Ck. Ballantyne et Ge. Hallam, Maximum altitude of Late Devensian glaciation on South Uist, Outer Hebrides, Scotland, P GEOL ASSN, 112, 2001, pp. 155-167
Mountains on South Uist support a high-level weathering limit that separate
s an upper zone of shattered bedrock, blockfields and tors from a lower zon
e of glacially moulded bedrock. This weathering limit descends gently SE fr
om a maximum altitude of c. 470 m, following the direction of regional ice
movement. Analyses of joint depths and clay-fraction mineralogy indicate th
at the weathering limit represents the upper limit of Late Devensian glacia
l erosion. The limit is therefore interpreted as a periglacial trimline cut
around palaeonunataks, and thus as representing the maximum altitude of th
e Outer Hebrides Ice Cap. The former ice divide probably lay along the west
coast of the Uists at an altitude of slightly over 500 m. This evidence is
combined with ice altitude data for adjacent land areas and the results of
offshore research to reconstruct the surface configuration of the last ice
sheet across western Scotland and the adjacent shelf. The reconstruction s
uggests that The Minch was occupied by a broad ice saddle over 400 m in alt
itude, with a major ice stream flowing southwestwards across the Sea of the
Hebrides. No unequivocal evidence was found in the South Uist hills for gl
acial readvances after the last glacial maximum.