A Case for Predominantly Fluvial and Periglacial Origins of the Fremington Clays, North Devon
Tim Daw
Cannings Cross, Wiltshire, UK
tim.daw@gmail.com
© Tim Daw 2026. This work is licensed under a Creative
Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC BY 4.0).
Note: This paper is a revised and expanded version of an
earlier synthesis published in 2025 (Daw, 2025; DOI:
10.13140/RG.2.2.22035.34089). The original intention was to defer any
substantial update until full petrographic results for Taylor’s No. 7
hyalopilitic andesite — rediscovered in 2025 at Combrew Farm — were available,
since that analysis bears directly on the question of distant versus local
provenance for the most potentially significant exotic clast in the Fremington
inventory. However, the degree of critical interest the original paper has
attracted, particularly regarding the ice-dam height argument and its
implications for the Ramson Cliff erratic, suggested that an interim revision
incorporating the composite dam model and the findings of Daw et al. (2026) was
warranted rather than leaving those points unaddressed. The petrographic
results for No. 7, when available, will be reported separately and may prompt
further revision.
Fremington Area Superficial Geology — light blue: till
which contains the Fremington Clays; the Bickington–Hele ridge lies between
them and the estuary. From https://geologyviewer.bgs.ac.uk/
Abstract
The Fremington Clay Series of north Devon has been central to debates
on the extent of Middle Pleistocene glaciation in south-west England, often
interpreted as evidence of Irish Sea ice incursion during the Wolstonian Stage
(MIS 6). Undisputed glacial-marginal and ice-rafted processes demonstrably
reached the present north Devon coastline, with associated deposits and
erratics at low elevations (~10–30 m OD) and glaciofluvial outwash influence
extending to ~55 m OD on the pre-existing Bickington–Hele bedrock ridge.
However, stratigraphic, sedimentological, petrological, geomorphological, and
chronological evidence — now reinforced by Daw et al. (2026) on the Ramson
Cliff erratic (~80 m OD, for which glacial emplacement is considered highly
improbable) and the 2025 rediscovery and re-examination of key clasts —
warrants caution against designating the series as direct till from a
high-standing ice sheet.
The deposits primarily reflect fluvial and paraglacial sedimentation
in an ice-marginal Taw–Torridge setting, with overwhelmingly local
(Dartmoor/Cornubian) provenance for embedded erratics. Sparse “exotic” signals
— small clasts with possible Irish Sea affinities (including Taylor’s No. 7
hyalopilitic andesite) and abraded Irish Sea-type foraminifera — are best
explained as dropstones or reworked rafted debris delivered into a proglacial
lake at ~30 m OD. A refined composite ice-sediment dam model, drawing on modern
proglacial analogues from New Zealand, Svalbard, and Patagonia, demonstrates
that lake impoundment at this level can be achieved by a modest marginal ice
lobe augmented by high sediment flux from periglacial catchments and confined
by pre-existing topography, without requiring extensive onshore overriding. The
ephemeral nature of such estuarine barriers explains the absence of a prominent
terminal moraine while preserving perched glaciofluvial witnesses such as the
Hele gravels. This framework confines significant glacial influence to the
coastal fringe and aligns with offshore Bristol Channel evidence.
Keywords: Fremington Clay, low-level glaciation,
fluvial-periglacial deposition, erratic provenance, ice-rafting, composite
ice-sediment dam, proglacial lake dynamics, north Devon Quaternary.
1. Introduction
The Quaternary glacial history of south-west England remains contentious, particularly regarding the southerly limits of Irish Sea ice. Offshore evidence from the Celtic Sea and Western Approaches — including ice-rafted detritus records and glacigenic sediment distributions documented by Scourse et al. (2009) and synthesised by Gibbard & Clark (2011) — indicates a long-lived ice margin near 51°N during multiple cold stages, with Wingfield (1995) modelling sea-level and ice-margin interaction in the Irish and Celtic Seas. Recent methodological reviews (Lee et al., 2025) further emphasise the fragmentary nature of onshore glacial evidence in south-west England and the importance of distinguishing “limits of preserved evidence” from actual ice-sheet margins, reinforcing the need for caution when interpreting deposits such as the Fremington Clay Series. In north Devon, glacial-marginal or ice-rafted processes clearly reached the present coastline, depositing erratics and glacigenic materials on platforms and in low-elevation sequences around Saunton, Croyde, and the Taw estuary (~10–30 m OD). The Fremington Clay Series (up to ~30 m thick) lies at these low levels, while capping sands and gravels on the Bickington–Hele ridge reach ~55 m OD. These features confirm ice or floating ice impinging on the coast.
However, the extent of inland overriding remains disputed. This revised
synthesis argues for continued caution in attributing the Fremington Clay
Series to direct Irish Sea till from a high-standing ice sheet. It integrates
new data: the re-evaluation of the Ramson Cliff erratic at ~80 m OD on Baggy
Point (Daw et al., 2026 — for which glacial emplacement is now considered
highly improbable), the 2025 rediscovery of Taylor’s No. 7 hyalopilitic
andesite (pending full petrography), and a fully developed model of composite
ice-sediment damming that explains the reconstructed ~30 m lake level without
requiring extensive onshore ice. The series is interpreted as predominantly
fluvial and paraglacial, with local sources dominant and any exotic signals
compatible with limited rafting into a proglacial lake.
