The Ancient Volcanoes of Great Britain, Volume 2 (of 2)
D.C.L. Oxf., D. Sc. Camb., Dubl.; LL.D. St. And., Edinb. DIRECTOR-GENERAL OF THE GEOLOGICAL SURVEY OF GREAT BRITAIN AND IRELAND; CORRESPONDENT OF THE INSTITUTE OF FRANCE; OF THE ACADEMIES OF BERLIN, VIENNA, MUNICH, TURIN, BELGIUM, STOCKHOLM, GÖTTINGEN, NEW YORK; OF THE IMPERIAL MINERALOGICAL SOCIETY AND SOCIETY OF NATURALISTS, ST. PETERSBURG; NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY, MOSCOW; SCIENTIFIC SOCIETY, CHRISTIANIA; AMERICAN PHILOSOPHICAL SOCIETY; OF THE GEOLOGICAL SOCIETIES OF LONDON, FRANCE, BELGIUM, STOCKHOLM, ETC. WITH SEVEN MAPS AND NUMEROUS ILLUSTRATIONS IN TWO VOLUMES VOL. II
London
MACMILLAN AND CO., Limited. NEW YORK: THE MACMILLAN COMPANY. 1897 All rights reserved
The North of England: Dykes, The Great Whin Sill—The Derbyshire Toadstones—The Isle of Man—East Somerset—Devonshire
The volcanic intercalations which diversify the Lower Carboniferous formations of Southern Scotland extend but a short way across the English Border, and although, over the moors and hills of the north of Cumberland and Northumberland, the Carboniferous sandstones, limestones and shales are well exposed, they present no continuation of either the plateau or puy-eruptions which play so prominent a part in the geology of Roxburghshire and Dumfriesshire. This deficiency is all the more noticeable seeing that the Carboniferous system is exposed down to its very base, in the deep dales of the North of England. Had any truly interstratified volcanic material existed in the system there, it could hardly fail to have been detected.
But while contemporaneous volcanic rocks are absent, the northern English counties contain many intrusive masses of dolerite, diabase, andesite or other eruptive rocks, which may be found traversing all the subdivisions of the Carboniferous system. These eruptive materials have taken two forms: in some cases they rise as Dykes, in others they appear as Sills.
Among the manifestations of the subterranean intrusion of igneous rocks in the British Isles the Great Whin Sill, next after the Dalradian sills of Scotland, is the most extensive. Its striking continuity for so great a distance, and the absence around it of any other trace of igneous action, save a few dykes, place it in marked contrast to the ordinary type of Carboniferous sills. The occasional gaps on its line of outcrop in the northern part of its course do not really affect our impression of the persistence of the sheet. They not improbably indicate merely that in its protrusion it had a wavy irregular limit, which in the progress of denudation has occasionally been not yet reached. For mile after mile the sill has been mapped by the Geological Survey in lines of crag across the moorlands, and as a conspicuous band among the limestones and shales that form the steep front of the Pennine escarpment, where it has long been known in the fine sections exposed among the gullies by which that noble rock-face has been furrowed.