Gordon, J.E. and Sutherland, D.G. GCR Editor: W.A. Wimbledon. 1993. Quaternary of Scotland. Geological Conservation Review Series No. 6. JNCC, Peterborough, ISBN 0 412 48840 X. The original source material for these web pages has been made available by the JNCC under the Open Government Licence 3.0. Full details in the JNCC Open Data Policy
Cam Loch
H.J.B. Birks
Highlights
The sediments on the floor of Cam Loch contain a valuable record of environmental changes during the Lateglacial. This record has been studied in great detail using pollen, diatom and chemical methods, together with radiocarbon dating. Cam Loch is an important reference site for the Lateglacial in north-west Scotland.
Introduction
Cam Loch
Description
The maximum water depth of Cam Loch is 37 m and the mean depth, 12 m. A sediment core has been obtained from a water depth of 10 m. The basal 0.65 m of sediment in this core comprise a succession of clay, silt and gyttja deposits
Interpretation
The basal sediments
In the sediments deposited from 11,800 to 11,000 BP (correlated with the Allerød Interstadial and Chronozone) pollen of Empetrum, Cyperaceae and Betula attain their highest values (zones Cc and Cd). The absolute Betula values do not, however, indicate that tree birches grew near the site at this time. The carbon content of the sediments attains its highest Lateglacial values during this period. The organic geochemistry indicates that much of the organic component of the Allerød Chronozone sediments was derived from in situ lake biota and lake productivity, suggesting a high trophic status at this time. The reduced state of the iron and manganese in the sediments presumably resulted from oxygen depletion in the hypolimnion, a characteristic of productive eutrophic lakes today. The diatom assemblages similarly indicate that the loch was productive at this time. The soils within the catchment appear, however, to have become leached during the interstadial, presumably because of high rainfall and the generally calcifuge nature of the dwarf-shrub and sedge-dominated vegetation. Soil erosion began during the inter-stadial, probably as a result of climatic deterioration. It resulted in the redeposition of organic material and some apparent anomalies in the radiocarbon dates.
Sediments deposited between 11,000 and 10,400 BP contain pollen assemblages that are characterized by high values of Artemisia (including A. norvegica), Cruciferae, Compositae, Caryophyllaceae and Gramineae pollen and of Lycopodium selago spores (zones Ce and Cf). The assemblages date from the first part of the Younger Dryas Stadial and Chronozone, the time during which small corrie glaciers became reestablished on the mountains of north-west Scotland (Sissons, 1977a). The sediments are minerogenic and reflect the onset of intense periglacial erosion of mineral soils by frost disturbance. They resemble the lowermost sediments in their high calcium, magnesium, potassium and sodium content. Terrestrial diatom species are frequent, again indicating extensive erosion and inwashing of terrestrial material. The vegetation was probably predominantly open and species-rich, with abundant sedges and grasses, Artemisia, and other herbs (Pennington, 1980). The climate was probably more continental and with less snowfall than the climate pre-13,000 BP.
This phase is part of the Loch Lomond Stadial and reflects a period of very marked climatic deterioration, with extensive erosion and inwashing of mineral soils.
At about 10,400 BP the sediments become more organic, the carbon content sharply rises to values higher than at any time in the Lateglacial, and elements such as sodium, potassium, calcium and magnesium decrease equally rapidly. These chemical changes indicate humus accumulation, soil stability, and high lake productivity. The pollen assemblages are dominated by Cyperaceae and Rumex pollen (zone Cg) and then by umperus communis and Empetrum pollen (zone Ch). The pollen stratigraphy clearly reflects the rapid vegetational changes that occurred at the end of the Lateglacial and the beginning of the Holocene.
The numerous geochemical and palaeontological variables that were studied in the Cam Loch sediments all indicate that a major and rapid climatic amelioration occurred at about 13,000 BP; a minor climatic recession occurred between 12,000 and 11,800 BP, and a major climatic deterioration occurred between 11,000 and 10,400 BP. These phases are correlated by Pennington (1975b, 1977a, 1977b) with the Bølling, Older Dryas, and Younger Dryas Chronozones, respectively, of Fennoscandia.
Cam Loch is of national importance because of its detailed and diverse stratigraphical record of the environmental history of the Lateglacial. It is one of the most intensively studied sites of Lateglacial age in Scotland, with detailed and integrated pollen, diatom and inorganic and organic chemical analyses, thereby providing valuable independent evidence for environmental change during the Lateglacial. Its palaeoclimate record shows marked differences with sites elsewhere in Britain (for example, Pennington, 1977b; Walker, 1984b) and mainland Europe (for example, Watts, 1980). Such spatial differences even within north-west Scotland (Birks, 1984) indicate the complex vegetational and hence environmental patterns that may have existed during the Lateglacial, especially in extreme, marginal areas. Cam Loch provides convincing evidence from various data sources for a minor climatic recession between about 12,000 and 11,800 BP. Increasing interest is now focused on such short-lived, often rather abrupt, climatic recessions during the Lateglacial (Tipping, 1991b). Because of its wealth of palaeoecological and palaeolimnological data from the Lateglacial, Cam Loch is an important reference site for studies of Late Quaternary vegetational and climatic history.
Conclusion
The sediments at Cam Loch are important for reconstructing the environmental history of north-west Scotland from about 13,000 to 10,000 years ago, during the Lateglacial. Pollen, diatom and chemical analyses, together with radiocarbon dating, show that the climatic amelioration at the end of the last glaciation was twice interrupted by colder phases, with corresponding changes in vegetation patterns and soil stability. The first interruption was a relatively short-lived event; the second corresponds with the Loch Lomond Stadial (about 11,000 to 10,000 years ago) and brought about a change from a stable ground cover of dwarf-shrub vegetation to unstable soils with open-habitat sedges, grasses and herbs. As one of the most intensively studied Lateglacial sites in north-west Scotland, Cam Loch is a key reference locality for this area.