Article

Pattern of British-Irish Ice Sheet advance and retreat: geochemical insights from an offshore Transect

Details

Citation

Taylor J, Bradwell T, Selby D & Lloyd JM (2026) Pattern of British-Irish Ice Sheet advance and retreat: geochemical insights from an offshore Transect. Journal of the Geological Society, 183 (3). https://doi.org/10.1144/jgs2025-109

Abstract
This multiproxy study combines sedimentology, foraminiferal analysis, and offshore geophysical data with the first application of the osmium isotope system to three marine sediment cores from a transect off the coast of northwest Scotland to understand the complex glacial history associated with the last British and Irish Ice Sheet. Sampled subglacial till facies are characterised by the absence of foraminifera, high 187Os/188Os values (∼1.5) and low Re abundances reflecting the input of glacially eroded terrestrial sourced radiogenic Os. The overlying proximal to distal glaciomarine mud facies yield glaciomarine foraminifera, lower 187Os/188Os values (∼1.2) and high Re abundances due to glacial retreat and a reduction in radiogenic Os input. Furthermore, alternating lithologies within the grounding line complex are reflected in the 187Os/188Os records indicating the sensitivity of the osmium-isotope proxy to more nuanced changes in ice sheet behaviour. The acoustic stratigraphy and seabed morphology of this transect suggest the BIIS margin retreated eastwards, an interpretation that is supported by radiocarbon dates above the sampled diamicton units. The new 187Os/188Os records presented here detect oscillations of the ice margin during its overall eastward retreat, revealing new insights into the dynamics and temporal behaviour of the BIIS.

Journal
Journal of the Geological Society: Volume 183, Issue 3

StatusPublished
Publication date31/05/2026
Publication date online31/12/2025
Date accepted by journal24/12/2025
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/37940
PublisherGeological Society of London
ISSN0016-7649
eISSN2041-479X

People (1)

Dr Tom Bradwell

Dr Tom Bradwell

Senior Lecturer, Biological and Environmental Sciences

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