The Riss glaciation was defined by Penck and Brückner as the Lower (
Niedere) or Younger Old Moraines and Old Terminal Moraines High Terraces (
Jüngere Altmoränen und Alt-Endmoränen-Hochterrassen). The
type locality lies near
Biberach an der Riß where the end of the northeastern
Rhine Glacier stood. Results gained from over a century of research show that in almost all glacial periods, several ice advances took place. Today it is thought that there were, in all, at least eight to fifteen ice advances. In the Riss stage, too, there were several advances of the ice sheet, so that it can be divided into
interstadials (ice retreats) and
stadials (ice advances), and at least one hitherto unnamed warm period. The present-day division differs from the original Penck classification. The beginning of the Riss ice age, according to the 2002 Stratigraphic Table of Germany, was the end of the
Holstein interglacial (known as the
Mindel-Riss interglacial in the Alpine Foreland and corresponding to the
Samerbe,
Thalgut,
Praclaux and
La Côte). Its end is the start of the
Eem interglacial (Riss-Würm interglacial). It is thus roughly contemporaneous with the
Saale glaciation of the North German glacial sequence. The Riss is paralleled by
MIS 6, 8 and 10, which would therefore place it about 350,000 and 120,000 years ago. Excluded from the Riss glaciation is the so-called Old Riss (
Ältere Riß), the time of the greatest ice advance in the Alpine region: today it is referred to as the
Haslach-Mindel complex (in Bavaria and Austria), Hoßkirch complex (in Baden-Württemberg) or Great Glaciation in Switzerland. The classification of ice ages in Switzerland varies from that used in the Bavarian and Austrian Alpine Foreland. The glaciation complex between the end of the Holstein and the beginning of the Eem interglacials is referred to as the Penultimate Ice Age and the Great Glaciation. During the period of maximum glaciation, ancient man (
Homo heidelbergensis – later the
Neanderthals) retreated behind the permafrost boundary and, in the warmer periods, spread beyond it to the north and northeast. Not until the Weichsel-Würm ice age did modern
Cro-Magnon man settle these regions, in about 40,000 BC. == Sequence and extent of the Riss glaciation ==