The high-level marine shell beds of Scotland and the build-up of the last Scottish ice sheet |
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Authors: | DONALD G SUTHERLAND |
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Institution: | Department of Geography, University of Edinburgh, High School Yards, Edinburgh EH3 6NA;9th May, 1980. |
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Abstract: | It is argued that high-level shell beds buried by till at various localities around the Scottish coast are in situ and represent a marine transgression immediately prior to and consequent upon loading of the earth's crust by the build-up of the last Scottish ice sheet. The high-level rock platforms of the Hebrides may also have been eroded at this time. A relationship between the build-up of the last Scottish ice sheet and world sea-level is suggested and it is further argued that the Scottish ice sheet was a more sensitive indicator of the onset (and termination) of a period of northern hemispheric glaciation than either the Laurentide or Scandinavian ice sheets. It is suggested that the build-up of the last Scottish ice sheet took place in the Early Devensian and a tentative correlation is proposed between the Scottish evidence and the deep-sea evidence for glacier build-up at ca. 75,000 years B.P |
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