Synopsis
A radiocarbon date of 11 330±170
b.p
. for shells from the Kinlochspelve Moraine on the Isle of Mull indicates that a readvance of ice took place there during Zone III. The ice apparently scooped up marine deposits laid down during the preceding Zone II (Alleröd) climatic amelioration.
Analysis of pollen from clays in both the Kinlochspelve and Menteith moraines substantiates this opinion and together with radiocarbon dates and geomorphological evidence enables correlation of both moraines with the Loch Lomond Readvance. On Mull the mapping of moraines and thick drift deposits indicates that an ice cap and several separate glaciers existed on the island at this time.
Relict Flandrian estuarine deposits in the Ythan valley are confined to an area in the lower valley around the present estuary. They rest upon a discontinuous layer of peat over an irregular surface of sand and gravel, and consist for the most part of a grey silty clay, or carse deposit, which forms terraces or small areas of carseland. At the seaward end ofthe estuary the grey silty clay contains a layer of grey, micaceous, silty fine sand, which tapers into the basal peat, whilst in places the surface of the grey silty clay is covered by peat and/or blown sand. The vegetational context and age of these deposits have been determined at Waterside, near the mouth of the present estuary.
Flandrian (Holocene) relative sea level changes in the lower Ythan valley, NE Scotland, U.K., are inferred from detailed stratigraphical evidence including microfossil analysis and radiocarbon assay. The principal event recorded is the Main Postglacial Transgression, which was under way in the area by c. 8300 and had culminated before c. 4000 radiocarbon years BP. It is concluded that the rise in relative sea levels during the transgression in the area exceeded 12 m; that the mean rate of rise there was 8·05 mm a−1 between c. 8300 and c. 7100 radiocarbon years BP, or 7·09 mm a−1 based upon calibrated dates for the same period, before declining markedly to 1·75 mm a−1 (radiocarbon) or 1·86 mm a−1 (calibrated) to the culmination of the event. By comparison with other sites, the culmination appears to have been time-transgressive in eastern Scotland. Deposits of the Second Storegga Slide tsunami, which occurred during the Main Postglacial Transgression, are present in the Ythan valley, where the sediment run-up of the event at the sites studied is estimated to have been within the range 2·99–5·19 m.
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