some of it freezes
During an ice age, sea levels typically drop because a significant amount of water becomes locked up in glaciers and ice sheets on land. As the ice sheets expand, they draw water from the oceans, causing sea levels to decrease.
In ice age it was so cold that water froze and turned into ice. So when the temperature started to get warm the ice began to melt into equally the same water the ice was before. So all the water from rivers, lakes, etc flowed into the seas and made the sea level rise.
During the ice age, a significant amount of water was locked up in glacial ice, causing sea levels to drop. This resulted in more water being stored on land in the form of ice sheets, which led to lower sea levels globally.
Evaporation and precipitation move water from the ocean onto the ice.
Sea level falls during ice ages because more water is locked up in glaciers.
After the Ice Age, the Bering land bridge was submerged by rising sea levels due to melting ice sheets, forming the Bering Strait. This separation of land masses led to the isolation of populations and species on either side, influencing the subsequent development of biodiversity in the Americas and Asia.
During the ice age, much of the Earth's water was locked up in large ice sheets, causing sea levels to be lower than they are today. As the ice sheets melted and retracted over time, the water they released flowed into the oceans, gradually raising sea levels to their current levels.
After the ice age, much of the water and ice from melting glaciers drained into the oceans, raising sea levels. Some water also returned to the atmosphere through evaporation and precipitation. Additionally, some ice melted and formed rivers and lakes.
they would rise because the ice being created will have more mass... so if global warming happens the sea level will stay approximately the same because although the north/south poles will lose mass places like greenland etc will melt their ice and the ice caps melting will be cancelled out.
Yes. The ice melts and raises sea levels. Areas that were once dry land are submerged.
During an ice age, Earth's sea level generally drops because water is locked up in the polar ice caps and glaciers. This causes less water to be in the oceans, leading to lower sea levels compared to during interglacial periods.
During glacial periods, sea levels drop because water is stored in continental ice sheets. During interglacial periods, ice melts and sea levels rise as water is released back into the oceans. These fluctuations in sea level are part of the Earth's natural climate cycles.