Dover White Cliffs

Brexit won't be the first time Britain has left Europe, says Simon Redfern, professor in Earth Sciences at听 探花直播 of Cambridge writing for 探花直播Conversation.听Almost half a million years ago听we experienced a catastrophic separation.

As Brexit looms, Earth scientists have uncovered evidence of Britain鈥檚 original split from mainland Europe. Almost half a million years ago, according to new data, water suddenly started cascading over the narrow strip of land that joined England and France 鈥 putting pressure on a chalk bridge.  探花直播Conversation

Researchers show that, as a result, this ridge 鈥 a natural dam that separated the North Sea from the English Channel 鈥 was catastrophically ruptured hundreds of thousands of years later in a two-stage process, ultimately setting Britain鈥檚 insular environment in stone. Their results are reported in .

So where did all the water that caused this geological disaster come from? 探花直播scientists, from UK, Belgium and France, base their conclusions on a line of deep plunge pools (basins excavated by intense waterfalls) and a network of channels cut in the sea floor south-west of the ridge line. They deduce that these were first formed some 450,000 years ago as a lake of glacial melt water to the north-east in the North Sea basin (the depression where the north sea sits today, some of which was dry land back then) spilled over into what is today the English Channel.

Strait of Dover map. wikipedia,


However, exactly why the remains unknown. One possibility is that part of its ice sheet broke off, causing a surge that prompted the water to flow over. 探花直播33km long land bridge at Dover Strait formed part of an icy landscape at the time. According to the researchers, it looked 鈥渕ore like the frozen tundra in Siberia than the green environment we know today鈥.

3D view of the seafloor in the 33km wide Dover Strait showing a prominent valley in the central part. Imperial College London/Professor Sanjeev Gupta and Dr Jenny Collier


探花直播loose gravel that fills the seafloor plunge pools was first noticed 50 years ago. Indeed, the channel tunnel during its construction. There has long been speculation that they were associated with the remains of the land bridge that formed an ancient route between UK and Europe 鈥 and now we finally have some evidence to back this up.

探花直播plunge pools themselves are huge, drilling down some 100 metres into the solid bedrock and measuring several kilometres across. 探花直播waterfalls that formed them are estimated to have been 100 metres high, as we know the land bridge stood high above the surrounding landscape.

Second sudden destruction

It seems Dover Strait may have gone through two breaches. 探花直播first one, about 450,000 years ago, was rather modest and formed a smaller channel than the one we see today. But the authors suggest that a second, more catastrophic breach subsequently occurred 鈥 possibly hundreds of thousands of year later, irrevocably separating Britain from Europe.

3D view of an ancient large waterfall in a valley in the central part of Dover Strait. A plunge pool lies at its base. Imperial College London/Professor Sanjeev Gupta and Dr Jenny Collier


This final collapse of the land bridge is marked out by a larger seafloor channel named the Lobourg Channel, which cuts through the earlier structures. This appears to have been carved by a major cataclysmic flood from the North Sea into the English Channel. 探花直播timings of the two-stage erosion, including the final destruction of the connecting bridge, are uncertain, but indicate that it was complete at least 100,000 years ago.

探花直播latest observations are the result of a broad marine geophysics campaign to tackle the problem. Ship-based seismic surveys of the floor of the English Channel have been combined with a type of sonar to provide an astoundingly detailed picture of the sea floor and its sub-surface. Uncertainty remains over the exact timings of each of the events, and researchers have set their sights on drilling into the sea floor to retrieve samples from the plunge pool sediments to determine their precise ages.

探花直播erosion of the land bridge hundreds of thousands of years ago set Britain on its path to becoming an island nation. Subsequent changes in sea level at the end of that ancient ice age further confirmed its insularity, and Britain鈥檚 connection to mainland Europe was lost.

, Professor in Earth Sciences,

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