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The British Isles |
Department of Geography, London School of Economics, Houghton Street, London WC2A 2AE, UK
This paper examines recent advances in understanding of the Tertiary evolutionary geomorphology of the southern England Chalklands, a subject of continuing controversy despite over a century of investigation. It begins by briefly outlining the classic Wooldridge and Linton model and discussing the many lines of criticism. Particular attention is paid to the explanation of discordant drainage and numerous lines of evidence are presented to explain why the superimposition model has been rejected in favour of an explanation involving the development of anteconsequents. Attention is then directed to the new models of evolution advanced in the early 1980s which placed heavier emphasis on Palaeogene denudation and pulsed tectonism. These models are compared and contrasted, and attention focused on the growing recognition that the fundamental erosional surface is an etchplanated Summit Surface originating in the Palaeogene rather than a peneplanated surface developed during the Miocene and Pliocene. Significant developments of the last fifteen years are then reviewed the establishment of inversion tectonics, lithostratigraphical division of the Chalk, apatite fission-track dating of uplift episodes and new information on the extent of the late Pliocene Red Crag incursion and combined to produce a new evolutionary sequence which differs from previous interpretations in a number of regards. First, the concept of structural compartmentalization into morphotectonic regions removes the need for uniformity of evolution and indicates that uplift could have been variable in time and space, thereby removing the problems caused by continual adherence to the concept of mid-Tertiary tectonism. Second, the growing evidence for Pleistocene differential uplift of at least 200 m is considered. Third, an explanation of the so-called Plio-Pliocene marine bench involving modified etchplanation is advanced. The paper concludes with a discussion of remaining uncertainties.