Fig. 298.—Volcanic Neck of Dolerite near Cushendall.
The greater coarseness of grain of the material filling these pipes, compared with that of the sheets in the terraces, is only what the very different conditions of cooling and consolidation would lead us to expect. There is no essential difference of composition between the two rocks. Where the erupted material has been poured out at the surface, it has assumed a finely crystalline texture, while, where it has slowly solidified within a volcanic pipe at some depth beneath the surface, and where consequently its component crystals have had more time for development, the resulting structure is much more largely crystalline, with a more or less complete development of the ophitic structure.
Fig. 299.—Section of Volcanic Neck at 'S Airde Beinne, near Tobermory, Mull.
a a, bedded basalts; b b, bedded basalts altered along the side of vent; c c, dolerite.
In the island of Mull, another instance of the same kind of vent has been observed and described by Professor Judd.[296] It rises in the conspicuous hill, 'S Airde Beinne (Sarta Beinn), about two miles south-west from Tobermory, and consists of a coarsely crystalline dolerite, which becomes finer in grain towards the outer margin ([Fig. 299]). No bedding, or structure of any kind beyond jointing, is perceptible in it. Examined in thin sections under the microscope, this rock is found to be another typical ophitic dolerite, consisting of lath-shaped felspars embedded in augite, with here and there wedge-shaped portions of interstitial matter and grains of olivine. Dr. Hatch found the felspars to contain spherical inclusions of devitrified glass, filled with black granules and trichites, and he observed that, under a high power, the interstitial matter is seen to consist mainly of a greenish-brown isotropic substance, in which are inclosed small crystals of augite, skeleton-forms and microlites of felspar, sometimes in stellate aggregates, as well as club-shaped, cruciform, arrow-headed and often crested microlites of magnetite.
[296] Quart. Jour. Geol. Soc., xxx. (1874), p. 264.
Fig. 300.—Interior of the Volcanic Neck of 'S Airde Beinne, near Tobermory, Mull.
Towering prominently above the flat basalt sheets, this neck has an oval form, measuring about half a mile in length by a quarter of a mile in breadth. Its central portion, however, instead of rising into a rugged hill-top, as is usually the case, sinks into a deep hollow, which is filled with water, and reminds one of a true crater-lake (Figs. [299], [300]). The middle of the neck is thus concealed from view, and we can only examine the hard prominent ring of dolerite that surrounds the tarn. The material occupying the hollow may be softer than that of the ring, and may have been scooped out by denudation. What we now see may not be the original surface, but may have been exposed after the removal of possibly hundreds of feet of overlying material. On the other hand, it is conceivable that the hollow is really a crater-lake which was filled up with detritus and may have been overspread with basalt, since removed. It may be suggestively compared with the crater-hollows revealed by denudation on the cliffs of Stromö and Portree Harbour, which will be described in a later part of this chapter. Possibly some more easily removable agglomerate, representing an eruption later than that of the dolerite, may occupy the centre of the volcanic pipe.