Luminescence dating of a late Middle Pleistocene glacial advance in eastern England

  • Philip L. Gibbard Scott Polar Research Institute, University of Cambridge, Lensfield Road, Cambridge CB2 1ER, England, UK https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9757-7292
  • Mark D. Bateman Department of Geography, University of Sheffield, Sheffield S10 2TN, England, UK
  • Jane Leathard Department of Geography, University of Sheffield, SheffieldS10 2TN, England, UK
Keywords: Glaciation, optically stimulated luminescence, ice margin, Fenland, glaciofluvial

Abstract

Previous investigation of isolated landforms, on the eastern margin of the East Anglian Fenland, England, has demonstrated that they represent an ice-marginal delta and alluvial fan complex deposited at the margin of an ice lobe that entered the Fenland during the ‘Tottenhill glaciation’ (termed the ‘Skertchly Line’). They have been attributed, based on regional correlations, to a glaciation during the Late Wolstonian (i.e. Late Saalian) Substage (Drenthe Stadial, early Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 6). This paper aimed to test this correlation by directly optically luminescence dating, for the first time, sediments found within the Skertchly Line at Shouldham Thorpe, Norfolk, and Maidscross Hill, Suffolk, together with those in associated kame terrace deposits at Watlington, Norfolk. Ages ranged from 244 ± 10 ka to 12.8 ± 0.46 ka, all the results being younger than MIS 8 with some clearly showing the landforms have been subsequently subjected to periglacial processes, particularly during the Late Devensian Substage (∼MIS 2). Most of the remainder fall within the range 169–212 ka and could be assigned to MIS 6, thus confirming the previously proposed age of the glaciation. The local and regional implications of these conclusions are discussed, the maximum ice limit being linked to that of the Amersfoort–Nijmegen glaciotectonic ridge limit in the central Netherlands.

Published
2021-11-29
How to Cite
Gibbard , P. L., Bateman , M. D., & Leathard , J. (2021). Luminescence dating of a late Middle Pleistocene glacial advance in eastern England. Netherlands Journal of Geosciences, 100. https://doi.org/10.1017/njg.2021.13
Section
Regular paper