Sediment cores, two approximately 6 metres and one about 1 metre in length,
were recovered from the profundal plain of the northern basin of Loch Ness, Scotland.
Examination revealed that the sediment is composed of irregular sequences of pale and
dark laminations, most sub-millimeter in thickness, some ca 5 mm thick.
Enumeration of laminae, and determination of lamination thickness, was
carried out using X-radiography and image analysis. A hypothesis was developed that the
finer laminations represent varves. This was tested by means of lamination counting, and
by radiocarbon dating of material from one 'long' core. Comparison of the two
chronologies thus derived suggested that the hypothesis was correct, and that a non-continuous
chronology had been obtained, spanning the period ca 9000 to 1500 BP.
Lamination thickness data derived from recent sediments was compared with
meteorological data, especially rainfall, in order to test the hypothesis that prevailing
climate, together with the alignment of the Loch with the predominantly southwesterly
airflow, médiates in the production of the volume of allochthonous mineral material eroded
from the catchment and its input to the water column. The result of this analysis bas
proved inconclusive, and a more complex relationship may be involved. Other proxy
climatic data were utilised in order further to investigate this aspect of the study and
correlations between the sediment record and several of thèse were shown to be
statistically significant. Spectral analysis of the lamination thickness datasets was also
employed in order to determine if patterns of sedimentation may be linked to periodic
forcing processes. Cyclicities observed in recent sediments include those of ca 210 and ca
90 years, which are also present in many other climatically-related records. Analysis of
lamination thickness in the 'long' cores has proved inconclusive, producing evidence of
many periodicities, but few of significance. It is believed that this result may be attributed
to the non-stationary behaviour of forcing agents through time.
Date of Award | 1999 |
---|
Original language | English |
---|
Awarding Institution | |
---|
Laminated Sediments of Loch Ness, Scotland: Indicators of Holocene Environmental Change
Cooper, M. C. (Author). 1999
Student thesis: PhD