Late-Glacial deposits at Nazeing in the Lea Valley, North London

At Nazeing, Essex, in the valley of the River Lea, a series of deposits has been investigated which extends back in time from the Post-Glacial climatic optimum to Late-Glacial times in the widest sense of that term. They are of special importance as bridging the time gap between the well-known ‘Arct...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological Sciences
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: The Royal Society 1952
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rstb.1952.0002
https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rstb.1952.0002
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Summary:At Nazeing, Essex, in the valley of the River Lea, a series of deposits has been investigated which extends back in time from the Post-Glacial climatic optimum to Late-Glacial times in the widest sense of that term. They are of special importance as bridging the time gap between the well-known ‘Arctic Plant Bed’ of the Ponder’s End stage (which occurs also at Nazeing), and the established Post-Glacial vegetational and climatic sequence. Pollen analysis of the main organic beds has permitted a general dating to be given to the various stages of formation of the deposits and this has been supplemented by a radio-carbon assay. Through the gravel sheet of the Ponder’s End stage a wide channel was cut which persisted with vicissitudes until Boreal time. At first this channel and the surrounding gravel plain were covered with organic muds and marls of a shallow lake containing stunted Mollusca of close affinity with those of Ponder’s End, and pollen indicative of rich herbaceous vegetation and an unwooded countryside. The channel was re-cut and the mere drained, and in the bed of the new channel, above an infilling of gravel, there began deposition of organic muds and then peats, a process which continued without interruption until, after a third short phase of erosion and drying in MidBoreal time (zone VI), the whole valley of the Lea was converted to fen. The later Boreal and succeeding Atlantic peats (zone VII) are sealed in by river flood clay. The Mollusca (whose determination is largely that of the late Santer Kennard) retain the general character of the Ponder’s End aggregate through the mere deposits, and the channel deposits up to the third erosion stage. The progress of drying of the mere is shown by the increasing proportion of land- to fresh-water shells. From the base of the channel which is referred to zone III, the close of the Late-Glacial period, the calcareous muds have yielded an extensive collection of plant remains, chiefly fruits and seeds belonging to ‘arctic-alpine’, ‘marsh’ and ‘ruderal’ ...