Serveur d'exploration sur le chêne en Belgique (avant curation)

Attention, ce site est en cours de développement !
Attention, site généré par des moyens informatiques à partir de corpus bruts.
Les informations ne sont donc pas validées.

Biostratigraphic and aminostratigraphic constraints on the age of the Middle Pleistocene glacial succession in north Norfolk, UK

Identifieur interne : 000F89 ( Istex/Corpus ); précédent : 000F88; suivant : 000F90

Biostratigraphic and aminostratigraphic constraints on the age of the Middle Pleistocene glacial succession in north Norfolk, UK

Auteurs : Richard C. Preece ; Simon A. Parfitt ; G. Russell Coope ; Kirsty E. H. Penkman ; Philippe Ponel ; John E. Whittaker

Source :

RBID : ISTEX:C3ED2AD921F587A517128A38DD62547463E73DC6

English descriptors

Abstract

Considerable debate surrounds the age of the Middle Pleistocene glacial succession in East Anglia following some recent stratigraphical reinterpretations. Resolution of the stratigraphy here is important since it not only concerns the glacial history of the region but also has a bearing on our understanding of the earliest human occupation of north‐western Europe. The orthodox consensus that all the tills were emplaced during the Anglian (Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 12) has recently been challenged by a view assigning each major till to a different glacial stage, before, during and after MIS 12. Between Trimingham and Sidestrand on the north Norfolk coast, datable organic sediments occur immediately below and above the glacial succession. The oldest glacial deposit (Happisburgh Till) directly overlies the ‘Sidestrand Unio‐bed’, here defined as the Sidestrand Hall Member of the Cromer Forest‐bed Formation. Dating of these sediments therefore has a bearing on the maximum age of the glacial sequence. This paper reviews the palaeobotany and describes the faunal assemblages recovered from the Sidestrand Unio‐bed, which accumulated in a fluvial environment in a fully temperate climate with regional deciduous woodland. There are indications from the ostracods for weakly brackish conditions. Significant differences are apparent between the Sidestrand assemblages and those from West Runton, the type site of the Cromerian Stage. These differences do not result from contrasting facies or taphonomy but reflect warmer palaeotemperatures at Sidestrand and a much younger age. This conclusion is suggested by the higher proportion of thermophiles at Sidestrand and the occurrence of a water vole with unrooted molars (Arvicola) rather than its ancestor Mimomys savini with rooted molars. Amino acid racemisation data also indicate that Sidestrand is significantly younger than West Runton. These data further highlight the stratigraphical complexity of the ‘Cromerian Complex’ and support the conventional view that the Happisburgh Till was emplaced during the Anglian rather than the recently advanced view that it dates from MIS 16. Moreover, new evidence from the Trimingham lake bed (Sidestrand Cliff Formation) above the youngest glacial outwash sediments (Briton's Lane Formation) indicates that they also accumulated during a Middle Pleistocene interglacial – probably MIS 11. All of this evidence is consistent with a short chronology placing the glacial deposits within MIS 12, rather than invoking multiple episodes of glaciation envisaged in the ‘new glacial stratigraphy’ during MIS 16, 12, 10 and 6. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Url:
DOI: 10.1002/jqs.1245