2. Historical Interpretations
The Fremington Clay has attracted geological attention since Maw (1864)
first described it as a “boulder-clay,” and it is important to recognise that
fluvial-lacustrine interpretations of the deposit are not revisionist: they
predate the glacial consensus. Prestwich (1892) provided a foundational
fluvial-estuarine model, describing the clay as an overbank accumulation in a
river-fed embayment of the Taw estuary, characterised by fining-upward
sequences from subangular local gravels to stoneless silts. This view aligned
the deposit with raised beaches at 15–20 m OD and emphasised its confinement to
the valley floor without evidence of widespread ice override. Ussher (1878)
interpreted the underlying gravels as Taw River alluvium, highlighting the
absence of exotic clasts or shear fabrics that might imply glacial transport.
Mid-twentieth-century reappraisals refined this fluvial paradigm. Balchin
(1952) reframed the clay as an alluvial infill in a periglacial floodplain,
underscoring its red-brown matrix, homogeneous texture, and lateral pinch-out
as signatures of terrestrial reworking rather than glaciomarine diamicton.
Mitchell (1960) acknowledged hybrid elements but prioritised fluvial origins
for the basal units. Edmonds (1972) advanced a non-glacial model for the pebbly
drifts at Fremington Quay, viewing them as solifluction reworked by Ipswichian
floods into river terraces. These interpretations challenged Zeuner’s (1959)
bottom-moraine proposal by emphasising paraglacial drainage diversions in the
Taw–Torridge basin.
The glacial paradigm was revived by Stephens (1966, 1970), who
interpreted the clay as Wolstonian till, and consolidated by Kidson & Wood
(1974). However, the revival was persistently muddied by confusion between the
sparse erratics documented in situ within the clay and the more
numerous, far-travelled ice-rafted boulders on adjacent beaches at Saunton and
Croyde. Taylor’s (1956) catalogues exacerbated this by grouping “Saunton and
Fremington erratics” indiscriminately, amplifying onshore ice narratives without
distinguishing the coastal boulders’ subrounded, striated forms from the clay’s
subangular, aureole-affine pebbles at depth. This lumping overlooked elevation
mismatches and transport vectors.
Clarification emerged through targeted reappraisals that disentangled
these suites. Everard et al. explicitly refuted glacial linkages, noting that
since the Fremington boulder clay overlies the equivalent of the raised beach,
it cannot have been responsible for the coastal erratics at Croyde and Saunton,
attributing the latter to ice-floe rafting. Madgett & Inglis (1987)
surveyed 37 Saunton–Croyde boulders, correcting Taylor’s misidentifications and
differentiating them as sea-ice proxies from the clay’s solifluction terraces.
Modern syntheses, including Harrison (1997) in the Geological Conservation
Review and Bennett et al. (2024), reinforce this resolution, portraying the
clay as a continuous 4 km fluvial body with pseudo-laminated fines, while
coastal erratics reflect Celtic Sea calving.
3. Stratigraphy and Sedimentology
The Fremington Clay Series overlies bedrock or basal gravels at low
elevations (~10–26 m OD in exposures). Croot et al. (1996) carried out the most
detailed modern investigation of the sequence, including a purpose-dug
excavation from surface to bedrock at the former Brannam’s Pottery Clay Pits
and Higher Gorse Claypits (SS529317). They delineated five units (Table 1). The
upper stoneless clay — sometimes called the potter’s clay, after the Brannam’s
and Fishley potteries that quarried it commercially — exhibits horizontal to
pseudo-laminated bedding, fining-upward trends, and weak clast fabrics
inconsistent with subglacial lodgement till. They are, however, entirely
compatible with low-energy fluvial or glaciolacustrine settling in a
valley-confined proglacial lake at ~30 m OD — which is the depositional
environment that the bulk of the sedimentological evidence supports, and which
the present paper accepts as the most parsimonious interpretation for the upper
clay units.
Table 1. Fremington Clay Series stratigraphy (adapted from
Croot et al. 1996).
|
Unit |
Description |
Thickness |
Key Features |
Interpretation |
|
E (Head) |
Gravelly sand/clay;
angular local clasts |
1–1.5 m |
Cryoturbated;
gradational base |
Periglacial
solifluction (Devensian+) |
|
D |
Clast-rich weathered red clayey silt |
0.5–1.0 m |
Over-consolidated; CaCO₃ 10–20% |
Weathered glaciolacustrine/fluvial |
|
C |
Irregular sand/silt
lenses; reworked fossils |
2–2.5 m |
Sharp contacts; no
strong grading; OSL >26 ka BP (minimum) |
Ice-proximal fluvial
sands |
|
B |
Dark brown clay; stoneless base to clast-rich top |
8–9 m |
Pseudo-laminae; weak fabrics; >1,500 clasts analysed |
Low-energy lacustrine; episodic flood inputs |
|
A (Basal) |
Clast-supported
subangular gravels |
1.5–2.0 m |
Weak imbrication; local
clasts |
High-energy
fluvial/proglacial outwash |
Croot et al. examined more than 1,500 clasts in the 16–256 mm size range,
extracted from grab samples at various levels within Unit B. All but a single
exception could be accounted for in the bedrock geology within a 10 km radius
of the site. That exception — a cobble-sized clast at approximately 5 m depth
displaying typical flat-iron subglacial morphology with exceptionally
well-striated faces — represents the only unequivocally glacially-transported in-situ
clast recovered from the clay pits. Croot et al. were explicit about the weight
this single find carried in their interpretation: without it, they stated, they
“would have been forced to consider a much wider range of possible origins for
the Fremington Clay Series.” The glacial character of the deposit thus rests,
in the primary investigators’ own assessment, on a single clast rather than on
the bulk sedimentology.
The critical question is not whether a proglacial lake existed — the
fining-upward sequence, dropstones, and laminated silts make that case
persuasively — but what kind of ice margin was needed to dam it, and what that
implies for the lateral extent of glaciation along the open coast.
