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I've heard that Britain is sinking in the south and rising in the north - how can that happen

00:00 Sun 04th Feb 2001 |

asks MScott:
A.
You're right. It's happening because of something called 'isostatic rebound'.

Q. Sounds scary - is it
A. Could be. It's happening because the north of Britain is recovering from having the weight of an enormous amount of ice pressing down on it after the last Ice Age.�That part of the country is merely 'bouncing back'.

Q. Wasn't the ice age a very long time ago
A.
Yes it was. But even though the earth's crust is slightly elastic, it takes thousands of years for�it to adjust to a huge amount of weight being added or removed.

Q. How much ice are we talking about
A.
Scotland was under more than 300 metres of ice during the ice ages. And Scotland is rising fairly quickly.

Q. How quickly
A.
About a metre a century.

Q. So you can see the effects
A.
Yes. Along the coast of north-east Scotland in particular, you can see 'raised beaches' which sit several feet above the current sea level.

Q. So is Scotland pushing England down
A.
Not exactly. When the ice weighed Scotland down, it also had the effect of raising England up - in a see-saw kind of motion. Now that the ice has gone, England is returning to its pre-ice age level .


Also, the sea level is rising worldwide as global warming melts glaciers and releases more water into the oceans.

And, as oceans get warmer they expand, raising the sea level further - about 3mm a year.


This is, of course, causing great concern to those living on the south coasts of England.

Q. Is London particularly vulnerable
A.
Yes, it couldn't be sited in a worse place. As well as the rising sea level and the fact that England is sinking, the Thames valley is a syncline (an area of locally subsided crust), and is suffering from subsidence because of groundwater extraction - plus storm surges in the Thames estuary are greater because of the funnel shape of the North Sea.

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