Links to Exploration step

ISTEX:C3ED2AD921F587A517128A38DD62547463E73DC6

Le document en format XML

<record>
<TEI wicri:istexFullTextTei="biblStruct">
<teiHeader>
<fileDesc>
<titleStmt>
<title xml:lang="en">Biostratigraphic and aminostratigraphic constraints on the age of the Middle Pleistocene glacial succession in north Norfolk, UK</title>
<author>
<name sortKey="Preece, Richard C" sort="Preece, Richard C" uniqKey="Preece R" first="Richard C." last="Preece">Richard C. Preece</name>
<affiliation>
<mods:affiliation>Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK</mods:affiliation>
</affiliation>
<affiliation>
<mods:affiliation>Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge, Downing Street, Cambridge CB2 3EJ, UK.</mods:affiliation>
</affiliation>
</author>
<author>
<name sortKey="Parfitt, Simon A" sort="Parfitt, Simon A" uniqKey="Parfitt S" first="Simon A." last="Parfitt">Simon A. Parfitt</name>
<affiliation>
<mods:affiliation>Department of Palaeontology, Natural History Museum, London, UK</mods:affiliation>
</affiliation>
<affiliation>
<mods:affiliation>Institute of Archaeology, University College London, London, UK</mods:affiliation>
</affiliation>
</author>
<author>
<name sortKey="Coope, G Russell" sort="Coope, G Russell" uniqKey="Coope G" first="G. Russell" last="Coope">G. Russell Coope</name>
<affiliation>
<mods:affiliation>Tigh‐na‐Cleirich, Foss, Pitlochry, UK</mods:affiliation>
</affiliation>
</author>
<author>
<name sortKey="Penkman, Kirsty E H" sort="Penkman, Kirsty E H" uniqKey="Penkman K" first="Kirsty E. H." last="Penkman">Kirsty E. H. Penkman</name>
<affiliation>
<mods:affiliation>BioArCh, Departments of Biology, Archaeology and Chemistry, University of York, York, UK</mods:affiliation>
</affiliation>
</author>
<author>
<name sortKey="Ponel, Philippe" sort="Ponel, Philippe" uniqKey="Ponel P" first="Philippe" last="Ponel">Philippe Ponel</name>
<affiliation>
<mods:affiliation>IMEP‐CNRS, Europôle Mediterranéen de l'Arbois, Aix‐en‐Provence, France</mods:affiliation>
</affiliation>
</author>
<author>
<name sortKey="Whittaker, John E" sort="Whittaker, John E" uniqKey="Whittaker J" first="John E." last="Whittaker">John E. Whittaker</name>
<affiliation>
<mods:affiliation>Department of Palaeontology, Natural History Museum, London, UK</mods:affiliation>
</affiliation>
</author>
</titleStmt>
<publicationStmt>
<idno type="wicri:source">ISTEX</idno>
<idno type="RBID">ISTEX:C3ED2AD921F587A517128A38DD62547463E73DC6</idno>
<date when="2009" year="2009">2009</date>
<idno type="doi">10.1002/jqs.1245</idno>
<idno type="url">https://api.istex.fr/document/C3ED2AD921F587A517128A38DD62547463E73DC6/fulltext/pdf</idno>
<idno type="wicri:Area/Istex/Corpus">000F89</idno>
<idno type="wicri:explorRef" wicri:stream="Istex" wicri:step="Corpus" wicri:corpus="ISTEX">000F89</idno>
</publicationStmt>
<sourceDesc>
<biblStruct>
<analytic>
<title level="a" type="main" xml:lang="en">Biostratigraphic and aminostratigraphic constraints on the age of the Middle Pleistocene glacial succession in north Norfolk, UK</title>
<author>
<name sortKey="Preece, Richard C" sort="Preece, Richard C" uniqKey="Preece R" first="Richard C." last="Preece">Richard C. Preece</name>
<affiliation>
<mods:affiliation>Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK</mods:affiliation>
</affiliation>
<affiliation>
<mods:affiliation>Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge, Downing Street, Cambridge CB2 3EJ, UK.</mods:affiliation>
</affiliation>
</author>
<author>
<name sortKey="Parfitt, Simon A" sort="Parfitt, Simon A" uniqKey="Parfitt S" first="Simon A." last="Parfitt">Simon A. Parfitt</name>
<affiliation>
<mods:affiliation>Department of Palaeontology, Natural History Museum, London, UK</mods:affiliation>
</affiliation>
<affiliation>
<mods:affiliation>Institute of Archaeology, University College London, London, UK</mods:affiliation>
</affiliation>
</author>
<author>
<name sortKey="Coope, G Russell" sort="Coope, G Russell" uniqKey="Coope G" first="G. Russell" last="Coope">G. Russell Coope</name>
<affiliation>
<mods:affiliation>Tigh‐na‐Cleirich, Foss, Pitlochry, UK</mods:affiliation>
</affiliation>
</author>
<author>
<name sortKey="Penkman, Kirsty E H" sort="Penkman, Kirsty E H" uniqKey="Penkman K" first="Kirsty E. H." last="Penkman">Kirsty E. H. Penkman</name>
<affiliation>
<mods:affiliation>BioArCh, Departments of Biology, Archaeology and Chemistry, University of York, York, UK</mods:affiliation>
</affiliation>
</author>
<author>
<name sortKey="Ponel, Philippe" sort="Ponel, Philippe" uniqKey="Ponel P" first="Philippe" last="Ponel">Philippe Ponel</name>
<affiliation>
<mods:affiliation>IMEP‐CNRS, Europôle Mediterranéen de l'Arbois, Aix‐en‐Provence, France</mods:affiliation>
</affiliation>
</author>
<author>
<name sortKey="Whittaker, John E" sort="Whittaker, John E" uniqKey="Whittaker J" first="John E." last="Whittaker">John E. Whittaker</name>
<affiliation>
<mods:affiliation>Department of Palaeontology, Natural History Museum, London, UK</mods:affiliation>
</affiliation>
</author>
</analytic>
<monogr></monogr>
<series>
<title level="j">Journal of Quaternary Science</title>
<title level="j" type="abbrev">J. Quaternary Sci.</title>
<idno type="ISSN">0267-8179</idno>
<idno type="eISSN">1099-1417</idno>
<imprint>
<publisher>John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.</publisher>
<pubPlace>Chichester, UK</pubPlace>
<date type="published" when="2009-09">2009-09</date>
<biblScope unit="volume">24</biblScope>
<biblScope unit="issue">6</biblScope>
<biblScope unit="page" from="557">557</biblScope>
<biblScope unit="page" to="580">580</biblScope>
</imprint>
<idno type="ISSN">0267-8179</idno>
</series>
<idno type="istex">C3ED2AD921F587A517128A38DD62547463E73DC6</idno>
<idno type="DOI">10.1002/jqs.1245</idno>
<idno type="ArticleID">JQS1245</idno>
</biblStruct>
</sourceDesc>
<seriesStmt>
<idno type="ISSN">0267-8179</idno>
</seriesStmt>
</fileDesc>
<profileDesc>
<textClass>
<keywords scheme="KwdEn" xml:lang="en">
<term>Anglian</term>
<term>Cromer Forest‐bed Formation</term>
<term>Cromerian</term>
<term>Happisburgh Till</term>
<term>MIS 16</term>
<term>Mimomys–Arvicola transition</term>
<term>Norfolk</term>
<term>Sidestrand Cliff Formation</term>
<term>Sidestrand Hall Member</term>
<term>Sidestrand Unio‐bed</term>
<term>Trimingham lake beds</term>
<term>aminostratigraphy</term>
<term>‘New glacial stratigraphy’</term>
</keywords>
</textClass>
<langUsage>
<language ident="en">en</language>
</langUsage>
</profileDesc>
</teiHeader>
<front>
<div type="abstract" xml:lang="en">Considerable debate surrounds the age of the Middle Pleistocene glacial succession in East Anglia following some recent stratigraphical reinterpretations. Resolution of the stratigraphy here is important since it not only concerns the glacial history of the region but also has a bearing on our understanding of the earliest human occupation of north‐western Europe. The orthodox consensus that all the tills were emplaced during the Anglian (Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 12) has recently been challenged by a view assigning each major till to a different glacial stage, before, during and after MIS 12. Between Trimingham and Sidestrand on the north Norfolk coast, datable organic sediments occur immediately below and above the glacial succession. The oldest glacial deposit (Happisburgh Till) directly overlies the ‘Sidestrand Unio‐bed’, here defined as the Sidestrand Hall Member of the Cromer Forest‐bed Formation. Dating of these sediments therefore has a bearing on the maximum age of the glacial sequence. This paper reviews the palaeobotany and describes the faunal assemblages recovered from the Sidestrand Unio‐bed, which accumulated in a fluvial environment in a fully temperate climate with regional deciduous woodland. There are indications from the ostracods for weakly brackish conditions. Significant differences are apparent between the Sidestrand assemblages and those from West Runton, the type site of the Cromerian Stage. These differences do not result from contrasting facies or taphonomy but reflect warmer palaeotemperatures at Sidestrand and a much younger age. This conclusion is suggested by the higher proportion of thermophiles at Sidestrand and the occurrence of a water vole with unrooted molars (Arvicola) rather than its ancestor Mimomys savini with rooted molars. Amino acid racemisation data also indicate that Sidestrand is significantly younger than West Runton. These data further highlight the stratigraphical complexity of the ‘Cromerian Complex’ and support the conventional view that the Happisburgh Till was emplaced during the Anglian rather than the recently advanced view that it dates from MIS 16. Moreover, new evidence from the Trimingham lake bed (Sidestrand Cliff Formation) above the youngest glacial outwash sediments (Briton's Lane Formation) indicates that they also accumulated during a Middle Pleistocene interglacial – probably MIS 11. All of this evidence is consistent with a short chronology placing the glacial deposits within MIS 12, rather than invoking multiple episodes of glaciation envisaged in the ‘new glacial stratigraphy’ during MIS 16, 12, 10 and 6. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.</div>
</front>
</TEI>
<istex>
<corpusName>wiley</corpusName>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>Richard C. Preece</name>
<affiliations>
<json:string>Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK</json:string>
<json:string>Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge, Downing Street, Cambridge CB2 3EJ, UK.</json:string>
</affiliations>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>Simon A. Parfitt</name>
<affiliations>
<json:string>Department of Palaeontology, Natural History Museum, London, UK</json:string>
<json:string>Institute of Archaeology, University College London, London, UK</json:string>
</affiliations>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>G. Russell Coope</name>
<affiliations>
<json:string>Tigh‐na‐Cleirich, Foss, Pitlochry, UK</json:string>
</affiliations>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>Kirsty E. H. Penkman</name>
<affiliations>
<json:string>BioArCh, Departments of Biology, Archaeology and Chemistry, University of York, York, UK</json:string>
</affiliations>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>Philippe Ponel</name>
<affiliations>
<json:string>IMEP‐CNRS, Europôle Mediterranéen de l'Arbois, Aix‐en‐Provence, France</json:string>
</affiliations>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>John E. Whittaker</name>
<affiliations>
<json:string>Department of Palaeontology, Natural History Museum, London, UK</json:string>
</affiliations>
</json:item>
</author>
<subject>
<json:item>
<lang>
<json:string>eng</json:string>
</lang>
<value>Sidestrand Unio‐bed</value>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<lang>
<json:string>eng</json:string>
</lang>
<value>Sidestrand Hall Member</value>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<lang>
<json:string>eng</json:string>
</lang>
<value>Cromerian</value>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<lang>
<json:string>eng</json:string>
</lang>
<value>Cromer Forest‐bed Formation</value>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<lang>
<json:string>eng</json:string>
</lang>
<value>Anglian</value>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<lang>
<json:string>eng</json:string>
</lang>
<value>Norfolk</value>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<lang>
<json:string>eng</json:string>
</lang>
<value>Happisburgh Till</value>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<lang>
<json:string>eng</json:string>
</lang>
<value>MIS 16</value>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<lang>
<json:string>eng</json:string>
</lang>
<value>Mimomys–Arvicola transition</value>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<lang>
<json:string>eng</json:string>
</lang>
<value>aminostratigraphy</value>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<lang>
<json:string>eng</json:string>
</lang>
<value>Sidestrand Cliff Formation</value>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<lang>
<json:string>eng</json:string>
</lang>
<value>Trimingham lake beds</value>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<lang>
<json:string>eng</json:string>
</lang>
<value>‘New glacial stratigraphy’</value>
</json:item>
</subject>
<articleId>
<json:string>JQS1245</json:string>
</articleId>
<language>
<json:string>eng</json:string>
</language>
<originalGenre>
<json:string>article</json:string>
</originalGenre>
<abstract>Considerable debate surrounds the age of the Middle Pleistocene glacial succession in East Anglia following some recent stratigraphical reinterpretations. Resolution of the stratigraphy here is important since it not only concerns the glacial history of the region but also has a bearing on our understanding of the earliest human occupation of north‐western Europe. The orthodox consensus that all the tills were emplaced during the Anglian (Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 12) has recently been challenged by a view assigning each major till to a different glacial stage, before, during and after MIS 12. Between Trimingham and Sidestrand on the north Norfolk coast, datable organic sediments occur immediately below and above the glacial succession. The oldest glacial deposit (Happisburgh Till) directly overlies the ‘Sidestrand Unio‐bed’, here defined as the Sidestrand Hall Member of the Cromer Forest‐bed Formation. Dating of these sediments therefore has a bearing on the maximum age of the glacial sequence. This paper reviews the palaeobotany and describes the faunal assemblages recovered from the Sidestrand Unio‐bed, which accumulated in a fluvial environment in a fully temperate climate with regional deciduous woodland. There are indications from the ostracods for weakly brackish conditions. Significant differences are apparent between the Sidestrand assemblages and those from West Runton, the type site of the Cromerian Stage. These differences do not result from contrasting facies or taphonomy but reflect warmer palaeotemperatures at Sidestrand and a much younger age. This conclusion is suggested by the higher proportion of thermophiles at Sidestrand and the occurrence of a water vole with unrooted molars (Arvicola) rather than its ancestor Mimomys savini with rooted molars. Amino acid racemisation data also indicate that Sidestrand is significantly younger than West Runton. These data further highlight the stratigraphical complexity of the ‘Cromerian Complex’ and support the conventional view that the Happisburgh Till was emplaced during the Anglian rather than the recently advanced view that it dates from MIS 16. Moreover, new evidence from the Trimingham lake bed (Sidestrand Cliff Formation) above the youngest glacial outwash sediments (Briton's Lane Formation) indicates that they also accumulated during a Middle Pleistocene interglacial – probably MIS 11. All of this evidence is consistent with a short chronology placing the glacial deposits within MIS 12, rather than invoking multiple episodes of glaciation envisaged in the ‘new glacial stratigraphy’ during MIS 16, 12, 10 and 6. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.</abstract>
