Abstract

Abstract Pollen, diatom, lithostratigraphic and radiocarbon data from five sites in northwestern Scotland provide new data from an area previously devoid of reliable and precise information on Late Devensian and Holocene sea-level changes. The sites cover a range of palaeoenvironments, indicative of diversity in coastal evolution since deglaciation. For each site and palaeoenvironment the reference water (tide) level, indicative range, age and tendency of sea-level movement of all sea-level index points are quantified to enable correlation of the diverse coastal environments. The data record patterns of relative sea-level change and tendencies of sea-level movement from 12 ka BP to 1 ka BP. This is the longest and most comprehensive published record of relative sea-level change from the area. The information is used to test the accuracy of existing models of relative sea-level change. The results are only broadly consistent with a quantitative rebound model, and there is significant disagreement with empirical models during the Late Devensian and the early Holocene.

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