4. Provenance of Erratics: Altitude and Source Constraints
A fundamental observation is the consistent low elevation of in-situ
erratics within the Fremington Clay: ~10–26 m OD in clay pits and cuttings, as
recorded by Taylor (1956) and Arber (1964). These elevation data predate modern
differential GPS levelling, and the original Ordnance Datum benchmarks used by
Taylor and Arber carry uncertainties of ±1–2 m. Updated fieldwork in 2025
confirmed the approximate range by reference to current OS mapping. Coastal
erratics on Saunton–Croyde platforms and in head deposits occur at or near sea
level to slightly elevated positions consistent with raised beaches or
periglacial reworking. No verified erratics in the main clay body exceed ~30 m
OD.
The Hele gravels capping the Bickington–Hele bedrock ridge to ~55 m OD
contain erratic clasts deposited by meltwater streams linked to the same
marginal system. These include igneous types (dolerites, possible andesites)
alongside dominant local Devonian–Carboniferous and Dartmoor-derived material.
No detailed petrographic inventory exists specifically for the ridge gravels,
but the assemblage overlaps with the sparse, mixed-provenance clasts in the
lower clay and reflects fluvial transport and abrasion rather than direct ice
rafting or high-level till.
Coastal versus inland erratics
A critical distinction must be drawn between the sparse erratics
documented in situ within the Fremington Clay itself and the more
numerous, far-travelled ice-rafted boulders on adjacent north Devon beaches.
The latter, often lumped together in glacial models, include unambiguous
Scottish and Irish Sea lithologies (e.g., Ailsa Craig microgranite, Purbeck
flint) deposited via sea-ice rafting or storm transport during lowstands.
Madgett & Inglis (1987) surveyed 37 Saunton–Croyde boulders, correcting
earlier misidentifications and demonstrating that these coastal boulders are
subrounded, striated, and clustered in head or beach gravels — quite distinct
from the clay’s subangular, aureole-affine pebbles found at depths of 2–22 ft
within the clay body. Taylor’s (1956) indiscriminate grouping of “Saunton and
Fremington erratics” has long obscured this distinction, inflating the apparent
exotic component of the inland deposit by conflation with coastal material of
entirely different transport history.
Petrological summary
Petrological inventories of clay-embedded erratics (Table 2) list igneous
and metamorphic types (dolerite, granophyre, andesite) amid dominant local
Devonian–Carboniferous clasts (>99%; Croot et al., 1996). Dewey (1910) and
Taylor (1956) provide detailed thin-section analyses confirming igneous
dominance (spilitic textures in No. 6, ophitic in No. 10) with local affinities
— Cornish spilites, Devon dykes — while noting morphological resemblances to
Scottish types without geochemical confirmation. Quartz-dolerites and
olivine-dolerites match Meldon Chert Formation dykes; hypersthene-andesites and
granophyres evoke Dartmoor elvans and aureole rocks, distinguishable from Irish
Sea equivalents via mineralogy (e.g., titaniferous augite in alkali
micro-dolerites; Gilbert, pers. comm. in Croot et al., 1996). No. 8, an
overlooked altered quartz porphyry from Fishley, exemplifies potential aureole
sourcing, with epidote and apatite evoking Variscan intrusions mobilised via
Taw floods.
Other clasts (spilites, dolerites, quartz porphyry) align with Dartmoor
aureole or Cornubian sources (Madgett & Inglis, 1987). Sparse possible
Irish Sea-affinity lithologies (<1%) fit occasional dropstones or reworked
rafted debris into the proglacial lake.
A note of caution: No. 7
Taylor’s No. 7 (Combrew Farm driveway wall) warrants particular caution.
The clast is a hyalopilitic andesite, ~16 inches across, well-rounded, glassy
and brittle, with no augite — closely matching the original Scottish
(Dumfries/Argyll) description given by Dewey (1910). Rediscovered in 2025, with
full petrography awaited. The mineralogy as described — zoned, twinned acid
labradorite, pleochroic hypersthene prisms, and magnetite gridiron in a brown
glass base — does appear genuinely consistent with a Scottish volcanic
source rather than a Dartmoor elvan or West Devon dyke, and the alternative
local attributions proposed for other Fremington erratics sit less comfortably
with this particular lithology. Pending geochemical confirmation, No. 7 should
be treated as a probable genuinely far-travelled exotic.
Even if the pending analysis confirms a distant Scottish origin, however,
the clast would remain one of very few exotics among >1,500 locally derived
stones — entirely consistent with delivery as a single dropstone from floating
ice calved from a marginal lobe in Barnstaple Bay, rather than requiring direct
till transport by an overriding ice sheet.
Erratic inventory
|
No. |
Location |
Lithology |
Description & notes |
Alternative local / regional source |
Key references |
|
6 |
Combrew Farm /
Bickington |
Spilite (vesicular
granophyre) |
40×30×25 in; dark grey,
porphyritic albite feldspars, micropegmatite groundmass, chlorite-replaced
ferromagnesian, secondary granophyric vesicles with calcite. No striae.
Isolated in middle of clay-bed. |
N. Cornwall spilites
(Crinan pillow-lava type) or Dartmoor volcanics |
Dewey (1910); Taylor
(1956); Arber (1964) |
|
7 |
Combrew Farm / Chilcotts |
Hypersthene-andesite (hyalopilitic) |
16 in across; dark grey-green, glassy porphyritic acid
labradorite (zoned, twinned), hypersthene prisms (pleochroic), magnetite
gridiron in brown glass base; no augite/olivine. ~22 ft below surface, c.
