The landscape evolution of eastern Lincolnshire from the Palaeolithic to the present day :) http://www.caitlingreen.org/2014/08/landscape-evolution.html …pic.twitter.com/EpBd7skzRA
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Lincolnshire 17,000 yrs ago during last 'Ice Age' 1) max extent of ice 2) retreat of ice sheet http://www.caitlingreen.org/2014/09/of-chalk-and-ice-white-cliffs-of-louth.html …pic.twitter.com/SL5kRunTQH
Two maps on the flooding of Mesolithic Doggerland & the emergence of Lincolnshire: http://www.caitlingreen.org/2014/08/the-flooding-of-mesolithic-doggerland.html …pic.twitter.com/tie40cHswF
On the final flooding of Doggerland: http://arheologija.ff.uni-lj.si/documenta/pdf35/weninger35.pdf … &http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-27224243 …
Hippopotamus bones from Fulbeck, Lincolnshire, dating to c.115,000 years ago (MIS5e): https://prehistoriclincolnshire.wordpress.com/excavations/fulbeck-pleistocene/ …pic.twitter.com/xgG8CiaDTL
@caitlinrgreen present day residents of Holderness subject to rapid boulder clay cliff losses to sea would be alarmed by old coastline! :)
.@CatherineEsse Absolutely! ;) 1st image illustrates coastlines nicely; 2nd is predicted eventual Yorks/Lincs coast:pic.twitter.com/zBNv9PR9Nu
@caitlinrgreen great articles - I see 10,000 yrs more erosion to get back to orig chalk clifflines - had wondered re that :)
@CatherineEsse Indeed! Fab report, that one :) Predicted=no sea-level rise; if rises, then 5-10ka & we're back where we were 115k yrs ago!
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