THE BOOK
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Tuesday, 19 November 2024

The myth of ice-rafted coastal erratics



Features seen on Höga Kusten, Sweden, around and beneath the 260m marine limit.  Kalottberg hills are "capped" with moraine and glacial and fluvioglacial deposits, providing excellent conditions for forest cover to survive.  Beneath the highest strandline surfaces are washed -- which means that most of the fines have been washed out during isostatic uplift.


Beneath the highest shoreline in the Höga Kusten district, the finer materials in the morainic cover are washed out, leaving massive accumulations of boulders and smaller stones. The term "Klapperfält" is used to describe them.. Most of the boulders are local, but scattered among them are far-travelled erratics, coloured orange in this diagram.  In areas such as this, stillstands or pauses in the rate of uplift may result in the formation of storm-beach ridges.




Erratics of many different lithologies on washed rock surfaces in the Stockholm Archipelago.

Washed surfaces, kalottberg and klapperfält features can be found anywhere within the dark coloured area on this map.


It's intriguing that ice-rafted erratic boulders are still being talked about in the context of the large erratics found on the shorelines of southern Britain.  Ice rafting seems to be the "process of preference" among those who -- for whatever reason -- do not wish to accept that full glacial processes have substantially affected the Bristol Channel coasts of Cornwall, Devon and Somerset.  

About a year ago I posted these items on the blog: 

https://brian-mountainman.blogspot.com/2023/12/coastal-geomorphology-in-devensian.html

https://brian-mountainman.blogspot.com/2023/12/the-big-erratic-boulders-of-devon-and.html

........... and I have discussed the matter in many other posts as well.  Use the search box to find them.

The latest spat is with James Scourse, who argued in a very strange paper that the big coastal erratics were emplaced by floating ice at a time of high relative sea level (RSL) and cold climate.

https://brian-mountainman.blogspot.com/2024/03/new-scourse-paper-on-giant-erratics-is.html

That of course flies in the face of our understanding of eustatic / isostatic relationships during the Devensian and earlier glacial episodes.  In the latest rather crude attack on me by Pearce, Ixer, Bevins and Scourse they argue again that the big coastal erratics (like the Limeslade erratic) on the Bristol Channel coasts are "ice rafted"  -- and that there was "asynchrony between Early and Middle Devensian regional ice sheet development and global sea level".   I don't have a clue what that means, and no evidence in support of the contention is provided.  I see no sign at all of Early and Middle Devensian glacial activity in the Quaternary stratigraphy of West Wales, and I see no evidence of substantial isostatic depression at the time, or tectonic tilting.  Bennett et al, in the new paper on the Quaternary in Devon, say with respect to the coastal erratics: "...........another view is that the coastal platform erratics were delivered by icebergs calved from glacier ice farther north, an interpretation that is consistent with the widespread distribution of erratics on shore platforms on the Bristol Channel and English Channel coasts."


Even if there was a substantial ice mass in Wales during the Early and Mid Devensian, global sea level at that time was around -70m, and I can see no mechanism for a sinking of the Devon and Cornwall coast by an equivalent amount, thereby creating conditions for ice rafted debris to be dumped on the coastal rock platform.  On the contrary, when one looks at known isostatic adjustment mechanisms, there would have been a hinge line along the Bristol Channel and a rise in the relative altitude of the South-West Peninsula, making giant erratic emplacement from floating ice even less likely.

