On the extent of the Last Glaciation in eastern England

From pollen analysis of a Late-glacial deposit in east Lincolnshire, it is inferred that the earliest sedimentation in a depression in boulder clay immediately followed melting of the ice. Radiocarbon age determination confirms the Late-glacial age. The boulder clay is the Hessle Boulder Clay of Lincolnshire, and the correlation of this with the Hessle Boulder Clay of Holderness and with the Hunstanton Brown Boulder Clay of north Norfolk is accepted. The evidence from the Late-glacial site, from the stratigraphical position of the boulder clay, and from the topographical form of the boulder clay, all point to the Last Glaciation ice having extended south of the Humber as far as north Norfolk, with a lobe pushing into the Wash. This conclusion reasserts the traditional southern limit of Last Glaciation ice in eastern England, on which doubt had recently been cast by various authors on topo­graphical inference alone. The pollen analysis has been made more accurate by the introduction of a method of correcting for derived pollen, using derived Carboniferous and Mesozoic spores as a control. Significant errors in the radiocarbon age determination are shown to be caused even in peat by derived carbonaceous material from the boulder clay.

1986 ◽  
Vol 229 (1255) ◽  
pp. 177-207 ◽  

Pollen analysis of 4 m of peat, swamp-soil and lake sediments dated from 0 to > 43800 years b.p. indicates the occurrence of three major pollen assemblage zones. During Zone 1 (11000-0 years b.p.) the area had temperate rainforest and the climate was warm, moist and interglacial. During Zone 2 ( ?25000-l 1000 years b.p.), correlated approximately with the last period of glaciation, the vegetation was mainly grassland and the climate was considerably colder than present. In late glacial times (14000-11000 years b.p.) pollen of shrub and tree taxa increased, especially during the later part of the period as the climate became warmer and moister. During Zone 3 (more than 4 3 0 0 0 -?25000 years b.p.) the vegetation was predominantly sub-alpine and alpine. This vegetation represents an interstadial assemblage for a lowland site. The climate was cool and moist. The results are compared with sites of similar age in Tasmania, and with sites from temperate forest environments in Chile and New Zealand.


1998 ◽  
Vol 49 (1) ◽  
pp. 11-23 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jo C. Lin ◽  
Wallace S. Broecker ◽  
Sidney R. Hemming ◽  
Irena Hajdas ◽  
Robert F. Anderson ◽  
...  

U-Th isochron ages of tufas formed on shorelines suggest that the last pluvial event in Lake Lahontan and Searles Lake was synchronous at about 16,500 cal yr B.P. (equivalent to a radiocarbon age of between 14,000 and 13,500 yr B.P.), whereas the timing of this pluvial event determined by radiocarbon dating is on the order of 1000 yr younger. The timing of seven distinct periods of near desiccation in Searles Lake during late-glacial time has been reinvestigated for U-Th age determination by mass spectrometry. U-Th dating of evaporite layers in the interbedded mud and salt unit called the Lower Salt in Searles Lake was hampered by the uncertainty in assessing the initial 230Th/232Th of the samples. The resulting ages, corrected by a conservative range of initial 230Th/232Th ratios, suggest close correlation of the abrupt changes recorded in Greenland ice cores (Dansgaard-Oeschger events) and wet–dry conditions in Searles Lake between 35,000 and 24,000 cal yr B.P.


1986 ◽  
Vol 23 (8) ◽  
pp. 1190-1213 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. W. Josenhans ◽  
J. Zevenhuizen ◽  
R. A. Klassen

