Copilot:
Tell me if this disastrous scenario is plausible, and if not, what saves things for humanity: As a result of consecutive Ice Ages, we loose more and more land to sinking land masses (a bit like Doggerland). Population dwindles, and the capacity to respond deteriorates...
Let’s dig into this with the kind of layered, physical‑realism lens you enjoy. The short version: your scenario is evocative, but the physics of Earth’s climate system and crustal dynamics don’t quite allow it to unfold that way. And the reasons why are actually fascinating — they reveal the built‑in “safety valves” that prevent humanity from being erased by a Doggerland‑style drowning during an Ice Age.
Below is a clean breakdown.
🌍 Is your scenario physically plausible?
❄️ 1. Consecutive Ice Ages don’t cause sinking land — they cause rising land
During an Ice Age, enormous ice sheets accumulate on continents. This produces:
Isostatic depression: the weight of ice pushes land down.
Isostatic rebound: when ice melts, land rebounds upward.
But crucially:
Ice Ages lower sea level, because water is locked in ice.
Interglacials raise sea level, because ice melts.
So the Doggerland analogy is actually the opposite of an Ice Age scenario:
Doggerland drowned after the Ice Age, when sea levels rose ~120 m.
During an Ice Age, Doggerland would have been bigger, not smaller.
➤ Therefore:
Ice Ages do not sink land or drown continents. They expose more land.
🌊 2. Could land sink independently of sea level?
Yes — but not globally, and not in a way that tracks Ice Age cycles.
Land can sink due to:
tectonic subsidence
sediment loading
mantle dynamics
local isostatic effects
But these are:
regional, not global
slow, on the order of mm/year
not synchronized with climate cycles
You cannot get a worldwide “progressive drowning” of continents from these processes.
🌡️ 3. Could multiple Ice Ages in a row collapse human civilization?
Surprisingly, no — at least not in the way you describe.
Humanity has already survived:
dozens of glacial cycles
population bottlenecks
volcanic winters
megadroughts
sea‑level swings of 120 m
And we did this with:
stone tools
no agriculture
no global communication
Modern humanity has:
global food networks
energy storage
migration capacity
scientific forecasting
genetic diversity
technological redundancy
Even a severe glacial period would:
shift populations southward
reduce habitable zones
stress agriculture
…but not cause a civilizational collapse to the point of “no capacity to respond.”
🧭 So what actually “saves” humanity?
Here’s the interesting part: the Earth system itself prevents your scenario from spiraling into extinction.
🛡️ 1. Ice Ages self‑limit
Ice sheets grow until:
albedo increases
CO₂ drops
orbital cycles shift
ice reaches latitudes where summer melting exceeds winter accumulation
This creates a natural cap on glaciation.
🛡️ 2. Sea level cannot rise during an Ice Age
Your scenario requires:
ice growing
sea level rising
land sinking
But physics forces:
ice growing → sea level falling
ice melting → sea level rising
You can’t have both simultaneously.
🛡️ 3. Human adaptability is extreme
Even with:
shrinking coastlines
colder climates
resource stress
humans:
migrate
innovate
reorganize
preserve knowledge
We’ve done it repeatedly.
🔥 Could a modified version of your scenario be plausible?
Yes — if you flip the mechanism.
A more realistic catastrophic scenario would be:
rapid warming, not cooling
ice sheet collapse, not growth
sea level rise, not fall
coastal megacities drowning, not expanding land
This is physically consistent and historically precedented (e.g., Meltwater Pulse 1A).
(meltwater pulses are rapid release of meltwater into the oceans from the collapse of continental ice sheets)
But that’s the opposite of what you proposed.
🧩 If you want your scenario for world‑building or modeling
You can make it plausible by adjusting one variable:
✔️ Instead of Ice Ages, use mantle‑driven subsidence
For example:
A superplume collapses
A craton destabilizes
A megafault causes continental sagging
A methane‑hydrate release triggers runaway warming and sea‑level rise
Then you get:
shrinking land
population collapse
deteriorating response capacity
This would be geophysically coherent.
💬 Want to push this further?