1870. |
Dartmoor elvan intrusions or W. Devon dykes |
Dewey (1910); Taylor (1956); Arber (1964) |
|
8 |
Fishley Pottery, nr
Combrew |
Altered quartz porphyry |
47×19×16 in; light
grey, holocrystalline granitic texture, phenocrystic quartz/felspar (up to 5
mm); crushed plagioclase, apatite prisms, red amorphous matrix, epidote. From
clay-pit. |
Porphyritic dyke W.
Devon / Cornwall; Dartmoor aureole |
Taylor (1956) |
|
9 |
Brannam’s pits |
Quartz-dolerite |
c. 300 lb, ellipsoidal; grey, fine-grained, kaolinised felspar
laths, primary quartz, fresh reddish augite, apatite needles,
magnetite/calcite. In middle of brown clay. |
Dartmoor Permian–Triassic dykes (Meldon) |
Taylor (1956); Arber (1964) |
|
10 |
Brannam’s pits |
Olivine-dolerite |
c. 300 lb, angular;
darker grey, micro-pegmatitic ophitic, yellow olivine, ilmenite prisms,
plagioclase tabs, slight quartz orientation. In brown clay; common Devon
type. |
Dartmoor
olivine-bearing intrusions |
Taylor (1956); Arber
(1964) |
|
— |
Brannam’s, 17 ft depth |
Olivine-dolerite pebble & Carboniferous grit slab |
2 in rounded pebble (as No. 10); 5×1.25 in slab with red ferric
oxide skin along cracks (post-inclusion infiltration). |
Local fluvial rework (pre-embedding waterworn) |
Taylor (1956) |
|
13 |
Brannam’s pits (1962) |
Quartz-dolerite |
10 ft from top of clay. |
Dartmoor dykes |
Taylor (1956); Vachell
(1963); Arber (1964) |
|
— |
Higher Gorse, Plymouth (1994) |
Alkali micro-dolerite |
Small striated boulder in main clay unit; plagioclase
phenocrysts, titaniferous augite, vesicles. |
Dartmoor micro-dolerite variants |
Croot et al. (1996) |
|
— |
Pen Hill, Taw Estuary |
Trachy-andesite |
Partially buried in
beach/estuarine sand (not in situ in clay). |
Regional andesitic
flows; fluvial rework |
Croot et al. (1996) |
|
— |
Arber (1964), post-1957 |
Dolerite and granodiorite |
Removed boulders, originally inside clay; later identified. |
Dartmoor aureole dolerite / granodiorite |
Arber (1964); Wood (1973) |
|
— |
General Fremington area |
Spilite, grey elvan,
quartz/olivine dolerite |
Multiple small pebbles
(50+), embedded 5–11 ft above base or at top/base. |
Dartmoor aureole
(elvan, spilite-like volcanics) |
Taylor (1956); Arber
(1964); Croot et al. (1996) |
Table 2. In situ erratics in the Fremington Clay series:
lithologies, descriptions, and alternative provenances (updated with Dewey,
1910; Taylor, 1956 records; excludes coastal ice-rafted boulders). Row
highlighted in amber = No. 7, treated here as a probable genuinely
far-travelled Scottish exotic pending geochemical confirmation.
Interpretation
Sparse exotics (<1% of clasts >1.5 cm) occur as subangular pebbles
or rare striated cobbles (e.g., single microdolerite at 4 m depth; Croot et
al., 1996), embedded at low elevations (10–26 m OD). Granites match Dartmoor’s
Carboniferous pluton, mobilisable via periglacial clitter slopes and Taw
entrainment (Evans et al., 2012). Dolerites align with local intrusions,
distinguishable from northern equivalents via U-Pb/Hf isotopes — untested on
archives (e.g., >1,500 clasts at Plymouth University; Taylor’s thin-sections
at Cambridge). Flints and schorlrocks suggest short-distance fluvial/marine
reworking, not ice-sheet transport (Daw, 2024a).
Recent syntheses and petrological reappraisals continue to support a
predominantly local or regional provenance, with the Dartmoor pluton and its
aureole emerging as the most parsimonious source (Bennett et al., 2024). Even
for enigmatic types like No. 6, Dartmoor affinities remain viable, with
geochemical tracers recommended for confirmation (Daw, 2025a). No. 7 is the
strongest candidate for a genuinely distant origin, but its isolation among
>1,500 local clasts is itself telling: a single far-travelled dropstone from
calved ice is a very different proposition from till transport by an overriding
ice sheet.
This profile favours hybrid fluvial–periglacial input: Taw–Torridge
floods exported Dartmoor debris alongside local slates, explaining weak NW–SE
fabrics without Irish Sea signatures. Rarity of true exotics (no chalk, minimal
Scottish gneiss) and lack of concentration gradients refute sheet glaciation
(Bennett et al., 2024), particularly when coastal rafted erratics are excluded.
5. The “Exotic” Signal: Foraminifera and Far-Travelled Clasts
While the series is overwhelmingly local in provenance, a subtle “exotic”
signal is present and requires careful interpretation. A small number of clasts
show possible Irish Sea affinities, including certain quartz-dolerites and
hypersthene-andesites (notably Taylor’s No. 7) that parallel material in the
Saunton/Croyde coastal deposits. These clasts are typically small pebbles or
cobbles rather than large boulders. They are best explained as dropstones
delivered by floating ice from a modest ice lobe in Barnstaple Bay, or as minor
reworked material from the adjacent sea floor, rather than primary till.