The regional distribution of glacial and postglacial sediments on the Labrador Shelf was mapped by medium- and high-resolution seismics and shows a succession of tills that extend to the continental shelf edge at approximately 600 m. The uppermost of these tills is less laterally extensive and does not occur on the Labrador Shelf bank tops in water depths less than 160 m. We infer that the last glacial episode was less extensive than the preceding ones. Glaciomarine stratified silts and postglacial muds are found overlying the upper till in the deep basins that separate the banks. The upper till, glaciomarine silts, and postglacial muds are interpreted to constitute one complete deglacial cycle. Radiocarbon age determination suggests this deglacial sequence began at approximately 20 000 years BP. On the northernmost Labrador Shelf and Hudson Strait, seismic evidence indicates a late glacial readvance locally deposited a till that overlies the glaciomarine sediments associated with the last glacial advance on the Labrador Shelf. The stratigraphic position of this Hudson Strait till suggests the local readvance occurred at approximately 8000 years BP. The acoustic stratigraphic framework (data) is ground truthed by a regionally extensive piston core and grab sample network. Multidisciplinary analysis of these sediment samples included X-ray, textural, geotechnical, paleontological, lithological, trace-element, and 14C analyses. The results confirm the acoustic interpretations and show that each of the stratigraphic units defined have unique and regionally consistent properties. Geotechnical analyses from the upper till indicate low shear strengths (± 25 kPa) and low to normal consolidation ratios (0.8–2.8), which we interpret to indicate deposition under low basal loading as a result of hydrostatic support on an ice shelf in a marine setting. Provenance studies on the sands and gravels from each of the stratigraphic units of the last deglacial sequence (i.e., till, glaciomarine silts, postglacial muds) indicate that the till is mostly derived from mainland Labrador and transported by an easterly ice flow. Since limestone outcrops are rare to absent on the Labrador mainland and continental shelf, high limestone concentrations (up to 80%) within the glaciomarine sediments that overlie the upper till indicate a northern and distal source for that unit. We interpret an active ice margin overlying the Paleozoic limestone outcrops in Hudson Strait and Ungava Bay as being the dominant source for the glaciomarine silts. The absence of limestone within the postglacial muds that overlie the glaciomarine silts indicates a significant change in provenance, which we attribute to the disappearance of the active ice margin over the limestone terranes. The depositional style and sedimentary structures within the glaciomarine silts indicate low bottom currents and a uniform rain out of ice-rafted (limestone) debris that extends to the southernmost part of the Labrador Shelf. The depositional style of the postglacial muds indicates a significant increase in bottom currents, with deposition restricted to the deep basins. We suggest these increased currents resulted from the disappearance of the Hudson Strait ice barrier, which allowed the Canadian current to develop and combine with the west Greenland current. This combination of currents occurred at approximately 8000 years BP and marks the inception of the Labrador current, which presently traverses the Labrador Shelf.


1967 ◽  
Vol 104 (6) ◽  
pp. 630-633 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brian S. John

AbstractAt Cil-maenllwyd (Cardiganshire) glacial outwash sands were found to contain layers of small wood fragments. A radiocarbon age determination of 33,750 yrs B.P. indicates that the wood fragments are probably of Middle Würm age, and that the last glaciation of St. George's Channel occurred during the Main Würm. Pollen and spores contained in the sands suggest that the environment prior to the last glaciation was at one stage predominantly forested. The organic remains are thought to relate to the problematical “ Middle Würm Interstadial ”, rather than the Paudorf Interstadial.


Author(s):  
H. J. B. Birks ◽  
W. Williams

SynopsisThe Inner Hebrides support a diverse flora and a wide range of vegetation types today. Native woodland is rare, even on the larger islands of Skye and Mull. The present-day floristic and vegetational diversity and the scarcity of native woodland raise important ecological questions, answers to which can be provided by pollen analysis of loch or bog sediments.Pollen analysis of sediments deposited during the last glacial stage on Skye and on Lewis suggest that some plants may have survived the last glaciation within the Hebrides. Pollen analysis of late-glacial (13500–10000 years ago) sediments on Skye indicate that even at the close of the last glaciation there was considerable floristic and vegetational diversity related to geology, altitude, and climate.Post-glacial (10000–0 year ago) vegetational histories are available from Skye, Soay, Canna, Tiree, and Jura. Forest was rare or absent on Canna and Tiree as well as on the Outer Hebrides throughout the postglacial. In contrast Soay and southern and eastern Skye were well forested, with birch, alder, hazel, and small amounts of elm and oak. Pine was confined to eastern Skye. Since 5,000 years ago there has been extensive forest destruction by man, especially on the better soils, and the spread of bog and heath on the poorer soils. Northern Skye supported birch, hazel, and willow scrub during the post-glacial. This has largely been removed by man since about 5,000 years ago. The present-day vegetation of the Inner Hebrides is predominantly anthropogenic.


