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Revealed: how Scotland must have looked 16,000 years ago…



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Published Date: 04 May 2008
HIGHS of –7°C and lows of –20°C: welcome to the long-range weather forecast circa 10,000 BC.
Scotland as it looked during the last ice age has been revealed by a stunning new set of computer-generated images.

An ice sheet spreading 100 kilometres wide and 200 kilometres north from near Glasgow to Sutherland would have blanketed the country around 12,000 years ago.

The size of the current Iceland ice sheet, it would have ranged in depth from tens of metres near the coast to hundreds of metres inland, where it helped create glens such as Glencoe.

Most of western and northern Scotland above Loch Lomond would have been in its icy grip, with isolated glaciers on mountainous islands such as Skye.

Lowland Scotland would have been largely ice-free by this time, as would eastern mountain ranges such as the Cairngorms, which, despite their height, have less rainfall.

Winter temperatures would have been around a steady and bone-chilling –7°C, although warmer summers would have hastened ice-cap melting. Scotland is believed to have been ice-free by around 11,000 years ago.

Meanwhile, the bottom right image shows the extent of the ice sheet as it would have been around 25,000 years ago when it reached out into the North Sea off Orkney and Shetland towards Scandinavia.

It shows in detail the glacial ridges and valleys left under the sea after the gigantic ice sheet melted and slowly retreated towards the Scottish mainland, allowing sea levels to rise. The deeper areas are depicted in darker blue and are now some of the richest fishing grounds in Europe.

Geologists say the map reveals that the British ice sheet melted much quicker than previously thought, providing clues as to how the current melting of the Antarctic ice sheet in the southern hemisphere will unfold.

Dr Tom Bradwell, head of the quaternary period (last ice age) at the Edinburgh-based British Geological Survey, said: "We used to think the British ice sheet was a very stable block of ice that grew and receded very slowly.

"Now we see it was made of fast-flowing dynamic ice sheets – and that it collapsed in the same way that the Antarctic ice sheet is collapsing now.

"So this has happened before on a continental scale in our history. There is no difference to what happened then to what is happening now. Obviously, it still took thousands of years for the British ice sheet to melt but in geological time that is not very long."

At its full extent, the British ice sheet would have almost joined up with the Scandinavian ice sheet covering what is now Norway and stretched down to a line from South Wales to East Anglia. Areas to the south would have been largely ice-free.

The map of the extent of the ice sheet, published in the scientific journal Science Review, has been compiled from data provided by North Sea fishing boats equipped with echo sounders. The readings have enabled geologists to compile the best picture yet of what lies under the surface.

It reveals an underwater landscape of tunnel valleys and glacial debris – moraines – carved and deposited as the ice flowed from the southeast to the northwest across what is now the North Sea Basin to the edge of the Continental Shelf.

The features show how far the ice sheet extended at its maximum and at various stages during its retreat.

"By getting access to this data, we have for the first time put together a model of the last British ice sheet and properly reconstructed its true extent," Bradwell said. "We have a clear picture of the seabed of the North Sea off Shetland and Orkney and it was really eye-opening.

"We have found these stunning valleys and big glacial ridges. There are phenomenal shelf-edge moraines, which chart the recession of the last ice sheet. They show the positions as the ice sheet fluctuates. As it pushes forward it pushes up a moraine. Then it retreats, then it pushes again.

"The big story is that the British ice sheet collapsed very rapidly and it is very similar to the situation in Antarctica today. Marine-based ice sheets, those that terminate in the sea, are very susceptible to collapse as sea levels rise, and the British ice sheet collapsed in a very similar way to what we are seeing in Antarctica now."

The current North Sea seabed was a legacy of what happened during the last ice age, Bradwell added.

"The channels, such as the Devil's Deeps, are tunnel valleys formed under a fast-flowing ice sheet," he said. "Now they are the best grounds for shrimp and lobster in Europe. It is fascinating that what we now eat is a direct result of what happened all those thousands of years ago."

At the full extent of the ice sheet, most of Scotland would have been under a kilometre of ice and snow, with temperatures falling to around –20°C. As global warming progressed, a glacier would still have been flowing in the Loch Lomond area, about 10 miles north of Glasgow. Further north a clean ice shelf would have marked the coast of northwest Scotland, as shown in the image above.

Animals such as the lynx, Arctic hare and polar bear are likely to have been roaming the frigid landscape, although little is known about any human presence at that time.

What happened to the vanishing British ice sheet could shed light on what will happen in Antarctica this century if global warming continues to gather pace.

Measurements of the western Antarctic ice sheet show the balance of snowfall and melting has shifted and it is now shrinking. According to a study, a local warming of more than 5°C could trigger uncontrollable melting.