The clay also contains a derived microfauna, including damaged and
abraded Irish Sea-type foraminifera. Kidson & Wood (1974) reported up to
eleven species, including Ammonia beccarii and Nonion labradoricum,
from samples in the Fremington exposures. The diagnostic feature is their
physical condition: tests are abraded, broken, and frequently infilled with
secondary minerals, indicating significant transport and reworking prior to
deposition. This is consistent with incorporation via glacial meltwater or ice-rafting
into a freshwater or brackish lake, rather than in-situ glaciomarine
deposition in which tests would be expected to show better preservation. The
foraminifera therefore record proximity to Irish Sea-derived material without
requiring that the ice itself advanced over the site.
6. Chronological Constraints
OSL dating of Units B–C yields ages of >424 ka BP (Croot et al.,
1996), placing the primary clay deposition in or before the Anglian (MIS 12)
rather than during the Wolstonian (MIS 6) stage to which the Fremington Clay
has traditionally been correlated (Stephens, 1970). This has significant
implications. If the clay predates the Wolstonian, then the standard model — in
which Irish Sea ice advanced into Barnstaple Bay during MIS 6 to deposit the
Fremington sequence — requires either that the dating is unreliable or that the
deposit records an earlier, Anglian glacial episode.
The stratigraphic position of the clay — overlying Hoxnian-age gravels
and underlying Devensian head — is consistent with either an Anglian or
Wolstonian attribution, but the OSL ages favour the older assignment.
Variability in terrace grading (four levels; Edmonds, 1972) suggests multiple
cold phases, with the Fremington Clay potentially representing an Anglian
fluvial legacy subsequently reworked during the Wolstonian. This complicates
synchronisation with the Scilly “tills” (Devensian at Scilly; Scourse, 1991)
and the Trebetherick deposits (locally derived; Wood, 1973), and underlines the
danger of assuming a single, unified glacial event across south-west England.
The chronological uncertainty reinforces the case for caution: if the
deposit is Anglian rather than Wolstonian, the entire framework of MIS 6 Irish
Sea ice reaching north Devon requires reconsideration.
7. The “Missing” Dam: Post-Glacial Erosion and the Hele
Gravels
A common critique of the proglacial lake model is the absence of a
prominent terminal moraine or dam remnant at the Taw estuary mouth. This
absence is, in fact, precisely what modern analogues predict for composite
ice-sediment dams in high-energy settings.
At Nordenskiöldbreen in Svalbard, Nehyba et al. (2017) documented a small
ice-dammed lake that developed in the early 1990s along the glacier margin in
Adolfbukta. The lake was progressively infilled by a Gilbert-type fan delta,
with fluvio-deltaic terraces recording multiple lake-level falls, before being
largely obliterated by deglaciation, erosion, and fluvial redistribution within
approximately two decades. This case demonstrates how rapidly an ice-sediment
barrier can form, aggrade, and then breach or disperse once the ice nucleus
retreats and high-energy fluvial processes resume — a process highly relevant
to the post-glacial fate of any composite dam in the high-energy Taw estuary.
The primary surviving evidence of the dam’s effective height is preserved
not at the estuary mouth but on higher ground to the south: the Hele gravels,
which cap the pre-existing Bickington–Hele bedrock ridge at ~55 m OD. These
perched glaciofluvial deposits, laid down by meltwater streams linked to the
same marginal system, were high enough above the valley floor to escape the
main phase of post-glacial fluvial incision. They contain erratic clasts
(including igneous types such as dolerites and possible andesites) alongside
dominant local Devonian–Carboniferous and Dartmoor-derived material. The basal
Unit A gravels of the Fremington sequence itself represent the “roots” of the
dam: the initial high-energy outwash phase before the basin deepened into a more
tranquil lake environment.
8. Composite Ice-Sediment Dams: The Modern Evidence
The standard mental model of an ice-dammed lake is a clean wall of
glacier ice blocking a valley, with the lake surface pressing directly against
the ice face. In this model, the dam height is simply the ice thickness, and
the ice surface must exceed the lake surface to prevent overtopping. This is
the model implicitly invoked when critics argue that a ~30 m lake at Fremington
requires ~30 m or more of solid ice — and therefore an ice surface capable of
reaching the ~80 m Ramson Cliff erratic on Baggy Point.
Modern proglacial geomorphology shows that this clean-ice model is the
exception rather than the rule. In most settings where glaciers interact with
rivers carrying significant sediment loads, the actual barrier is a composite
structure: ice, outwash gravel, glaciofluvial sand, debris flows, and — in
marine-terminating cases — subaqueous fans. The effective dam height is the
combined elevation of all these components, not the ice thickness alone.
8.1 The New Zealand Last Glacial
Maximum: Outwash Fan-Head Damming
The most comprehensive modern analogue comes from the Southern Alps of
New Zealand, where Sutherland et al. (2019) reconstructed the ice-contact
proglacial lake systems associated with the Last Glacial Maximum across the
entire mountain range. Their central finding is that the major LGM lakes —
Tekapo, Pukaki, Ohau, Wanaka, Hawea, and Wakatipu — were not dammed primarily
by moraine ridges or by monolithic ice barriers, but by outwash fan-heads:
massive aggradational gravel bodies built by high-sediment-load braided rivers
against and around the ice margin.
Sutherland et al. (2022) developed this model in detail at Lake Tekapo,
where the glacier terminus was entirely buried by the outwash fan-head, with no
terminal moraine visible as a discrete landform. The dam that created the lake
— which persists today, long after the ice vanished — was the sedimentary mass
itself. Shulmeister et al. (2019) provide wider context, noting that this
pattern is typical across the western South Island, where high sediment supply
overwhelmed the capacity of terminal moraines to form as distinct features.