Icebergs do not, in general, deliver erratics to distant coastal platforms. Dirty icebergs moving away from floating ice fronts almost always operate in deep water, dropping their debris load as a consequence of bottom melting -- ending up as glacio-marine sediments with added dropstones. There are vast thicknesses of these materials in the Celtic Sea and in the outer Bristol Channel. (They have received impressive attention during the BRITICE studies.)  Icebergs do get stranded in embayments in the intertidal zone, and they do break up into bergy bits and release big boulders onto mud flats.  But most of the ice with "rafting" characteristics is sea ice which develops as flat sheets and then gets broken up by lateral pressure, and broken ice floes are almost always clean.  Where there is an ice foot on a polar coastline,  it is almost always a mixture of sea ice, frozen spray and detached chunks of winter snowbanks.  It sometimes contains erratic boulders, but these are generally taken from pre-existing coastal materials including beach accumulations, till and scree.  They are seldom carried in from the sea; they are more likely to be carried OUT from the coastline to be dropped in deeper water offshore. 

As I see it, the big erratic boulders scattered along the coasts of the Bristol Channel are NOT all concentrated in the current intertidal zone.  They occur at altitudes up to at least 80m.  They have to be residuals or remnants of ancient glacial deposits scattered along the Bristol Channel coasts.  As I have said before, the "concentration" of these erratics on the intertidal rock platform is more apparent than real, since these are washed surfaces similar to those associated with "kalottberg" hills around the marine limit in Sweden.  Nobody ever suggests that the boulders found at the marine limit are unique in any way;  they almost always also occur above and below the limit.  So the position of the marine limit -- like RSL on the coast of the Bristol Channel -- is interesting but not geomorphologically significant.

https://brian-mountainman.blogspot.com/2018/07/kalottberg-features-in-northern-sweden.html

It seems to me highly likely that the erratic boulders on the Bristol Channel coasts are simply the remnants of ancient glacial deposits that have been almost entirely removed on the coast by marine, periglacial and other processes, possibly over several glacial / interglacial cycles. Further inland, away from the coast, there may well be in situ glacial deposits (with giant erratics!) still awaiting discovery.

 The boulders themselves may date from a number of different glacial phases, including the Anglian, Late Wolstonian and Late Devensian, in which Irish Sea ice from the N and NW crossed the coastline and pressed inland via convenient depressions and wide valleys.   Just a few of the boulders (such as the famous pink erratic at Saunton) can be tied into the stratigraphic sequence,  sealed by sandrock or slope breccia.  At Whitesands in North Pembrokeshire  the boulder bed (which I think is related to some of the erratics on coastal rock platforms) appears to consist of boulders emplaced prior to the last interglacial and then modified by wave action.  It is not visibly associated with the Ipswichian raised beach. 


Some of the boulders of the Whitesands boulder bed, held in cemented slope breccia at the base of the Devensian sediment sequence.  The boulders were probably emplaced during an early glaciation and rounded by wave action during the Ipswichian interglacial.  This narrative probably applies to many of the Bristol Channel "giant erratics"........

Looking again at the ice-rafting hypothesis, I cannot see any tectonic or other evidence which suggests that floating ice was involved in the emplacement of any of the big erratics on the Bristol Channel coast.  On those occasions when there were dirty icebergs in the Celtic Sea, sea level was probably at least 100m lower than today, and the coastline was at least 10 km further to the west than it is now.  






Saturday, 16 November 2024

More support for a big Wolstonian glaciation

 


I have been looking again at the big article by Bennett et al (2024) on the Quaternary in Devon.  As indicated on the table above, they believe that the one glacial episode that substantially affected the North Devon coast occurred during the Late Wolstonian (MIS 6).  They consider that the glaciation of the Bristol Channel during the Late Devensian (MIS 2) was less extensive, although they accept that the evidence for that time demonstrates a local ice cap on Dartmoor. (There must, of course, also have been a Dartmoor ice cap in the Late Wolstonian, but the evidence for it is not easy to find.........)

As for the Anglian (MIS 12), the authors are cautious.  They suggest that the evidence for a big glaciation at that time is not clear in and around Devon, and therefore they prefer to stick with a "periglacial" climate label for that period. 

Commendable work, with great relevance for other parts of SW Britain. 

