2. In the second place, the geographical position of Britain gives it a notable advantage in regard to the manifestations of volcanic energy. Rising from the margin of a great ocean-basin and extending along the edge of a continent, these islands have lain on that critical border-zone of the terrestrial surface, where volcanic action is apt to be most vigorous and continuous. It has long been remarked that volcanoes are generally placed not far from the sea. From the earliest geological periods the site of Britain, even when submerged below the sea, has never lain far from the land which supplied the vast accumulations of sediment that went to form the Palæozoic and later formations, while, on the other hand, it frequently formed part of the land of former geological periods. It was thus most favourably situated as a theatre for both terrestrial and submarine volcanic activity.

3. In the third place, this advantageous geographical position is found to have been attended with an altogether remarkable abundance and persistence of volcanic eruptions. No tract of equal size yet known on the face of the globe furnishes so ample a record of volcanic activity from the earliest geological periods down into Tertiary time. Every degree of energy may be signalized in that record, from colossal eruptions which piled up thousands of feet of rock down to the feeblest discharge of dust and stones. Every known type of volcano is represented—great central cones like Etna or Vesuvius, scattered groups of small cones like the puys of France, and fissure- or dyke-eruptions like those of recent times in Iceland.

Moreover, the accurate manner in which the stratigraphy of the country has been established permits each successive era in the long volcanic history to be precisely determined, and allows us to follow the whole progress of that history stage by stage, from the beginning to the end.

These characteristics may be instructively represented on a map, such as that which accompanies the present volume ([Map I.]). The reader will there observe how repeatedly volcanic eruptions have taken place, not merely within the general area of the British Isles, but even within the same limited region of that area. The broad midland valley of Scotland has been especially the theatre for their display. From the early part of the Lower Silurian period, through the ages of the Old Red Sandstone, Carboniferous and Permian systems, hundreds of volcanic vents were active in that region, while in long subsequent time there came the fissure-eruptions of the Tertiary series.

4. In the fourth place, the geological revolutions of successive ages have made this long volcanic chronicle fully accessible to observation. Had the lavas and ashes of one period remained buried under the sedimentary accumulations of the next, their story would have been lost to us. We should only have been able to decipher the latest records which might happen to lie on the surface. Fortunately for the progress of geology, the endless vicissitudes of a continental border have brought up the very oldest rocks once more to the surface. All the later formations of the earth's crust have likewise been upraised and exposed to denudation during long cycles of time. In this manner, the rocky framework of the country has been laid bare, and each successive chapter of its geological history may be satisfactorily deciphered. The singularly complete volcanic chronicle, after being entombed under younger deposits, has been broken up and raised once more into view. The active vents of former periods have been dissected, submarine streams of lava have been uncovered, sheets of ashes that fell over the sea-bottom have been laid bare. The progress of denudation is specially favoured in such a variable and moist climate as that of Britain, and thus by the co-operation of underground and meteoric causes the marvellous volcanic records of this country have been laid open in minutest detail.

There is yet another respect in which the volcanic geology of Britain possesses a special value. Popular imagination has long been prone to see signs of volcanic action in the more prominent rocky features of landscape. A bold crag, a deep and precipitous ravine, a chasm in the side of a mountain, have been unhesitatingly set down as proof of volcanic disturbance. Many a cauldron-shaped recess, like the corries of Scotland or the cwms of Wales, has been cited as an actual crater, with its encircling walls still standing almost complete.

The relics of former volcanoes in this country furnish ample proofs to dispel these common misconceptions. They show that not a single crater anywhere remains, save where it has been buried under lava; that no trace of the original cones has survived, except in a few doubtful cases where they may have been preserved under subsequent accumulations of material; that in the rugged tracts, where volcanic action has been thought to have been most rife, there may be not a vestige of it, while, on the other hand, where the uneducated eye would never suspect the presence of any remnant of volcanic energy, lavas and ashes may abound. We are thus presented with some of the most impressive contrasts in geological history, while, at the same time, this momentous lesson is borne in upon the mind, that the existing inequalities in the configuration of a landscape are generally due far less to the influence of subterranean force than to the action of the superficial agents which are ceaselessly carving the face of the land. Those rocks which from their hardness or structure are best able to withstand that destruction rise into prominence, while the softer material around them is worn away. Volcanic rocks are no exception to this rule, as the geological structure of Britain amply proves.

In the following chapters, forming Book I. of this work, I propose to begin by offering some general remarks regarding the nature and causes of volcanic action, so far as these are known to us. I shall then proceed to consider the character of the evidence that may be expected to be met with respecting the former prevalence of that action at any particular locality where volcanic disturbances have long since ceased. The most telling evidence of old volcanoes is naturally to be found in the materials which they have left behind them, and the reader's attention will be asked to the special characteristics of these materials, in so far as they give evidence of former volcanic activity.

As has been already remarked, many of the most prominent phenomena of a modern volcano are only of transient importance. The earthquakes and tremors, and the constant disengagement of steam and gases, that play so conspicuous a part in an eruption, may leave no sensible record behind them. But even the cones of ashes and lava, which are piled up into mountainous masses, have no true permanence: they are liable to ceaseless erosion by the meteoric agencies of waste, and every stage in their degradation may be traced. In successive examples we can follow them as they are cut down to the very core, until in the end they are entirely effaced.

We may well, therefore, ask at the outset by what more enduring records we may hope to detect the traces of former volcanic action. The following introductory chapters will be devoted to an attempt to answer this question. I shall try to show the nature and relative importance of the records of ancient volcanoes; how these records, generally so fragmentary, may be pieced together so as to be made to furnish the history which they contain; how their relative chronology may be established; how their testimony may be supplemented in such wise that the position of long vanished seas, lands, rivers, and lakes may be ascertained; and how, after ages of geological revolution, volcanic rocks that have lain long buried under the surface now influence the scenery of the regions where they have once more been exposed to view.