When were the interglacials?
Last time you and crock said 25k years ago and 125k years ago, which was par for the course.
No matter. Greenland and AA grew ice straight through both, proving the definition of interglacial was completely refuted during the time of the so-called interglacial...
The National Science Foundation Ice Core Facility (NSF-ICF) — formerly the U.S. National Ice Core Laboratory (NICL) — is a facility for storing, curating, and studying meteoric ice cores recovered from the glaciated regions of the world.
icecores.org
The oldest continuous ice core records extend to 130,000 years in Greenland, and 800,000 years in Antarctica.
and neither one of those goes even a full mile down. AA's ice is 2.5 miles thick, and the lower the ice core layer, the thinner and more compressed it is.
There is no such thing as an "interglacial." The data proves that. What you cannot disprove is the actual definition of ICE AGE and how that causes actual Earth climate change...
What is an ICE AGE? Most apparently still believe it is a terrifying horror movie event where Earth all at once freezes up. The data has never supported such a scenario. Since 2010, there has been a massive effort to re-write Earth climate history into a series of rapid "glaciations" and ice...
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