Quote:

The most recent research on glaciation in the Bristol
Channel was published by Gibbard et al. (2017, 2022). This
included a synthesis of new publicly available borehole and
bathymetric data, combined with a wealth of other existing
disparate data sources. Sediment boreholes throughout
the Bristol Channel confirm the area was glaciated in the
Pleistocene. Till is present below marine deposits and, in some
areas, is visible morphologically as submerged moraines (Fig.
9). In the central and eastern Bristol Channel the submerged
valley course of the palaeo-Severn is very clear in new highresolution
bathymetric surveys. This former river course and
associated tributaries cross-cut through glacial sediments in
the Bristol Channel. At least three phases of glaciation are
recorded in the Bristol Channel, one related to the southern
limits of a Late Devensian Substage (~MIS 2) Welsh Ice Cap
which reached into Swansea Bay, an earlier Devensian (MIS
4 to 3) glaciation associated with Irish Sea ice, and another
older glaciation that is associated with ice that filled the entire
outer and central Bristol Channel (Fig. 1). The age of the older
Bristol Channel glaciation is still open, although it predates
the Devensian (Late Pleistocene) and must date to the Middle
Pleistocene, and as noted above is likely to correlate with MIS
6 (i.e., the Late Wolstonian). This has implications for the age
of the glacial deposits present on land in the Barnstaple area,
which have traditionally been correlated with the Anglian Stage
(MIS 12) (e.g., Croot et al. 1996). It is more likely, however,
that these deposits correlate with the oldest glaciation of the
Bristol Channel immediately to the north, i.e., with MIS 6 and
the Late Wolstonian Substage (potentially the Moreton Stadial
of Gibson et al., 2022).


I am unconvinced about the Early Devensian  (MIS 4-3) glaciation associated with Irish Sea ice, since the evidence is just not there -- and  I suspect this idea will be dumped before too long.......

Thursday, 14 November 2024

The Quaternary Geology of Devon




Glacial deposits and erratics in the Fremington area.  Note that the till cover extends over the 60m contour.  It is therefore not surprising that "high level erratics" are found at even greater altitudes elsewhere on the Devon coasts.



Been waiting for this for some time.  A very comprehensive and interesting summary.  I'm intrigued by the  suggestion that glacier ice "approached" the North Devon coast on at least three occasions from the Bristol Channel, and probably crossed it more than once.  The authors are in no doubt about the presence of glacial deposits in the Fremington area.  I would have liked a more careful consideration of the ice rafting hypothesis in the section where they talk about erratic boulders.  They say that the rivers that cut the deep river valleys were graded to low, cold period sea levels, but if that was the case you cannot have high sea levels with ice rafting of erratics when conditions were of "full glacial" status.  You can't have your cake and eat it.

Anyway, I'll give this useful article greater consideraton on another occasion.

===========

Bennett, J.A., Cullingford, R.A., Gibbard, P.L., Hughes, P.D. and Murton, J.B. 2024. The Quaternary Geology of Devon. Proceedings of the Ussher Society, 15, 84-130.

