tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1228690739485734684.post2759436906556807413..comments2024-03-28T14:00:12.372+00:00Comments on Stonehenge and the Ice Age: Classic Pembrokeshire Pleistocene locations (1)BRIAN JOHNhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00413447032454568083noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1228690739485734684.post-14666424065708039622014-03-18T20:53:19.260+00:002014-03-18T20:53:19.260+00:00Tony -- Ipswichian is the name conventionally used...Tony -- Ipswichian is the name conventionally used for the last Interglacial (oxygen isotope Stage 5E). Given that name because the "type locality" which fixed this interglacial in a wider sequence was near Ipswich....BRIAN JOHNhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00413447032454568083noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1228690739485734684.post-63712847549987940102014-03-18T20:46:02.280+00:002014-03-18T20:46:02.280+00:00IPSWICHIAN interglacial beach deposits??!!.... [ f...IPSWICHIAN interglacial beach deposits??!!.... [ final image caption]<br /><br />Gosh, I KNOW glaciers are no respectors of distance in human terms, but Ipswich is an awful long way east of Pembrokeshire. And my Undergraduate knowledge of Glacial Geomorphology is by now quite archaic.TonyHnoreply@blogger.com