<qualityIndicators>
<score>8</score>
<pdfVersion>1.3</pdfVersion>
<pdfPageSize>595 x 842 pts (A4)</pdfPageSize>
<refBibsNative>true</refBibsNative>
<abstractCharCount>2663</abstractCharCount>
<pdfWordCount>16747</pdfWordCount>
<pdfCharCount>109021</pdfCharCount>
<pdfPageCount>24</pdfPageCount>
<abstractWordCount>394</abstractWordCount>
</qualityIndicators>
<title>Biostratigraphic and aminostratigraphic constraints on the age of the Middle Pleistocene glacial succession in north Norfolk, UK</title>
<refBibs>
<json:item>
<host>
<author></author>
<title>Andrews P.1990.Owls, Caves and Fossils.Natural History Museum: London.</title>
</host>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<host>
<author></author>
<title>Andrews P,Cook J,Currant A,Stringer C (eds).1999.Westbury Cave: the Natural History Museum Excavations 1976–1984.Western Academic and Specialist Press: Bristol, UK.</title>
</host>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>N Ashton</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>SA Parfitt</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>SG Lewis</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>GR Coope</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>N Larkin</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<pages>
<last>156</last>
<first>151</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>The Quaternary of Northern East Anglia</title>
</host>
<title>Happisburgh Site 1 (TG388307)</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>TC Atkinson</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>KR Briffa</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>GR Coope</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>325</volume>
<pages>
<last>592</last>
<first>587</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Nature</title>
</host>
<title>Seasonal temperatures in Britain during the past 22,000 years, reconstructed using beetle remains</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>A Azzaroli</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>73</volume>
<pages>
<last>115</last>
<first>104</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Palaeontographia Italica</title>
</host>
<title>On some vertebrate remains of middle Pleistocene age from the Upper Valdarno and Val di Chiana, Tuscany</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>JL Bada</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>MY Ho</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>EH Man</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>RA Schroeder</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>41</volume>
<pages>
<last>76</last>
<first>67</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Earth Planetary Science Letters</title>
</host>
<title>Decomposition of hydroxy amino acids in foraminiferal tests: kinetics, mechanism and geochronological implications</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>PH Banham</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>79</volume>
<pages>
<last>285</last>
<first>281</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Proceedings of the Geologists' Association</title>
</host>
<title>A preliminary note on the Pleistocene stratigraphy of north‐east Norfolk</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>PH Banham</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>PL Gibbard</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>JP Lunkka</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>SA Parfitt</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>RC Preece</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>C Turner</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>93</volume>
<pages>
<last>14</last>
<first>5</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Quaternary Newsletter</title>
</host>
<title>A critical assessment of ‘A new glacial stratigraphy for Eastern England’</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>GW Berger</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>A Pérez‐González</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>E Carbonell</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>JL Arsuaga</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>J‐M Bermúdez de Castro</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>T‐L Ku</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>55</volume>
<pages>
<last>311</last>
<first>300</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Journal of Human Evolution</title>
</host>
<title>Luminescence chronology of cave sediments at the Atapuerca paleoanthropological site, Spain</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>MJ Bishop</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>28</volume>
<pages>
<last>108</last>
<first>1</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Special Papers in Palaeontology</title>
</host>
<title>The mammal fauna of the early Middle Pleistocene cavern infill site of Westbury‐sub‐Mendip, Somerset</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<host>
<author></author>
<title>A revised correlation of Quaternary deposits in the British Isles</title>
</host>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>DR Bridgland</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>19</volume>
<pages>
<last>1303</last>
<first>1293</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Quaternary Science Reviews</title>
</host>
<title>River terrace systems in north‐west Europe: an archive of environmental change, uplift and early human occupation</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>DR Bridgland</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>117</volume>
<pages>
<last>305</last>
<first>281</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Proceedings of the Geologists' Association</title>
</host>
<title>The Middle and Upper Pleistocene sequence in the Lower Thames: a record of Milankovitch climatic fluctuation and early human occupation of southern Britain</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>M Coltorti</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>G Feraud</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>A Marzoli</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>C Peretto</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>T Ton‐That</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>P Voinchet</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>J‐J Bahain</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>A Minelli</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>U Thun‐Hohenstein</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>131</volume>
<pages>
<last>22</last>
<first>11</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Quaternary International</title>
</host>
<title>New 40Ar/39Ar, stratigraphic and paleoclimatic data on the Isernia La Pineta Lower Palaeolithic site, Molise, Italy</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>GR Coope</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<pages>
<last>713</last>
<first>703</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Handbook of Holocene Palaeoecology and Palaeohydrology</title>
</host>
<title>Coleoptera analysis</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>GR Coope</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>25</volume>
<pages>
<last>1754</last>
<first>1738</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Quaternary Science Reviews</title>
</host>
<title>Insect faunas associated with palaeolithic industries from five sites of pre‐Anglian age in central England</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<host>
<author></author>
<title>Coleoptera from the excavations in 1992–1995 of the mammoth skeleton at West Runton, Norfolk, England</title>
</host>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>GR Coope</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>FW Shotton</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>I Strachan</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>B244</volume>
<pages>
<last>421</last>
<first>379</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London</title>
</host>
<title>A Late Pleistocene fauna and flora from Upton Warren, Worcestershire</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>GR Coope</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>MH Field</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>PL Gibbard</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>M Greenwood</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>AE Richards</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>113</volume>
<pages>
<last>258</last>
<first>237</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Proceedings of the Geologists' Association</title>
</host>
<title>Palaeontology and biostratigraphy of Middle Pleistocene river sediment in the Mathon Member, at Mathon, Herefordshire, England</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>A Crottini</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>F Andreone</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>J Kosuch</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>LJ Borkin</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>SN Litvinchuk</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>C Eggert</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>M Veith</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>16</volume>
<pages>
<last>2754</last>
<first>2734</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Molecular Ecology</title>
</host>
<title>Fossorial but widespread: the phylogeography of the common spadefoot toad (Pelobates fuscus), and the role of the Po Valley as a major source of genetic variability</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>P De Deckker</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>22</volume>
<pages>
<last>316</last>
<first>293</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Palaeontology</title>
</host>
<title>The Middle Pleistocene ostracod fauna of the West Runton Freshwater Bed, Norfolk</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>C De Rouffignac</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>DQ Bowen</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>GR Coope</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>DH Keen</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>AM Lister</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>D Maddy</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>JE Robinson</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>GA Sykes</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>MJC Walker</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>19</volume>
<pages>
<last>31</last>
<first>15</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Journal of Quaternary Science</title>
</host>
<title>Late Middle Pleistocene interglacial deposits at Upper Strensham, Worcestershire, England</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>JM Edington</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>37</volume>
<pages>
<last>692</last>
<first>675</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Journal of Animal Ecology</title>
</host>
<title>Habitat preferences in net‐spinning caddis larvae with special reference to the influence of water velocity</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>JM Edington</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>AG Hildrew</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>53</volume>
<pages>
<last>134</last>
<first>1</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Freshwater Biological Association Scientific Publications</title>
</host>
<title>Caseless caddis larvae: a key with ecological notes</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>C Eggert</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>D Cogălniceaunu</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>M Veith</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>G Dzukic</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>P Taberlet</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>7</volume>
<pages>
<last>165</last>
<first>185</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Conservation Genetics</title>
</host>
<title>The declining spadefoot toad, Pelobates fuscus (Pelobatidae): palaeo and recent environmental change as a major influence on current population structure and status</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>A Forsten</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>6</volume>
<pages>
<last>52</last>
<first>43</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Quartärpaläontologie</title>
</host>
<title>A review of the Süssenborn horses and the origin of Equus hydruntinus Regalia</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<host>
<author></author>
<title>Atlas of Scottish Water Beetles</title>
</host>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>H Gee</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>8</volume>
