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Pleistocene glaciation of Fenland, England, and its implications for evolution of the region

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TLDR
Detailed investigation of landforms and their underlying deposits on the eastern margin of Fenland, East Anglia, demonstrated that they represent a series of glaciofluvial delta-fan and related sediments, a period during which fluvial and periglacial activity modified the landscape under cold climates, and organic sediments were laid down during a warmer event.
Abstract
Detailed investigation of landforms and their underlying deposits on the eastern margin of Fenland, East Anglia, demonstrated that they represent a series of glaciofluvial delta-fan and related sediments. Associated with these deposits are glacially dislocated sediments including tills, meltwater and pre-existing fluvial sediments. These ‘Skertchly Line’ deposits occur in the context of a substantial ice lobe that entered Fenland from the N to NE, dammed the streams entering the basin and caused glacial lakes to form in the valleys on the margins. Bulldozing by the ice lobe caused a series of ice-pushed ridges to form at the dynamic margin, especially at the ice maximum and during its retreat phases. Meltwater formed a series of marginal fans that coalesced into marginal accumulations in the SE of the basin. The ice lobe is named the Tottenhill glaciation. Further investigations of the Fenland margin have revealed the extent of the Tottenhill glaciation in the Fenland Basin, to the south and west, in sufficient detail to demonstrate the nature of the Tottenhill ice lobe and the landscape left on deglaciation. The ice lobe is likely to have been prone to surging. This is indicated by the low gradient of the ice lobe, the presence of underlying ductile Mesozoic clays, the evidence of ice-marginal flooding and the presence of arcuate glaciotectonic push moraines. Regional correlation, supported by independent numerical geochronology, indicates that the glaciation occurred ca 160 ka, i.e. during the late Middle Pleistocene, Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 6, the Wolstonian Stage. Comparison and correlation across the southern North Sea Basin confirms that the glaciation is the equivalent of that during the Late Saalian Drenthe Stadial in The Netherlands. The implications of this correlation are presented. Before the glaciation occurred, the Fenland Basin did not exist. It appears to have been initiated by a subglacial tunnel valley system beneath the Anglian (=Elsterian, MIS 12) ice sheet. During the subsequent Hoxnian (=Holsteinian; approx. MIS 11) interglacial, the sea invaded the drainage system inherited following the glacial retreat. The evolution through the subsequent ca 200 ka Early to Middle Wolstonian substages, the interval between the Hoxnian (Holsteinian) temperate Stage and the Wolstonian glaciation, represents a period during which fluvial and periglacial activity modified the landscape under cold climates, and organic sediments were laid down during a warmer event. Palaeolithic humans were also periodically present during this interval, their artefacts having been reworked by the subsequent glaciation. The deglaciation was followed by re-establishment of the rivers associated with the deposition of Late Wolstonian (Warthe Stadial) gravels and sands, and later, deposits of the Ipswichian interglacial (=Eemian, approx. MIS 5e) including freshwater, then estuarine sediments. Subsequent evolution of the basin occurred during the Devensian Stage (=Weichselian, MIS 5d-2) under predominantly cold, periglacial conditions.

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Global glacier dynamics during 100 ka Pleistocene glacial cycles

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The “Missing Glaciations” of the Middle Pleistocene

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A chronology for North Sea Lobe advance and recession on the Lincolnshire and Norfolk coasts during MIS 2 and 6

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Trace fossils from proglacial lake sediments

TL;DR: Trace fossils have been discovered in Middle Pleistocene proglacial lake sediments from St Albans, Hertfordshire, England as discussed by the authors, indicating that this environment was capable of supporting a variety of benthonic animals.
Journal ArticleDOI

Relative land-sea-level changes in southeastern England during the Pleistocene

TL;DR: In this paper, it is shown that during the last two million years, sea level is known to have risen above and fallen below the present sea level, and the evidence for such fluctuations comes from marine and estuarine sediments, including beaches, far above present sea-level and from freshwater sediments.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fluvial system response to Late Devensian (Weichselian) aridity, Baston, Lincolnshire, England

TL;DR: In this article, a marked horizon of ice-wedge casts is found between two distinctive dateable facies associations, in order to provide chronological control on the period of icewedge formation, and good agreement of the radiocarbon and OSL dating techniques during the Middle and Late Devensian.
Journal ArticleDOI

The interglacial of the Nar Valley, Norfolk

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the geology and palaeobotany of the Nar Valley, Norfolk, interglacial deposits in the early Pleistocene and found that they are of great (Hoxnian, Elster/Saale) Interglacial age.
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