Gn. Thomas, Late Middle Pleistocene pollen biostratigraphy in Britain: pitfalls and possibilities in the separation of interglacial sequences, QUAT SCI R, 20(16-17), 2001, pp. 1621-1630
Recent work on late Middle Pleistocene interglacials in Britain has shown t
hat sites formerly attributed to the Hoxnian include representatives of two
different interglacials, which have been correlated with Oxygen Isotope St
ages 11 and 9. Palynology has long been used to characterize and correlate
temperate sequences in Britain. However, the quality of the palynological r
ecord is considerably better in lacustrine sequences than in fluvial and es
tuarine sediments; the former have longer sequences and higher resolution,
whereas more rapid deposition in fluvial and estuarine environments leads t
o sequences representing only fragments of interglacials. The latter type o
f site, however, is more likely to have multi-proxy evidence and to be read
ily fitted into a stratigraphical framework. The problems are reviewed in t
he light of new work in the West Midlands, where some of the most complete
British late Middle Pleistocene lacustrine sequences are preserved, Lacustr
ine sites here have a strong affinity with 'Hoxnian' sites of the 'type' ar
ea in East Anglia. A critical question remains as to whether the two interg
lacials conflated under the term Hoxnian can be separately characterized in
terms of their pollen assemblages. Details of lacustrine sequences in the
North Birmingham area and East Anglia show remarkable similarities, perhaps
suggesting that the same interglacial is recorded in all of them. As many
of these sites are thought to be kettle holes or glacially overdeepened bas
ins, the first interglacial following the Anglian glaciation is the most li
kely to be represented, suggesting that all the lacustrine 'Hoxnian' sites
might date from OIS 11. In areas not glaciated since the Anglian, interglac
ials after OIS I I are likely to be represented only by fragmentary, non-la
custrine sequences, difficult if not impossible to separate using palynolog
y alone. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.