<pages>
<last>92</last>
<first>79</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Journal of Quaternary Science</title>
</host>
<title>The distinction between postcranial bones of Bos primigenius Bojanus, 1827 and Bison priscus Bojanus, 1827 from the British Pleistocene and the taxonomic status of Bos and Bison</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>A Gentry</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<pages>
<last>174</last>
<first>139</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Westbury Cave: The Natural History Museum Excavations 1976‐1984</title>
</host>
<title>Fossil ruminants (Mammalia, Artiodactyla) from Westbury Cave</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>PL Gibbard</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>RG West</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>WH Zagwijn</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>PS Balson</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>AW Burger</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>BM Funnell</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>DH Jeffery</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>J de Jong</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>T van Kolfschoten</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>AM Lister</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>T Meijer</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>PEP Norton</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>RC Preece</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>J Rose</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>AJ Stuart</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>CA Whiteman</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>JA Zalasiewicz</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>10</volume>
<pages>
<last>52</last>
<first>23</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Quaternary Science Reviews</title>
</host>
<title>Early and Early Middle Pleistocene correlations in the southern North Sea Basin</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>PL Gibbard</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>A Moscariello</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>HW Bailey</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>S Boreham</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>C Koch</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>AR Lord</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>JE Whittaker</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>CA Whiteman</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>23</volume>
<pages>
<last>92</last>
<first>85</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Journal of Quaternary Science</title>
</host>
<title>Comment: Middle Pleistocene sedimentation at Pakefield, Suffolk, England</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<host>
<author></author>
<title>Godwin H.1975.History of the British Flora: A Factual Basis for Phytogeography.Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, UK.</title>
</host>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>HI Griffiths</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>34</volume>
<pages>
<last>168</last>
<first>1</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Scopolia</title>
</host>
<title>European Quaternary freshwater Ostracoda: a biostratigraphic and palaeobiogeographic primer</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>RJO Hamblin</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>BSP Moorlock</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>J Rose</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>92</volume>
<pages>
<last>43</last>
<first>35</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Quaternary Newsletter</title>
</host>
<title>A new glacial stratigraphy for Eastern England</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>RJO Hamblin</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>BSP Moorlock</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>J Rose</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>JR Lee</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>JB Riding</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>SJ Booth</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>SM Pawley</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>84</volume>
<pages>
<last>85</last>
<first>77</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Netherlands Journal of Geosciences – Geologie en Mijnbouw</title>
</host>
<title>Revised Pre‐Devensian glacial stratigraphy in Norfolk, England, based on mapping and till provenance</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>P Hammond</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>A Morgan</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>AV Morgan</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>4</volume>
<pages>
<last>221</last>
<first>215</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Systematic Entomology</title>
</host>
<title>On the gibbulus Group of Anotylus and fossil occurrences of Anotylus gibbulus (Staphylinidae)</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>DL Harrison</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>39</volume>
<pages>
<last>212</last>
<first>201</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Acta Zoologica Cracoviensia</title>
</host>
<title>Systematic status of Kennard's shrew (Sorex kennardi Hinton 1911, Insectivora: Soricidae): a study based on British and Polish material</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>JK Hart</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>SM Peglar</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>101</volume>
<pages>
<last>196</last>
<first>187</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Proceedings of the Geologists' Association</title>
</host>
<title>Further evidence for the timing of the Middle Pleistocene glaciation in Britain</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>RL Hill</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>20</volume>
<pages>
<last>107</last>
<first>37</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Advances in Protein Chemistry</title>
</host>
<title>Hydrolysis of proteins</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>MAC Hinton</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>5</volume>
<pages>
<last>539</last>
<first>529</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Geological Magazine</title>
</host>
<title>The British fossils shrews</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>MAC Hinton</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>9</volume>
<pages>
<last>542</last>
<first>541</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Annals and Magazine of Natural History ser</title>
</host>
<title>Diagnoses of Pitymys and Microtus occurring in the Upper Freshwater Bed of West Runton, Norfolk</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>PG Hoare</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>ER Connell</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>54</volume>
<pages>
<last>12</last>
<first>3</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Bulletin of the Geological Society of Norfolk</title>
</host>
<title>The first appearance of Scandinavian indicators in East Anglia's glacial record</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>PG Hoare</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>ER Connell</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>55</volume>
<pages>
<last>62</last>
<first>52</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Bulletin of the Geological Society of Norfolk</title>
</host>
<title>The first appearance of Scandinavian indicators in East Anglia's glacial record – reply</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>PG Hoare</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>NR Larkin</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>ER Connell</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>108</volume>
<pages>
<last>13</last>
<first>6</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Quaternary Newsletter</title>
</host>
<title>The first appearance of Norwegian indicator erratics in the glacial succession of Northeast Norfolk</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<host>
<pages>
<last>175</last>
<first>1</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Hodge PJ,Jones RA.1995.New British Beetles: Species not Included in Joy's Practical Handbook.British Entomological and Natural History Society: Reading, UK;1–175.</title>
</host>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>DG Holland</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>26</volume>
<pages>
<last>58</last>
<first>1</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Freshwater Biological Association Scientific Publications</title>
</host>
<title>A key to the larvae, pupae and adults of the British species of Elminthidae</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>JA Holman</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<pages>
<last>187</last>
<first>181</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Boxgrove: A Middle Pleistocene Hominid Site at Eartham Quarry, Boxgrove, West Sussex</title>
</host>
<title>Herpetofauna</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>DS Kaufman</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>WF Manley</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>17</volume>
<pages>
<last>1000</last>
<first>987</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Quaternary Science Reviews</title>
</host>
<title>A new procedure for determining DL amino acid ratios in fossils using reverse phase liquid chromatography</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>DH Keen</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>T Hardaker</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>ATO Lang</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>21</volume>
<pages>
<last>470</last>
<first>457</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Journal of Quaternary Science</title>
</host>
<title>A Lower Palaeolithic industry from the Cromerian (MIS 13) Baginton Formation of Waverley Wood and Wood Farm Pits, Bubbenhall, Warwickshire, UK</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>AS Kennard</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>16</volume>
<pages>
<last>97</last>
<first>84</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Proceedings of the Malacological Society of London</title>
</host>
<title>The Pleistocene non‐marine Mollusca of England</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<host>
<volume>325</volume>
<author></author>
<title>Koch K.1989.Die Käfer Mitteleuropas: Ökologie, Vol.2Goecke & Evers: Krefeld, Germany.</title>
</host>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<host>
<volume>325</volume>
<author></author>
<title>Koch K.1992.Die Käfer Mitteleuropas: Ökologie, Vol.3Goecke & Evers: Krefeld, Germany.</title>
</host>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>W von Koenigswald</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>T van Kolfschoten</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<pages>
<last>226</last>
<first>211</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>The early Middle Pleistocene in Europe</title>
</host>
<title>The Mimomys–Arvicola boundary and the enamel thickness quotient (SDQ) of Arvicola as stratigraphic markers in the Middle Pleistocene</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>T van Kolfschoten</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>43</volume>
<pages>
<last>69</last>
<first>1</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Mededelingen Rijks Geologische Dienst</title>
</host>
<title>The evolution of the mammal fauna in the Netherlands and the middle Rhine region (West Germany) during the Late Middle Pleistocene</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>T van Kolfschoten</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>E Turner</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<pages>
<last>253</last>
<first>227</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>The Early Middle Pleistocene in Europe</title>
</host>
<title>Early Middle Pleistocene mammalian faunas from Kärlich and Meisenheim 1 and their biostratigraphical implications</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>B Kurtén</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>111</volume>
<pages>
<last>26</last>
<first>1</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Acta Zoologica Fennica</title>
</host>
<title>On the evolution of the European wild cat, Felis silvestris Schreber</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>B Kurtén</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>AN Poulianos</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>4</volume>
<pages>
<last>130</last>
<first>47</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Anthropos</title>
</host>
<title>New stratigraphical and faunal material from Petralona Cave, with special reference to the Carnivora</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<host>
<author></author>
<title>Patterns of pre‐glacial sedimentation and glaciotectonic deformation within the early Middle Pleistocene sediments at Sidestrand, north Norfolk, UK</title>
</host>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>JR Lee</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>J Rose</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>JB Riding</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>BSP Moorlock</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>RJO Hamblin</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>31</volume>
<pages>
<last>355</last>
<first>345</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Boreas</title>
</host>