The full article contains 984 words and appears in Scotland On Sunday newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 03 May 2008 9:47 PM
  • Source: Scotland On Sunday
  • Location: Scotland
  • Related Topics: Climate change
 
1

Angus Ogg,

03/05/2008 20:21:25

If you look really hard at the images of Lowland Scotland, you can just about see the early meetings of the Larkhall Labour Club. Old Labour that is, none of this new Megalithic Labour that the Woolly Mamouth Labour Fringe are on about. Proper socialists. Freezeng their nuts off, but real ice cool politicians.

Some are still members of Loorkie Labour today. Just pop down to have a look and see. Onyway.

2

Guga II,

Rockall 04/05/2008 00:32:31
No doubt it's all the fault of global warming; all these woolly mamoths running around in 4x4's.
3

Guga II,

Rockall 04/05/2008 00:33:36
#1 Angus Ogg. A posting at 20:21? You must work for the Hootsmon.
4

acanthus,

Moscow 04/05/2008 07:03:34
What a shocking piece, revealed how Scotland looked...it's Torridon under snow! What a revelation. Who put this together, someone with basic photoshop? I particularly like the 'icing sugar' effect over the Lowlands. But it came as a big shock (i'm sure it will to everyone) to find out that Scotland was at one time under ice and that it was cold!
5

John M,

Melbourne, Australia 04/05/2008 08:19:13
"must have looked"? Give our intelligence some credit!

"might have looked" or "probably looked" I would have accepted.

Does this journalist always believe everything that comes from a computer? More fool him!
6

Drum Major,

Brisbane, Australia 04/05/2008 08:20:24
They obviously had human habitation at that time. They were all politicians, hence the hot air melting the ice cap.
7

Unimpressed one,

04/05/2008 09:15:42
"What happened to the vanishing British ice sheet could shed light on what will happen in Antarctica this century if global warming continues to gather pace."

And we know now that this is sheer tripe since 'global warming' has stopped for a decade and is predicted to go into reverse over the next decade. Some faces with egg on them now?
8

Crewedaddy,

Cheshire 04/05/2008 10:19:07
And you know this for a fact, Unimpressed? We should trust what you say and not the results and conclusions of extensive geological and geophysical research? You know nothing at all. Neither do but I like to read the opinions of those who are rather more qualified than I am to make them.
9

Angus Ogg,

04/05/2008 11:11:40

#3, Hi Guga,

Just read your posting on the Cure for C., thread.

I lost a wee brother that way. Time is the only healer we have just now. Like one of the posters on that thread said: there seems to be an announcement of a cure regularly for the past 40 years. All we can do is hope that there is real progress being made. If you read the detail, it does appear that the scientists are getting down to the molecular building blocks, agonists, antagonists, so perhaps more reason for hope.

Sorry to be off topic with the above.

Guga, I don't work for the Scotsman, just have a spare key for the back door for their computer site. For the life of me I don't know why nobody joins me just before the midnight hour. Nobody seems to want to play before bedtime !
10

John Kelly,

Long Beach 04/05/2008 11:19:05
Where was Al Gore when we needed him?
Scotland could still be blanketed with ice and snow,
11

Evan Owen,

Snowdonia 04/05/2008 11:40:22
Were they Scottish polar bears? Wearing kilts and playing the bagpipes?

This piece would look more at home in the Beano.
12

Freethinker,

Penicuik 04/05/2008 14:46:35
"16000 year ago." That can't be right - the Bible has the Earth at around 5500 years old.

Intelligent Design = Fake science for the psychologically needy!

P.S. The earth is around 4.5 billion years old - ask a geologist!


13

GlenB,

04/05/2008 22:00:34
I'm a sufficiently free thinker to think that the geologist could be wrong and that there is intelligent design in the universe.

Its all a matter of interpreting what we observe in the light of the presuppositions we choose to hold.
14

Scotindy,

Los Angeles 05/05/2008 04:13:40
Where is this Northern Britain, does'nt that mean Cumberland?? And also we in SCOTLAND do not have Valley,s, we have GLENS. Attention to detail I think is the order of the day I think. Other than that, very interesting article.
15

GlacialGeologist,

Edinburgh 06/05/2008 12:28:57
Glad this article has inspired some comments.
To reply to a few. The 'Mountain' image is not Torridon. It was taken from a helicopter over Alexander Island in the Antarctic- no photoshopping was involved- and is a representation of how western Scotland looked 16 thousand years ago.
The blue map image is actual data and not computer generated, showing the sea bed derived from echosounder imagery. This shows a wealth of glacial features that can be interpreted to give us a reconstruction of ice sheet behaviour.
The oblique 3D image is derived from a computer model of the last phase of the ice age, and is tied to actual mapped glacial limits, and driven by the Greenland Ice Sheet temperature record.
I hope this clears some of the comments up- please keep them coming, the more interest in this there is, the more we are able to highlight the issues facing the planet today, either real or postulated!

 

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