From under the Loch Tay Limestone a great thickness of mica-schists, "green schists," schistose grits and conglomerates, slates and greywackes, emerges up to the border of the Highlands. Above that calcareous band thick masses of mica-schist and sericite-schist are succeeded by a well-marked zone of quartzite, which forms the mountains of Ben-y-Glo and Schihallion, and stretches south-westward across Argyllshire into Islay and Jura. The second or Blair-Athol Limestone lies next to this quartzite. If the limestones are identical with those of Donegal, Mayo and Galway, the quartzites may doubtless be also regarded as continued in those of the same Irish counties, where they form some of the most conspicuous features in the scenery, since they rise into such conspicuous mountains as Erigal, Slieve League, Nephin, and the twelve Bins of Connemara.

The age of this vast system of altered rocks has still to be determined. It is possible that they may include some parts of the Torridonian series, or even here and there a wedge of the Lewisian gneiss driven into position by gigantic disruptions, like those of the North-West Highlands. But there can be no doubt that the schists, quartzites and limestones form an assemblage of metamorphosed sedimentary strata which differs much in variety of petrographical character, as well as in thickness, from the Torridonian sandstone, and which has not been identified as the equivalent of any known Palæozoic system or group of formations in Britain. It may conceivably embrace the Cambrian series of the North-West Highlands, and also the sedimentary deposits that succeeded the Durness Limestone, of which no recognizable vestige remains in Sutherland or Ross.

That the metamorphic rocks east of the line of the Great Glen are at least older than the Arenig formation of the Lower Silurian system may be inferred from an interesting discovery recently made by the officers of the Geological Survey. A narrow strip of rocks has been found which, from their remarkable petrographical characters, their order of sequence and their scanty fossil contents (Radiolaria), are with some confidence identified with a peculiar assemblage of rocks on the Arenig horizon of the Silurian system in the Southern Uplands of Scotland, to which fuller reference will be made in [Chapter xii.] This strip or wedge of probably Lower Silurian strata intervenes between the Highland schists and the Old Red Sandstone in Kincardineshire, Forfarshire and Dumbartonshire. It has been recognized also, occupying a similar position, in Tyrone in Ireland. The schists in some places retain their foliated character up to the abrupt line of junction with the presumably Lower Silurian strata, while in other districts, as at Aberfoyle, they have been so little affected that it is hardly possible to draw a line between the Highland rocks and those of this border-zone, which indeed are there perhaps more metamorphosed than the Highland grits to the north of them. The metamorphism of the schists may have been mainly effected before the final disturbances that wedged in this strip of Silurian strata along the Highland border, though some amount of crushing and schist-making seems to have accompanied these disturbances. No trace of any similar strip of Palæozoic rocks has ever been detected among the folds of the schists further into the Highlands. But some of the Highland rocks in the region of Loch Awe lose their metamorphosed character, and pass into sedimentary strata which, so far as petrographical characters are concerned, might well be Palæozoic.

Until some clue is found to the age of the Younger or Eastern schists, quartzites and limestones of the Highlands, it is desirable to have some short convenient adjective to distinguish them. As a provisional term for them I have proposed the term "Dalradian," from Dalriada, the name of the old Celtic kingdom of the north of Ireland and south-west of Scotland.[61]

[61] Presidential Address to Geological Society, 1891, p. 39.

The special feature for which this Dalradian series is cited in the present volume is the evidence it furnishes of powerful and extensive volcanic action. In a series of rocks so greatly dislocated, crumpled and metamorphosed, we cannot look for the usual clear proofs of contemporaneous eruptions. Nevertheless all over the Scottish Highlands, from the far coast of Aberdeenshire to the Mull of Cantyre, and across the west of Ireland from the headlands of Donegal into Galway, there occurs abundant evidence of the existence of rocks which, though now forming an integral part of the schists, can be paralleled with masses of undoubtedly volcanic origin.

Fig. 37.—Section showing the position of Sills in the mica-schist series between Loch Tay and Amulree.
a, Mica-schist; b, b, Sills.

Intercalated in the vast pile of altered sediments lie numerous sheets of epidiorite and hornblende-schist, which were erupted as molten materials, not improbably as varieties of diabase-lava. Most of these sheets are doubtless intrusive "sills," for they can be observed to break across from one horizon to another. But some of them may possibly be contemporaneous lava-streams. A sheet may sometimes be followed for many miles, occupying the same stratigraphical platform. Thus a band of sills may be traced from the coast of Banffshire to near Ben Ledi, a distance of more than 100 miles. Among the hornblendic sills of this band some occur on a number of horizons between the group of Ben Voirlich grits and the Ben-y-Glo quartzite. One of the most marked of these is a sheet, sometimes 200 feet thick, which underlies the Loch Tay Limestone. Another interesting group in the same great band has been mapped by the Geological Survey on the hills between Loch Tay and Amulree, some of them being traceable for several miles among the mica-schists with which they alternate ([Fig. 37]).

In Argyllshire also, between Loch Tarbert and Loch Awe, and along the eastern coasts of the islands of Islay and Jura, an abundant series of sheets of epidiorite, amphibolite and hornblende-schist runs with the prevalent strike of the schists, grits and limestones of that region. Similar rocks reappear in a like position in Donegal, where, as in Scotland, the frequency of the occurrence of these eruptive rocks on the horizons of the limestones is worthy of remark. The persistence, number and aggregate thickness of the sills in this great band mark it out as the most extensive series of intrusive sheets in the British Isles.