Earth

Aerial view of a big city with building roofs covered by snow. Clip. Flying above frozen city and a

Next Global Ice Age

Geological and astronomical models predict that Earth is due for another glacial period within the next 100,000 years, possibly plunging much of the planet into ice. This event will significantly impact ecosystems, sea levels, and potentially human civilizations, depending on technological advancements and societal adaptations.

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New North Star

520 Generations From Now Right now Polaris is our North Star. In 13,000 years it will be Vega. The Earth spins as it revolves around the Sun, but the North Pole is always pointing toward the North Star, Polaris. The Earth spins and only wobbles a tiny bit over millennia as it revolves around the

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Top view of astrologer hands

Brand New Constellations

The constellations we recognize today will be vastly different in a million years due to what astromers call “proper motion” of stars. This will transform our night sky, creating new constellations from stars that have shifted positions, presenting future astronomers with a completely new celestial map to study. Because of stellar motion, our current Star

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Owen is the best GG, CC BY-SA 4.0 , via Wikimedia Commons

New Pangaea Proxima Supercontinent

We can measure the movement of continents very precisely. Their future locations are a simple exercise in the empirical sciences. Predictive models like “Pangaea Proxima” (sometimes called “Next Pangaea” or “NeoPangaea”) predict the formation of a new supercontinent in about 250 million years, potentially sooner. This model sees “ALL” of Earth’s continents coming together to

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