https://ussher.org.uk/journal/catalogue/volume-15-part-3-2024

Abstract


Throughout the 2.6 My of the Quaternary, Devon has occupied a critical position with respect to the evolution of Britain in that it lies close to the North Atlantic Ocean between the southern coast of the Bristol Channel and the northern coast of the English Channel. This setting results in the area being highly sensitive to climatic and environmental change. Although the county lies beyond the general limit of the major glaciations of the last 0.5 My, it was impacted by glacial ice and its associated meltwater that approached the north coast on at least three occasions. Glaciers also left deposits on the Bristol Channel floor and potentially locally on Dartmoor and possibly Exmoor. Ice-rafting of erratic rocks also occurred. Nevertheless, the whole region has been repeatedly subjected to severe cold-climate, periglacial conditions for much of Quaternary time. Under cold periods frost- dominated climates have driven the formation of a thick carapaces of slope-derived debris (head deposits), with wind erosion shaping the tors characteristic of the high moorlands. At the same time deep river valleys have been carved by continual severe seasonal snow meltwater, the streams transporting weathered rock derived from the steep slopes. The rivers that cut these valleys were graded to low, cold period sea levels, and their valleys frequently include multiple terrace accumulations, the highest of which date from the Middle Pleistocene. Apart from the Late-glacial open vegetation and Holocene blanket peatland, evidence of earlier warm-climate conditions also occur, but are limited in comparison to the cold-climate accumulations. Past and present interglacial (temperate) deposits are also known from the county. They include not only river deposits, but also cave infillings and high sea-level, fossil beaches, often including fossil evidence. Coastal erosional landforms such as wave-cut platforms and cliff formations are commonly found, and submerged offshore examples are also known, particularly from the English Channel coast. Despite all this evidence, its fragmentary nature means that the record of events in the region is both limited and intriguing. The advent of numerical age determination and other modern analytical methods have improved knowledge of the timing of some events and provenance of materials in the region, but much more work is required to fill in the substantial gaps in current knowledge.

Pearce et al: Much ado about nothing much



The map published by Scourse et al, 2021. The labels used for the glaciers are no more "correct" than the labels that might be used by others on their own maps.  The ice edge positions shown are also matters of opinion, as are the directions of ice flow........ and I happen to disagree with several of the key features on this map.

With regard to that petty and mean-spirited ad hominem attack the other day from Pearce, Ixer, Bevins and Scourse, one of the things that most intrigued me was the obsession with silly little details.  

One comment (with the use of "sic") related to my use of the term "Irish Sea Glacier" somewhere in the text, whereas I should apparently have used the term "Irish Sea Ice Stream" as defined by Scourse and many other colleagues in 2021.  Big deal.  Well yes, that is the term used for many years now to describe the ice mass flowing in the Celtic Sea arena and into the Bristol Channel.  For many years I have used the term "ice stream" myself, in this blog and in publications.  But the term "Irish Sea Glacier" is and has been used widely across the literature for many years, and is widely understood as the ice mass that extended all the way out to the Celtic Sea shelf edge.  An ice stream is simply a big glacier, flowing fast and flanked by ice that is stagnant or flowing much more slowly.  A glacier might be described as an ice stream channelled in a trough or bounded by topographic highlands.  Pearce et al apparently want the rest of us to restrict the term "Irish Sea Glacier" to the ice that flowed into the Cheshire Basin, flanked by the uplands of North Wales and the southern Pennines.  But it was no more constrained by topography than the "Irish Sea Ice Stream"  that flowed through St Georges Channel -- and I think that the term "ice lobe" better describes the characteristics of the ice that flowed into Cheshire and the north Midlands.  

It may also be argued that the use of the term "Irish Sea Ice Stream" for the ice occupying the Celtic Sea is inadequate, since the feature (possibly during several glaciations) had many of the characteristics of a piedmont glacier, as I pointed out in one of my earliest glaciology articles, in 1968:

https://brian-mountainman.blogspot.com/2011/02/glaciological-dilemma.html

https://brian-mountainman.blogspot.com/2016/07/ice-in-celtic-sea-piedmont-glacier-or.html

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/319922666_Short_Notes_Directions_of_Ice_Movement_in_the_Southern_Irish_Sea_Basin_During_the_Last_Major_Glaciation_An_Hypothesis

Thus there is no "correct" terminology in any of this.  It is disingenuous of Pearce et al to pretend that there is, and that others are "in error" if they use terms that do not conform to somebody else's labelling system.