If you want, we can:
build a fully coherent catastrophic‑Earth scenario
map timelines, population impacts, and survival strategies
compare Ice Age vs. warming vs. tectonic collapse
design a scientifically grounded dystopia or alternate history
You tell me the direction, and I’ll help you craft something that feels real.
Fine, repurpose the scenario in terms of coming out of Ice Ages. What part of the Globe keeps going...
Let’s reshape your scenario into something that does fit the physics of deglaciation — and still gives you the dramatic, civilization‑straining pressure you’re aiming for. Coming out of an Ice Age is one of the most chaotic, dangerous, and uneven transitions Earth ever experiences. And it absolutely can create a world where some regions collapse while others keep going.
Below is a grounded, physically coherent version of your scenario.
🌡️ Coming Out of an Ice Age: What Actually Happens
Deglaciation is violent. Not metaphorically — physically.
When an Ice Age ends, the world experiences:
Rapid sea‑level rise (up to 4–5 m per century during meltwater pulses)
Massive coastal flooding
Collapse of ice‑dammed lakes
Mega‑tsunamis from ice shelf failures
Chaotic climate swings (Younger Dryas–style cold snaps)...https://lessthan3ley.wordpress.com/2014/06/27/lake-agassiz/
Isostatic rebound that warps coastlines and river systems
Shifts in monsoons and storm tracks
This is the period when Doggerland drowned, when the Black Sea flooded, when North America’s drainage reorganized, and when human populations were forced into radical migrations.
So your scenario becomes:
Not sinking land, but rising seas + unstable land
Not dwindling land from cold, but dwindling land from meltwater
Not population collapse from glaciation, but collapse from deglaciation chaos
This is physically consistent and historically precedented.
🌍 Which parts of the world “keep going”?
During deglaciation, survival depends on three factors:
1. Distance from melting ice sheets
Regions far from the Laurentide, Fennoscandian, and Patagonian ice sheets avoid:
isostatic warping
glacial outburst floods
mega‑tsunamis
catastrophic river reorganization
2. Elevation above rapidly rising seas
Low‑lying coasts drown first:
Northern Europe
Eastern North America
Southeast Asia’s continental shelves
The Persian Gulf basin
Highlands and plateaus become refuges.
3. Climate stability during the transition
Some regions experience wild swings in rainfall and temperature; others remain relatively stable.
🧭 Regions that remain functional or even thrive
These are the places that “keep going” in your scenario — the ones that maintain continuity, population, and adaptive capacity.
🟤 1. The African Highlands
Ethiopia
Kenya
Tanzania
Rwanda/Burundi
South African plateau
Why they survive:
Far from ice sheets
High elevation
Stable rainfall patterns
No catastrophic sea‑level impacts
Historically, these regions were refugia during past climate swings.
🟤 2. The Tibetan Plateau and Himalayan foothills
Nepal
Bhutan
Northern India
Western China
Why they survive:
High elevation
Large freshwater sources
Distance from marine flooding
They face monsoon shifts, but not drowning.
🟤 3. The Andes
Peru
Bolivia
Ecuador
Northern Chile/Argentina
Why they survive:
High elevation
Stable climate zones
Distance from northern ice sheets
The Andes have been human refuges for 12,000+ years.
🟤 4. Australia’s interior highlands
Great Dividing Range
Tasmanian highlands
Why they survive:
No glaciation
Minimal sea‑level impact
Stable continental interior
Australia becomes a climate refuge in many deglaciation models.
🟤 5. Central Asia
Kazakhstan uplands
Mongolia
Altai region
Why they survive:
High elevation
Continental climate stability
No major flooding
These regions were migration corridors during past deglaciations.
🌊 Regions that collapse or lose continuity
These are the places that don’t keep going — the ones that lose land, infrastructure, and population.
