[166] Messrs. Lapworth and Watts, op. cit. p. 318.
Fig. 50.—Section across the anticline of Corndon.[167]
A, Arenig flags and shales; B, andesites and tuffs; C, intrusive dolerite.
[167] After Prof. Lapworth and Mr. Watts, op. cit. p. 342.
Numerous dykes and sills traverse the rocks of this district. They consist chiefly of hypersthene-dolerite. They appear to belong to a much later period than the interstratified volcanic series; at least some of them are found altering the Pentamerus limestones, and these must be later than the Llandovery rocks.[168] The most important sill is that which forms Corndon, the central igneous mass of the district. This body of dolerite was ascertained by Mr. Watts not to be a boss but a laccolite, which wedges out both towards the north-west and south-east, as shown in [Fig. 50].
[168] Op. cit. p. 339.
Six miles to the north of the Shelve and Corndon district the Breidden Hills rise on the border of Shropshire and Montgomeryshire, and include a mass of volcanic material belonging to a distinct area of eruption. In the ridge that extends for about three and a half miles through Moel-y-golfa and Middletown Hill, a synclinal trough of volcanic rocks lies upon shales, which from their fossils have been placed in the Bala group. The volcanic series appears to exceed 1000 feet in thickness. The lowest part of it on Moel-y-golfa consists of andesitic lavas about 400 feet thick, followed by tuffs and volcanic conglomerates. The lavas resemble some of the "porphyrites" of the Old Red Sandstone, and contain two forms of pyroxene—one rhombic, probably enstatite, and the other monoclinic augite. There are likewise considerable masses of intrusive rock, which are varieties of diabase or dolerite.[169]
[169] See Mr. W. W. Watts on the Igneous and Associated Rocks of the Breidden Hills, Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc. vol. xli. (1885), p. 532.
iii. SCOTLAND
From the centre of England we must in imagination transport ourselves into the Southern Uplands of Scotland, where a widely distributed series of Silurian volcanic rocks has been preserved. It was, until recently, supposed that the Silurian system north of the Tweed contains no contemporaneously erupted volcanic rocks. Yet, as far back as the year 1860, I pointed to the abundant existence of volcanic detritus in these strata throughout the southern counties as a probable indication of volcanic activity at the time and in the area within which the strata were deposited.[170] Some years later, when the microscope had been introduced as an aid to field-geology, I sliced some of the Silurian sediments of that region and found them, particularly certain shales and grits of Moffatdale, to contain a large admixture of perfectly fresh unworn felspar crystals, which I felt tolerably certain had been supplied by volcanic explosions. As no trace, however, had then been detected of an intercalated volcanic group in any part of the Silurian series of the south of Scotland, I used at that time to speculate on the possibility of the volcanic detritus having been wind-borne from the volcanoes of the Lake District. I had at that time no suspicion that its source was rather to be sought under my feet. The presence of volcanic rocks underneath the uplands of the south of Scotland would have been a welcome explanation of the frequent felspathic composition of many of the Silurian greywackes and shales of that region, and particularly the abundance of andesitic and felsitic fragments in them.