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The mixed‐bed glacial landform imprint of the North Sea Lobe in the western North Sea

Authors :
Richard C. Chiverrell
Elena Grimoldi
Steven Grahame Moreton
Mark D. Bateman
Dayton Dove
Alicia Medialdea
Heather Stewart
Colm Ó Cofaigh
Margot Saher
Tom Bradwell
Derek Fabel
David H. Roberts
Chris D. Clark
Louise Callard
David J.A. Evans
Source :
Earth surface processes and landforms, 2019, Vol.44(6), pp.1233-1258 [Peer Reviewed Journal], Earth Surface Processes and Landforms
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Wiley, 2019.

Abstract

© 2018 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. During the last glacial cycle an intriguing feature of the British-Irish Ice Sheet was the North Sea Lobe (NSL); fed from the Firth of Forth and which flowed south and parallel to the English east coast. The controls on the formation and behaviour of the NSL have long been debated, but in the southern North Sea recent work suggests the NSL formed a dynamic, oscillating terrestrial margin operating over a deforming bed. Further north, however, little is known of the behaviour of the NSL or under what conditions it operated. This paper analyses new acoustic, sedimentary and geomorphic data in order to evaluate the glacial landsystem imprint and deglacial history of the NSL offshore from NE England. Subglacial tills (AF2/3) form a discontinuous mosaic interspersed with bedrock outcrops across the seafloor, with the partial excavation and advection of subglacial sediment during both advance and retreat producing mega-scale glacial lineations and grounding zone wedges. The resultant ‘mixed-bed’ glacial landsystem is the product of a dynamic switch from a terrestrial piedmont-lobe margin with a net surplus of sediment to a partially erosive, quasi-stable, marine-terminating, ice stream lobe as the NSL withdrew northwards. Glaciomarine sediments (AF4) drape the underlying subglacial mixed-bed imprint and point to a switch to tidewater conditions between 19.9 and 16.5 ka cal BP as the North Sea became inundated. The dominant controls on NSL recession during this period were changing ice flux through the Firth of Forth ice stream onset zone and water depths at the grounding line; the development of the mixed-bed landsystem being a response to grounding line instability. © 2018 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01979337
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Earth surface processes and landforms, 2019, Vol.44(6), pp.1233-1258 [Peer Reviewed Journal], Earth Surface Processes and Landforms
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....940bc90c3325ffe201e8356530374b3a