We describe and discuss the glacial and climate variations in the Polar Ural Mountains in northern
Russia over the last 100 000 years. A series of optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) and radiocarbon
ages from sediment cores demonstrate that there has been continuous deposition of lacustrine
sediments throughout the last 65 ka in Lake Gerdizty, a lake basin situated on the eastern foothills of
the Urals. Below the lacustrine sequence are two till beds; the uppermost (unit B) was probably
deposited by a large mountain-centred glacier complex that covered the lake basin during Marine
Isotope Stage (MIS) 4.