As the waters evaporated after Noah's flood the cooling effect caused equatorial and polar glaciation. There were temperate zones in the Northern and Southern hemisphere.
Peer Review
We have considered the dubious nature of the Great Permian Contrivance. The Permian, and its supposed date being millions of years ago, isn't a testable hypothesis, so it's not, technically, scientific.
Earth in Upheaval
Earth in Upheaval is the name of a book by Immanuel Velikovsky which lays out his summary of the evidence for cataclysmic upheavals in the history of Earth.
Which Ice Age?
When we say "ice age" we usually mean the one that ended about 10,000 years ago. In the popular science narrative (SciPop) this was the last of several retreats and advances of polar ice over the last 10,000-40,000 years.
Voltziales and Glossopterids
"Rise of Northern Hemisphere Voltziales and diversification of Southern Hemisphere glossopterids. Extinction, arborescent lycopsids, and sphenopsids. Diversification of reptiles."
Extensive Glaciation in Southern Hemisphere
Creationists don't seem to grasp the concept that Noah's flood and Peleg's tectonics are separate events, and they don't seem to have a coherent answer to the question: "where did the flood waters go?"
Uplift in Appalachian Geosyncline
"Uplift in Appalachian geosyncline" took place when the tectonic plates formed in the time of Peleg. This was 101 years after Noah's flood.
Cooler and Drier Climates
The paleoenvironments of Periods of the geological timescale are dependent on warm climates, humidity and increased precipitation when they represent the erosion, transportation and deposition of sediment.
August 13th
After Noah's flood a wind caused the waters to evaporate. The cooling effect caused the formation of equatorial and polar ice. Temperate zones were in the mid-latitudes of the Northern and Southern Hemispheres.
August 12th
The Permian is an induction dumpster fire. Inconvenient sedimentary deposits and evidence of phenomenon which are difficult to rationalize found their way into the Permian.
