Fig. 309.—View of neck-like mass of breccia, Brochel, Raasay.
Though there is no indication of the age of these necks, they agree so closely in general character with known vents of the Tertiary volcanic plateaux that there cannot be much hesitation in regarding them as dating from the same great period of basalt-eruption. But no relic now exists anywhere around of lavas or tuffs ejected from them. They rise on the bare Applecross hills, 1000 feet above sea-level, two miles from the shore, and about ten miles from the nearest outlier of the basalt-plateau in the Dùn Can of Raasay. If they once discharged streams of lava that united with the rest of the plateau, the total destruction of this lava affords another impressive picture of the waste which the volcanic rocks of the Inner Hebrides have undergone.
The large proportion of Torridon Sandstone blocks in these two Applecross necks suggests, however, that the orifices never became active volcanic vents. They may have been mere spiracles, or blow-holes, where the funnels drilled by explosive vapours were filled up with the debris of the rocks that were blown out. But that lava did rise within them is shown by the basic lapilli in the agglomerate, and by the basalt which in both vents has found its way up the chimney.
In the island of Raasay Mr. Teall, during the summer of 1894, observed a group of curious neck-like masses of breccia which pierce the Torridon Sandstone near Brochel ([Fig. 309]). The blocks in them are large angular unaltered pieces of the surrounding sandstones and shales, sometimes ten feet or more in length, and the matrix is sometimes pure crystalline calcite like Iceland spar. The breccia is generally coarsest towards the outer margin. But though the Lewisian gneiss exists immediately below the thin cake of Torridonian strata, not a fragment of it could either Mr. Teall or I, when I visited the locality with him, find among the components of the breccia. Nor did we detect any trace of volcanic material. The general ground-plan of these masses is elliptical, the most northerly measuring 30 yards in diameter. Where the junction of the breccia with the Torridon strata can be seen it is a nearly vertical one, the sandstones and shales being much jumbled and broken, but not sensibly indurated. This little cluster of patches of breccia can hardly be due to local crushing of the rocks. Their definite outlines and composition seem rather to indicate spiracles of Tertiary time, which never became vents erupting lava or ashes. The absence of fragments of the underlying gneiss may be accounted for if we suppose that the orifices were completely cleared out by the violence of the explosions and were afterwards filled up by the falling in of the walls of the higher parts now removed by denudation, which consisted of Torridon Sandstone and shale.[307]
[307] It is on one of these neck-like patches of breccia that Brochel Castle stands, of which Macculloch gave so sensational a picture in one of the plates of his Western Isles.
Further research may detect at still greater distances from the basalt-plateaux ancient volcanic necks that might, with more or less probability, be referred to the Tertiary period. As an instance of this kind, I refer to the neck at Bunowen, County Galway, recently described by Mr. M'Henry and Professor Sollas. Though so remote from the Tertiary basalt-plateaux, the rock of this boss is an olivine-basalt presenting a close resemblance to some of the rocks of Antrim.[308]
[308] Trans. Roy. Irish Acad., 1896
As a final illustration of Tertiary volcanic vents I will now describe the Faroe group already alluded to ([vol. i. p. 63], [vol. ii. p. 256]). It was almost by a kind of happy accident that these vents were discovered. Noticing at a distance of a mile or more from the deck of a steam-yacht that the base of the great basalt cliffs on the west side of Stromö were varied by what looked like agglomerate, I steamed inshore, and was delighted to find, as the vessel drew near to the cliff, that the agglomerate assumed definite boundaries and occurred in several distinct patches, until at last it presented the unmistakable outlines of a group of vents underlying and overspread by the bedded basalts of the plateau. Favoured by an unusually calm sea, I was enabled to boat into every nook and round every buttress and islet of this part of the coast-line.