A series of very wide (up to 15 km) raised shore platforms in the Scottish Hebrides are identified and described for the first time and are considered part of a high rock platform shoreline in the western isles of Scotland described by W. B. Wright in his classic Geological Magazine paper a century ago as a 'preglacial' feature. Subsequent interpretations suggesting that the platforms were produced during the Pleistocene are rejected here in favour of a speculative hypothesis that the features are part of the well-known strandflat that is extensively developed across large areas of the northern hemisphere. It is argued that the Scottish strandflat developed during the Pliocene and was later subjected to extensive Pleistocene glacial erosion...
Recent models of the last Scottish ice sheet suggest that nunataks remained above the ice surface in...
New 10Be exposure age dating and geomorphological mapping of emerged shoreline features in W Jura an...
Seismic facies, provenance and marine faunal associations of a nearshore prograding sediment wedge o...
A series of very wide (up to 15 km) raised shore platforms in the Scottish Hebrides are identified a...
The Outer Hebrides Platform extends west from the present island chain towards the Atlantic continen...
During the Late Glacial and Early Holocene periods Scotland was a mountainous north-westerly peninsu...
The Quaternary Period in Scotland was characterized by major climatic shifts and the alternation of ...
Recent research based primarily on exposure ages of boulders on moraines has suggested that extensiv...
This paper reviews the changing environments, developing landforms and terrestrial stratigraphy duri...
Evidence is presented for Holocene relative sea-level changes on the margin of a glacio-isostaticall...
This paper reviews the changing environments, developing landforms and terrestrial stratigraphy duri...
Preliminary results of a lengthy and detailed investigation into middle- and late-Holocene raised sh...
From a study of offshore borehole samples collected by the British Geological Survey in 1975, it is ...
As the majority of the data on Quaternary sediments from the North Sea Basin are seismostratigraphic...
Recent models of the last Scottish ice sheet suggest that nunataks remained above the ice surface in...
New 10Be exposure age dating and geomorphological mapping of emerged shoreline features in W Jura an...
Seismic facies, provenance and marine faunal associations of a nearshore prograding sediment wedge o...
A series of very wide (up to 15 km) raised shore platforms in the Scottish Hebrides are identified a...
The Outer Hebrides Platform extends west from the present island chain towards the Atlantic continen...
During the Late Glacial and Early Holocene periods Scotland was a mountainous north-westerly peninsu...
The Quaternary Period in Scotland was characterized by major climatic shifts and the alternation of ...
Recent research based primarily on exposure ages of boulders on moraines has suggested that extensiv...
This paper reviews the changing environments, developing landforms and terrestrial stratigraphy duri...
Evidence is presented for Holocene relative sea-level changes on the margin of a glacio-isostaticall...
This paper reviews the changing environments, developing landforms and terrestrial stratigraphy duri...
Preliminary results of a lengthy and detailed investigation into middle- and late-Holocene raised sh...
From a study of offshore borehole samples collected by the British Geological Survey in 1975, it is ...
As the majority of the data on Quaternary sediments from the North Sea Basin are seismostratigraphic...
Recent models of the last Scottish ice sheet suggest that nunataks remained above the ice surface in...
New 10Be exposure age dating and geomorphological mapping of emerged shoreline features in W Jura an...
Seismic facies, provenance and marine faunal associations of a nearshore prograding sediment wedge o...