Merritt, J W, Auton, C A, Connell, E R, Hall, A M, and Peacock, J D. 2003. Cainozoic geology and landscape evolution of north-east Scotland, Memoir of the British Geological Survey, Sheets 66E, 67, 76E, 77, 86E, 87W, 87E, 95, 96W, 96E and 97 (Scotland).
Site 5 Crossbrae Farm, Turriff
The Late Pleistocene sequence uncovered in a drainage ditch at Crossbrae Farm
The Crossbrae Farm Peat Bed locally rests on weathered Devonian pebbly sandstone (
The Crossbrae Farm Peat Bed reaches a maximum known thickness of 55 cm and comprises sandy peat with interbedded silty sands and sand laminae. Pollen analysis has revealed a former dwarf shrub tundra vegetation, with Betula nana and Salix herbacea. Bruckenthalia spiculifolia was also present in the flora. Supporting evidence of an interstadial environment is provided by a range of plant macrofossil remains and by a total of 40 coleoptera taxa, including Olophnum boreale (Payk.), Acidota quadrata (Zett.) and Boreaphilus henningianus (Sahlb.). None of these beetles live today in the British Isles, but each is found in the present-day fauna of northern Fennoscandia. Based on the overlap of the climatic envelopes of 23 coleoptera species, the average temperature at the time of the formation of the Crossbrae Farm Peat Bed is estimated as:
Mean temperature of the warmest month 10°C ± 1°C
Mean temperature of the coldest month -9°C ± −3°C
Further radiocarbon age determinations for the Peat are as follows:
These dates must be seen as minima for the Crossbrae Farm Peat Bed. The dates obtained earlier therefore appear to be anomolously young, probably owing to contamination by younger carbon in groundwater.
The Crossbrae Farm Peat Bed clearly predates the Late-glacial and the Sourlie Interstadial around 30 ka (possibly equivalent to the Ålesund Interstadial of western Norway,
Excavations in 1992 showed that the Crossbrae Farm Peat Bed is directly overlain by coarse gravel up to 1.2 m in thickness. This clast-supported pebble and cobble gravel unit has a strongly erosive base and is dominated by quartzite and quartzose psammite clasts. It is succeeded by crudely stratified, clast-rich diamictons up to 2.5 m thick. The diamictons contain striated pelite clasts and show a strong down-slope clast fabric. They are interpreted as soliflucted tills.
The significance of the Crossbrae Farm site is the presence of a peat deposit that apparently represents an Early Devensian interstadial. The most recently obtained radiocarbon dates indicate that the peat is older than the Middle Devensian and therefore cannot constrain significantly the age of the last glaciation of this part of Buchan. The presence of coarse gravel of possible glaciofluvial origin is important. This gravel unit is most likely to be of Late Devensian age and as such provides no support for the view that part of Buchan escaped glaciation in the Late Devensian. However, it is possible that the gravel is older, as glacial deposits at the Howe of Byth site in Buchan (Hall et al., 1995b) and in the vicinity of Teindland in lower Strathspey (Hall et al., 1995a) have been ascribed to cold stages in Oxygen Isotope Stages 4 and 3.