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
Gairloch Moraine
C.K. Ballantyne
Highlights
This site demonstrates the best representative assemblage of landforms associated with the Gairloch Moraine, a feature formed by the Wester Ross Readvance of the Late Devensian ice-sheet.
Introduction
The Gairloch Moraine
Description
The Gairloch Moraine marks the western limit of a former glacier nearly 25 km across, which occupied Loch Gairloch and Loch Ewe and the intervening low ground (Robinson and Ballantyne, 1979). The moraine
Local equivalents of the Gairloch Moraine, comprising boulder ridges, moraine ridges and drift limits, have been identified on the Redpoint and Applecross peninsulas near Aultbea, on An Teallach (Robinson, 1977, 1987b; Robinson and Ballantyne, 1979; Sissons and Dawson, 1981) and on the flank of Ben Mor Coigach (Sutherland, 1984a, figure 10). Robinson (1977) and Robinson and Ballantyne (1979) record that some of the individual features were first noted by officers of the Geological Survey on their manuscript maps, although their significance was not then recognized (but see Wright, 1937). However, a whole system of ice-marginal features has now been traced out (see Sutherland, 1984a) and interpreted on geomorphological grounds as marking the maximal extent of a glacial readvance, the Wester Ross Readvance (see
Interpretation
In the past, numerous readvances of the Late Devensian ice-sheet in Scotland have been proposed (see the reviews in Sissons, 1967a, 1974c and 1976b; and also Charlesworth, 1926b, 1956; Synge, 1966, 1977b; Synge and Stephens, 1966; Smith, 1977; Synge and Smith, 1980), but the evidence for most of these has now been reinterpreted (see reviews in Sissons, 1974c, 1976b; Gray and Sutherland, 1977; Sutherland, 1984a). The evidence from Wester Ross, however, and particularly the continuity of the ice-marginal features across large tracts of country, appears to substantiate a readvance. Significantly, also, the marine limit outside the moraine represents a broadly synchronous shoreline formed at approximately the same time as the moraine (Sissons and Dawson, 1981).
Relationships between the Wester Ross Moraine and former ice limits elsewhere are uncertain (Ballantyne et al., 1987). For example, Smith (1977) and Synge (1977b) described a putative readvance limit at Ardersier (but see Firth, 1989b), and D. J. Balfour (unpublished data) has identified former ice limits near the mouths of a number of valleys on the north coast of Sutherland. Sissons and Dawson (1981) considered the possibility that the Wester Ross Readvance might relate to former ice limits associated with sharp drops in the marine limit at Stirling (Sissons et al., 1966) and Otter Ferry (Sutherland, 1981b) and to a stillstand or readvance suggested by Peacock (1970a) in Inverness-shire. However, the evidence is conflicting (Sutherland, 1984a). On the one hand, the gradient of the Main Wester Ross Shoreline associated with the moraine is similar to that of the Main Perth Shoreline which terminates inland near Stirling. In contrast, the gradual drop in the marine limit as the ice retreated from the Wester Ross Moraine appears to argue against such correlations (Sissons and Dawson, 1981). Ballantyne (1988) has also suggested that the readvance may be represented by the 'Strollamus Moraine' in southern Skye, but subsequently reinterpreted the latter as a medial moraine deposited at the convergence of two ice streams (Ballantyne and Benn, 1991).
Similarly, it is not possible to substantiate correlations with the end moraines described in Easter Ross (Sissons, 1982a; Sutherland, 1984a; Ballantyne et al., 1987) for it is as yet unclear which of those moraines relate to ice-sheet deglaciation and which relates to the Loch Lomond Readvance.
The continuity and extent of the Wester Ross Moraine is of considerable importance in providing the clearest geomorphological evidence yet for a readvance of the Late Devensian ice-sheet in Scotland. This evidence is particularly well developed in the Gairloch area where the features marking the ice limit are all clearly demonstrated and seen in close geographical association — drift limits, boulder ridges and till ridges. Here too, eskers occur as part of the landform assemblage. The Gairloch Moraine site may therefore be regarded as the single most important locality demonstrating key geomorphological features of the Wester Ross Readvance. Elsewhere, other aspects of the readvance are represented at An Teallach, notably the relationship with Loch Lomond Readvance moraines.
Conclusion
This site demonstrates an end moraine and other landforms formed by a readvance (the Wester Ross Readvance) of the Late Devensian ice-sheet, about 13,500–13,000 years ago. It includes the best assemblage of landforms that mark the former limit of the ice and is therefore an important reference locality for the geomorphological expression of the event.