There are two groups of rocks in Anglesey to which a pre-Cambrian age may with probability be assigned. In the heart of the island lies a core of gneiss which, if petrographical characters may be taken as a guide, must certainly be looked upon as Archæan. In visiting that district with my colleague Mr. Teall I was much astonished to find there so striking a counterpart to portions of the Lewisian gneiss of the north-west of Sutherland and Ross. The very external features of the ground recall the peculiar hummocky surface which so persistently characterizes the areas of this rock throughout the north-west of Scotland. If the geologist could be suddenly transported from the rounded rocky knolls of Sutherland, Ross-shire or the Hebrides to those in the middle of Anglesey, south of Llanerchymedd, he would hardly be aware of the change, save in the greater verdure of the hollows, which has resulted from a more advanced state of decomposition of the rocks at the surface, as well as from a better climate and agriculture.

When we examine these rocky hummocks in detail we find them to consist of coarse gneisses, the foliation of which has a prevalent dip to N.N.W. Some portions abound in dark hornblende and garnets, others are rich in brown mica, the folia being coarsely crystalline and rudely banded, as in the more massive gneisses of Sutherland. Abundant veins of coarse pegmatite may here and there be seen, with pinkish and white felspars and milky quartz. Occasionally the gneiss is traversed by bands of a dark greenish-grey rock, which remind one of the dykes of the north-west of Scotland. There are other rocks, some of them probably intrusive and of later date, to be seen in the same area; but they require more detailed study than they have yet received.

The relation of this core of gneiss and its associated rocks to the second group of pre-Cambrian rocks has not hitherto been satisfactorily ascertained. The core may conceivably be an eruptive boss in that group, and may have acquired its foliation during the movements that produced the foliation of the surrounding schists. But it seems more probable that the gneiss is much older than these schists, though it would undoubtedly participate in the effects of the mechanical movements which gave rise to their deformation, cleavage and foliation.

The second group of rocks occupies a large area in the west and in the centre and south of Anglesey. The schists of which it consists are obviously in the main a clastic series. One of their most conspicuous members is quartzite, which, besides occurring sporadically all over the island, forms the prominent mass of Holyhead Mountain. There are likewise flaggy chloritic schists, green and purple phyllites or slates, and bands of grit, while parts of the so-called "grey gneiss" consist of pebbly sandstones that have acquired a crystalline structure. That some order of sequence among these various strata may yet be worked out is not impossible, but the task will be one of no ordinary difficulty, for the plications and fractures are numerous, and much of the surface of the ground is obscured by the spread of Palæozoic formations and superficial deposits.

These Anglesey schists are so obviously an altered sedimentary series that it is not surprising that they should have been regarded as metamorphosed Cambrian strata. All that can be positively affirmed regarding their age is that they are not only older than the lowest fossiliferous rocks around them—that is, than Arenig or even Tremadoc strata—but that they had already acquired their present metamorphic character before these strata were laid down unconformably upon them. There is no actual proof that they include no altered Cambrian rocks. But when we consider their distinctly crystalline structure, and the absence of such a structure from any portion of the Cambrian areas of the mainland; when, moreover, we reflect that the metamorphism which has affected them is of the regional type, and can hardly have been restricted to merely the limited area of Anglesey; we must agree with those observers who, in spite of the absence of positive proof of their true geological horizon, have regarded these rocks as of much higher antiquity than the Cambrian strata of the neighbourhood. No one familiar with the Dalradian rocks of Scotland and Ireland can fail to be struck with the close resemblance which these younger Anglesey schists bear to them, down even into the minutest details. Petrographically they are precisely the counterparts of the quartzites and schists of Perthshire and Donegal, and a further connection may be established of a palæontological kind. The upper part of the Holyhead quartzite was found by Mr. B. N. Peach and myself in the autumn of the year 1890 to be at one place crowded with annelid-pipes, and I subsequently found the same to be the case with some of the flaggy quartzites near the South Stack.

Fig. 38.—Sketch of crushed basic igneous rock among the schists, E. side of Porth-tywyn-mawr, E. side of Holyhead Straits.

For the purpose of the inquiry which forms the theme of this work, the feature of greatest interest about these younger schists of Anglesey is the association of igneous rocks with them. They include bands of dark basic material, the less crushed parts of which resemble the diabases of later formations, while the sheared portions pass into epidiorites and true hornblende-schists. As in other regions where eruptive rocks have been crushed down and changed into the schistose modification, it is frequently possible to see groups of uncrushed cores round which, under severe mechanical stresses, the rock has undergone this conversion. Lines of movement through the body of the rock may be detected by bands of schist, the gradation from the solid core to the hornblende-schist being quite gradual. The accompanying figure ([Fig. 38]) represents a portion of one of these crushed basic igneous rocks on the east side of Holyhead Straits.

As in the Dalradian series of the Highlands, many, perhaps most, of these igneous bands are probably intrusive sills, but others may be intercalated contemporaneous sheets. They occur across the whole breadth of the island from the Menai Strait to the shores of Holyhead.

Besides these undoubtedly igneous rocks, the green chloritic slates of Anglesey deserve notice. They are well-bedded strata, consisting of alternations of foliated fine grit or sandstone, with layers more largely made up of schistose chlorite. The gritty bands sometimes contain pebbles of blue quartz, and evidently represent original layers of sandy sediment, but with an admixture of chloritic material. The manner in which this green chloritic constituent is diffused through the whole succession of strata, and likewise aggregated into bands with comparatively little quartzose sediment, reminds one of the "green schists" of the Central Highlands and Donegal, and suggests a similar explanation. Taken in connection with the associated basic igneous rocks, these chloritic schists seem to me to represent a thick group of volcanic tuffs and interstratified sandy and clayey layers. If this inference is well founded, and if we are justified in grouping these Anglesey rocks with the Dalradian schists of Scotland and Ireland, a striking picture is presented to the mind of the wide extent and persistent activity of the volcanoes of that primeval period in Britain.[64]