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Group: Marshall Islands (Japanese occupied)
Topic: Little Ice Age, Warm Phase III

Little Ice Age, Warm Phase III

Years: 1716 - 1789

The Little Ice Age (LIA) is a period of cooling occurring after a warmer period known as the Medieval climate optimum.

Climatologists and historians find it difficult to agree on either the start or end dates of this period.

Some confine the Little Ice Age to approximately the 16th century to the mid 19th century.

In the 13th century, pack ice had begun advancing southwards in the North Atlantic, as did glaciers in Greenland.

The three years of torrential rains beginning in 1315 usher in an era of unpredictable weather in Northern Europe which will not lift until the 19th century.

There is anecdotal evidence of expanding glaciers almost worldwide.

In contrast, a climate reconstruction based on glacial length shows no great variation from 1600 to 1850, though it shows strong retreat thereafter.

The Little Ice Age brings bitterly cold winters to many parts of the world, but is most thoroughly documented in Europe and North America.

There is evidence, however, that the Little Ice Age does affect the Southern Hemisphere.

"{Readers} take infinitely more pleasure in knowing the variety of incidents that are contained in them, without ever thinking of imitating them, believing the imitation not only difficult, but impossible: as if heaven, the sun, the elements, and men should have changed the order of their motions and power, from what they were anciently"

― Niccolò Machiavelli, Discourses on Livy (1517)