<title>Testing the case for a Middle Pleistocene Scandinavian glaciation in Eastern England: evidence for a Scottish ice source for tills within the Corton Formation of East Anglia, UK</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>JR Lee</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>J Rose</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>RJO Hamblin</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>BSP Moorlock</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>23</volume>
<pages>
<last>1566</last>
<first>1551</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Quaternary Science Reviews</title>
</host>
<title>Dating the earliest lowland glaciation of eastern England: a pre‐MIS 12 early Middle Pleistocene Happisburgh glaciation</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>JR Lee</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>SJ Booth</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>RJO Hamblin</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>AM Jarrow</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>AM Kessler</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>BSP Moorlock</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>AN Morigi</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>A Palmer</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>SJ Pawley</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>JB Riding</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>J Rose</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>53</volume>
<pages>
<last>60</last>
<first>3</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Bulletin of the Geological Society of Norfolk</title>
</host>
<title>A new stratigraphy for the glacial deposits around Lowestoft, Great Yarmouth, North Walsham and Cromer, East Anglia, UK</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>JR Lee</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>J Rose</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>I Candy</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>RW Barendregt</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>21</volume>
<pages>
<last>179</last>
<first>155</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Journal of Quaternary Science</title>
</host>
<title>Sea‐level changes, river activity, soil development and glaciation around the western margins of the southern North Sea Basin during the Early and early Middle Pleistocene: evidence from Pakefield, Suffolk, UK</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>JR Lee</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>J Rose</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>I Candy</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>RW Barendregt</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>BSP Moorlock</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>JB Riding</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>RJO Hamblin</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>23</volume>
<pages>
<last>98</last>
<first>93</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Journal of Quaternary Science</title>
</host>
<title>Reply: Middle Pleistocene sedimentation at Pakefield, Suffolk, England</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<host>
<author></author>
<title>Carnivora of the West Runton Freshwater Bed</title>
</host>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<host>
<author></author>
<title>Eastern England</title>
</host>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<host>
<volume>325</volume>
<author></author>
<title>Lindroth CH.1992.Ground Beetles (Carabidae) of Fennoscandia: A Zoogeographical Study, Part1.Intercept: Andover, UK (English translation of 1945 German original text).</title>
</host>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>LE Lisiecki</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>ME Raymo</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>20</volume>
<pages>
<first>1003</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Paleoceanography</title>
</host>
<title>A Pliocene–Pleistocene stack of 57 globally distributed benthic δ18O records</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<host>
<author></author>
<title>Evolutionary studies on Pleistocene deer</title>
</host>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>AM Lister</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>8</volume>
<pages>
<last>108</last>
<first>95</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Journal of Quaternary Science</title>
</host>
<title>The stratigraphical interpretation of deer species in the Cromer Forest‐bed Formation</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>AM Lister</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<pages>
<last>44</last>
<first>25</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>The early Middle Pleistocene in Europe</title>
</host>
<title>The stratigraphical interpretation of large mammal remains from the Cromer Forest‐bed Formation</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<host>
<author></author>
<title>Lucht WH.1987.Die Käfer Mitteleuropas: Katalog.Goecke & Evers: Krefeld, Germany.</title>
</host>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>JP Lunkka</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>9</volume>
<pages>
<last>233</last>
<first>209</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Journal of Quaternary Science</title>
</host>
<title>Sedimentation and lithostratigraphy of the North Sea Drift and Lowestoft Till Formations in the coastal cliffs of northeast Norfolk, England</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>D Maddy</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>GR Coope</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>PL Gibbard</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>CP Green</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>SG Lewis</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>151</volume>
<pages>
<last>233</last>
<first>221</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Journal of the Geological Society of London</title>
</host>
<title>Reappraisal of the Middle Pleistocene deposits near Brandon, Warwickshire and their significance for the Wolston glacial sequence</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>B Martínez‐Navarro</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>JA Pérez‐Claros</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>MR Palombo</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>L Rook</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>P Palmqvist</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>68</volume>
<pages>
<last>226</last>
<first>220</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Quaternary Research</title>
</host>
<title>The Olduvai buffalo Pelorovis and the origin of Bos</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>LC Maul</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>SA Parfitt</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<author></author>
<title>Quaternary International</title>
</host>
<title>Morphometric data and taxonomic reappraisal of micromammals from the type Cromerian at West Runton, Norfolk, UK, and their biostratigraphical significance</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>L Maul</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>F Masini</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>L Abbazzi</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>A Turner</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>85</volume>
<pages>
<last>151</last>
<first>111</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Palaeontographica Italica</title>
</host>
<title>The use of different morphometric data for absolute age calibration of some South and Middle European arvicolid populations</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>L Maul</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>F Masini</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>L Abbazzi</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>A Turner</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>60</volume>
<pages>
<last>572</last>
<first>565</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Mededelingen Nederlands Instituut voor Toegepaste Geowetenschappen TNO</title>
</host>
<title>Geochronometric application of evolutionary trends in the dentition of fossil Arvicolidae</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>DF Mayhew</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>AJ Stuart</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>B312</volume>
<pages>
<last>485</last>
<first>431</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society London</title>
</host>
<title>Stratigraphic and taxonomic revision of the fossil vole remains (Rodentia: Microtinae) from the Lower Pleistocene deposits of eastern England</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>T Meijer</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>RC Preece</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<pages>
<last>82</last>
<first>53</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>The Early Middle Pleistocene in Europe</title>
</host>
<title>Malacological evidence relating to the stratigraphical position of the Cromerian</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>T Meijer</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>P Cleveringa</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>DK Munsterman</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>RMCH Verreussel</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>21</volume>
<pages>
<last>310</last>
<first>307</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Journal of Quaternary Science</title>
</host>
<title>The Early Pleistocene Praetiglian and Ludhamian pollen stages in the North Sea Basin and their relationship to the marine isotope record</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>C Meisch</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>8/3</volume>
<pages>
<first>+ 522</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Sußwasserfauna von Mitteleuropa</title>
</host>
<title>Freshwater Ostracoda of Western and Central Europe</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<host>
<author></author>
<title>A correlation of Quaternary deposits in the British Isles</title>
</host>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>JR Moir</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>3</volume>
<pages>
<last>137</last>
<first>135</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Antiquaries Journal</title>
</host>
<title>An early Palaeolith from the Glacial Till at Sidestrand, Norfolk</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<host>
<author></author>
<title>Geology of the Cromer District–a brief explanation of the geological map sheet 131 Cromer</title>
</host>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<host>
<author></author>
<title>Nadachowski A.1982.Late Quaternary Rodents of Poland with Special Reference to Morphotype Dentition Analysis of Voles.Państwowe Wydawnictwo Naukowe: Warsaw.</title>
</host>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>M Olmi</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>X11</volume>
<pages>
<last>280</last>
<first>1</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Fauna d'Italia</title>
</host>
<title>Coleoptera, Dryopidae, Elminthidae</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>VA Osipova</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>B Rzebik‐Kowalska</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>MV Zaitsev</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>51</volume>
<pages>
<last>138</last>
<first>129</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Acta Theriologica</title>
</host>
<title>Intraspecific variability and phylogenetic relationship of the Pleistocene shrew Sorex runtonensis (Soricidae)</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>S Parfitt</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<pages>
<last>147</last>
<first>111</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Excavations at the Lower Palaeolithic site at East Farm, Barnham, Suffolk 1989–94</title>
</host>
<title>The interglacial mammalian fauna from Barnham</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>SA Parfitt</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>8</volume>
<pages>
<last>17</last>
<first>14</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Archaeology International</title>
</host>
<title>A butchered bone from Norfolk: evidence for very early human presence in Britain</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>SA Parfitt</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>RW Barendregt</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>M Breda</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>I Candy</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>MJ Collins</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>GR Coope</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>P Durbidge</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>MH Field</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>JR Lee</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>AM Lister</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>R Mutch</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>KEH Penkman</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>RC Preece</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>J Rose</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>CB Stringer</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>R Symmons</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>JE Whittaker</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>JJ Wymer</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>AJ Stuart</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>438</volume>
<pages>
<last>1012</last>
<first>1008</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Nature</title>
</host>