Reference:

https://brian-mountainman.blogspot.com/2021/05/new-dating-for-lgm-irish-sea-ice-stream.html

Maximum extent and readvance dynamics of the Irish Sea Ice Stream and Irish Sea Glacier since the Last Glacial Maximum
J. D. Scourse, R. C. Chiverrell, R. K. Smedley, D. Small, M. J. Burke, M. Saher, K. J. J. Van Landeghem, G. A. T. Duller, C. Ó Cofaigh, M. D. Bateman, S. Benetti, S. Bradley, L. Callard, D. J. A. Evans, D. Fabel, G. T. H. Jenkins, S. McCarron, A. Medialdea, S. Moreton, X. Ou, D. Praeg, D. H. Roberts, H. M. Roberts, C. D. Clark
Jnl of Quaternary Science, 7 May 2021 (special issue article)

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/jqs.3313?af=R

https://doi.org/10.1002/jqs.3313

This all reminds me of a spat I had with James Scourse five years ago, following the publication of my QN article on the glaciation of the Isles of Scilly.  Scourse attacked me, using very intemperate language, partly because I had the temerity to disagree with a part of his sedimentary stratigraphic labelling system.  In his eyes, I dare say, his labels were 100% reliable, and not open to negotiation by anyone.  Anyway, after some insulting bluster and questioning of my competence, he had to grudgingly agree that the Devensian ice limit as drawn by me did actually have some merit..........

https://brian-mountainman.blogspot.com/2019/03/scourse-versus-john-rather-scilly-spat.html

Then there is the matter of the Anglian Glaciation, about which I have written at length on this blog.  In their QN piece, Pearce et al have a silly dig at my "contention" that the ice advance responsible for bluestone transport was during the Anglian Glaciation, and claim that there is no geochronological or other evidence to support this.  It's true that when I wrote my article I did mention the Anglian episode (MIS 12), but in doing that I was representing an almost unanimous view across the research community that this was the most extensive pre-Devensian glaciation across much of the British Isles.  

LEE, J R, ROSE, J, HAMBLIN, R J, MOORLOCK, B S, RIDING, J B, PHILLIPS, E, BARENDREGT, R W, AND CANDY, I. 2011. The Glacial History of the British Isles during the Early and Middle Pleistocene: Implications for the long-term development of the British Ice Sheet. 59-74 in Quaternary Glaciations–Extent and Chronology, A Closer look. Developments in Quaternary Science. EHLERS, J, GIBBARD, P L, AND HUGHES, P D (editors). 15. (Amsterdam: Elsevier.)

I am quite unconcerned about whether the Anglian was or was not the largest British glaciation, and if Pearce et al had bothered to look at my published output they would have seen that I have discussed at length the possibility of a very large Wolstonian glaciation -- and that I am rather convinced by the latest suggestions of Phil Gibbard and others that it was more important than the Anglian for landscape transformation (and sediment transport) in the Celtic Sea arena. 


More to follow.......




Wednesday, 13 November 2024

The Berry House boulder, north of Shebbear

 


From Google streetview -- this is a hefty boulder, on the roadside verge at the entrance to Berry House

More on the Shebbear erratic boulder



Found in the NDAS Newsletter, Autumn 2017
http://www.ndas.org.uk/NDAS%20Newsletter%20Autumn%202017.pdf


This is very interesting. More on Shebbear........... John Bradbeer is quite certain that the Shebbear and Berry House stones are both sarsens, related to those on Salisbury Plain and other parts of southern England. He suggests that the two stones have come from destroyed Tertiary deposits, and have been "let down" onto the present land surface.  Until further evidence is forthcoming, this sounds like a reasonable explanation.  More research please, from those who live over that way......

The Devil’s Stone at Shebbear: A Landscape Enigma

John Bradbeer

Members will probably be aware of the Devil’s Stone, which lies at the west end of the square, just outside the churchyard in Shebbear. It represents an enigma taking in archaeology, geology and geomorphology (the study of landforms). The stone itself is at the centre of much folklore, culminating in a ceremony every 5th November, when the stone is turned. This is to flush the Devil out from his
possible hiding place under the stone and failure to do so puts next year’s crops in jeopardy. Another element to the story is that the Devil was escaping from Northlew, where he was in danger of catching his death of cold and to hasten his progress, he dropped the stone in Shebbear. We can probably explain the November timing of the turning of the stone with reference to the Celtic year in which the
first of November, Samhain (pronounced sawin) marks the start of winter. The shift to 5th November almost certainly came about after the Gunpowder Plot of 1605.

