“…Preliminary work on the lower Quaternary succession was undertaken during comprehensive mapping of the North Sea stratigraphy during the 1980s and 1990s, and relied on relatively widely spaced 2D seismic lines, which were calibrated shallow boreholes up to 250 m deep, and numerous short seabed cores up to 6 m long (Caston, ; Holmes, ; Stoker et al , ; Stoker and Bent, , ; Cameron et al , ; Sejrup et al , , , ; Knudsen and Sejrup, ). In the southern North Sea, Middle and Upper Pleistocene glaciogenic deposits are relatively thin; the boreholes and shallow cores were able to penetrate deep into the Lower Pleistocene deltaic and marine sequences, identifying a wide depositional plain from Britain to Denmark that was flooded at the onset of the Quaternary (Cameron et al , , 1989, 1993; Funnell, ; McMillan et al , ; Rose, ), but became subaerially exposed following a marine regression before the Middle Pleistocene (Cameron et al , , , ; Funnell, ).…”