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Pleistocene

From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Middle Pleistocene)
"The Ice Age" redirects here. For other uses, see Ice Age (disambiguation).
Glyptodon - an old type of an animal related to the armadillo. It lived in South America during the Pleistocene.
A model of a mammoth - a hairy elephant that lived in the frozen north. The last mammoth died about 4,500 years ago.

The Pleistocene stage or epoch was a long period of time. It stretched from 2.58 million years ago to 11,700 years ago.[1] It is the first epoch of the Quaternary period and the sixth in the Cainozoic. It came after the Pliocene epoch, and before the modern-day Holocene.

Ice ages

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The Pleistocene was a time of ice ages: cold glacial periods with shorter, warmer, interglacials. During these ice ages, the world became much colder for a long time.

For much of the 20th century, geologists believed there were four "major" ice ages. Nowadays scientists think there were at least five.[2]

During these glaciations, much of the world we know was covered by ice: North America down to and past the Great Lakes; all of northern Russia and Europe; and England down to the Thames.

Many animals that lived during the Pleistocene have become extinct because of climate change and hunting by humans.[3]

Many Pleistocene mammals were larger, cold-adapted versions of animals that live now. Mammoths were a species of elephant in the ice age. Their popular name of woolly mammoth suggests the long hair which was an adaptation to the cold.

Glyptodon was something like a giant armadillo.

Ancient humans

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Ancient human species lived during the Pleistocene. In Europe and Asia the large-brained Neanderthal (Homo neanderthalensis) lived until about 30,000 years ago. Modern man did not descend from Neanderthals, but originated in Africa from another branch of the genus Homo.[4]

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References

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  1. International Commission on Stratigraphy (ICS). ICS geologic time scale
  2. "Glad You Asked: Ice Ages – What are they and what causes them?". Utah Geological Survey. 2010-09-01. Retrieved 2025-12-15.
  3. Martin P.S. and Klein R.G. eds 1984. Quaternary extinctions: a prehistoric revolution. Arizona, Tucson AZ.
  4. Klein, Richard G. 2009. The human career: human biological and cultural origins. 3rd ed, Chicago.