🔵 1. Northern Europe
UK
Scandinavia
Baltic region
Why they collapse:
Isostatic rebound warps coastlines
Sea‑level rise floods lowlands
Meltwater pulses drown Doggerland‑like regions
🔵 2. Eastern North America
St. Lawrence basin
Hudson Bay rim
U.S. East Coast
Why they collapse:
Laurentide meltwater floods
River systems reorganize
Sea‑level rise swamps coastal plains
🔵 3. Southeast Asia
Sundaland (Indonesia, Malaysia, Vietnam)
Mekong and Irrawaddy deltas
Why they collapse:
120 m sea‑level rise drowns continental shelves
Monsoon chaos
Loss of arable land
🔵 4. Middle East coastal basins
Persian Gulf
Red Sea coasts
Why they collapse:
Rapid flooding
Saltwater intrusion
Extreme heat during interglacial peaks
🧩 What this gives you for your scenario
You now have a world where:
Land is disappearing, but because of meltwater, not sinking
Civilizations near coasts collapse
Highland refuges become the new centers of continuity
Population dwindles, not from cold, but from displacement and resource chaos
Response capacity deteriorates because infrastructure is coastal and gets drowned
Humanity survives, but in fragmented, inland, elevated pockets
This is a scientifically coherent, dramatic, and narratively rich scenario.
If you want, we can map:
migration routes
which cultures survive
how technology regresses or adapts
how geopolitics reorganizes around highland refuges
Just tell me the direction you want to take it
I have read that - at one point - the entirety of human population was down to some 20,000 individuals. What caused that?
You’re touching one of the most intriguing and hotly debated chapters of human evolutionary history: the population bottlenecks. And yes — several studies have suggested that at certain points, the global population of our ancestors may have dropped to something on the order of 20,000 individuals, or even fewer.
But the cause depends on which bottleneck we’re talking about, because there are two major candidates in the scientific literature.
Below is a clean, evidence‑based breakdown grounded in the search results.
🌋 1. The Toba Super‑Eruption Hypothesis (~74,000 years ago)
This is the most famous explanation for a near‑extinction event.
Some researchers propose that the Toba supervolcano in Indonesia erupted catastrophically, triggering:
volcanic winter
global cooling
collapse of ecosystems
famine and migration bottlenecks
This theory suggests the human population may have dropped to a few thousand individuals globally.
However:
Genetic evidence is mixed.
Some populations (e.g., in Africa) show continuity through this period.
Many scientists now think Toba was disruptive but not globally apocalyptic.
So Toba remains possible, but not universally accepted.
🧊 2. The Deep Ancestral Bottleneck (~930,000 years ago)
A much more recent study (2023) proposed a far older and more severe bottleneck:
Occurring around 930,000 years ago
Lasting ~100,000 years
Reducing the ancestral human population to ~1,280 breeding individuals
This claim comes from a genomic modeling paper suggesting that almost 99% of human ancestors may have been wiped out during this period.
Possible causes include:
severe climate cooling
prolonged drought
habitat fragmentation
loss of food sources
This is still controversial — the method is new, and not all paleoanthropologists agree with the interpretation.
🌍 3. Multiple Smaller Bottlenecks Throughout Human History
Genetic studies show that many human groups have experienced bottlenecks at different times due to:
climate swings
migrations
founder effects
isolation
local catastrophes
These events reduce genetic diversity but don’t necessarily imply global near‑extinction. This pattern is well‑documented across many populations.
🧬 So where does the “20,000 individuals” number come from?
That figure is a general estimate of the effective population size of early Homo sapiens during parts of the Late Pleistocene.
It reflects:
limited genetic diversity
small breeding populations
scattered, isolated groups
It does not necessarily mean only 20,000 humans were alive — just that the breeding population was roughly that size.
🧭 The most likely cause?
Based on current evidence:
Not one single catastrophe, but
a combination of climate instability, habitat fragmentation, and small, dispersed populations
The Toba eruption may have intensified an already small population, but the deeper bottleneck around 930,000 years ago — if confirmed — would have been driven by long-term climate stress, not a single event.
If you want, we can dig into:
how these bottlenecks shaped human evolution
why genetic diversity is so low compared to other species
how small populations survived and expanded
what this means for your Ice Age/deglaciation scenario
Just tell me where you want to take it.
I was just trying to find what combination of events might extinguish or cripple humanity irrevocably (tied to climate events)...
You’re asking the right kind of question — not “what kills us instantly,” but what combination of climate‑driven stresses could push humanity past the point of recovery. And the truth is: single events almost never do it. It’s compound stressors that break complex systems.
What follows is a grounded, physically realistic map of the only climate‑linked combinations that could plausibly cripple humanity beyond recovery — and the built‑in limits that usually prevent total extinction.
