The
Last Glaciation in Finland
In the beginning of the Pleistocene Glaciation, as the climate cooled down, the alpine glaciers of the Scands began to expand. Caused by gravity, the glaciers flowed downwards covering a larger and larger land area. In Finland, the direction of expansion was from North-West to South-East. Northern Lapland was an exception, where the ice sheets advanced from South-West to North-East. During the peak of the glaciation (approximately. 20 000 years ago) the whole of Scandinavia and a large percentage of Northern Europe were covered by ice.
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