The stone itself is around 500 to 700 kilograms in weight and sub-angular rather than round in shape. It is described geologically as a conglomerate orthoquartzite, and to the untrained eye, the shiny quartz grains resemble the quartz crystals in granite. It is in fact a sedimentary rock and current thinking suggests that it is Tertiary in age and thus comparable with the sarsen stones (or ‘grey wethers’) that are found on Salisbury Plain and which, of course, were famously used at Avebury and Stonehenge. It is generally accepted that sea levels were very much higher in the Tertiary period, roughly 5 to 50 million years ago, and many of the succession of erosion surfaces (from c 50 to c 350 metres OD) that give such flat skylines across much of the county were cut at this time. Most of the presumed Tertiary cover of South West England has long since been eroded away, but Tertiary deposits are preserved on the top of Haldon Hill, south west of Exeter and in the down-faulted Bovey Basin in South Devon and here in North Devon in the Petrockstow Basin and the off- shore Stanley Basin near Lundy. Orleigh in Buckland Brewer has a flint gravel deposit presumed to be of Tertiary age and derived from a former cover of chalk. The Tithe Apportionment of 1841 records some fields as ‘Flint Hill’. So geologists can offer a plausible origin for the Devil’s Stone, but what happened to the other survivors from this former Tertiary cover remains an enigma.

In central southern England, besides the sarsens used at sites like Avebury and Stonehenge and incorporated in some of the barrows, there are clusters such as those found in a dry valley on
Fyfield Down, just north of Pewsey in Wiltshire. Geomorphologists can explain such a cluster by reference to solifluction flow during the very cold periods in the Quaternary when southern England was effectively tundra, lying just to the south of the great ice sheets and the summer thaw delivered sufficient water to move soil and sarsens stones down slope. The river terrace gravels along the Solent also contain many smaller fragments of sarsen stone, brought down by the rivers that drain much of Salisbury Plain. But where are the other sarsen stones from North Devon? On Salisbury Plain it is plausible to speculate that early humans found and moved many of the suitably large stones to incorporate in monuments, but in North Devon, there are no megaliths formed of sarsens. North
Devon’s river gravel terraces, of which there may be at least four or five, have never been exploited so no sarsens have been exposed from these. Perhaps there never were as many sarsens here and most were quite small and thus readily transported or fragmented into yet smaller pieces.



The Devil’s stone at Shebbear 


However, the enigma has another twist. For about 750 metres from the Devil’s Stone is another sarsen, rather larger at an estimated 1,500 to 2,000 kilograms, now on the verge in front of Berry House and one that looks far more like potential megalith material in shape. That two such stones should survive so close to each other yet no others appear to have survived anywhere in North Devon requires explanation. Clearly human agency has to be invoked in the survival and folklore attached, especially to the Devil’s Stone, but archaeology and geology have no real explanation as to why there should be just these two sarsens and no others known in North Devon.  (Note from BJ:  could these stones have been carried from a source area near the coast, by an ice tongue pressing inland from the Fremington - Barnstaple area?)



The Berry House erratic, more than twice the size of the Shebbear stone, and weighing in 
at almost 2 tonnes.........














Monday, 11 November 2024

A very silly rant from the pet rock boys

 

Well, this is rather entertaining -- and more than a little pathetic.  Pearce, Bevins, Ixer and Scourse have put together a furious synthetic rant designed to question my competence and destroy my credibility.  It's just been published in Quaternary Newsletter:

Pearce, N., Bevins, R., Ixer, R. and Scourse, J.  2024.  Comment on "An igneous erratic at Limeslade, Gower, and the Glaciation of the Bristol Channel" by Brian John.  Quaternary Newsletter 163, pp 15 - 20.