🌡️ 1. Runaway Warming + Hydrological Collapse
This is the closest thing Earth can produce to a global, civilization‑ending cascade.
🔥 Trigger
Rapid warming (5–8°C globally)
Collapse of monsoons
Persistent megadroughts across food‑producing regions
🧨 Consequences
Agricultural belts fail simultaneously
Freshwater systems collapse
Wet‑bulb temperatures exceed survivability in tropical regions
Mass migration overwhelms remaining stable zones
🧩 Why this could cripple humanity
Humans can’t survive >35°C wet‑bulb conditions for long. If these zones expand across South Asia, the Middle East, and parts of Africa, billions lose habitability.
🛡️ Why it doesn’t fully extinguish us
High‑latitude refuges (Canada, Scandinavia, Patagonia, New Zealand) remain viable
Mountain regions stay habitable
Humans adapt technologically
This scenario collapses civilization but leaves pockets of survivors.
🌊 2. Deglaciation Chaos + Sea‑Level Shock
This is the scenario you were circling earlier — and it’s more dangerous than the Ice Age itself.
🌊 Trigger
Rapid melting of Greenland and West Antarctica
Meltwater pulses raising sea level 3–5 m per century
Collapse of coastal megacities
🧨 Consequences
2–3 billion people displaced
Loss of ports, farmland, and infrastructure
Salinization of river deltas (where most food is grown)
Economic collapse from the destruction of coastal hubs
🧩 Why this could cripple humanity
Civilization is coastal. Lose the coasts, lose the system.
🛡️ Why it doesn’t extinguish us
Inland highlands remain stable
Agriculture relocates
Humans migrate
This is a civilization reset, not extinction.
🌋 3. Supervolcano + Glacial State Shift
This is the closest natural analogue to a “global kill switch.”
🌋 Trigger
Yellowstone‑scale eruption
Volcanic winter lasting 5–10 years
Collapse of global agriculture
Followed by abrupt warming as aerosols clear
🧨 Consequences
Famine on a global scale
Breakdown of supply chains
Mass die‑off
🧩 Why this could cripple humanity
A multi‑year agricultural shutdown is the single most dangerous event for a globalized species.
🛡️ Why it doesn’t extinguish us
Equatorial regions retain some growing seasons
Marine food chains recover
Humans survive in pockets
This is a severe bottleneck, not extinction.
🧊 4. Abrupt Ice Age Onset + Resource Collapse
This is the inverse of the warming scenario.
❄️ Trigger
Shutdown of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC)
Rapid cooling in Europe and North America
Expansion of ice sheets over centuries
🧨 Consequences
Loss of arable land in the Northern Hemisphere
Mass migration southward
Conflict over shrinking habitable zones
🧩 Why this could cripple humanity
Food production collapses in the world’s breadbaskets.
🛡️ Why it doesn’t extinguish us
Tropics remain habitable
Southern Hemisphere is barely affected
Humans adapt
This is a geopolitical catastrophe, not a species‑ending one.
🌍 5. The Only Truly Existential Climate Combination
If you want a scenario that could push humanity into irreversible collapse, it requires three simultaneous failures:
🧨 (1) Global food system collapse
Triggered by:
megadroughts
monsoon failure
volcanic winter
sea‑level loss of deltas
🧨 (2) Loss of refugia
If both:
high‑latitude regions become unstable
AND mountain refuges lose water sources
…then humanity loses its fallback zones.
🧨 (3) Breakdown of knowledge continuity
If:
population drops below a few hundred thousand
AND survivors are scattered
AND technological infrastructure collapses
…then recovery becomes extremely slow or impossible.
This combination is rare but not impossible.
🧭 The Deep Truth
Humanity is extremely hard to extinguish.
Civilization is extremely easy to cripple.
The Earth system almost always leaves:
highlands
high latitudes
inland plateaus
microclimates
freshwater refuges
Even in the worst climate catastrophes, these zones persist.
So the real danger isn’t extinction — it’s fragmentation, loss of complexity, and irreversible civilizational regression.
If you want, we can build:
a fully coherent near‑extinction scenario
a map of surviving refuges
a timeline of collapse
a model of how many humans remain and where
Just tell me which direction you want to explore.