Lithology, lithic petrology, planktonic foraminiferal abundances, and clastic grain sizes have been determined in a 30 m-long core recovered from the Barra Fan off northwest Scotland. The record extends back to around 45 kyr B.P., with sedimentation rates ranging between 50 and 200 cm/kyr. The abundance of ice-rafted debris indicates 16 glacimarine events, including temporal equivalents to Heinrich events 1-4. Enhanced concentrations of basaltic material derived from the British Tertiary Province suggest that the glacimarine sediments record variations in a glacial source on the Hebrides shelf margin. Glacimarine zones are separated by silty intervals with high planktonic foraminifera concentrations that reflect an interstadial circulation ...
The growth, maximum lateral extent and deglaciation of the last British Ice Sheet (BIS) has been rec...
The Barra Fan is a large prograding sedimentary wedge of Pliocene–Pleistocene age that has built out...
The Peach Slide is the largest known submarine mass movement on the British continental margin and i...
Abstract. Lithology, lithic petrology, planktonic foraminiferal bundances, and clastic grain sizes h...
Sediment core MD04-2822 from the Rockall Trough, northeast Atlantic, provides lithological evidence ...
Sediment colour, together with other proxy data, provides a novel, rapid and non-destructive tool in...
Sediment core MD04-2822 from the Rockall Trough, northeast Atlantic, provides lithological evidence ...
The Barra Fan, located at the continental margin of NW Scotland, offers a unique possibility to retr...
This study presents a stratigraphic investigation of the marine sediment core MD04-2822 from the Roc...
Electronic version excludes material for which permission has not been granted by the rights holderT...
A high-resolution investigation into the stratigraphy of core MD95-2006 from the Barra fan, NW Scott...
Abstract: The detailed stratigraphies of two shallow marine cores from the Hebridean shelf of northw...
During the last glacial maximum, the British–Irish Ice Sheet (BIIS) extended to the shelf edge in th...
The growth, maximum lateral extent and deglaciation of the last British Ice Sheet (BIS) has been rec...
The growth, maximum lateral extent and deglaciation of the last British Ice Sheet (BIS) has been rec...
The growth, maximum lateral extent and deglaciation of the last British Ice Sheet (BIS) has been rec...
The Barra Fan is a large prograding sedimentary wedge of Pliocene–Pleistocene age that has built out...
The Peach Slide is the largest known submarine mass movement on the British continental margin and i...
Abstract. Lithology, lithic petrology, planktonic foraminiferal bundances, and clastic grain sizes h...
Sediment core MD04-2822 from the Rockall Trough, northeast Atlantic, provides lithological evidence ...
Sediment colour, together with other proxy data, provides a novel, rapid and non-destructive tool in...
Sediment core MD04-2822 from the Rockall Trough, northeast Atlantic, provides lithological evidence ...
The Barra Fan, located at the continental margin of NW Scotland, offers a unique possibility to retr...
This study presents a stratigraphic investigation of the marine sediment core MD04-2822 from the Roc...
Electronic version excludes material for which permission has not been granted by the rights holderT...
A high-resolution investigation into the stratigraphy of core MD95-2006 from the Barra fan, NW Scott...
Abstract: The detailed stratigraphies of two shallow marine cores from the Hebridean shelf of northw...
During the last glacial maximum, the British–Irish Ice Sheet (BIIS) extended to the shelf edge in th...
The growth, maximum lateral extent and deglaciation of the last British Ice Sheet (BIS) has been rec...
The growth, maximum lateral extent and deglaciation of the last British Ice Sheet (BIS) has been rec...
The growth, maximum lateral extent and deglaciation of the last British Ice Sheet (BIS) has been rec...
The Barra Fan is a large prograding sedimentary wedge of Pliocene–Pleistocene age that has built out...
The Peach Slide is the largest known submarine mass movement on the British continental margin and i...