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Dive into the research topics where William A. Marshall is active.

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Featured researches published by William A. Marshall.


Science of The Total Environment | 2009

The isotopic record of atmospheric lead fall-out on an Icelandic salt marsh since AD 50.

William A. Marshall; Robert Clough; W. Roland Gehrels

We report a record of atmospheric Pb deposition at a coastal site in western Iceland that spans the last two millennia. The elemental concentrations of Pb, Al, Li and Ti are determined using ICP-MS from a sediment monolith collected from a salt marsh. Multicollector (MC) ICP-MS analysis is used to obtain isotopic ratios of stable Pb. The Pb/Ti and Pb/Li ratios are used to separate natural Pb background concentrations from Pb derived from remote anthropogenic sources. The pollution record in western Iceland is subdued in comparison with Pb records from the European mainland, but the isotopic character, profile and timing of Pb deposition show good agreement with the atmospheric Pb fall-out reported from sites in Scandinavia and northwestern Europe. At the bottom of the sequence we isolate a low-level (0.1-0.4 mg kg(-1)) Pb enrichment signal dated to AD 50-150. The isotopic signature and timing of this signal suggest Roman metal working industries as the source. In the subsequent millennium there was no significant or very low (i.e. elemental concentrations<0.01 mg kg(-1)) anthropogenic Pb deposition at the site up to, and including, the early Medieval period. Above a pumice layer, dated to AD 1226-1227, a small increase in Pb deposition is found. This trend is maintained until a more substantive and progressive increase is signalled during the late 1700s and early 1800s. This is followed by a substantial enrichment signal in the sediments (>3.0 mg kg(-1)) that is interpreted as derived from industrial coal burning and metal working during the 19th and 20th centuries in northern Europe. During the late 20th century, significant fall-out from European fuel additives reached Iceland.


The Holocene | 2006

Rapid sea-level rise in the North Atlantic Ocean since the first half of the nineteenth century

W. Roland Gehrels; William A. Marshall; Maria J. Gehrels; Gudrún Larsen; Jason R. Kirby; Jón Eiríksson; Jan Heinemeier; Tracy Shimmield


Quaternary Research | 2007

The use of ‘bomb spike’ calibration and high-precision AMS 14C analyses to date salt-marsh sediments deposited during the past three centuries

William A. Marshall; W. Roland Gehrels; Mark H. Garnett; Stewart P.H.T. Freeman; Colin Maden; Sheng Xu


Quaternary Research | 2006

Late Holocene sea-level changes and isostasy in western Denmark

W. Roland Gehrels; Katie Szkornik; Jesper Bartholdy; Jason R. Kirby; Sarah L. Bradley; William A. Marshall; Jan Heinemeier; Jørn Bjarke Torp Pedersen


Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2012

Nineteenth and twentieth century sea-level changes in Tasmania and New Zealand

W. Roland Gehrels; S. Louise Callard; Patrick Moss; William A. Marshall; Maarten Blaauw; John R. Hunter; J. Andrew Milton; Mark H. Garnett


Global and Planetary Change | 2011

Using Holocene relative sea-level data to inform future sea-level predictions: An example from southwest England

W. Roland Gehrels; David A. Dawson; Jon Shaw; William A. Marshall


Quaternary Science Reviews | 2016

Lake isotope records of the 8200-year cooling event in western Ireland: Comparison with model simulations

Jonathan A. Holmes; Julia C. Tindall; Neil Roberts; William A. Marshall; Jim D. Marshall; Ann Bingham; Ingo Feeser; Michael O'Connell; T.C. Atkinson; Anne-Lise Jourdan; Anna March; Elizabeth H. Fisher


Quaternary International | 2012

Exceptional iridium concentrations found at the Allerød-Younger Dryas transition in sediments from Bodmin Moor in southwest England

William A. Marshall


Journal of Asian Earth Sciences | 2016

New residence times of the Holocene reworked shells on the west coast of Bohai Bay, China

Zhiwen Shang; Fu Wang; Jianfen Li; William A. Marshall; Yongsheng Chen; Xingyu Jiang; Lizhu Tian; Hong Wang


Quaternary International | 2012

Reconstructing recent sea-level change in the Mira estuary, SW Portugal, using salt-marsh sediments

William A. Marshall

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Jason R. Kirby

Liverpool John Moores University

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Anna March

Queen Mary University of London

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