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The last Scottish Ice Sheet

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Ballantyne_2018_EESTRSE_LastScottish_AAM.pdf (6.951Mb)
Date
03/2019
Author
Ballantyne, Colin K.
Small, David
Keywords
British–Irish Ice Sheet
Deglaciation
Dimlington Stade
Flowsets
Ice streams
Late Devensian
Lithostratigraphy
Radiocarbon dating
Readvances
Terrestrial cosmogenic nuclide dating
GE Environmental Sciences
Environmental Science(all)
Earth and Planetary Sciences(all)
T-NDAS
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Abstract
The last Scottish Ice Sheet (SIS) expanded from a pre-existing ice cap after ∼35 ka. Highland ice dominated, with subsequent build-up of a Southern Uplands ice mass. The Outer Hebrides, Skye, Mull, the Cairngorms and Shetland supported persistent independent ice centres. Expansion was accompanied by ice-divide migration and switching flow directions. Ice nourished in Scotland reached the Atlantic Shelf break in some sectors but only mid-shelf in others, was confluent with the Fennoscandian Ice Sheet (FIS) in the North Sea Basin, extended into northern England, and fed the Irish Sea Ice Stream and a lobe that reached East Anglia. The timing of maximum extent was diachronous, from ∼30–27 ka on the Atlantic Shelf to ∼22–21 ka in Yorkshire. The SIS buried all mountains, but experienced periods of thickening alternating with drawdown driven by ice streams such as the Minch, the Hebrides and the Moray Firth Ice Streams. Submarine moraine banks indicate oscillating retreat and progressive decoupling of Highland ice from Orkney–Shetland ice. The pattern and timing of separation of the SIS and FIS in the North Sea Basin remain uncertain. Available evidence suggests that by ∼17 ka, much of the Sea of the Hebrides, the Outer Hebrides, Caithness and the coasts of E Scotland were deglaciated. By ∼16 ka, the Solway lowlands, Orkney and Shetland were deglaciated, the SIS and Irish Ice Sheet had separated, the ice margin lay along the western seaboard, nunataks had emerged in Wester Ross, the ice margin lay N of the Cairngorms and the sea had invaded the Tay and Forth estuaries. By ∼15 ka, most of the Southern Uplands, the Firth of Clyde, the Midland Valley and the upper Spey valley were deglaciated, and in NW Scotland ice was retreating from fjords and valleys. By the onset of rapid warming at ∼14.7 ka, much of the remnant SIS was confined within the limits of Younger Dryas glaciation. The SIS, therefore, lost most of its mass during the Dimlington Stade. It is uncertain whether fragments of the SIS persisted on high ground throughout the Lateglacial Interstade.
Citation
Ballantyne , C K & Small , D 2019 , ' The last Scottish Ice Sheet ' , Earth and Environmental Science Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh , vol. 110 , no. 1-2 , pp. 93–131 . https://doi.org/10.1017/S1755691018000038
Publication
Earth and Environmental Science Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh
Status
Peer reviewed
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1017/S1755691018000038
ISSN
1755-6910
Type
Journal article
Rights
Copyright: © The Royal Society of Edinburgh 2018. This work has been made available online in accordance with the publisher’s policies. This is the author created, accepted version manuscript following peer review and may differ slightly from the final published version. The final published version of this work is available at https://doi.org/10.1017/S1755691018000038
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  • University of St Andrews Research
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10023/16466

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