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10Be exposure age dating of Late Quaternary relative sea level changes and deglaciation of W Jura and NE Islay, Scottish Inner Hebrides

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 September 2022

Alastair G. DAWSON*
Affiliation:
Geography and Environmental Science, Tower Building, University of Dundee, Dundee DD1 4HN, Scotland, UK.
Paul BISHOP
Affiliation:
School of Geographical and Earth Sciences, University of Glasgow, University Avenue, Glasgow G12 8QQ, Scotland, UK.
James HANSOM
Affiliation:
School of Geographical and Earth Sciences, University of Glasgow, University Avenue, Glasgow G12 8QQ, Scotland, UK.
Derek FABEL
Affiliation:
Scottish Universities Environmental Research Centre, East Kilbride, South Lanarkshire G75 0QF, Scotland, UK.
*
*Corresponding author. Email: agdawson@dundee.ac.uk
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Abstract

New 10Be exposure age dating and geomorphological mapping of emerged shoreline features in W Jura and NE Islay throw new light on the regional pattern of ice sheet deglaciation and late-glacial relative sea level change. We conclude that the oldest and highest emerged shorelines in this area were produced ~15.7–16.3 ka, shortly after ice sheet deglaciation ~16.5 ka. It is envisaged that the first incursion of marine waters into coastal areas took place close to a former ice sheet margin that oscillated in position across this part of the Scottish Inner Hebrides. The first evidence of late-glacial marine sedimentation following deglaciation consists of emerged marine terrace fragments and unvegetated gravel beach ridges, the former represented by a prominent glacio-isostatically tilted shoreline that declines in altitude NE to SW, from ~40 m above ordnance datum (OD) in NW Jura to ~19 m OD in central Islay. In W Jura, north of Loch Tarbert, spectacular staircases of up to 55 unvegetated gravel beach ridges were formed shortly after regional deglaciation, possibly within 1 ka. A preliminary estimate of the average rate of relative sea level lowering across W Jura between deglaciation and the Younger Dryas is in the order of ~7 mmyr−1. Geomorphological evidence from Shian Bay, W Jura, indicates a truncation of the late-glacial beach ridge staircases by a large 480-m-long beach ridge (the Colonsay Ridge) at ~14.9 ka, when former relative sea level was at ~18 m OD. This ridge may represent the product of either a stillstand in the progressive lowering of relative sea level during the late-glacial or a reversal. This raises the intriguing possibility of an association between ridge formation and the timing of the well-established global meltwater pulse 1A between ~14.65 and ~14.8 ka.

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Creative Commons
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This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
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Copyright © The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press
Figure 0

Figure 1 Principal locations mentioned in text.

Figure 1

Figure 2 Oblique aerial photograph of late-glacial and Holocene-emerged gravel spreads in Loch Aoinidh area, western Jura. Note the termination seaward of the (higher) late-glacial beach ridge staircases at the top of the cliff of the Main Rock Platform. Photo courtesy of E Smith (photo reference ezs DSC_9787).

Figure 2

Figure 3 Three-stage schematic diagram of coastline evolution, W Jura. Top and middle: note that the deposition of the late-glacial beach ridges took place as a result of the erosion and winnowing of glacial sediments by the late-glacial sea across a much more extensive High Rock Platform. Bottom: a lower emerged shore platform was produced rapidly during the Younger Dryas as a result of cold-climate coastal processes that led to the seaward truncation of the (higher) late-glacial beach ridge staircases. Glacial till at locations A and B demonstrate that the late-glacial beach gravels and underlying High Rock Platform are separated by a period of ice sheet glaciation. Not to scale.

Figure 3

Figure 4 Oblique aerial photograph of late-glacial and Holocene-emerged gravel spreads, Shian Bay, western Jura. Photo courtesy of E Smith (photo reference ezs DSC 9780).

Figure 4

Figure 5 Geomorphological map of raised shoreline features, Loch Aoinidh, W Jura, showing locations of 10Be samples used to reconstruct pattern of late-glacial RSL changes (see Fig. 11). In this area, a High Rock Platform is locally mantled by staircases of unvegetated emerged beach ridges that extend up to ~36 m OD. The ridges terminate seaward at an emerged cliff and shore platform of Younger Dryas age (the Main Rock Platform). Note also that this emerged platform is mantled by Holocene beach gravels (see also Fig. 2). Note also the well-defined 480-m-long linear beach ridge, the Colonsay Ridge, whose seaward base lies at ~18 m OD (see Fig. 4). Topographic profiles and location of the beach ridge staircases at Loch Aoinidh together with profiles A–B and C–D are shown in Figures 7 and 8.

Figure 5

Table 1 Grid reference location data, altitude values and shielding parameter values for 10Be samples used in this study.

Figure 6

Table 2 Dissolved quartz mass values, 9Be, 10Be and exposure age data used in this study

Figure 7

Figure 6 Vertical Google Earth image (18.02.22) of Sgriob na Caillich medial moraine, SW Jura. At the seaward end of the hillslope, Loch na Sgrioba separates the moraine from an unvegetated emerged gravel ridge that cuts across the moraine at right angles (see also Fig. 10).

Figure 8

Figure 7 Cross profile of the 55 beach ridge staircase sequence at Loch Aoinidh, W Jura. A shorter profile across a staircase of vegetated beach ridges, A–B is also shown (see Fig. 5). The three 10Be exposure age determinations for this ridge sequence are also shown.

Figure 9

Figure 8 Cross profile C–D at Shian Bay, seaward from late-glacial marine limit showing the dimensions of the Colonsay Ridge and related 10Be exposure ages (see also Figs 5, 10; Table 2).

Figure 10

Figure 9 Geomorphological map of Coir Odhar area, NE Islay, showing partial truncation of outer moraine area by the highest late-glacial emerged marine terrace. The locations of 10Be exposure samples and ages of alluvial gravels located inside the moraine complex are also shown.

Figure 11

Figure 10 Aerial panorama, looking SW across the emerged coastal landforms of W Jura, between Shian Bay and Ruantallain (middle distance) (see Fig. 1) with the SW Jura peninsula in the far distance. Superimposed on the photograph are the 10Be exposure ages (ka) cited in the text. The 10Be exposure age of the Sgriob na Caillich medial moraine (far distance) is an average value derived from five age determinations. Photograph courtesy of E Smith (photo reference ezc DSC 9774).

Figure 12

Figure 11 (a) RSL curve for Arisaig, NW Scotland based on Lin et al. (2021) and Shennan et al. (2006, 2018). The circled data points and horizontal bars denote the sea level index points and associated standard errors of Shennan et al. (2006), while the inverted triangles denote the inferred upper limit of RSL (the late-glacial marine limit). The solid line represents the RSL prediction of Lin et al. (2021) using the optimum Earth model, while the shaded vertical bar indicates the approximate age of Meltwater Pulse 1A. (b) Reconstructed trend of RSL for Jura/Islay based on 10Be age determinations and associated standard error bars presented in this paper, plotted alongside the Holocene RSL curve for Islay (Dawson et al. 1998). The possible link between the 10Be age for the Colonsay Ridge (Col) and Meltwater Pulse 1A is highlighted. Note that the Jura/Islay plot is not an RSL curve sensu stricto since the late-glacial altitude values plotted are those from the individual swale depressions in front of the dated gravel ridges. Note that the plots of RSL in the two areas are unlikely to be identical since both are likely to have experienced different patterns of glacio-isostatic rebound.