A climate of arctic severity prevailed in Britain throughout much of the
last two million years, resulting in the widespread formation of a great
range of periglacial landforms and deposits. Many of these features
provide key evidence for understanding the evolution of the present
landscape and reconstructing former climate. Appreciation of the
significance of periglacial deposits and structures is also important in
many engineering operations and in understanding the development of
present-day soils. This book, first published in 1994, provides a
synthesis of theory in periglacial geomorphology and applies this to the
study of periglacial phenomena in Great Britain. The first part of the
book introduces the chronological and environmental background to
periglaciation in Britain. The second and third parts deal respectively
with the periglaciation of lowland Britain and upland Britain. The book
concludes by considering the implications of periglacial phenomena for
environmental reconstruction.