The evolution of the Dogger Bank, North Sea: a complex history of terrestrial, glacial and marine environmental change

This paper presents a summary of the results of a detailed multidisciplinary study of the near surface geology of the Dogger Bank in the southern central North Sea, forming part of a site investigation for a major windfarm development undertaken by the Forewind consortium. It has revealed that the D...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Quaternary Science Reviews
Main Authors: Cotterill, Carol J., Phillips, Emrys, James, Leo, Forsberg, Carl Fredrik, Tjelta, Tor Inge, Carter, Gareth, Dove, Dayton
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2017
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Online Access:http://nora.nerc.ac.uk/id/eprint/517943/
https://nora.nerc.ac.uk/id/eprint/517943/1/Cotterill%20et%20al%20Dogger%20Bank%20QSR.pdf
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2017.07.006
Description
Summary:This paper presents a summary of the results of a detailed multidisciplinary study of the near surface geology of the Dogger Bank in the southern central North Sea, forming part of a site investigation for a major windfarm development undertaken by the Forewind consortium. It has revealed that the Dogger Bank is internally complex rather than comprising a simple “layer cake” of the Quaternary sediments as previously thought. Regional and high-resolution seismic surveys have enabled a revised stratigraphic framework to be established for the upper part of this sequence which comprises the Eem (oldest), Dogger Bank, Bolders Bank formations and Botney Cut Formation (youngest), overlain by a typically thin Holocene sequence. Detailed mapping of key horizons identified on the high-resolution seismic profiles has led to the recognition of a series of buried palaeo-landsystems which are characterised by a range of features including; glacial, glacifluvial and fluvial channels, a large-scale glacitectonic thrust-moraine complex with intervening ice-marginal basins, a lacustrine basin and marine ravinement surfaces. Interpretation of these buried landscapes has enabled the development of an environmental change model to explain the evolution of the Dogger Bank. This evolution was driven by the complex interplay between climate change, ice sheet dynamics and sea level change associated with the growth and subsequent demise of the British and Irish and Fennoscandian ice sheets during the Weichselian glaciation. Following the decay of these ice sheets the Dogger Bank entered a period of significant climatic and environmental flux which saw a terrestrial landscape being progressively inundated as sea levels rose during the Holocene.