POST‐GLACIAL DEPOSITS IN SOUTH YORKSHIRE AND NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE
- 1 March 1958
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in New Phytologist
- Vol. 57 (1) , 19-49
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1469-8137.1958.tb05915.x
Abstract
Summary: The stratigraphy and pollen analysis of Hatfield Moors, Yorkshire, about ten miles south of Goole, are described. These moors are the residue of an old raised bog which lies on the Triassic sandstones and has no underlying deposits indicative of an initial phase of reed‐swamp. The bog, which has at least four flooding horizons, began to grow in early Atlantic times. Early agricultural practices are revealed by the pollen analyses at the opening of Sub‐boreal times, and at the same time small amounts of charcoal are found in the peat. Agricultural activity increased at the beginning of Sub‐atlantic times, but was afterwards curtailed. It is suggested by comparison with a site at South Ferriby in the Ancholme Valley, Lincolnshire, that this curtailment may well date from the end of Romano‐British times.The stratigraphy and archaeology at Island Carr, Brigg, in the Ancholme Valley are brought together, and a correlation is made between the Bronze Age‐Iron Age transition; the opening of Sub‐atlantic times; and the onset of a marine transgression of the Ancholme Valley. This transgression occurs during a period of relative emergence in the East Anglian Fenland and it is possible that differential isostatic or tectonic movements have taken place between the two areas during the later part of the post‐glacial period. The possibility of the presence of offshore bars, however, complicates the problem. The transgression is also manifested at Redbourne Hayes, a site some five miles to the south of Brigg where the maximum of the transgression is shown, at a rather later date. The peat overlying the transgression clay at Redbourne Hayes probably dates from Romano‐British times and is—perhaps within rather wide limits—contemporaneous with the upper organic deposits at South Ferriby (where Romano‐British remains were found in situ) at Weston Road, Goole, and at Ingoldmells on the Lincolnshire coast.A reassessment is made of the dating of the site at Ingoldmells in which it appears that the deposits are more comparable with those of the Humber region than with those of the Fenland.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Studies of the post-glacial history of British vegetation XIII. The meare pool region of the Somerset levelsPhilosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. B, Biological Sciences, 1955
- FURTHER POLLEN DATA EROM THE NOREOLK BROADSNew Phytologist, 1955
- Studies of the post-glacial history of British vegetation X. Correlation between climate, forest composition, prehistoric agriculture and peat stratigraphy in sub-Boreal and sub-Atlantic peats of the Somerset levelsPhilosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. B, Biological Sciences, 1948
- Studies in the Post-glacial history of British vegetation. VIII Swamping surfaces in peats of the Somerset Levels IX. Prehistoric trackways in the Somerset LevelsPhilosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. B, Biological Sciences, 1948
- COASTAL PEAT‐BEDS OF THE NORTH SEA REGION, AS INDICES OE LAND‐ AND SEA‐LEVEL CHANGESNew Phytologist, 1945
- Studies of the post-glacial history of British vegetation - III. Fenland polen diagrams - IV. Post-glacial changes of relative land- and sea-level in the English FenlandPhilosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. B, Biological Sciences, 1940
- STUDIES OF THE POST‐GLACIAL HISTORY OF BRITISH VEGETATIONNew Phytologist, 1939
- Studies of the post-glacial history of British vegetation I. Origin and stratigraphy of Fenland deposits near Wooldwalton, Hunts II. Origin and stratigraphy of deposits in southern FenlandPhilosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. B, Biological Sciences, 1938
- The Post-Glacial Deposits of the Lincolnshire CoastQuarterly Journal of the Geological Society, 1931
- Studies in the postarctic history of the forests of Northwestern Europe. I. Investigations in the British IslesGeologiska Föreningen i Stockholm Förhandlingar, 1928