European history on repeat: Study finds
evidence of 'Brexit 1.0'
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[April 05, 2017]
By Kate Kelland
LONDON, (Reuters) - Scientists have found
evidence of how ancient Britain separated from Europe in what they are
dubbing "Brexit 1.0" - a flooding event that happened in two stages
thousands of years ago.
In research published in the journal Nature Communications on Tuesday,
the scientists said they now have proof that the opening of the Dover
Strait in the English Channel, severing the land between Britain and
France, occurred in two episodes - an initial lake spill over, followed
by catastrophic flooding.
"The breaching of this land bridge between Dover and Calais was
undeniably one of the most important events in British history, helping
to shape our island nation's identity," said Sanjeev Gupta, a professor
at Imperial College London who co-led the work.
"When the ice age ended and sea levels rose, flooding the valley floor
for good, Britain lost its physical connection to the mainland," he
said. "This is Brexit 1.0 – the Brexit nobody voted for."
The first pieces of the puzzle came some 10 years ago, when researchers
found geophysical evidence of giant valleys on the seafloor in the
central part of English Channel. They believed these valley networks
were evidence of a megaflood gouging out the land, probably caused by a
breach in a chalk rock ridge joining Britain to France.
In the new study, new geophysical data collected by colleagues in
Belgium and France has been combined with seafloor data from Britain
showing evidence of huge holes and a valley system located on the
seafloor. This help the team establish how the chalk ridge was breached.
The ridge acted like a huge dam and behind it was a proglacial lake, the
researchers explained. The lake overflowed in giant waterfalls, eroding
the rock escarpment, weakening it and eventually causing it to fail and
release huge volumes of water onto the valley floor below.
"We still don't know for sure why the proglacial lake spilt over," said
Jenny Collier, a co-author of the study from Imperial's department of
earth science and engineering.
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An illustration of what the land bridge connecting Britain to Europe
may have looked like before the formation of the Dover Strait is
seen in an image handed out by Imperial College London April 4,
2017. The foreground is around where the port of Calais is today and
way in the distance (the background of this illustration) is early
Britain. Huge waterfalls cascading over the land bridge represents
the beginning of physical separation of Britain from Europe.
Imperial College London/Chase Stone handout via REUTERS
"Perhaps part of the ice sheet broke off, collapsing into the lake,
causing a surge that carved a path for the water to cascade off the
chalk ridge. Maybe an earth tremor... further weakened the ridge and
caused (it) to collapse, releasing the megaflood that we have found
evidence for in our studies."
Either way, the scientists said, if it was not for a set of chance
geological circumstances, Britain may have remained connected to
mainland Europe, jutting out into the sea like Denmark.
The researchers still have no exact timeline of events, but said
they now want to take and analyze core samples of the in-filled
sediments in the plunge pools to try and pinpoint the timing of
erosion and the filling of the pools.
They cautioned, however, that this next step will be tricky, since
getting samples in the Dover Strait means navigating huge tidal
changes and the world's busiest shipping lane.
(Editing by Pritha Sarkar)
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