Quaternary Deposits on the Carboniferous Limestone of Derbyshire

The Carboniferous Limestone outcrop of Derbyshire forms the southernmost section of the Pennines. It is part of the main waterdivide of Northern England and glaciation has played a crucial role in its Pleistocene development. Throughout the whole epoch, the Derbyshire upland was never of sufficient...

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Main Author: Burek, Cynthia Veronica
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Leicester 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2381/7935
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spelling ftleicester:oai:lra.le.ac.uk:2381/7935 2023-05-15T16:41:36+02:00 Quaternary Deposits on the Carboniferous Limestone of Derbyshire Burek, Cynthia Veronica 2010-05-20T11:44:28Z http://hdl.handle.net/2381/7935 en eng University of Leicester http://hdl.handle.net/2381/7935 Thesis Doctoral PhD 2010 ftleicester 2019-03-22T20:14:10Z The Carboniferous Limestone outcrop of Derbyshire forms the southernmost section of the Pennines. It is part of the main waterdivide of Northern England and glaciation has played a crucial role in its Pleistocene development. Throughout the whole epoch, the Derbyshire upland was never of sufficient altitude to generate its own ice sheet and the limestone lay in the shadow of higher Millstone Grit to the north. Derbyshire was therefore subject to external influences. Of the seven cold stages established in the East Anglian sequence, only the last three were cold enough to generate glacial advances. The Anglian and Wolstonian ice sheets certainly crossed Derbyshire, but in the Devensian, the last stage, there is little evidence of glacial debris on the limestone. No interglacial deposits have been found on the plateau surface. In addition to the first detailed mapping and classification of the superficial sediments, geochemical, mineralogical and physical analyses have been made. Using computer analysis of the data for verification, a Pleistocene sequence of events has been established for the area. Problems of dating and distinguishing specific glacial deposits associated with Pleistocene stages have been partly solved by employing a variety of different techniques: emission spectroscopy, X-ray diffraction, scanning electron microscopy, weathering ratio and particle size analysis. Different superficial deposits, till, loess, 'silty drift', insoluble residue, solifluction deposits and erratic content have been compared with each other and limited cave sediments in order to elucidate the former glacial episodes no longer identifiable as distinct deposits on the surface. The analytical results from five important sections point to the existence of two tills on the plateau surface, a northern weathered till in deep limestone joints and over the Tertiary sandpits and a second occurring later within an established drainage system. All are covered indiscriminately by loess, a Devensian product. Surface tills are only preserved in favourable locations and within extensive cave systems. The development of the drainage pattern and stripping of the shale cover play key roles in this association. The investigations provide a framework for the Pleistocene history of north Derbyshire which illuminates the Pleistocene sequence of events throughout the Midlands. Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis Ice Sheet University of Leicester: Leicester Research Archive (LRA)
institution Open Polar
collection University of Leicester: Leicester Research Archive (LRA)
op_collection_id ftleicester
language English
description The Carboniferous Limestone outcrop of Derbyshire forms the southernmost section of the Pennines. It is part of the main waterdivide of Northern England and glaciation has played a crucial role in its Pleistocene development. Throughout the whole epoch, the Derbyshire upland was never of sufficient altitude to generate its own ice sheet and the limestone lay in the shadow of higher Millstone Grit to the north. Derbyshire was therefore subject to external influences. Of the seven cold stages established in the East Anglian sequence, only the last three were cold enough to generate glacial advances. The Anglian and Wolstonian ice sheets certainly crossed Derbyshire, but in the Devensian, the last stage, there is little evidence of glacial debris on the limestone. No interglacial deposits have been found on the plateau surface. In addition to the first detailed mapping and classification of the superficial sediments, geochemical, mineralogical and physical analyses have been made. Using computer analysis of the data for verification, a Pleistocene sequence of events has been established for the area. Problems of dating and distinguishing specific glacial deposits associated with Pleistocene stages have been partly solved by employing a variety of different techniques: emission spectroscopy, X-ray diffraction, scanning electron microscopy, weathering ratio and particle size analysis. Different superficial deposits, till, loess, 'silty drift', insoluble residue, solifluction deposits and erratic content have been compared with each other and limited cave sediments in order to elucidate the former glacial episodes no longer identifiable as distinct deposits on the surface. The analytical results from five important sections point to the existence of two tills on the plateau surface, a northern weathered till in deep limestone joints and over the Tertiary sandpits and a second occurring later within an established drainage system. All are covered indiscriminately by loess, a Devensian product. Surface tills are only preserved in favourable locations and within extensive cave systems. The development of the drainage pattern and stripping of the shale cover play key roles in this association. The investigations provide a framework for the Pleistocene history of north Derbyshire which illuminates the Pleistocene sequence of events throughout the Midlands.
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Burek, Cynthia Veronica
spellingShingle Burek, Cynthia Veronica
Quaternary Deposits on the Carboniferous Limestone of Derbyshire
author_facet Burek, Cynthia Veronica
author_sort Burek, Cynthia Veronica
title Quaternary Deposits on the Carboniferous Limestone of Derbyshire
title_short Quaternary Deposits on the Carboniferous Limestone of Derbyshire
title_full Quaternary Deposits on the Carboniferous Limestone of Derbyshire
title_fullStr Quaternary Deposits on the Carboniferous Limestone of Derbyshire
title_full_unstemmed Quaternary Deposits on the Carboniferous Limestone of Derbyshire
title_sort quaternary deposits on the carboniferous limestone of derbyshire
publisher University of Leicester
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/2381/7935
genre Ice Sheet
genre_facet Ice Sheet
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/2381/7935
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