III.—Notes on “The Great Ice Age” in Relation to the Question of Submergence

1895 ◽  
Vol 2 (8) ◽  
pp. 348-351
Author(s):  
Dugald Bell

“Even if marine life had been prolific, and the old sea-bottom more or less well covered with sedimentary deposits, it does not follow,” says Dr. Geikie, “that the Boulder-clay of the succeeding mer de glace should now contain any shells” (p. 141).

1903 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 12-18 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. F. Blake

The form of the deposits that are taking place on the sea-bottom at the present day is one of the essential elements required to be known when we wish to interpret the submarine contours, as throwing light on the submergence or elevation of the land in late geological times, or when we propose to use the variation of thickness of the strata deposited during any epoch as an indication of the position of the shore-lines at that time.In the case of deposits in small or temporary masses of water, their form and arrangement may sometimes be observed directly; but in the case of the deposits in the sea, where we can neither remove the water nor make borings beneath it, we can only avail ourselves of theoretical considerations.It might have been expected that the original form of various sedimentary deposits would have been considered in detail long ago, but as a matter of fact the few writers who have touched upon the question have mostly been content with the assumption that deposits taken as a whole are thickest near the source of supply, and the figures given in illustration of the arrangement of various kinds, and thereby the shape of each, are remarkable for their variety.As the theoretical results at which I have arrived differ fundamentally from the ordinary assumptions, it is to be hoped that some one will be able to point out the fallacy, if any, which has led me astray, and to explain more satisfactorily the observed features which appear to confirm the theory.


1932 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
pp. 253-303 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. P. T. Burchell

In order to prepare an address calculated to be of general interest to my fellow archæologists, it is essential that it be composed of a variety of ingredients. Now, it so happens that the results I have been obtaining during the course of my investigations in the last few years not only embrace a large number of culture phases, but, when arranged in proper sequence, they form a consecutive narrative. Furthermore, the greater part of the researches I have undertaken relates to those periods in British prehistory concerning which we know least. I refer to the so-called ‘Upper Palæolithic’ and ‘Early Neolithic’ times.It is not my intention to deal in this paper with those inter-glacial and cultural phases which antedate the formation of the Lower Purple Boulder Clay of Yorkshire and Lincolnshire and the Lower Chalky Boulder Clay of East Anglia, though I would mention I have recently discovered in the glacial deposits of north-east Ireland specimens similar to those which have been found beneath the Cromer Forest Bed of Norfolk and in the Sub-Crag Detritus Bed of Norfolk and Suffolk. These specimens will be fully described and illustrated in our “Proceedings” at a later date.


1930 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 126-133 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. M. C. Kermode

The northern end of the Isle of Man is a low plain, a legacy of the Ice Age, consisting of boulder clay, sands, and gravels, bordered round the coast by a range of sandhills rising from 100 ft. at the break made by the Lhen to over 300 ft. where they cluster around the little village of Kirk Bride. The mouth of the Lhen at a distance of five miles from the foot of the hills, the pre-glacial coastline of the Island, is the reputed landing-place of the Scandinavian settlers who came sailing down from the western isles of Scotland; and for their small and shallow vessels the gravel beach, still known by their name of ‘the Ayres’, was admirably adapted.


1871 ◽  
Vol 8 (82) ◽  
pp. 158-162
Author(s):  
C. E. de Rance

Between the mountains of North Wales and the sea, occur two terraces, an upper composed of Boulder-day sloping towards the sea, and a lower, consisting of peat and alluvium, but little removed above high-water mark, running far inland, wherebroad valleys like the Vale of Clwyd breach the coast, and where rocky headlands jut into the sea, as the Great and LittleOrmes Heads. The two terraces are almost entirely denuded away, but often the lower one has alone suffered, as between Penmaen Bach and Penmaen Mawr, where a bay in the rocks, so to speak, is filled up with Upper Boulder-clay. It is quite evident that before denudation of the coast took place, the peat plain had a far greater extension than at present, which is proved by the foot of the occurrence of peat and a submarine forest at Rhyl, in borings in the Dee, and around the whole coasts of Cheshire, Lancashire, and southern Cumberland. It is also evident that considerable denudation of Glacial beds had taken place before the period of the old forests, and that the sea-ward prolongations of these beds, which themselves rested on an old sea-bottom, had been denuded away, and that a great plain, or series of plains, formed much of what is now the Irish Sea, before the forests came into existence; the lower terrace now fringing the coasts being the landward edge of this plain. It is nowhere better seen than in the Birket plain, forming the northern portion of the Hundred of Wirral, in North Cheshire. It is bounded to the south by an old pre-Glacial cliff, which abruptly terminates the northerly prolongation of all the numerous longitudinal valleys running with the strike of the Triassic rocks, of which this district is composed, each valley having a steep escarpment facing the west, as described by Professor Hull and myself.


2017 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 11
Author(s):  
Muhammad Hasanudin

<strong>Characteristics of Sea Bottom Morphology and Their Relationships with Sediment Thickness and Current Speed in the Straits of Flores, Lamakera, Boling, and Alor. </strong> The morphology of the seabed of a strait may affect sedimentary deposits and current speeds in the strait. The Straits of Flores, Lamakera, Boling, and Alor connect the Flores Sea and Savu Sea in East Nusa Tenggara Province. This study aimed to determine the characteristics of seabed morphology and its relation to sediment thickness and current speed in the straits. Single Beam Echosounder and SubBottom Profiler were used to measure depth of waters and subsurface. The results showed that the seabed of the Flores Strait was basin-shaped at a depth of about 250 m, while the seabed at the connections between the Straits of Boling, Lamakera, and Alor was a ridge leading to the Flores Sea and Savu Sea with depths up to 3,000 m. The thickness of the sedimentary sediments in the Flores Strait reached 50 m, while in the Straits of Boling, Lamakera, and Alor sedimentary deposits were not visible. In the Flores Strait which was characterized by narrow strait, the current speed ranged from 0.3 to 3.8 m/s. The descriptions of subsurface conditions in these straits can be used for navigation of ships that will cross the straits, especially vessels of more than 2,000 tons. The narrow strait morphology causes the mass of water in this region to have a high current speed. Therefore, the sedimentation occurs only in the Flores Strait due to its basin-shaped seabed.


1965 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 47-60
Author(s):  
Klaus-Dieter Meyer

Abstract. Stratigraphy and exposure of beds along the bluffs of the river Elbe west of Lauenburg are described. Deposits dated as Miocene, Elster Ice Age and Holstein Interglacial have been encountered in borings only. The bluff is prevailingly composed of rocks belonging to the Drenthe stage. The latter is represented by at least three different ground moraines, apart from intercalated basin silts, basin sands and glacial-fluviatile sands. According to the dimensions, the three ground moraines may correspond to three different phases. In the intervals peaty basin sands were deposited. Samples of glacial drift indicate that the Warthe stage is represented by just minor remains of ground moraine. The gravels of which the Hasenberg is composed, however, belong into the same stage. The boulder clay widely distributed on the uplands and underlying the Eem-„Kuhgrund"-peats belong to the Drenthe stage. This joungest Drenthe boulder clay is undisturbed and covers strongly faulted old and middle Pleistocene deposits. Therefore these dislocations occurred before the Warthe stage; even the „Lauenburger Stauchmoräne" can no longer beassigned to the Warthe stage.


Nature ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 578 (7795) ◽  
pp. 482-482
Author(s):  
Josie Glausiusz
Keyword(s):  

Nature ◽  
2005 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark Peplow
Keyword(s):  

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