Evidence of Late Devensian and early Flandrian processes and environments in the Idle Valley at Tiln, North Nottinghamshire

Citation
Aj. Howard et al., Evidence of Late Devensian and early Flandrian processes and environments in the Idle Valley at Tiln, North Nottinghamshire, P YORKS G S, 52, 1999, pp. 383-393
Citations number
46
Categorie Soggetti
Earth Sciences
Journal title
PROCEEDINGS OF THE YORKSHIRE GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY
ISSN journal
00440604 → ACNP
Volume
52
Year of publication
1999
Part
4
Pages
383 - 393
Database
ISI
SICI code
0044-0604(199911)52:<383:EOLDAE>2.0.ZU;2-O
Abstract
This paper elucidates the late Pleistocene and early Flandrian environmenta l history of the Lower Idle Valley through sedimentological, palaeobiologic al and radiometric dating studies of fluvial and aeolian deposits. The lowe r part of the sequence comprises braided river sands and gravels with silty peats infilling a scour hollow in their upper surface. Coleopteran and pal ynological analyses of the organic sediments indicate deposition in a slow moving or static water body with fringing reeds, sedges and substantial bed s of wet moss. Away from the water, the vegetation was open and probably of grassland with few trees. Radiocarbon dating indicates accumulation of org anic material started towards the end of the Dimlington Stadial, c. 13,500 CAL BP. A cryoturbated, podsolized sandy clay with plant matter was develop ed on the sands and gravels and is akin to an 'Arctic Structure Soil'. The sandy clay parent material on which the soil was developed is suggested to have originated in a lacustrine environment, tentatively linked to the Lake Humber complex. The palaeosol is buried, in turn, beneath coversands, the uppermost part of which is reworked. Thermoluminescence (TL) age determinat ions show that the coversands started to accumulate around 13,700 sp, proba bly in response to climatic deterioration prior to the Loch Lomond Stadial. Reworking began around 8,500 years ago.