After much thought, the blue line on this map shows where the outer limit of glaciation in Southern England might actually be located. Maybe this is a "composite line" showing the limits of different ice lobes of different ages, but this may also be the "Stage 16 glaciation" otherwise referred to as the Happisburgh or Cromerian glaciation, dated to c 650,000 years ago. The white line represents the outer limit of the Anglian glaciation, dated to MIS-12, around 450,000 years ago.
Numbers identify key research areas: 1 Exmoor and the SW uplands (local ice caps and snowfields). 2 Somerset Levels. 3 Mendip. 4 Salisbury Plain. 5 North Wessex Downs. 6 Cotswold Hills. 7 Plateau drift remnants near Oxford. 8 Chilterns. 9 Chalky Till spread.
Quote: "The Anglian Glaciation (c. 0.43 Ma; MIS 12) marks the biggest Quaternary expansion of the BIS and had a marked effect on the landscape of Britain. It radically altered drainage and relief, and initiated the formation of the Straits of Dover which led Britain to be isolated from mainland Europe during various high sea-level stands during the Middle and Late Pleistocene. The chronology of Middle Pleistocene expansions of the BIS is still contentious, with conflicts existing between different types of evidence, and in some cases, different interpretations of the same evidence."
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.)
=======================
This is an interesting summary of the problems associated with very old glacial episodes, by Rose et al (2010):
Attempts to understand the glacial history of Britain have generated much work and much debate (see Clark et al., 2004 and Rose, 2009 for outlines of the current debates), and one of the issues of contention is the status of glacial events before MIS 12 (the Anglian Glaciation of the British Quaternary). Conventional views, as expressed in Bowen et al. (1999) and by Gibbard in Clark et al. (2004), find no evidence of substance for glaciation prior to MIS 12, whereas Whiteman and Rose (1992), Hamblin et al., (2000, 2005), Lee et al., (2004), Rose in Clark et al. (2004) and Rose (2009) identify much evidence for glaciations prior to MIS 12, proposing glaciations in Wales, a glaciation in the upper part of the present Thames catchment and lowland glaciation in eastern England. This issue is important as glaciation is perhaps the most effective indicator of how the climate of the British Isles responded to the climate forcing of the Early and early Middle Pleistocene, and in particular how Earth surface systems responded to obliquity-driven climate change and the Mid-Bruhnes Transition (Clark et al., 2006; Rose, 2010).
The critical problems fuelling this debate are the quality of the evidence used to propose glaciation, and the reliability of the evidence used to date the proposals. For instance, the Happisburgh Glaciation, which is well represented by unequivocal glacial deposits (the Happisburgh and Corton Tills) (Lee et al., 2004; Hamblin et al., 2005; Rose, 2009), is ascribed to MIS 16 on the basis of stratigraphic sequences and relationships with pre-MIS 12 Bytham river deposits, but this age is challenged by First Appearance Datum / Last Appearance Datum (FAD/LAD) bio- stratigraphy and AAR results, which suggest that such an early age is not possible (Preece et al., 2009). Likewise, a number of glaciations have been proposed for western Britain on the basis of glacially-sourced material (clasts provenanced to the Welsh Mountains and Borderlands) (Hey and Brenchley, 1977; Whiteman, 1990), and glacially fractured sand grains (Hey et al., 1971, Hey, 1976) in the Early and early Middle Pleistocene deposits of the River Thames. In this case, unlike the case for the Happisburgh Glaciation, the early age of the evidence is not in question, rather the issue is whether the evidence is good enough to justify the case for glaciation. It is possible, for instance, that the clasts could have been derived from the head-waters of the ancestral Thames catchment by frost shattering and transported from these regions by fluvial and ice-floe processes, and the origin of surface textures on sand grains remains an issue of debate (Whalley, 1996). Hey and Brenchley (1977, p. 224) noted that ‘no glacial striae have yet been recognised on any pebbles of boulders of the Kesgrave gravels ...’.
===================
So here is my take on the situation:
For something like 50 years it has been accepted in the specialist literature that the supposed "Anglian" ice limit in the Midlands is a proxy for the greatest extent of glaciation in the British Isles. I myself have slipped into that style of thinking on many occasions. But how logical is it to assume that glacier ice has never extended beyond that widely-quoted line drawn on a map? What about the evidence on the ground?
Well, for a start, the line (which is itself a matter involving some disagreement) purports to show the southernmost limit of coherent and easily reconizeable glacial deposits including till. It has always been accepted that there might be destroyed or redistributed glacial deposits further south, and the literature is full of instances where glacial till appears to be incorporated into other deposits including slope deposits and fluvial gravels. In the upper and lower Thames Valleys the vast quantities of terrace gravels laid down during a long history of river valley evolution have masked or sealed older deposits which are only very rarely exposed during gravel pit operations -- and which are often then immediately flooded. The Anglian ice limit portrayed in the Celtic Sea has been submerged and more of less forgotten about as the LGM ice limit has been pushed further and further south, right out to the shelf edge, by the work of James Scourse and others. And if the Anglian Glaciation was more extensive and intensive than the Devensian Glaciation, did the ice of the Irish Sea Glacier extend all the way to a calving ice front when deep water was encountered? It is known from East Anglia that there are glacial deposits in the sediment sequence that are older than the Anglian glaciation, and these are referred to as the "Cromerian" sequence (MIS-22-13) or the Happisburgh Glaciation. Others refer to oxygen isotope stage 16 as a distinct glacial episode.
There are some difficulties. To quote Lee et al (2011): "Far- travelled erratics from north Wales, including frequently outsized and sub-angular clasts of acid porphyry, tuff and banded rhyolite (Hey and Brenchley, 1977; McGregor and Green, 1978), and glacially-abraded sandgrains (Hey, 1980), have been found throughout both the Sudbury and Colchester formations (Whiteman and Rose, 1992), and recently, a glacially striated oversized block of rhyolitic tuff has been discovered in situ in the Colchester Formation (Rose et al et al. 2010)." "The increased influx of north Welsh erratic lithologies into the Ardleigh Terrace aggradation has been attributed to a glaciation reaching the Cotswold Hills after the truncation of the Thames catchment........"Quaternary Science Reviews 23(14):1551-1566
Jonathan R. Lee, James Rose, Richard J.O Hamblin, Brian S.P Moorlock
DOI:
10.1016/j.quascirev.2004.02.002
Interestingly enough, Campbell (1998), in his Synthesis of the GCR volume on the Quaternary of South-West England (map on p 23) suggested that the giant erratics and other "inconvenient" features in SW England might be relics of what he called "the Stage 16 Glaciation". I quite like this assignment, since it deals with some awkward evidence in the sedimentary record for Somerset which suggests that at least some glacial traces there are pre-Anglian in age.
As regards your mention of a so-called Happisburgh Glaciation, very early human tools were found on Happisburgh beach in recent times that are believed to be the earliest human tools in Britain thus far, around 9000,000 years old.
ReplyDeleteThe evidence for the Happisburgh Glaciation is restricted to quite a small area -- too many zeroes, Tony. The human traces are said to be from around 850,000 years ago, linked to the Cromer Forest Bed.. The chronology is very messy around there.......
ReplyDeleteWhoops, was meant to have been Nine Hundred Thousand! Was merely trying to add what I knew about the archaeology of Happisburgh, that was all, just as an additional fact.
ReplyDelete