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Post by nei on May 31, 2018 10:44:18 GMT -5
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Post by Lommaren on May 31, 2018 11:06:44 GMT -5
South-facing Nyköping wouldn't mean much being that tundra-ish.
If the sun gets hotter on the other hand (nobody really knows for sure how much it'll warm) then the climate might be similar.
Best climates would probably be near the coast in Alaska.
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Post by Mörön on May 31, 2018 12:02:37 GMT -5
The area around the Atlantic sea would be very dry, probably similar to the Caspian sea of today. New Zealand and the Sydney area in Australia would have my ideal climates though.
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Post by Giorbanguly on May 31, 2018 14:50:29 GMT -5
Will certainly be easier for muzzies to immigrate to Europe
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Post by Lommaren on May 31, 2018 15:02:16 GMT -5
Except no-one will want to live in that tundra GiorbangulyThere's an overwhelming risk Nyköping could resemble something out of Labrador by then.
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Post by knot on May 31, 2018 16:58:19 GMT -5
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Post by Mörön on May 31, 2018 17:56:10 GMT -5
Australia looks to be at a markedly lower latitude on that map, so the climates will be nothing but tropical gayshit That new mountain range looks promising, however! The Aussie Himalayas...Black Springs could rise to 5,354 m AMSL at Shooters Hill if that's where the new plateau & tablelands are Damn...i didn't realize the dashed lines are the tropical demarcation latitudinally. Looks like Scandinavia and points southeast for me. Probably some decent highland climates in the Andes, Himalayas, and the new Aussie mountain range.
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Post by Deleted on May 31, 2018 19:32:55 GMT -5
South-facing Nyköping wouldn't mean much being that tundra-ish. If the sun gets hotter on the other hand (nobody really knows for sure how much it'll warm) then the climate might be similar. Best climates would probably be near the coast in Alaska. Just as likely to be colder rather than warmer. It's a long enough time frame to cycle between warm periods and ice ages.
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Post by Steelernation on May 31, 2018 22:00:46 GMT -5
Looks like we’d be right on the north side of the new mountain range. Looks like a similar latitude but much more inland.
Looks like we’d be more continental, drier, and actually have some nice scenery nearby. I’d probably prefer this scenario.
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Post by Deleted on Jun 1, 2018 2:52:59 GMT -5
Brexit has been reversed.
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Post by Babu on Jun 1, 2018 5:13:44 GMT -5
Sweden used to be tropical millions of years ago. That's why there's so much limestone on Gotland
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Post by knot on Jun 1, 2018 5:17:31 GMT -5
Sweden used to be tropical millions of years ago. That's why there's so much limestone on Gotland Ever heard of Lund or Visby?! Ignoramus, fucken
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Post by Babu on Jun 1, 2018 5:29:08 GMT -5
Sweden used to be tropical millions of years ago. That's why there's so much limestone on Gotland Ever heard of Lund or Visby?! Ignoramus, fucken Lol. Ignoramus?
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Post by Lommaren on Jun 1, 2018 8:37:52 GMT -5
That angle between India and Antarctica around the equator surrounded by hot land must under today's sun strength have some insane SST's...
Must be like Djibouti all the way around that sea.
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Post by grega94 on Jun 3, 2018 18:27:09 GMT -5
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Post by srfoskey on Jun 4, 2018 13:00:52 GMT -5
My current climate looks like it would probably be tropical semi-desert. The future northwestern parts of North America look like they'd be best for me, or maybe the northern part of Africa (but that might be too dry).
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Post by Deleted on Jun 5, 2018 3:20:12 GMT -5
London would go from a C to an F climate. Spain would be even colder jajaja.
Looks like a very arid continent with very hot summers and cold winters in the interior, and a steamy tropical Indian Ocean.
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Post by Hlidskjalf on Jun 18, 2018 5:37:41 GMT -5
Bear in mind that 250 million years ago Earth was much warmer than today.
We are currently living in a cold period which began 2,5 million years ago, with multiple ice ages which last 100 000 years each. The short warmer periods last for only 10 000 years, and these warmish periods are still very cold compared to 250 mill years ago.
So in 250 million years we would probably have an interely different climate than the current. The entire Earth may be tropical even at the poles, or it could be covered with ice down to the equator.
Humanity would probably be extinct, have colonized the milky way galaxy and/or we have uploaded our consciousness to computer simulations long before this. So I probably wouldn't care by this point.
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Post by P London on Jun 19, 2018 4:23:11 GMT -5
The exact climate of 250m years into the future can't be verified but there would definitely be a lot of deserts and hyper continental climates. Mountain ranges will probably act as massive borders between regions with different sides of those ranges having extremely different climates.
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Post by Mörön on Jun 19, 2018 11:41:03 GMT -5
The exact climate of 250m years into the future can't be verified but there would definitely be a lot of deserts and hyper continental climates. Mountain ranges will probably act as massive borders between regions with different sides of those ranges having extremely different climates. and the mountains themselves having very interesting climates. That's where all the fun is to be had!
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