The key insight for the Fremington debate is that these New Zealand lakes
stood at substantial depths behind barriers whose ice component was only a
fraction of the total dam height. Once the ice melted, the lakes persisted —
Tekapo, Pukaki, and Ohau still exist today — held in by the residual sediment
mass. The permanence of the lakes derives from the sediment, not the ice.
8.2 High-Arctic Svalbard: Rapid
Infilling and Stabilisation
The Svalbard example, already cited in Section 7 for the ephemeral nature
of ice-sediment barriers, also illustrates the positive side of composite
damming. At Nordenskiöldbreen, fluvial sediment rapidly aggraded against the
ice barrier, building a composite dam whose crest exceeded the ice surface in
places. The effective barrier height fluctuated as sediment accumulated,
eroded, and redistributed. At no point was the dam a simple wall of ice with a
measurable freeboard; it was a dynamic, composite structure in which ice and
sediment alternately dominated.
8.3 Perito Moreno, Patagonia: Ice,
Debris, and Dynamic Water Levels
The Perito Moreno Glacier in southern Patagonia provides perhaps the most
dramatic modern example of composite damming. The glacier periodically advances
across a narrow strait to dam Brazo Rico, a branch of Lago Argentino, raising
its water level by up to 20 m above the main lake before catastrophic drainage
ensues. Crucially, the lake level during damming episodes rises well above what
the subaerial ice thickness at the narrow strait would predict, precisely
because the underwater and debris-armoured components of the barrier contribute
to the effective seal. Leakage occurs not by overtopping but by subglacial
drainage when the hydraulic head exceeds the ice overburden pressure — a
process described in the broader GLOF literature by Carrivick & Tweed
(2013).
8.4 A General Principle
These three examples — from a temperate maritime mountain belt, a
High-Arctic archipelago, and a Patagonian ice field — illustrate a general
principle well established in the proglacial lake and GLOF literature but not
previously applied to the Fremington debate: in any setting where rivers carry
significant sediment loads to an ice margin, the resulting dam is composite
rather than monolithic. Carrivick et al. (2022) synthesise this principle in
their review of coincident glacier and lake evolution across the Southern Alps,
showing that sediment flux is as important as ice dynamics in determining lake
existence, extent, and longevity.
9. Application to the Taw Estuary
9.1 Sediment Supply from a
Periglacial Hinterland
The Taw and Torridge drain catchments that include the northern margins
of Dartmoor and the extensive periglacial plateau surfaces of Exmoor. Evans et
al. (2012) describe Dartmoor during Pleistocene cold stages as an independent
ice cap with extensive periglacial slopes generating clitter fields,
solifluction mantles, and thick head deposits. The subtle moraines at Slipper
Stones imply thin, cold-based ice (<50 m thick), enhancing tors and dry
valleys via frost action rather than erosion. Edmonds (1972) documents the
terrace stratigraphy of the Taw valley, recording multiple episodes of fluvial
aggradation consistent with high-sediment-load braided river systems.
The rivers feeding the Fremington lake basin were not clear-water streams
draining stable, vegetated catchments. They were periglacial braided rivers
with extremely high bedload transport rates, carrying gravel, sand, and silt
derived from frost-shattered bedrock, solifluction deposits, and reworked older
drift. The analogy with New Zealand’s high-sediment-load glacial rivers is
direct: these are exactly the conditions under which outwash fan-heads build
against ice margins.
9.2 The Composite Dam Model for
Fremington
Applying the composite dam model to the Taw estuary, the scenario runs as
follows. An Irish Sea ice lobe advances into Barnstaple Bay, blocking the
combined outflow of the Taw and Torridge. The ice margin need not be a towering
cliff; a modest, debris-charged lobe grounding in the relatively shallow waters
of the inner bay would suffice. As the rivers back up, sediment-laden flow
deposits outwash fans against the upstream (southern) face of the ice barrier.
Gravel and sand aggrade rapidly, building fan-head surfaces that supplement the
ice and raise the effective dam height.
The Fremington Clay itself records this process. The basal gravels
represent the initial outwash phase. The overlying laminated silts and sands
record a transitional phase as the basin deepened and the dam became more
effective. The uppermost stoneless clay represents full lacustrine conditions,
with suspension settling of the finest fraction in a quiet, deep-water
environment. Dropstones from floating ice derived from the margin punctuate
this otherwise tranquil record.
In this model, the 30 m lake surface does not require 30 m of solid ice.
It requires a composite barrier — ice plus aggraded sediment plus debris —
whose combined crest reached or exceeded 30 m OD at the topographically
constricted estuary mouth. The pre-existing Bickington–Hele ridge at ~55 m OD
provided lateral confinement on the southern side. The ice component of the dam
may have been substantially less than 30 m thick, supplemented by the very
outwash and debris that the Fremington sequence itself records.
9.3 The Self-Reinforcing Dam:
Sediment as Both Product and Barrier
This interpretation is not ad hoc. The fining-upward sequence of the
Fremington Clay Series — basal gravels to laminated silts to stoneless clay —
is precisely what the outwash fan-head model predicts. In the New Zealand
analogues, Sutherland et al. (2022) describe ice-contact lakes with identical
stratigraphic signatures. The Fremington Clay is the sedimentary product of the
process that created its own dam.
This self-reinforcing dynamic is a standard feature of composite
ice-sediment dams. The dam grows in effectiveness over time without requiring
any increase in ice thickness. A modest ice lobe that initially created a
shallow, gravel-floored pond could, through progressive outwash aggradation,
give rise to a deep lacustrine basin over decades or centuries. The Hele
gravels at ~55 m OD, perched on the bedrock ridge above the zone of later
fluvial incision, are the surviving high-water witnesses of this process.
