[92] The occurrence of these dykes is paralleled by that of the similar intrusions in the quartz-felsite of Llyn Padarn to be afterwards described.
In external characters, the rock composing these dykes and sheets may be described as usually a dull dirty-green or yellowish-brown mass, to which the old name of "wacke" might appropriately be given. It exhibits the texture and mode of weathering of the more distinctly crystalline members of the basalt family. It is occasionally amygdaloidal or cellular, the kernels or cavities being arranged parallel with the sides of the dyke. Here and there a rudely prismatic structure extends between the walls.
The microscopic structure of this rock has been described by Professor Judd, Mr. Davies and Mr. Tawney. It is a diabase, but more allied in structure to true basalt than the olivine-diabase of the volcanic group. It especially differs from the older rock in the abundance and freshness of its felspars, in the comparative scarcity of its augite, and in the absence of olivine. The magnesian silicates are very generally replaced by green decomposition-products diffused through the mass. An occasional crystal of hornblende, recognizable by its cleavages and dichroism, may be detected. Some of the diabase dykes present excellent examples of flow-structure. A beautiful instance occurs in a dyke that cuts the shales, in a small cove to the east of Nun's Chapel. The shale and eruptive rock are in contact; and the small acicular prisms of felspar, besides ranging themselves in line parallel to the side of the dyke, stream round the larger felspar crystals.
Some of the dykes or veins are only three inches broad. They send out fingers, and sometimes break abruptly across from one line to another. They appear generally to have followed the lines of joint in the granite, as Mr. Tawney has observed;[93] consequently they must be posterior to the development of the system of jointing in that rock.
[93] Proc. Nat. Hist. Soc. Bristol, vol. ii. part ii. (1879), p. 115.
Besides the abundant dykes, there has been a more limited extrusion of the same material in sheets parallel (or approximately so) to the bedding of the sandstones and shales. These sheets are well displayed at St. John's Point, where evidence of their being intrusive, and not truly bedded, may be seen along the fine cliffs which have been cut by the waves on this part of the coast-line.
The sedimentary series which overlies the volcanic group of St. David's, and contains the fossils of the lower part of the Cambrian system, gradually loses all trace of volcanic material, as its members are followed upward in stratigraphical order.[94] We thus learn that the eruptions of this district came to an end in an early part of the Cambrian period. But as we shall see in the following pages, volcanic activity was subsequently renewed at no great distance in the next or Silurian period.
[94] Dr. Hicks has noted the occurrence of "volcanic tuff" in the Lower Lingula Flags of Porth-y-Rhaw, a little to the east of St. David's (Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc. vol. xx. 1864, p. 240). This intercalation is marked as a "dyke" in the MS. notes of Sir A. C. Ramsay on a copy of the Geological Survey map of the district.