Climate and landscape in the Pleistocene

Climate and landscape in the Pleistocene
Lesson goals:
1. Define Pleistocene and Holocene period (using the atlas)
2. Discuss dolmens
3. Review the two main ice ages (Saale en Weichsel)


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Slide 1: Slide
AardrijkskundeMiddelbare schoolhavoLeerjaar 2

This lesson contains 11 slides, with interactive quizzes and text slides.

time-iconLesson duration is: 45 min

Items in this lesson

Climate and landscape in the Pleistocene
Lesson goals:
1. Define Pleistocene and Holocene period (using the atlas)
2. Discuss dolmens
3. Review the two main ice ages (Saale en Weichsel)


Slide 1 - Slide

Hunnebedden / Dolmens
 The so-called 'hunebedden' or dolmens were created by men during the stone age. They originally came from Scandinavia. About 200,000 years ago, during the second last ice age, most of northern Europe including our country was covered by a thick layer of ice. The big erratic boulders were transported  to the Netherlands by slow moving glaciers.  

Slide 2 - Slide

What were 'hunnebedden' (dolmens) used for?
A
Shelter
B
Places to gather
C
Graves
D
Storage of food

Slide 3 - Quiz

What is another name for an ice age?
A
Pleistocene
B
glacial period
C
Holocene
D
interglacial

Slide 4 - Quiz

Saale Glacial 

Slide 5 - Slide

Saale Glacial
  • Ice covered large part of the Netherlands (HUN - line = Haarlem - Utrecht Nijmegen) DRAWING
  • The rest of the Netherlands was a polar desert (very cold)
  • Moraines formed because ice pushed material forward (glacial sediments) forming the Utrechtse Heuvelrug. 

Slide 6 - Slide

The ice reached no further than the HUN - line

Stuwwallen = terminal moraine

Keileem = boulder clay

Slide 7 - Slide

Weichsel Glacial

Slide 8 - Slide

Weichsel glacial
  • Ice covered Scandinavia
  • Most of the Netherlands was a polar desert
  • South Limburg had some vegetation on its hills
  • Wind-borne sand (dekzand) form the former North Sea covered the Netherlands.
  • Loess (löss) covered South Limburg 
  • (DRAWING)

Slide 9 - Slide

How could the wind-borne sand come from the former North Sea?
A
The water would wash the sand onshore
B
The sea water was stored in the ice caps
C
There was enough space
D
The wind blew very hard

Slide 10 - Quiz

Why was the lighter loess trapped in South Limburg? This is because
A
rivers carried it towards South Limburg.
B
there was enough sand left.
C
hills and vegetation trapped the loess.
D
the winds in this area were not very strong.

Slide 11 - Quiz