ace age formed the Great Lakes as well as many of the North American lakes.
Paleo-Indians entered the North American continent by crossing the Bering land bridge, a landmass that connected Asia and North America during the last Ice Age. This migration is estimated to have occurred around 15,000-20,000 years ago.
Vikings led by Leif Eriksson are believed to be the first explorers of the North American continent around 1000 AD, landing on the coast of present-day Canada. Their settlement, known as Vinland, did not last long.
2001 ( salt lake city )
vermont
The North American continent has been moving westward due to the process of plate tectonics. It has been drifting away from the spreading center in the Atlantic Ocean, leading to the opening of the Atlantic Ocean and the formation of the mid-Atlantic ridge.
The North American Ice sheets melted roughly 10,000 to 12,000 years ago at the end of the last Ice Age, leading to the formation of many of the landforms and bodies of water we see today in North America.
cause there is and in southern US it's a little worm so glaciers couldn't really last last there as long in more up north.
During the peak of the last ice age, approximately 30% of Earth's surface was covered by glaciers. These glaciers were part of massive ice sheets that extended over North America, Europe, and Asia.
The Great Lakes were created by glaciers in the last ice age.
Malasprina and Athabasca were two glaciers that swept over North America. They carved the Great Lakes.