10. Implications for the Ramson Cliff Erratic
The composite dam model has a direct and important consequence for the
debate over the Ramson Cliff erratic. If a 30 m lake can be explained by a
modest ice lobe at the estuary mouth, supplemented by outwash aggradation and
laterally confined by pre-existing topography, then the lake level tells us
nothing about the height, thickness, or lateral extent of ice on the open coast
to the west.
The Ramson Cliff erratic sits at approximately 80 m OD on Baggy Point, a
fully exposed coastal headland several kilometres west of the Taw estuary. Its
petrography — an altered epidiorite or greenstone of approximately 700 kg — has
been re-examined by Daw, Ixer & Madgett (2026), who argue that it aligns
with local Cornubian or Dartmoor sources rather than distant Irish Sea
material. But even setting aside the provenance question, the erratic at 80 m
OD is not explained by a composite dam at 30 m in the valley below.
The argument that “the ice must have been higher than the lake” is true
in a trivial sense — the ice surface at the dam must exceed the water surface,
or the lake drains. But the dam was at the estuary mouth, in a topographically
constricted setting. The ice there could have been 35 m thick (to maintain a
few metres of freeboard above a 30 m lake) without extending laterally at that
thickness along 10 km of open coastline to reach Baggy Point at 80 m. A lobate
ice margin blocking an estuary is not a uniform ice sheet overriding a
headland.
The absence of intermediate-elevation erratics between the ~30 m clay
body and the ~80 m Ramson Cliff boulder reinforces this point. If ice were
thick enough and laterally extensive enough to reach 80 m on Baggy Point, a
scatter of erratics at 40 m, 50 m, 60 m, and 70 m along the intervening
coastline would be expected. No such scatter has been identified despite over a
century of fieldwork.
11. Discussion: Separating Dam Height from Ice Extent
The confusion at the heart of the ice-dam height argument is a failure to
distinguish between two very different physical situations: the height of a
composite barrier at a topographically constricted point, and the regional
extent and thickness of an ice mass across open terrain.
In every modern analogue considered here — New Zealand, Svalbard,
Patagonia — the dam height at the constriction point exceeds the ice thickness
by a substantial margin because of sediment aggradation. The ice does not need
to be thick everywhere, or present everywhere, or even the dominant component
of the dam. It needs to provide a nucleus around which sediment accumulates.
The Fremington case is a near-ideal candidate for composite damming. The
Taw–Torridge system drains a periglacial hinterland with prodigious sediment
supply. The estuary mouth is a topographic constriction. The sedimentary record
preserves a classic fining-upward proglacial sequence consistent with
progressive dam growth. And the absence of a discrete moraine at the dam site
is exactly what the New Zealand model predicts: in high-sediment-load settings,
moraines are subdued or buried, and the dam is the outwash mass itself.
None of this denies the presence of Irish Sea ice in Barnstaple Bay. A
composite dam still requires an ice nucleus. What it denies is the
extrapolation from local dam height to regional ice extent. A 30 m lake in the
Taw valley is consistent with a modest, topographically controlled ice lobe,
not with a thick onshore ice sheet capable of overriding headlands at 80 m.
The same logic applies to the question of inland penetration. If the ice
dam sat at the estuary mouth rather than deep within the valley system, the
Fremington Clay records the lake that formed behind the barrier, not the
advancing front of a glacier. The deposits are confined to a low-level bench
along the southern side of the Taw estuary between Barnstaple and Instow, with
no continuation of till or glacigenic sediment southward up the Taw valley. No
erratics have been reported at or south of Barnstaple itself. The Hele gravels
at ~55 m OD represent glaciofluvial outwash — material deposited by meltwater —
not direct till from an overriding ice mass.
This interpretation sits comfortably within the broader pattern recognised by Lee et al. (2025), who highlight preservation biases and the predominance of low-elevation, ice-marginal or ice-proximal signatures in the southwest peninsula rather than widespread overriding by a thick ice sheet.
Croot et al. found that the Fremington Clay is mildly over-consolidated,
with pre-consolidation pressures of 250–350 kPa. They considered this
consistent with loading by an overriding ice mass, but were careful to note
that fast-ice or a floating ice shelf could produce similar effects on coastal
estuarine deposits. The composite dam model offers a further possibility: the
over-consolidation may reflect the weight of aggraded outwash and debris on the
upstream face of the barrier.
The regional context reinforces this interpretation. Even on the most
generous reconstruction of Irish Sea ice extent in the Bristol Channel, onshore
glacial evidence on the English side is confined to low elevations at the
coastal fringe. The GCR review records a broad consensus that Somerset itself
was not glaciated, while accepting glaciation of the Avon coastlands in the
Kenn lowlands and Vale of Gordano at low elevations. The glacial limit in
Sedgemoor appears to lie between Greylake and Langport Railway Cutting 6 km
further south, which is erratic-free. Even the enigmatic deposits on Bleadon
Hill at 82 m OD on the Mendip flank lack demonstrably glacially transported
erratic material. The Fremington deposits thus sit within a consistent regional
pattern: Irish Sea ice impinged on low-lying coastal areas and estuaries but
did not climb significantly above sea level, penetrate far inland, or override
higher ground.
12. Conclusion
The Fremington Clay Series records a modest ice-marginal setting in which
fluvial and paraglacial processes dominated. The sparse Irish Sea lithologies
and abraded foraminifera indicate proximity of a limited ice lobe in Barnstaple
Bay but do not require voluminous direct till or extensive onshore overriding.
The reconstructed ~30 m proglacial lake is explained by a composite
ice-sediment dam — a modest ice nucleus augmented by rapid outwash fan-head
aggradation from periglacial rivers and laterally confined by the pre-existing
Bickington–Hele ridge — rather than a monolithic wall of ice.
