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Relative sea‐level observations in western Scotland since the Last Glacial Maximum for testing models of glacial isostatic land movements and ice‐sheet reconstructions
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2006
Year
Glacio‐isostatic ReboundGlacierEngineeringGeomorphologyPaleoceanographyOceanographyGlacial ProcessEarth ScienceSocial SciencesHolocenePaleoenvironmental ChangeGeochronologySea-level HistoryMarine GeologySea-level ChangeGeographySea IceCryosphereIce‐sheet ReconstructionsRelative Sea‐level ObservationsRelative Sea‐level ChangePaleoecologyWestern Scotland
Abstract Observations of relative sea‐level change and local deglaciation in western Scotland provide critical constraints for modelling glacio‐isostatic rebound in northern Britain over the last 18 000 years. The longest records come from Skye, Arisaig and Knapdale with a shorter, Holocene, record from Kintail. Biostratigraphic (diatom, pollen, dinoflagellate, foraminifera and thecamoebian), lithological and radiocarbon analyses provide age and elevation parameters for each sea‐level index point. All four sites reveal relative sea‐level change that is highly non‐monotonic in time as the local vertical component of glacio‐isostatic rebound and eustasy (or global meltwater influx) dominate at different periods. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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