Also very entertaining is Tim Daw's instant report on his blog.  Ah, the faithful retainer can always be relied on to help his muckers when they are in a spot of bother.  His report, with carefully selected quotes, is flagged up as "the professional response" to my Limeslade article !!  It's quite touching to see such blind loyalty from an amateur.

Maybe you shouldn't be too surprised.  I'm not surprised at all.........

As readers of this blog will know, my short article published earlier this year presented some preliminary information on the Limeslade boulder, including pXRF data kindly provided by the late Prof Tim Darvill, and assessed its importance in the debate about the glaciation of the Bristol Channel.  In the article I recognised the shortcomings of just three readings from one sample from the boulder, and looked forward to seeing more intensive and detailed analyses of other samples from the boulder by other researchers.  I said: "There is inadequate data for the creation of scatter diagrams or bivariate graphs involving the Limeslade boulder ppm readings. So it is not possible at present to say that the pXRF readings occupy a different visualised “compositional space” for trace elements than the readings for the Preseli tors."

Not everybody has access to research funds and top class laboratory facilities, and when Prof Tim Darvill and Dr Steve Parry offered to help in obtaining pXRF readings, I was grateful for their involvement. 

Instead of accepting this preliminary work with good grace as a starting point for future research, Pearce et al  have subjected it to detailed -- and it has to be said, obsessively aggressive and petulant -- scrutiny, while in the process questioning the competence of other geologists whose notes I reproduced word for word.  I am at a loss as to why these four academics have allowed themselves to be sucked into this absurd spat.  They cannot possibly come out of it with any credit.

In the second part of their article Pearce et al accuse me of  "a polemic against the advocates of human transport (e.g. Parker Pearson et al., 2021)".  I strongly refute that.  My assessment of the human transport thesis (on pp 10 and 11) is carefully phrased, and constitutes a straightforward review of the narrative developed over the last decade by Parker Pearson, Ixer, Bevins and others.  Indeed, my comments are supported by the dramatic retreats made by these authors from the spectacular claims they were making just a few years ago.  These retreats (for example on Waun Mawn) are well known to all who read the literature.

The latter part of the Pearce et al article relates to the glaciation / sea ice transport issue, and I take issue with almost everything that they say.  I will revisit that in a later post.  I will not accept snide comments from people who have apparently never done any field work in West Wales relating to the Quaternary stratigraphic sequence.  Nor will I accept a "holier than thou" attitude from geologists who have, over the last decade, refused to cite "inconvenient literature" or to accept that any of their ideas are questioned or disputed by anybody else.

As for their parting shot:  "This article merely represents a disingenuous cover to justify a rehearsal
of the now well-worn and increasingly tedious debate concerning transport of the Stonehenge bluestones."  That really is beneath contempt.  The article I published was fashioned in part by the constructive comments of the journal editor and referees. The "tedious debate" to which Pearce et al  refer has been fuelled and perpetrated by an endless stream of journal and popular science magazine articles which they themselves have written, many of them recycling the same basic data, designed to promote the strange fantasy that the Preseli bluestones at Stonehenge were targetted, quarried and transported by our Neolithic ancestors.

Watch this space........

Details:

Brian John, 2024. An Igneous Erratic at Limeslade, Gower & the Glaciation of the Bristol Channel. Quaternary Newsletter 162, June 2024. pp 4 - 14.

The article is freely accessible, and can be downloaded here:

https://www.qra.org.uk/quaternary-newsletter/quaternary-newsletter-current/

It is also on Researchgate, and can be accessed here:

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/381775577_Quaternary_Newsletter_Article_AN_IGNEOUS_ERRATIC_AT_LIMESLADE_GOWER_AND_THE_GLACIATION_OF_THE_BRISTOL_CHANNEL