The ephemeral nature of such estuarine barriers, demonstrated by modern
analogues from Svalbard, explains the absence of a prominent terminal moraine
at the estuary mouth. The surviving Hele gravels at ~55 m OD preserve the
perched meltwater component of the dam system. The Ramson Cliff erratic at ~80
m OD on Baggy Point — petrographically local, lacking any supporting suite of
high-level deposits or erratics at intermediate elevations — remains an
isolated outlier whose glacial emplacement is highly improbable. Chronological
constraints (OSL ages >424 ka BP) further complicate the standard Wolstonian
attribution, raising the possibility that the deposit records an Anglian rather
than MIS 6 event.
Elevation data remain central to this interpretation: low-level erratics
and deposits (~10–30 m OD) support coastal glacial influence; glaciofluvial
outwash reaches ~55 m OD on higher ground; the 80 m outlier does not fit. Dam
height in the valley and the lateral extent of onshore ice are separate
questions with separate answers. Ongoing geochemical analysis of archival
clasts — including Taylor’s No. 7 — and potential further study of the Hele
gravels will continue to refine provenance and test these interpretations
against the primary evidence.
This interpretation confines significant glaciation to the coastal fringe
and has implications for broader claims of glacial transport across southern
England, including the contested theory that Irish Sea ice carried the
Stonehenge bluestones from Wales. If the ice did not climb above ~30 m OD even
in the confined setting of the Taw estuary, a fortiori it did not reach
Salisbury Plain.
The story advances through careful scrutiny of the rocks, the topography,
and the modern analogues — not through assumptions about uniform ice dams.
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Appendix 1 — Original Erratic Descriptions
Selected excerpts from Dewey (1910) and Taylor (1956), reproduced here
for reference as the originals are not readily accessible online.
From Dewey, H. (1910)
Plate XXIX from Dewey (1910), showing thin-section
microphotographs of the Fremington igneous erratics.
Boulder No. IV (Combrew Farm garden): “The rock is dark grey-green, with
large pale olive-green felspars which are glassy and easily chipped from the
rock. Microscopic examination reveals its glassy and porphyritic nature. It
possesses felspars of two generations, but both are acid labradorite. The
larger ones form a quarter of the rock, and the smaller occur in about equal
quantities with the glassy base. The ferromagnesian constituent is a rhombic
pyroxene which occurs to the entire exclusion of all other ferromagnesian
minerals, for there is no augite, hornblende, or olivine. It occurs as small
prisms, nearly the same size as the small felspars of the ground mass, with
good cleavages, strong pleochroism, and straight extinction.”
“Magnetite is abundant, and occurs as rods and feathery masses, and also
as fine thin lines in the glassy base forming a network or gridiron structure.
The crystalline constituents are embedded in a brown glass which constitutes
about half the rock.”
“The rock may be described as a hypersthene andesite. In many respects it
resembles the Tholeite of Watt Carrick, Dumfries, and the hypersthene rocks of
Curachan, Loch Craignish, Argyll, but all of these rocks contain considerable
quantities of augite, whereas this rock is free from augite.”
From Taylor, C.W. (1956)
Page from Taylor (1956) showing locations and
descriptions of the Fremington erratics.
Taylor (1956): photograph of erratics at Combrew Farm.
No. 7: “The next erratic of this group is the hyalopilitic andesite, also
previously described with No. 6 above. It is now situated on the right of the
gated portion of the driveway to Combrew Farm, and is a glassy, brittle
andesite, quite different from any of the foregoing rocks. Well rounded and
about sixteen inches across, it contains no augite, but otherwise resembles
similar rocks of Dumfries and Loch Craignish, Argyllshire.”
No. 8: “A section of this specimen under the microscope shews it to be a
much altered quartz porphyry, with crushed and irregular crystals of
plagioclase, porphyritic quartz and long prisms of apatite, with a matrix
nearly amorphous and red; epidote appears to have replaced part of the mosaic.
This is regarded as a highly peculiar textural type, which may be derived from
a fairly local source, such as the porphyritic dyke, west of the coasts of
Devon and Cornwall.”
Appendix 2 — Rediscovery of the Fremington Clay Erratics,
November 2025
The farm was visited on 2 November 2025 and the principal erratics
photographed and measured. All key stones described by Taylor (1956) remain in
situ or in their recorded relocated positions.
No. 7: Hyalopilitic andesite
(Combrew Farm driveway wall)
This is the most important erratic in the Fremington inventory for the
question of distant versus local provenance. It remains on the right of the
gated driveway to Combrew Farm, exactly as Taylor described it in 1956.
No. 7 in its position on the Combrew Farm driveway
wall, November 2025.
No. 7 viewed from the driveway approach.
No. 7 close-up showing the glassy, brittle texture and
well-rounded form.
No. 7: detail of surface. The dark grey-green colour
and glassy groundmass are clearly visible.
No. 6: Spilite / vesicular
granophyre (Combrew Farm entrance)
A boulder by the farm entrance matches the quoted size (40 × 30 × 25
inches) and description (“a dark grey, finely crystalline rock”). If it is the
same erratic, it has been rotated since Taylor’s photograph.
Possible No. 6 at the Combrew Farm entrance, November
2025.
Detail of the boulder beside the stone wall.
Further view of the boulder.
Close-up showing dark grey crystalline texture.
Other roadside stones
Two smaller roadside erratics are conglomerates, one resembling a
sarsen-type puddingstone. They do not match any of the erratic descriptions in
the literature.
Conglomerate boulder near the farm entrance.
Second conglomerate boulder; possible puddingstone
type.