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Were Ireland and Britain once joined by a land bridge?

Northern Ireland-based researchers go underwater to discover whether we could have walked to Britain in the past



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An international team of researchers led by University of Ulster Professor Andrew Cooper is about to embark on a  voyage of underwater discovery that will establish whether Ireland was ever joined to Britain by a land bridge.

The aim of the three year project is to determine just how far sea level fell in the Irish Sea during the last Ice Age and how changing land levels, ice sheets and global climate change affected it. Of particular local interest is whether sea level fell so far that Ireland was joined to Britain by dry land. 

According to Professor Cooper,  “The question of whether Ireland and Britain were ever connected by land has never been answered satisfactorily and there are many competing hypotheses based on everything from the different mammal populations, archaeology, and computer modelling.  Nobody has ever looked at the geological evidence that is preserved on the sea floor.”

The project, funded by the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) to the tune of almost a million pounds, involves systematic assessment of geological evidence on the seabed at sites all around the Irish Sea offshore of Bantry Bay, Waterford, Cardigan Bay, Drogheda, Morecambe Bay and Belfast Lough.

“This type of work requires a range of specialised approaches and we have assembled a uniquely experienced international team to allow us to investigate this problem properly” said Professor Cooper.

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“In this first research cruise on a state-of-the art research vessel we will be collecting geophysical data to locate submerged shorelines, river valleys and deltas throughout the Irish Sea. 

"We have chosen these particular sites because they have the highest potential for preserving these types of environment.  We will carefully analyse all this information  to find sites where we can extract material from these submerged shorelines that will allow us to radiocarbon date them.

"Next year we will go back on a bigger ship and collect cores of sediment from those locations to help us reconstruct the past environment” said Professor Cooper.

The project, however, is of more than regional importance and was given the highest possible ranking by NERC’s peer-review college, placing it in the ‘outstanding, exceptional scientific merit’ category.  

As Professor Cooper noted: “As well as recording global changes in the volume of the ocean, the sea level record is a yardstick for unravelling how ice interacts with the earth's crust.
 
"The northern part of the British Isles was covered with thicker ice during the ice age, and this was the last to melt.

"We know that land is pushed downwards under the weight of the ice and then bounces back when the ice is removed. Because of this, sea level in the British Isles records the combined effect of global changes in the ocean and regional changes from climate change.   

"The British Isles sea level record is of global importance when it comes to understanding how the earth responds to ice loading and unloading - a process we see at work right now in places like Greenland because of global climate change.

"This means we can use the information we collect to improve geophysical models of how the earth works"


Nster.com


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Pitts: Things have developed in Ireland recently. The issue of North and South is firmly on the democratic hands of all the people of the Island. As it stands now: The South has renounced any legal claim to the North and have agreed that the North can join the South and 'leave' Britain if and when they express that wish. Meantime, cross-border Instruments are in place to deal with issues of mutual interest. At the moment, the polls all show the majority of the population of the North ~ including 'Catholic/Republicans' wish to retain the British connection. The Queens recent visit has stunned many in the South and highlighted how little difference there is between the two Islands anyway, and with goodwill, peace and humility we can build an even stronger friendship in the future.
More Ulster propaganda, which ties Northern Ireland to Britain. I often wonder, whether Northern Ireland is a good ecomonic deal for England. Of course the Belfast industrial complex payed it way in the first half of the 20th Century. Since 1968, Northern Ireland has been a drain on the fading British Empire. At some point Britian is going to have to consider cutting Northern Ireland lose for economic reasons. If Britian cut Northern Ireland lose, would it be economically practical for Ireland to assume Northern Ireland. The real economic force that will finally pull Ireland away from Britian is the Catholic Woman's ability to out produce babies.
The answer it the headline is of course: Yes. Not only to Britain - but everywhere else as well! At a time when the world was just water and one single Landmass (Pangea) what we now call Britain, Europe and Africa and yes even America was only in the next field! Since then we have drifted apart to form many separate Continents and Oceans. Some have pointed out that what we now call "Ireland" was at the centre of this 'Pangean Continent'.You can draw your own conclusions as to why everyone drifted away from it! Me? I blame "d'English!"
@katiemac: as the above article stated, the project is headed by a Professor from Northern Ireland and funded by NERC which is based in the United Kingdom. I agree with your post in general though. Surely there are better research projects that NERC could be supporting.
I'm surprised that people don't already have strong opinions and information about this (the British navy?). The North Channel or the Straits of Moyle (between the Irish Sea and the Atlantic Ocean, is only 12 miles wide, at it's narrowest, between Torr Head or Fair Head and the Mull of Kintyre. Maps show the deepest part (a trench called Beaufort's Dyke (and here you thought that a dyke was something long and narrow that stood above the ground) is more than 200 meters deep (and perhaps close to 300 meters) and several miles wide. Not an insurmountable obstacle, but probably not dry land, either. Unless, of course, there was traversable land to the north of the end of Beaufort's Dyke,where the sea is shallower between Malin Head in Donegal and some of the Scottish islands, as some have suggested. And one would have to consider the problems with a long sea migration if there were not a bridge. Not only would you have to get the wife and kids into the boat, you would also have to get the cows, the goats, the pigs, the dogs etc, etc, etc.
@katiemac -- Yes, my initial reaction was that this was proved long ago, and I was surprised that this research is being undertaken. Perhaps I am thinking of England (Cliffs of Dover area) and France? Anyway, I'd be interested in knowing where the land bridge(s) were.
They will probably find a bit of Africa down there as well.
fastjack7: True and a great idea! ... Wait,not so fast Jack - where will we drain it to?
"If you drain all the water from the face of the earth,you will find that all land is locked together"
I'm betting there was a bridge.
 




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