<title>The earliest record of human activity in northern Europe</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>SM Pawley</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>J Rose</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>JR Lee</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>BSP Moorlock</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>RJO Hamblin</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>115</volume>
<pages>
<last>42</last>
<first>25</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Proceedings of the Geologists' Association</title>
</host>
<title>Middle Pleistocene sedimentology and lithostratigraphy of Weybourne, northeast Norfolk, England</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>SM Pawley</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>RM Bailey</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>J Rose</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>BSP Moorlock</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>RJO Hamblin</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>SJ Booth</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>JR Lee</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>27</volume>
<pages>
<last>1377</last>
<first>1363</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Quaternary Science Reviews</title>
</host>
<title>Age limits on Middle Pleistocene glacial sediments from OSL dating, north Norfolk, UK</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<host>
<author></author>
<title>Amino acid geochronology: a closed system approach to test and refine the UK model</title>
</host>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>KEH Penkman</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>RC Preece</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>DH Keen</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>D Maddy</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>DC Schreve</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>MJ Collins</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>26</volume>
<pages>
<last>2969</last>
<first>2958</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Quaternary Science Reviews</title>
</host>
<title>Testing the aminostratigraphy of fluvial archives: the evidence from intra‐crystalline proteins within freshwater shells</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>KEH Penkman</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>DS Kaufman</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>D Maddy</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>MJ Collins</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>3</volume>
<pages>
<last>25</last>
<first>2</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Quaternary Geochronology</title>
</host>
<title>Closed‐system behaviour of the intra‐crystalline fraction of amino acids in mollusc shells</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<host>
<author></author>
<title>British aggregates: an improved chronology using amino acid racemization and degradation of intra‐crystalline amino acids (IcPD)</title>
</host>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<host>
<author></author>
<title>Amino acid geochronology of the type Cromerian of West Runton, Norfolk, UK</title>
</host>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>RMS Perrin</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>J Rose</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>H Davies</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>287</volume>
<pages>
<last>570</last>
<first>535</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London B</title>
</host>
<title>The distribution, variation and origins of pre‐Devensian tills in eastern England</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>RC Preece</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>20</volume>
<pages>
<last>1656</last>
<first>1643</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Quaternary Science Reviews</title>
</host>
<title>Molluscan evidence for differentiation of interglacials within the ‘Cromerian Complex’</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<host>
<author></author>
<title>The molluscan fauna of the Cromerian type site at West Runton, Norfolk</title>
</host>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>RC Preece</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>SA Parfitt</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<pages>
<last>27</last>
<first>1</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>The Quaternary of Norfolk and Suffolk</title>
</host>
<title>The Cromer Forest‐Bed Formation: new thoughts on an old problem</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>RC Preece</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>SA Parfitt</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<pages>
<last>83</last>
<first>60</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>The Quaternary of Northern East Anglia</title>
</host>
<title>The Cromer Forest‐bed Formation: some recent developments relating to early human occupation and lowland glaciation</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>RC Preece</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>KEH Penkman</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>116</volume>
<pages>
<last>377</last>
<first>363</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Proceedings of the Geologists' Association</title>
</host>
<title>New faunal analyses and amino acid dating of the Lower Palaeolithic site at East Farm, Barnham, Suffolk</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>RC Preece</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>SA Parfitt</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>DR Bridgland</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>SG Lewis</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>PJ Rowe</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>TC Atkinson</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>I Candy</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>NC Debenham</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>KEH Penkman</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>EJ Rhodes</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>J‐L Schwenninger</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>HI Griffiths</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>JE Whittaker</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>C Gleed‐Owen</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>26</volume>
<pages>
<last>1300</last>
<first>1236</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Quaternary Science Reviews</title>
</host>
<title>Terrestrial environments during MIS 11: evidence from the Palaeolithic site at West Stow, Suffolk, UK</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>CJ Proctor</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>PJ Berridge</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>MJ Bishop</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>DA Richards</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>PL Smart</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>24</volume>
<pages>
<last>1252</last>
<first>1243</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Quaternary Science Reviews</title>
</host>
<title>Age of Middle Pleistocene fauna and Lower Palaeolithic industries from Kent's Cavern, Devon</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<host>
<author></author>
<title>The geology of the country around Cromer</title>
</host>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<host>
<author></author>
<title>The Pliocene deposits of Britain</title>
</host>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<host>
<author></author>
<title>Roberts MB,Parfitt SA (eds).1999.Boxgrove, A Middle Pleistocene Hominid Site at Eartham Quarry, Boxgrove, West Sussex.English Heritage: London.</title>
</host>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>J Rose</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>JA Lee</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>I Candy</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>SG Lewis</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>14</volume>
<pages>
<last>360</last>
<first>347</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Journal of Quaternary Science</title>
</host>
<title>Early and Middle Pleistocene river systems in eastern England: evidence from Leet Hill, southern Norfolk, England</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>J Rose</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>BSP Moorlock</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>RJO Hamblin</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>79</volume>
<pages>
<last>22</last>
<first>5</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Quaternary International</title>
</host>
<title>Pre‐Anglian fluvial and coastal deposits in Eastern England: lithostratigraphy and palaeoenvironments</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>B Sala</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>74</volume>
<pages>
<last>170</last>
<first>113</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Palaeontographia Italica</title>
</host>
<title>Bison schoetensacki Freud. from Isernia la Pineta (early Mid‐Pleistocene – Italy) and revision of the European species of bison</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>AV Sher</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>40</volume>
<pages>
<last>180</last>
<first>101</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Das Pleistozän von Untermassfeld bei Meiningen (Thüringen)</title>
</host>
<title>An early Quaternary bison population from Untermassfeld: Bison manneri sp. nov</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>FW Shotton</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>DH Keen</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>GR Coope</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>AP Currant</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>PL Gibbard</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>M Aalto</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>SM Peglar</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>JE Robinson</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>8</volume>
<pages>
<last>325</last>
<first>293</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Journal of Quaternary Science</title>
</host>
<title>The Middle Pleistocene deposits of Waverley Wood Pit, Warwickshire, England</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>BW Sparks</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>172</volume>
<pages>
<last>80</last>
<first>71</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Proceedings of the Linnean Society London</title>
</host>
<title>The ecological interpretation of Quaternary non‐marine Mollusca</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>BW Sparks</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<pages>
<last>27</last>
<first>25</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>The Pre‐glacial Pleistocene of the Norfolk and Suffolk Coasts</title>
</host>
<title>Land and freshwater Mollusca of the West Runton Freshwater Bed</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<host>
<author></author>
<title>Stuart AJ.1982.Pleistocene Vertebrates in the British Isles.Longman: London.</title>
</host>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>AJ Stuart</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<pages>
<last>24</last>
<first>9</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>The Early Middle Pleistocene in Europe</title>
</host>
<title>Vertebrate faunas from the early Middle Pleistocene of East Anglia</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>AJ Stuart</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>RG West</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>113</volume>
<pages>
<last>473</last>
<first>469</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Geological Magazine</title>
</host>
<title>Late Cromerian flora and fauna from Ostend, Norfolk</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>GA Sykes</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>MJ Collins</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>DI Walton</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>23</volume>
<pages>
<last>1065</last>
<first>1039</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Organic Geochemistry</title>
</host>
<title>The significance of a geochemically isolated intracrystalline organic fraction within biominerals</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>EI Virina</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>F Heller</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>SS Faustov</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>NS Bolikhovskaya</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>RV Krasnenkov</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>T Gendler</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>EA Hailwood</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>J Hus</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>15</volume>
<pages>
<last>499</last>
<first>487</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>Journal of Quaternary Science</title>
</host>
<title>Palaeoclimatic record in the loess–palaeosol sequence of the Strelitsa type section (Don glaciation area, Russia) deduced from rock magnetic and palynological data</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<host>
<author></author>
<title>West RG.1980.The Pre‐glacial Pleistocene of the Norfolk and Suffolk Coasts.Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, UK.</title>
</host>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>JE Whittaker</name>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<name>DJ Horne</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<author></author>
<title>Ostracods in British Stratigraphy</title>
</host>
<title>The Pleistocene</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>DG Wilson</name>
</json:item>
</author>
<host>
<volume>72</volume>
<pages>
<last>1234</last>
<first>1207</first>
</pages>
<author></author>
<title>New Phytologist</title>
</host>