2013 ◽  
Vol 53 (2) ◽  
pp. 191-233 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aleksandra Jurochnik ◽  
Dorota Nalepka

ABSTRACT Late Glacial (since Oldest Dryas) and Holocene (to Subatlantic) changes of vegetation at the Węgliny site (south-west Poland) are reconstructed based mainly on pollen analysis of five cores from the palaeobasin (anaerobic sediments). The chronology of the described events is based on palynological comparison with the Lubsza Plain environs, based on LPAZs from several published pollen diagrams on 14C data, and multiple cryptotephra levels determined in the Węgliny profiles. The Węgliny record integrates well into the north European Holocene and Late Glacial biostratigraphic framework. The Węgliny site is the next (fourth) locality in Poland where the Laacher See Tephra (LST) horizon within the Allerød chronozone was identified.


2020 ◽  
Vol 88 ◽  
pp. 63-78
Author(s):  
Maciej Nowak ◽  
Barbara Musiał-Łaczek ◽  
Piotr Włodarczak

Grave 3/2016 from site 3 in Węgrzce, Comm. Zielonki, Kraków District was discovered during archaeological excavations preceding construction of a detached house. This was a niche grave, holding two burials: a male aged 38–47 years, and a child 4–5 years old. The recorded funeral rite is characteristic of a cluster of Corded Ware culture cemeteries on the lower Dłubnia River, near Kraków. A vessel recovered from the grave reveals local features characteristic of that cluster. One radiocarbon age determination was obtained for the burial, pointing to ca. 2470–2350 BC as the most likely range. Thus, the grave links with the younger phase of the Final Eneolithic in Lesser Poland.


1964 ◽  
Vol 42 (6) ◽  
pp. 677-692 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. C. Ritchie ◽  
Bernard de Vries

A buried deposit of limnic sediment was excavated from a site on the Missouri Coteau of Saskatchewan, within the Mixed Prairie section of the Great Plains. Carbon-14 determinations indicate that the section is late-glacial, possibly deposited during an interstadial terminated by the Condie (= Valders?) re-advance. On the basis of the records of about 60 taxa of Tracheophyta and a pollen diagram, the section is characterized by lower, middle, and upper plant assemblages. It is suggested that the lower and upper assemblages, distinguished mainly by a Picea – Shepherdia canadensis – Salix – Artemisia pollen spectrum, indicate the prevalence on mesic sites of a spruce forest. The middle assemblage, having an array of macrofossils and a few microfossils of temperate geographical affinity and a pollen spectrum suggesting relatively less spruce and (or) more herbaceous vegetation, is interpreted in terms of a mixed spruce–poplar forest on mesic sites with shrub and grassland communities on the more xeric habitats. This tripartite division of the section in terms of ecologically concordant plant assemblages suggests an amelioration of environment followed by a deterioration which was probably correlative with the Condie re-advance.


1996 ◽  
Vol 46 (3) ◽  
pp. 219-229 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhou Weijian ◽  
Douglas J. Donahue ◽  
Stephen C. Porter ◽  
Timothy A. Jull ◽  
Li Xiaoqiang ◽  
...  

High-resolution paleomonsoon proxy records from peat and eolian sand–paleosol sequences at the desert–loess transition zone in China denote a rapid oscillation from cold–dry conditions (11,200–10,600 14C yr B.P.) to cool–humid conditions (10,600–10,200 14C yr B.P.), followed by a return to cold–dry climate (10,200–10,000 14C yr B.P.). Variations in precipitation proxies suggest that significant climatic variability occurred in monsoonal eastern Asia during the Younger Dryas interval. Late-glacial climate in the Chinese desert–loess belt that lies downwind from Europe was strongly influenced by cold air from high latitudes and from the North Atlantic via the westerlies. The inferred precipitation variations were likely caused by variations in the strength of the Siberian high, which influenced the pressure gradient between land and ocean and therefore influenced the position of the East Asian monsoon front.


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