Editing 1225: Ice Sheets
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{{w|Toronto}} and {{w|Montreal}} are both {{w|Canada|Canadian}} cities, while {{w|Boston}} and {{w|Chicago}} are in the {{w|United States}}. The skylines of each city are shown at the bottom of the ice sheet to scale. The tallest structure shown is the {{w|CN Tower}} in Toronto, the tallest free-standing structure in the {{w|Western Hemisphere}}, at a height of 553 m. The tallest ice sheet is 3.3 km tall, almost six times as tall as that tower. Although, over Toronto, the ice was "only" 2.1 km tall. | {{w|Toronto}} and {{w|Montreal}} are both {{w|Canada|Canadian}} cities, while {{w|Boston}} and {{w|Chicago}} are in the {{w|United States}}. The skylines of each city are shown at the bottom of the ice sheet to scale. The tallest structure shown is the {{w|CN Tower}} in Toronto, the tallest free-standing structure in the {{w|Western Hemisphere}}, at a height of 553 m. The tallest ice sheet is 3.3 km tall, almost six times as tall as that tower. Although, over Toronto, the ice was "only" 2.1 km tall. | ||
β | The tallest ice sheet takes up 265 pixels. From that, each pixel is about 12.4 meters and the height of the panels is 3.7 km with less than 200 m of the ground shown in black below the cities making the white "air" above ground reaching up to 3.5 km, leaving only 200 m of air above the highest ice sheet. | + | The tallest ice sheet takes up 265 pixels. From that, each pixel is about 12.4 meters and the height of the panels is 3.7 km with less than 200 m of the ground shown in black below the cities making the white "air" above ground reaching up to 3.5 km, leaving only 200 m of air above the highest ice sheet.{{What?}} |
The title text references the "[https://notendur.hi.is//~oi/AG-326%202006%20readings/Canadian%20Arctic/Dyke_QSR2002.pdf The Laurentide and Innuitian ice sheets during the Last Glacial Maximum (PDF)]," an actual series of scientific papers about the ice sheet (see figure 4). But it also refers to the animated {{w|Ice_Age_(film_series)|''Ice Age''}} film series, specifically to ''{{w|Ice Age: the Meltdown}}'', and ''{{w|Ice Age: Continental Drift}}'' which are the second and fourth Ice Age films. | The title text references the "[https://notendur.hi.is//~oi/AG-326%202006%20readings/Canadian%20Arctic/Dyke_QSR2002.pdf The Laurentide and Innuitian ice sheets during the Last Glacial Maximum (PDF)]," an actual series of scientific papers about the ice sheet (see figure 4). But it also refers to the animated {{w|Ice_Age_(film_series)|''Ice Age''}} film series, specifically to ''{{w|Ice Age: the Meltdown}}'', and ''{{w|Ice Age: Continental Drift}}'' which are the second and fourth Ice Age films. |