Fig. 304.—Section of Volcanic Vent and connected lavas and tuffs, Scorr, Camas Garbh, Portree Bay, Skye.
a, Rudely-bedded dull green tuff; b, coarse agglomerate; c, prismatic basalt; d, massive jointed basalt; e, red banded decomposing rock, probably of detrital origin; f, plateau-basalts, prismatic and rudely columnar; g, dyke of dolerite, somewhat vesicular, five to six feet broad; h, basalt dyke two to three feet broad; i, dyke or sill of similar basalt to h, and possibly connected with it.

The agglomerate (b) is quite tumultuous, and here and there strikingly coarse. Some of its included blocks measure five feet in length. These fragments represent most of the varieties of the lavas of the district. Large slaggy masses are abundant among them, and sometimes exhibit the annelide-like elongation of the vesicles which I have referred to as occasionally displayed by the plateau-basalts. More than 60 feet of agglomerate are visible in vertical height from where its base is concealed by debris and vegetation to where its upper surface passes under a banded rock to be afterwards described. That this unstratified mass of volcanic detritus marks the site of a vent can hardly be doubted, although denudation has not revealed the actual walls of the chimney. The steep grassy slopes do not permit the relations of the rocks to be everywhere seen, but the agglomerate appears to pass laterally into finer, rudely-stratified material of a similar kind, which extends towards east and west as a thick deposit between the bedded basalts. Possibly denudation has only advanced far enough to lay bare the crater and its surrounding sheets of fragmentary material, while the chimney lies still buried underneath.

To the east or left of the agglomerate the detritus becomes less coarse, and shows increasing indications of a bedded arrangement. Close to the agglomerate the dip of the coarse tuff is towards that rock at about 10°. A few yards further east a sheet of very slaggy basalt is seen to lie against the tuff, which it does not pierce. The vesicles in this adhering cake of lava have been pulled out in the direction of the slope till they have become narrow tubes four or five inches long and parallel to each other. Some parts of this rock have a curved ropy surface, like that of well-known Vesuvian lavas, suggestive of the molten rock having flowed in successive thin viscous sheets down the slope, which has a declivity of about 30°. This part of the section may possibly preserve a fragment of the actual inner slope of the crater formed of rudely-bedded tuffs.

Continuing still eastward, we find the feebly stratified tuff (a) to be perhaps 200 feet thick. It forms a grassy declivity that descends from the basalt-escarpment above to the grass-covered platform which overlies a lower group of basalts. The visible portion of this tuff presents a thoroughly volcanic character, being made up of the usual dull dirty-green granular paste, through which are dispersed angular and rough lumps of slag and pieces of more solid basalt, varying up to a foot or two feet in length. These stones are generally disposed parallel to the indistinct bedding, but are sometimes placed on end, as if they had assumed that position on falling from an explosive shower. Among the smaller stones, pieces of a finely vesicular basic pumice are frequent and are among the most strikingly volcanic products of the deposit. From a characteristic sample of these stones, a thin slice was prepared and placed in Mr. Harker's hands. The following are his observations on it:—"A very compact dark grey rock, amygdaloidal on a minute scale. The lighter grey crust is probably due merely to weathering, and the specimen seems to be a distinct fragment, not a true bomb. The slice shows it to be essentially a brown glass with only occasional microscopic crystals of a basic plagioclase. It has been highly vesicular, and the vesicles are now filled by various secondary products, including a chloritic mineral, nearly colourless and singly refracting in thin section, and a zeolite."

Tracing now the tuff from the west or right side of the vent, we can follow it to a greater distance. No abrupt line can be detected here, any more than on the other side, between the agglomerate and the tuff. The latter rock extends under the overlying plateau of basalt, at least as far west as Portree Loch, a distance of fully a mile, but rapidly diminishes in thickness in that direction. Traces of what is probably the same tuff can be detected between the basalts at Ach na Hannait, more than three miles to the south ([Fig. 305]). It is thus probable that from the Portree vent fragmentary discharges took place over an area of several square miles.

Above the agglomerate of this vent two lavas may be seen to start towards opposite directions. One of these (c), already referred to, is a dull prismatic basalt with a slaggy bottom, its vesicles being pulled out in the direction of the general bedding of the section. It descends by a twist or step, and then lies on the inclined surface of the tuff which dips towards the agglomerate and seems to pass into that rock. Further east this basalt increases in thickness and forms the lowest of the basalt-sheets of the cliff. The lava that commences on the west side of the agglomerate (d) is a massive jointed basalt, which, though not seen at the vent, appears immediately to the west of it and rapidly swells out so as to become one of the thickest sheets of the locality. It lies upon the rudely-bedded tuff, and is covered by the other basalts of the cliff.

That these two basalts came out of this vent cannot be affirmed. If they did so at different times, their emission must have been followed by the explosion which cleared the funnel and left the central mass of agglomerate there. But that some kind of saucer-shaped depression was still left above the site of the vent is indicated by the curious elliptical mass of rock (e) that lies immediately above the agglomerate, from which it is sharply marked off. This is one of the most puzzling rocks in the district, probably in large measure owing to its advanced state of decay. It is dull-red in colour, and decomposes into roughly parallel layers, so that at a short distance it looks like a bedded tuff, or like some of the crumbling varieties of banded lavas. I could not obtain specimens fresh enough to put its nature and origin beyond dispute. Whatever may have been its history, this ferruginous rock rests in a flat basin-shaped hollow directly above the agglomerate of the vent. The form of this depression corresponds fairly well with what we may suppose to have been the final position and shape of the crater of the little volcano. The rock that occupies the bowl dies out towards the east on the face of the cliff, and the prismatic basalt (c) is then immediately covered by the rest of the basalt-sheets of the plateau (f). On the west side its precise termination is concealed by grass. But it must rapidly dwindle in that direction also, for not many yards away it is found to have disappeared, and the basalts (d and f) come together.

Though the decayed state of this rock does not warrant any very confident opinion regarding its history, I am inclined to look upon it as a deposit of much disintegrated volcanic detritus washed into the hollow of the old crater when it had become filled with water, and had passed into the condition of a maar. The peculiarly oxidized condition of its materials points probably to long atmospheric exposure, and an examination of the surrounding parts of the district furnishes more or less distinct evidence that a considerable lapse of time did actually intervene between the cessation of the eruptions of the Portree volcano and the next great basalt-floods of this part of Skye.

That volcanic eruptions from other vents continued after the Portree vent had become extinct is proved by the great sheets of basalt (f) that overspread it, and still bury a large tract of the fragmentary material which it discharged. At a later time a fissure that was opened across the vent, allowed the uprise of a basalt dyke (g), and subsequently another injection of similar material took place along the same line of weakness (h).

Before leaving this interesting locality we may briefly take note of the distribution of the ashes and stones ejected by the volcano, and the evidence for the relative length of the interval between the outflow of the lavas below and that of those above the tuff and volcanic conglomerate. These deposits may be traced in clear sections along the base of the cliffs for a mile to the west of the vent. They thin away so rapidly in that direction that at a distance of three-quarters of a mile they do not much exceed fifty feet in thickness. At Camas Bàn they consist mainly of a fine, dull-green, granular, rudely-stratified basalt-tuff, through which occasional angular pieces of different lavas and rough slags are irregularly dispersed. These stones occur here and there in rows, suggestive of more vigorous discharges, the layers between the platforms of coarser detritus being occupied by fine tuff. Some of the ejected blocks are imbedded on end—an indication of the force with which they were projected so as to fall nearly a mile from the crater.