Fig. 48.—Sketch-section across Cader Idris.
st, slates and tuffs and ashy slates; s, slates and grits; i, ironstone; b, volcanic breccias; a, slaggy andesitic and more basic lavas; e, microgranite or eurite; f, felsites; d, "greenstone" (dolerites, diabases, etc.).
Between a lower and an upper band of tuff in the Arenig volcanic group the Maps and Memoirs of the Geological Survey distinguish a central zone of "felspathic porphyry," which attains a maximum thickness of 1500 feet (see [Fig. 48]). From Sir Andrew Ramsay's descriptions, it is clear that he recognized in this zone both intrusive and extrusive sheets, and that the latter, where thickest, were not to be regarded as one mighty lava-flow, but rather as the result of successive outpourings, with occasional intervals marked by the intercalation of bands of slate or of tuff. To a certain extent the intruded sheets are separated on the map from the contemporaneous lavas; but this has been done only in a broad and sketchy way. One of the most important, and at the same time most difficult, tasks yet to be accomplished in this district is the separation of the rocks which were probably poured out at the surface from those that were injected underneath it. My own traverses of the ground have convinced me that good evidence of superficial outflows may be found in tracts which have been mapped as entirely intrusive; while, on the other hand, some of the so-called "lavas" may more probably be of the nature of sills.
The petrography of the rocks, moreover, still requires much study. Among the so-called "felspathic porphyries" of the Survey maps a considerable variety of texture, structure and composition will doubtless be detected. In the Descriptive Catalogue of Rock-Specimens in the Museum of Practical Geology (3rd edit., 1862) the rocks that form the "lava-streams of Llandeilo age," in Merionethshire, are named "felstone," "felspar-porphyry," "felstone-porphyry," "felspathic-porphyry," and "calcareous amygdaloid."
The most interesting feature which my own slight personal acquaintance with the region has brought before me is the clear evidence of a succession from comparatively basic lavas in the lower part of the group to much more acid masses in the higher part. In the Survey map numerous sheets of intrusive "greenstone" are shown traversing the Lingula Flags, Tremadoc slates, and lower part of the volcanic group along the northern slopes of Cader Idris. The true intrusive nature of much of this material is clearly established by transgressive lines of junction and by contact-metamorphism, as well as by the distinctive crystalline texture of the rocks themselves. But the surveyors were evidently puzzled by some parts of the ground. Sir Andrew Ramsay speaks of "the great mass of problematical vesicular and sometimes calcareous rock which is in places almost ashy-looking." After several oscillations of opinion, he seems to have come finally to the conclusion that this vesicular material, which occurs also in the upper part of the mountain, passes into, and cannot be separated from, the undoubted intrusive "greenstones."[149]
[149] Mem. Geol. Surv. vol. iii. 2nd edit. p. 36; see also pp. 31, 32.
The true solution of the difficulty will be found, I believe, in the recognition of a group of scoriaceous lavas among these greenstones. The presence of a cellular structure might not be sufficient to demonstrate that the rocks in which it appears are true lava-beds, for such a structure is far from unknown both among dykes and sills. But in the present case there is other corroborative testimony that some of these Cader Idris amygdaloids were really poured out at the surface. Below Llyn-y-Gadr—the dark tarn at the foot of the vast wall of Cader Idris—the beds of coarse volcanic conglomerate (b in [Fig. 48]), to which I have already alluded, are largely composed of blocks of the vesicular "greenstones" on which they lie. These "greenstones," moreover, have many of the most striking characteristics of true lavas (a in [Fig. 48]). They are extraordinarily cellular; their upper surfaces sometimes present a mass of bomb-like slags with flow-structure, and the vesicles are not infrequently arranged in rows and bands along the dip-planes.
A microscopic examination of two slides cut from these rocks shows them to be of a trachytic or andesitic type, with porphyritic crystals of a kaolinized felspar embedded in a microlitic groundmass. The rocks are much impregnated with calcite, which fills their vesicles and ramifies through their mass.
A few miles to the east some remarkable felsitic rocks take the place of these vesicular lavas immediately below the pisolitic iron ore. I have not determined satisfactorily their relations to the surrounding rocks, and in particular am uncertain whether they are interbedded lavas or intrusive sheets. Dr. F. H. Hatch found that their microscopic characters show a close resemblance to the soda-felsites described by him from the Bala series of the south-east of Ireland.
The slopes of Cader Idris are partly obscured with debris, from above which rises the great precipitous face formed by the escarpment of "porphyry," here intrusively interposed among the Arenig volcanic rocks. This enormous sill will be referred to a little further on in connection with the other intrusive sheets of the region.