<title>Notable plant records from the Cromer Forest Bed Series</title>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<host>
<author></author>
<title>Wymer JJ.1985.Palaeolithic Sites of East Anglia.Geo Books: Norwich, UK.</title>
</host>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<host>
<author></author>
<title>Zeuner FE.1959.The Pleistocene Period: Its Climate, Chronology and Faunal Successions.Hutchinson Scientific & Technical: London.</title>
</host>
</json:item>
</refBibs>
<genre>
<json:string>article</json:string>
</genre>
<host>
<volume>24</volume>
<publisherId>
<json:string>JQS</json:string>
</publisherId>
<pages>
<total>24</total>
<last>580</last>
<first>557</first>
</pages>
<issn>
<json:string>0267-8179</json:string>
</issn>
<issue>6</issue>
<subject>
<json:item>
<value>Research Article</value>
</json:item>
</subject>
<genre>
<json:string>journal</json:string>
</genre>
<language>
<json:string>unknown</json:string>
</language>
<eissn>
<json:string>1099-1417</json:string>
</eissn>
<title>Journal of Quaternary Science</title>
<doi>
<json:string>10.1002/(ISSN)1099-1417</json:string>
</doi>
</host>
<categories>
<wos>
<json:string>science</json:string>
<json:string>geosciences, multidisciplinary</json:string>
<json:string>geography, physical</json:string>
</wos>
<scienceMetrix>
<json:string>natural sciences</json:string>
<json:string>earth & environmental sciences</json:string>
<json:string>paleontology</json:string>
</scienceMetrix>
</categories>
<publicationDate>2009</publicationDate>
<copyrightDate>2009</copyrightDate>
<doi>
<json:string>10.1002/jqs.1245</json:string>
</doi>
<id>C3ED2AD921F587A517128A38DD62547463E73DC6</id>
<score>1</score>
<fulltext>
<json:item>
<extension>pdf</extension>
<original>true</original>
<mimetype>application/pdf</mimetype>
<uri>https://api.istex.fr/document/C3ED2AD921F587A517128A38DD62547463E73DC6/fulltext/pdf</uri>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<extension>zip</extension>
<original>false</original>
<mimetype>application/zip</mimetype>
<uri>https://api.istex.fr/document/C3ED2AD921F587A517128A38DD62547463E73DC6/fulltext/zip</uri>
</json:item>
<istex:fulltextTEI uri="https://api.istex.fr/document/C3ED2AD921F587A517128A38DD62547463E73DC6/fulltext/tei">
<teiHeader>
<fileDesc>
<titleStmt>
<title level="a" type="main" xml:lang="en">Biostratigraphic and aminostratigraphic constraints on the age of the Middle Pleistocene glacial succession in north Norfolk, UK</title>
</titleStmt>
<publicationStmt>
<authority>ISTEX</authority>
<publisher>John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.</publisher>
<pubPlace>Chichester, UK</pubPlace>
<availability>
<p>Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.</p>
</availability>
<date>2009</date>
</publicationStmt>
<notesStmt>
<note type="content">*Preece, R. C., Parfitt, S. A., Coope, G. R., Penkman, K. E. H., Ponel, P. and Whittaker, J. E. 2009. Biostratigraphic and aminostratigraphic constraints on the age of the Middle Pleistocene glacial succession in north Norfolk, UK. J. Quaternary Sci., Vol. 24 pp. 557–580. ISSN 0267‐8179.</note>
</notesStmt>
<sourceDesc>
<biblStruct type="inbook">
<analytic>
<title level="a" type="main" xml:lang="en">Biostratigraphic and aminostratigraphic constraints on the age of the Middle Pleistocene glacial succession in north Norfolk, UK</title>
<author xml:id="author-1">
<persName>
<forename type="first">Richard C.</forename>
<surname>Preece</surname>
</persName>
<affiliation>Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK</affiliation>
<affiliation>Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge, Downing Street, Cambridge CB2 3EJ, UK.</affiliation>
</author>
<author xml:id="author-2">
<persName>
<forename type="first">Simon A.</forename>
<surname>Parfitt</surname>
</persName>
<affiliation>Department of Palaeontology, Natural History Museum, London, UK</affiliation>
<affiliation>Institute of Archaeology, University College London, London, UK</affiliation>
</author>
<author xml:id="author-3">
<persName>
<forename type="first">G. Russell</forename>
<surname>Coope</surname>
</persName>
<affiliation>Tigh‐na‐Cleirich, Foss, Pitlochry, UK</affiliation>
</author>
<author xml:id="author-4">
<persName>
<forename type="first">Kirsty E. H.</forename>
<surname>Penkman</surname>
</persName>
<affiliation>BioArCh, Departments of Biology, Archaeology and Chemistry, University of York, York, UK</affiliation>
</author>
<author xml:id="author-5">
<persName>
<forename type="first">Philippe</forename>
<surname>Ponel</surname>
</persName>
<affiliation>IMEP‐CNRS, Europôle Mediterranéen de l'Arbois, Aix‐en‐Provence, France</affiliation>
</author>
<author xml:id="author-6">
<persName>
<forename type="first">John E.</forename>
<surname>Whittaker</surname>
</persName>
<affiliation>Department of Palaeontology, Natural History Museum, London, UK</affiliation>
</author>
</analytic>
<monogr>
<title level="j">Journal of Quaternary Science</title>
<title level="j" type="abbrev">J. Quaternary Sci.</title>
<idno type="pISSN">0267-8179</idno>
<idno type="eISSN">1099-1417</idno>
<idno type="DOI">10.1002/(ISSN)1099-1417</idno>
<imprint>
<publisher>John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.</publisher>
<pubPlace>Chichester, UK</pubPlace>
<date type="published" when="2009-09"></date>
<biblScope unit="volume">24</biblScope>
<biblScope unit="issue">6</biblScope>
<biblScope unit="page" from="557">557</biblScope>
<biblScope unit="page" to="580">580</biblScope>
</imprint>
</monogr>
<idno type="istex">C3ED2AD921F587A517128A38DD62547463E73DC6</idno>
<idno type="DOI">10.1002/jqs.1245</idno>
<idno type="ArticleID">JQS1245</idno>
</biblStruct>
</sourceDesc>
</fileDesc>
<profileDesc>
<creation>
<date>2009</date>
</creation>
<langUsage>
<language ident="en">en</language>
</langUsage>
<abstract xml:lang="en">
<p>Considerable debate surrounds the age of the Middle Pleistocene glacial succession in East Anglia following some recent stratigraphical reinterpretations. Resolution of the stratigraphy here is important since it not only concerns the glacial history of the region but also has a bearing on our understanding of the earliest human occupation of north‐western Europe. The orthodox consensus that all the tills were emplaced during the Anglian (Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 12) has recently been challenged by a view assigning each major till to a different glacial stage, before, during and after MIS 12. Between Trimingham and Sidestrand on the north Norfolk coast, datable organic sediments occur immediately below and above the glacial succession. The oldest glacial deposit (Happisburgh Till) directly overlies the ‘Sidestrand Unio‐bed’, here defined as the Sidestrand Hall Member of the Cromer Forest‐bed Formation. Dating of these sediments therefore has a bearing on the maximum age of the glacial sequence. This paper reviews the palaeobotany and describes the faunal assemblages recovered from the Sidestrand Unio‐bed, which accumulated in a fluvial environment in a fully temperate climate with regional deciduous woodland. There are indications from the ostracods for weakly brackish conditions. Significant differences are apparent between the Sidestrand assemblages and those from West Runton, the type site of the Cromerian Stage. These differences do not result from contrasting facies or taphonomy but reflect warmer palaeotemperatures at Sidestrand and a much younger age. This conclusion is suggested by the higher proportion of thermophiles at Sidestrand and the occurrence of a water vole with unrooted molars (Arvicola) rather than its ancestor Mimomys savini with rooted molars. Amino acid racemisation data also indicate that Sidestrand is significantly younger than West Runton. These data further highlight the stratigraphical complexity of the ‘Cromerian Complex’ and support the conventional view that the Happisburgh Till was emplaced during the Anglian rather than the recently advanced view that it dates from MIS 16. Moreover, new evidence from the Trimingham lake bed (Sidestrand Cliff Formation) above the youngest glacial outwash sediments (Briton's Lane Formation) indicates that they also accumulated during a Middle Pleistocene interglacial – probably MIS 11. All of this evidence is consistent with a short chronology placing the glacial deposits within MIS 12, rather than invoking multiple episodes of glaciation envisaged in the ‘new glacial stratigraphy’ during MIS 16, 12, 10 and 6. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.</p>
</abstract>
<textClass xml:lang="en">
<keywords scheme="keyword">
<list>
<head>keywords</head>
<item>
<term>Sidestrand Unio‐bed</term>
</item>
<item>
<term>Sidestrand Hall Member</term>
</item>
<item>
<term>Cromerian</term>
</item>
<item>
<term>Cromer Forest‐bed Formation</term>
</item>
<item>
<term>Anglian</term>
</item>
<item>
<term>Norfolk</term>
</item>
<item>
<term>Happisburgh Till</term>
</item>
<item>
<term>MIS 16</term>
</item>
<item>
<term>Mimomys–Arvicola transition</term>
</item>
<item>
<term>aminostratigraphy</term>
</item>
<item>
<term>Sidestrand Cliff Formation</term>
</item>
<item>
<term>Trimingham lake beds</term>
</item>
<item>
<term>‘New glacial stratigraphy’</term>
</item>
</list>
</keywords>
</textClass>
<textClass>
<keywords scheme="Journal Subject">
<list>
<head>article-category</head>
<item>
<term>Research Article</term>
</item>
</list>
</keywords>
</textClass>
</profileDesc>
<revisionDesc>
<change when="2008-06-03">Received</change>
<change when="2008-10-14">Registration</change>
<change when="2009-09">Published</change>
</revisionDesc>
</teiHeader>
</istex:fulltextTEI>
<json:item>
<extension>txt</extension>
<original>false</original>
<mimetype>text/plain</mimetype>
<uri>https://api.istex.fr/document/C3ED2AD921F587A517128A38DD62547463E73DC6/fulltext/txt</uri>
</json:item>
</fulltext>
<metadata>
<istex:metadataXml wicri:clean="Wiley, elements deleted: body">
<istex:xmlDeclaration>version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes"</istex:xmlDeclaration>
<istex:document>
<component version="2.0" type="serialArticle" xml:lang="en">
<header>
<publicationMeta level="product">
<publisherInfo>
<publisherName>John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.</publisherName>
<publisherLoc>Chichester, UK</publisherLoc>
</publisherInfo>
<doi registered="yes">10.1002/(ISSN)1099-1417</doi>
<issn type="print">0267-8179</issn>
<issn type="electronic">1099-1417</issn>
<idGroup>
<id type="product" value="JQS"></id>
</idGroup>
<titleGroup>
<title type="main" xml:lang="en" sort="JOURNAL OF QUATERNARY SCIENCE">Journal of Quaternary Science</title>
<title type="short">J. Quaternary Sci.</title>
</titleGroup>
</publicationMeta>
<publicationMeta level="part" position="60">
<doi origin="wiley" registered="yes">10.1002/jqs.v24:6</doi>
<numberingGroup>
<numbering type="journalVolume" number="24">24</numbering>
<numbering type="journalIssue">6</numbering>
</numberingGroup>
<coverDate startDate="2009-09">September 2009</coverDate>
</publicationMeta>
<publicationMeta level="unit" type="article" position="20" status="forIssue">
<doi origin="wiley" registered="yes">10.1002/jqs.1245</doi>
<idGroup>
<id type="unit" value="JQS1245"></id>
</idGroup>
<countGroup>
<count type="pageTotal" number="24"></count>
</countGroup>
<titleGroup>
<title type="articleCategory">Research Article</title>
<title type="tocHeading1">Research Articles</title>
</titleGroup>
<copyright ownership="publisher">Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.</copyright>
<eventGroup>
<event type="manuscriptReceived" date="2008-06-03"></event>
<event type="manuscriptRevised" date="2008-10-08"></event>
<event type="manuscriptAccepted" date="2008-10-14"></event>
<event type="firstOnline" date="2009-02-17"></event>
<event type="publishedOnlineFinalForm" date="2009-08-20"></event>
<event type="publishedOnlineAcceptedOrEarlyUnpaginated" date="2009-02-17"></event>
<event type="xmlConverted" agent="Converter:JWSART34_TO_WML3G version:2.4.7 mode:FullText source:HeaderRef result:HeaderRef" date="2011-02-24"></event>
<event type="xmlConverted" agent="Converter:WILEY_ML3G_TO_WILEY_ML3GV2 version:3.8.8" date="2014-02-01"></event>
<event type="xmlConverted" agent="Converter:WML3G_To_WML3G version:4.1.7 mode:FullText,remove_FC" date="2014-10-30"></event>
</eventGroup>
<numberingGroup>
<numbering type="pageFirst">557</numbering>
<numbering type="pageLast">580</numbering>
</numberingGroup>
<correspondenceTo>Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge, Downing Street, Cambridge CB2 3EJ, UK.</correspondenceTo>
<linkGroup>
<link type="toTypesetVersion" href="file:JQS.JQS1245.pdf"></link>
</linkGroup>
</publicationMeta>
<contentMeta>
<countGroup>
<count type="figureTotal" number="8"></count>
<count type="tableTotal" number="7"></count>
<count type="referenceTotal" number="125"></count>
</countGroup>
<titleGroup>
<title type="main" xml:lang="en">Biostratigraphic and aminostratigraphic constraints on the age of the Middle Pleistocene glacial succession in north Norfolk, UK
<link href="#fn1"></link>
</title>
<title type="short" xml:lang="en">AGE CONSTRAINTS ON MIDDLE PLEISTOCENE GLACIAL SUCCESSION IN NORFOLK</title>
</titleGroup>
<creators>
<creator xml:id="au1" creatorRole="author" affiliationRef="#af1" corresponding="yes">
<personName>
<givenNames>Richard C.</givenNames>
<familyName>Preece</familyName>
</personName>
<contactDetails>
<email>rcp1001@cam.ac.uk</email>
</contactDetails>
</creator>
<creator xml:id="au2" creatorRole="author" affiliationRef="#af2 #af3">
<personName>
<givenNames>Simon A.</givenNames>
<familyName>Parfitt</familyName>
</personName>
</creator>
<creator xml:id="au3" creatorRole="author" affiliationRef="#af4">
<personName>
<givenNames>G. Russell</givenNames>
<familyName>Coope</familyName>
</personName>
</creator>
<creator xml:id="au4" creatorRole="author" affiliationRef="#af5">
<personName>
<givenNames>Kirsty E. H.</givenNames>
<familyName>Penkman</familyName>
</personName>
</creator>
<creator xml:id="au5" creatorRole="author" affiliationRef="#af6">
<personName>
<givenNames>Philippe</givenNames>
<familyName>Ponel</familyName>
</personName>
</creator>
<creator xml:id="au6" creatorRole="author" affiliationRef="#af2">
