The Antrim plateau, in these respects, resembles the others. But as has already been remarked, it differs from them in one important particular. It has nowhere been disrupted by huge bosses of younger rocks, such as have broken up the continuity of the old lava-fields further north. Yet it also is not without its memorials of younger protrusions. It contains not a few excellent examples of true volcanic vents, and, as above stated, it includes some small acid bosses that may represent the great protrusions of the Inner Hebrides, and may have been connected with superficial outflows of rhyolitic lava and showers of rhyolitic tuff.

ii. MULL, MORVEN AND ARDNAMURCHAN

This plateau covers nearly the whole of the island of Mull, embraces a portion of Morven on the Argyleshire mainland, and, stretching across Loch Sunart, includes the western part of the peninsula of Ardnamurchan (Map VI.). That these now disconnected areas were once united into a continuous lava-field which extended far beyond its present limits is impressively indicated by their margin of cliffs and fringe of scattered islands and outliers. The plateau went west, at least, as far as the Treshnish Isles, which are composed of basalt. On its eastern border, a capping of basalt on the top of Beinn Iadain (1873 feet) in Morven, and others further north, prove that its volcanic sheets once spread into the interior of Argyleshire ([Fig. 266]). On the south, its fine range of lofty cliffs, with their horizontal bars of basalt, bear witness to the diminution which it has undergone on that side; while, on the north, similar sea-walls tell the same tale. Not only has it suffered by waste along its margin, it has also been deeply trenched by the excavation of glens and arms of the sea. The Sound of Mull cuts it in two, and the mainland portion is further bisected by Loch Sunart, and again by Loch Aline. The island of Mull is so penetrated by sea-lochs and divided by deep valleys that a comparatively slight depression would turn it into a group of islands. But, besides its enormous denudation, this plateau has been subjected to disruption, and perhaps also to subsidence, from subterranean movements. In the southern portion of the island of Mull it has been broken up by the intrusion of large bosses and sheets of gabbro, and by masses as well as innumerable veins of various granitoid and felsitic rocks. In Ardnamurchan, it has suffered so much disturbance from the same cause that its original structure has been almost obliterated over a considerable area. Moreover, it has been dislocated by many faults, by which different portions have been greatly shifted in level. The most important of these breaks is one noticed by Professor Judd, and visible to every tourist who sails up the Sound of Mull. It traverses the cliffs on the Morven side, opposite Craignure, bringing the basalts against the crystalline schists, and strikes thence inland, wheeling round into the long valley in which Lochs Arienas and Teacus lie. On its western side, the base of the basalt-series is almost at the sea-level; on its eastern side, that platform rises high into the outliers of Beinn na h-Uamha (1521 feet) and Beinn Iadain. The amount of displacement is probably more than 1000 feet. Many other minor faults in the same district show how much the crust of the earth has been fractured here since older Tertiary time.

Fig. 266.—Basalt-capping on top of Beinn Iadain, Morven.
The hummocky ground to the right consists of the Highland schists against which the basalts are brought by lines of dislocation.[240]

[240] There are no fewer than three faults in the basalt-capping on the summit of Beinn Iadain. By bringing the basalts and schists into juxtaposition, they have given rise to topographical features that can be seen even from a distance.

A little to the west of Mull, and belonging originally to the same plateau, lies the isle of Staffa, the famous columnar basalts of which first attracted the attention of travellers, and gave to the Tertiary volcanic rocks of Scotland their celebrity ([Fig. 266]a).

Fig. 266a.—View of the south side of Staffa, showing the bedded and columnar structure of the basalt. The rock in which the cave to the left hand has been eroded is a conglomeratic tuff underlying the basalt; to the right is Fingal's Cave. These caverns bear witness to the enormous erosive power of the Atlantic breakers.

In spite of the extent to which it has suffered from denudation and subterranean disturbance, and indeed in consequence thereof, the Mull plateau presents clear sections of many features in the history of the basalt-outflows and of the subsequent phases of Tertiary volcanic action which cannot be seen in the more regular and continuous tableland of Antrim. Moreover, it still possesses in its highest mountain, Ben More (3169 feet), a greater thickness, and probably a higher series, of lavas than can now be seen in any other of the plateaux.