Abstract
During the Pleistocene, a period covering the last two million years, sea level is known to have risen above and fallen below the present sea level. The evidence for such fluctuations comes from marine and estuarine sediments, including beaches, far above present sea level and from freshwater sediments, beaches and valley systems now submerged. In southeast England there are Lower Pleistocene marine deposits at 183 m O.D . at Netley Heath in Surrey and upper Pleistocene freshwater sediments at - 35 m O.D . in the Channel. Thus we have in this area evidence of an amplitude of sea-level fluctuation relative to the present sea level of some 218 m. While such limits of relative sea-level fluctuation are not so difficult to identify, very considerable difficulties arise in determining the relation of sea-level change to the passage of time, and in the analysis of sea-level change - whether it be a real lowering of sea level relative to land, or an uplift of land relative to sea level. Let us briefly consider each of these two fields of difficulty. To date a particular stand of sea level, we have to know the relation of a particular deposit, say beach or shallow marine sediment to sea level at the time, and we have to know the correlation of this deposit to a part of the sequence of geological events which make up the Pleistocene. Both of these aspects may be problematical. It may not be certain what depth of water a deposit was formed in, and the age and correlation of the deposit may be doubtful.

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