Episodic erosion and resedimentation of valley-side glacigenic drift is evi
dent at three sites in the Scottish Highlands in the form of buried in situ
palaeosols intercalated with stacked sediment units. Radiocarbon dating of
10 palaeosols exposed in sections in debris cones suggests that gully eros
ion and redeposition of drift represents asynchronous debris flow and slope
wash activity within the past 6.5 cal.kyr. Palynological and charcoal analy
ses confirm that reworking was unrelated to burning of vegetation, and post
-dared the main phase of anthropogenic woodland clearance at two sites, alt
hough the possibility that recent debris flow activity in Glen Docherty may
have been associated with removal of woodland cover cannot be dismissed. H
owever, the collective evidence points to discrete, extreme storm-generated
events of random occurrence as the most likely cause of episodes of enhanc
ed slope reworking at the sites investigated. Evidence for periodic climati
c deterioration is more equivocal. By implication, the accumulation of subs
tantial debris cones in upland Britain may reflect primarily the reworking
of sediment during extremely rare, intense rainstorms, essentially independ
ent of progressive climate changes. Consequently, caution is necessary in u
sing debris flow stratigraphies alone as a means of reconstructing former l
ong-term climatic changes. Copyright (C) 2000 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.