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Glacial stratigraphy of SE CaithnessSignificance: a record of the sequence of events during the last glaciation South-east Caithness straddles the boundary between two till sheets. To the north and east lies the shelly till, deposited by ice moving out of the Moray Firth. To the south and west lies the inland till, derived largely from the crystalline terrain of the Langwell and Berriedale drainage basins. The local stratigraphy records the interactions of the two ice streams that deposited the respective till sheets.
The formal units in the stratigraphy of Caithness were defined by Hall and Whittington (1989). The deposits in the shelly till area were assigned to the Lybster Formation. Only one shelly till unit was recognised, and linked to a type site near Forse where it is 6 m deep. The ridges which divide the Berriedale, Langwell and Dunbeath Waters guided ice flow and so here different till units were named in each valleys, all within the Berriedale Formation which equates to the inland till sheet.
Peach and Horne (1881) recognised that ice from inland and Moray Firth competed for control of this ground, with first one ice mass and then the other being dominant. The schematic stratigraphy in the three main valleys supports this classic view. The sequence of events from oldest to youngest appears to have been:
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