<personName>
<givenNames>John E.</givenNames>
<familyName>Whittaker</familyName>
</personName>
</creator>
</creators>
<affiliationGroup>
<affiliation xml:id="af1" countryCode="GB" type="organization">
<unparsedAffiliation>Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK</unparsedAffiliation>
</affiliation>
<affiliation xml:id="af2" countryCode="GB" type="organization">
<unparsedAffiliation>Department of Palaeontology, Natural History Museum, London, UK</unparsedAffiliation>
</affiliation>
<affiliation xml:id="af3" countryCode="GB" type="organization">
<unparsedAffiliation>Institute of Archaeology, University College London, London, UK</unparsedAffiliation>
</affiliation>
<affiliation xml:id="af4" countryCode="GB" type="organization">
<unparsedAffiliation>Tigh‐na‐Cleirich, Foss, Pitlochry, UK</unparsedAffiliation>
</affiliation>
<affiliation xml:id="af5" countryCode="GB" type="organization">
<unparsedAffiliation>BioArCh, Departments of Biology, Archaeology and Chemistry, University of York, York, UK</unparsedAffiliation>
</affiliation>
<affiliation xml:id="af6" countryCode="FR" type="organization">
<unparsedAffiliation>IMEP‐CNRS, Europôle Mediterranéen de l'Arbois, Aix‐en‐Provence, France</unparsedAffiliation>
</affiliation>
</affiliationGroup>
<keywordGroup xml:lang="en" type="author">
<keyword xml:id="kwd1">Sidestrand
<i>Unio</i>
‐bed</keyword>
<keyword xml:id="kwd2">Sidestrand Hall Member</keyword>
<keyword xml:id="kwd3">Cromerian</keyword>
<keyword xml:id="kwd4">Cromer Forest‐bed Formation</keyword>
<keyword xml:id="kwd5">Anglian</keyword>
<keyword xml:id="kwd6">Norfolk</keyword>
<keyword xml:id="kwd7">Happisburgh Till</keyword>
<keyword xml:id="kwd8">MIS 16</keyword>
<keyword xml:id="kwd9">
<i>Mimomys</i>
<i>Arvicola</i>
transition</keyword>
<keyword xml:id="kwd10">aminostratigraphy</keyword>
<keyword xml:id="kwd11">Sidestrand Cliff Formation</keyword>
<keyword xml:id="kwd12">Trimingham lake beds</keyword>
<keyword xml:id="kwd13">‘New glacial stratigraphy’</keyword>
</keywordGroup>
<abstractGroup>
<abstract type="main" xml:lang="en">
<title type="main">Abstract</title>
<p>Considerable debate surrounds the age of the Middle Pleistocene glacial succession in East Anglia following some recent stratigraphical reinterpretations. Resolution of the stratigraphy here is important since it not only concerns the glacial history of the region but also has a bearing on our understanding of the earliest human occupation of north‐western Europe. The orthodox consensus that all the tills were emplaced during the Anglian (Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 12) has recently been challenged by a view assigning each major till to a different glacial stage, before, during and after MIS 12. Between Trimingham and Sidestrand on the north Norfolk coast, datable organic sediments occur immediately below and above the glacial succession. The oldest glacial deposit (Happisburgh Till) directly overlies the ‘Sidestrand
<i>Unio</i>
‐bed’, here defined as the Sidestrand Hall Member of the Cromer Forest‐bed Formation. Dating of these sediments therefore has a bearing on the maximum age of the glacial sequence. This paper reviews the palaeobotany and describes the faunal assemblages recovered from the Sidestrand
<i>Unio</i>
‐bed, which accumulated in a fluvial environment in a fully temperate climate with regional deciduous woodland. There are indications from the ostracods for weakly brackish conditions. Significant differences are apparent between the Sidestrand assemblages and those from West Runton, the type site of the Cromerian Stage. These differences do not result from contrasting facies or taphonomy but reflect warmer palaeotemperatures at Sidestrand and a much younger age. This conclusion is suggested by the higher proportion of thermophiles at Sidestrand and the occurrence of a water vole with unrooted molars (
<i>Arvicola</i>
) rather than its ancestor
<i>Mimomys</i>
<i>savini</i>
with rooted molars. Amino acid racemisation data also indicate that Sidestrand is significantly younger than West Runton. These data further highlight the stratigraphical complexity of the ‘Cromerian Complex’ and support the conventional view that the Happisburgh Till was emplaced during the Anglian rather than the recently advanced view that it dates from MIS 16. Moreover, new evidence from the Trimingham lake bed (Sidestrand Cliff Formation) above the youngest glacial outwash sediments (Briton's Lane Formation) indicates that they also accumulated during a Middle Pleistocene interglacial – probably MIS 11. All of this evidence is consistent with a short chronology placing the glacial deposits within MIS 12, rather than invoking multiple episodes of glaciation envisaged in the ‘new glacial stratigraphy’ during MIS 16, 12, 10 and 6. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.</p>
</abstract>
</abstractGroup>
</contentMeta>
<noteGroup>
<note xml:id="fn1">
<p>Preece, R. C., Parfitt, S. A., Coope, G. R., Penkman, K. E. H., Ponel, P. and Whittaker, J. E. 2009. Biostratigraphic and aminostratigraphic constraints on the age of the Middle Pleistocene glacial succession in north Norfolk, UK.
<i>J. Quaternary Sci.</i>
,
<b>Vol. 24</b>
pp. 557–580. ISSN 0267‐8179.</p>
</note>
</noteGroup>
</header>
</component>
</istex:document>
</istex:metadataXml>
<mods version="3.6">
<titleInfo lang="en">
<title>Biostratigraphic and aminostratigraphic constraints on the age of the Middle Pleistocene glacial succession in north Norfolk, UK</title>
</titleInfo>
<titleInfo type="abbreviated" lang="en">
<title>AGE CONSTRAINTS ON MIDDLE PLEISTOCENE GLACIAL SUCCESSION IN NORFOLK</title>
</titleInfo>
<titleInfo type="alternative" contentType="CDATA" lang="en">
<title>Biostratigraphic and aminostratigraphic constraints on the age of the Middle Pleistocene glacial succession in north Norfolk, UK</title>
</titleInfo>
<name type="personal">
<namePart type="given">Richard C.</namePart>
<namePart type="family">Preece</namePart>
<affiliation>Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK</affiliation>
<affiliation>Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge, Downing Street, Cambridge CB2 3EJ, UK.</affiliation>
<role>
<roleTerm type="text">author</roleTerm>
</role>
</name>
<name type="personal">
<namePart type="given">Simon A.</namePart>
<namePart type="family">Parfitt</namePart>
<affiliation>Department of Palaeontology, Natural History Museum, London, UK</affiliation>
<affiliation>Institute of Archaeology, University College London, London, UK</affiliation>
<role>
<roleTerm type="text">author</roleTerm>
</role>
</name>
<name type="personal">
<namePart type="given">G. Russell</namePart>
<namePart type="family">Coope</namePart>
<affiliation>Tigh‐na‐Cleirich, Foss, Pitlochry, UK</affiliation>
<role>
<roleTerm type="text">author</roleTerm>
</role>
</name>
<name type="personal">
<namePart type="given">Kirsty E. H.</namePart>
<namePart type="family">Penkman</namePart>
<affiliation>BioArCh, Departments of Biology, Archaeology and Chemistry, University of York, York, UK</affiliation>
<role>
<roleTerm type="text">author</roleTerm>
</role>
</name>
<name type="personal">
<namePart type="given">Philippe</namePart>
<namePart type="family">Ponel</namePart>
<affiliation>IMEP‐CNRS, Europôle Mediterranéen de l'Arbois, Aix‐en‐Provence, France</affiliation>
<role>
<roleTerm type="text">author</roleTerm>
</role>
</name>
<name type="personal">
<namePart type="given">John E.</namePart>
<namePart type="family">Whittaker</namePart>
<affiliation>Department of Palaeontology, Natural History Museum, London, UK</affiliation>
<role>
<roleTerm type="text">author</roleTerm>
</role>
</name>
<typeOfResource>text</typeOfResource>
<genre type="article" displayLabel="article"></genre>
<originInfo>
<publisher>John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.</publisher>
<place>
<placeTerm type="text">Chichester, UK</placeTerm>
</place>
<dateIssued encoding="w3cdtf">2009-09</dateIssued>
<dateCaptured encoding="w3cdtf">2008-06-03</dateCaptured>
<dateValid encoding="w3cdtf">2008-10-14</dateValid>
<copyrightDate encoding="w3cdtf">2009</copyrightDate>
</originInfo>
<language>
<languageTerm type="code" authority="rfc3066">en</languageTerm>
<languageTerm type="code" authority="iso639-2b">eng</languageTerm>
</language>
<physicalDescription>
<internetMediaType>text/html</internetMediaType>
<extent unit="figures">8</extent>
<extent unit="tables">7</extent>
<extent unit="references">125</extent>
</physicalDescription>
<abstract lang="en">Considerable debate surrounds the age of the Middle Pleistocene glacial succession in East Anglia following some recent stratigraphical reinterpretations. Resolution of the stratigraphy here is important since it not only concerns the glacial history of the region but also has a bearing on our understanding of the earliest human occupation of north‐western Europe. The orthodox consensus that all the tills were emplaced during the Anglian (Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 12) has recently been challenged by a view assigning each major till to a different glacial stage, before, during and after MIS 12. Between Trimingham and Sidestrand on the north Norfolk coast, datable organic sediments occur immediately below and above the glacial succession. The oldest glacial deposit (Happisburgh Till) directly overlies the ‘Sidestrand Unio‐bed’, here defined as the Sidestrand Hall Member of the Cromer Forest‐bed Formation. Dating of these sediments therefore has a bearing on the maximum age of the glacial sequence. This paper reviews the palaeobotany and describes the faunal assemblages recovered from the Sidestrand Unio‐bed, which accumulated in a fluvial environment in a fully temperate climate with regional deciduous woodland. There are indications from the ostracods for weakly brackish conditions. Significant differences are apparent between the Sidestrand assemblages and those from West Runton, the type site of the Cromerian Stage. These differences do not result from contrasting facies or taphonomy but reflect warmer palaeotemperatures at Sidestrand and a much younger age. This conclusion is suggested by the higher proportion of thermophiles at Sidestrand and the occurrence of a water vole with unrooted molars (Arvicola) rather than its ancestor Mimomys savini with rooted molars. Amino acid racemisation data also indicate that Sidestrand is significantly younger than West Runton. These data further highlight the stratigraphical complexity of the ‘Cromerian Complex’ and support the conventional view that the Happisburgh Till was emplaced during the Anglian rather than the recently advanced view that it dates from MIS 16. Moreover, new evidence from the Trimingham lake bed (Sidestrand Cliff Formation) above the youngest glacial outwash sediments (Briton's Lane Formation) indicates that they also accumulated during a Middle Pleistocene interglacial – probably MIS 11. All of this evidence is consistent with a short chronology placing the glacial deposits within MIS 12, rather than invoking multiple episodes of glaciation envisaged in the ‘new glacial stratigraphy’ during MIS 16, 12, 10 and 6. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.</abstract>
<note type="content">*Preece, R. C., Parfitt, S. A., Coope, G. R., Penkman, K. E. H., Ponel, P. and Whittaker, J. E. 2009. Biostratigraphic and aminostratigraphic constraints on the age of the Middle Pleistocene glacial succession in north Norfolk, UK. J. Quaternary Sci., Vol. 24 pp. 557–580. ISSN 0267‐8179.</note>
<subject lang="en">
<genre>keywords</genre>
<topic>Sidestrand Unio‐bed</topic>
<topic>Sidestrand Hall Member</topic>
<topic>Cromerian</topic>
<topic>Cromer Forest‐bed Formation</topic>
<topic>Anglian</topic>
<topic>Norfolk</topic>
<topic>Happisburgh Till</topic>
<topic>MIS 16</topic>
<topic>Mimomys–Arvicola transition</topic>
<topic>aminostratigraphy</topic>
<topic>Sidestrand Cliff Formation</topic>
<topic>Trimingham lake beds</topic>
<topic>‘New glacial stratigraphy’</topic>
</subject>
<relatedItem type="host">
<titleInfo>
<title>Journal of Quaternary Science</title>
</titleInfo>
<titleInfo type="abbreviated">
<title>J. Quaternary Sci.</title>
</titleInfo>
<genre type="journal">journal</genre>
<subject>
<genre>article-category</genre>
<topic>Research Article</topic>
</subject>
<identifier type="ISSN">0267-8179</identifier>
<identifier type="eISSN">1099-1417</identifier>
<identifier type="DOI">10.1002/(ISSN)1099-1417</identifier>
<identifier type="PublisherID">JQS</identifier>
<part>
<date>2009</date>
<detail type="volume">
<caption>vol.</caption>
<number>24</number>
</detail>
<detail type="issue">
<caption>no.</caption>
<number>6</number>
</detail>
<extent unit="pages">
<start>557</start>
<end>580</end>
<total>24</total>
</extent>
</part>
</relatedItem>
<identifier type="istex">C3ED2AD921F587A517128A38DD62547463E73DC6</identifier>
<identifier type="DOI">10.1002/jqs.1245</identifier>
<identifier type="ArticleID">JQS1245</identifier>
<accessCondition type="use and reproduction" contentType="copyright">Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.</accessCondition>
<recordInfo>
<recordContentSource>WILEY</recordContentSource>
<recordOrigin>John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.</recordOrigin>
</recordInfo>
</mods>
</metadata>
<serie></serie>
</istex>
</record>

Pour manipuler ce document sous Unix (Dilib)

EXPLOR_STEP=$WICRI_ROOT/Wicri/Bois/explor/CheneBelgiqueV1/Data/Istex/Corpus
HfdSelect -h $EXPLOR_STEP/biblio.hfd -nk 000F89 | SxmlIndent | more

Ou

HfdSelect -h $EXPLOR_AREA/Data/Istex/Corpus/biblio.hfd -nk 000F89 | SxmlIndent | more

Pour mettre un lien sur cette page dans le réseau Wicri

{{Explor lien
   |wiki=    Wicri/Bois
   |area=    CheneBelgiqueV1
   |flux=    Istex
   |étape=   Corpus
   |type=    RBID
   |clé=     ISTEX:C3ED2AD921F587A517128A38DD62547463E73DC6
   |texte=   Biostratigraphic and aminostratigraphic constraints on the age of the Middle Pleistocene glacial succession in north Norfolk, UK
}}

Wicri

This area was generated with Dilib version V0.6.27.
Data generation: Tue Feb 21 23:48:11 2017. Site generation: Wed Mar 6 16:29:49 2024