Unfortunately the bottom of the volcanic group is nowhere visible. At the east or lower end of the series, exposed on the shore, an agglomerate with its dykes appears to truncate the Castletown Limestones. No trace of any tuff has been noticed among these lower limestones. We may infer that the volcanic activity began after they were deposited. The highest accessible portions of the volcanic group, as Mr. Horne showed, are clearly exposed on the coast at Poyll Vaaish, intercalated in and overlying the dark limestones of that locality ([Fig. 184]), which have been assigned, from their fossil contents, to the upper part of the Carboniferous Limestone series.[56] The Manx volcanoes may therefore be regarded as having probably been in eruption during the later portion of the Carboniferous Limestone period.
[56] R. Etheridge jun., in Mr. Horne's paper above cited.
Fig. 184.—Limestones passing under stratified tuffs, Poyll Vaaish, Isle of Man.
Owing to irregularities of inclination, the thickness of the volcanic group can only be approximately estimated. It is probably not less than 200 or 300 feet. But as merely the edge of the group lies on the land, the volcanic rocks may reach a considerably greater extent and thickness under the sea.
The volcanic materials consist mainly of bedded tuffs, but include also several necks of agglomerate and a number of dykes and sills. So far as I have observed, they comprise no true lava-streams.[57] These Manx tuffs present many of the familiar features of those belonging to the puy-eruptions of Central Scotland, but with some peculiarities worthy of attention. They are on the whole distinctly bedded, and as their inclination is generally in a westerly direction, an ascending order can be traced in them from the eastern end of the section to the highest parts of the group associated with the Poyll Vaaish limestones. Their colour is the usual dull yellowish-green, varying slightly in tint with changes in the texture of the materials, the palest bands consisting of the finest dust or volcanic mud. Great differences in the size of their fragmentary constituents may be observed in successive beds, coarse and fine bands rapidly alternating, with no admixture of non-volcanic sediment, though occasional layers of fine ash or mudstone, showing distinct current-bedding, may be noticed.
[57] The occurrence of intercalated lavas has been described in this series, but, as I shall show in the sequel, they are probably intrusive masses.
Pauses in the succession of eruptions are marked by the intercalation of seams of limestone or groups of limestone, shale and black impure chert. Such interstratifications are sometimes curiously local and interrupted. They may be observed to die out rapidly, thereby allowing the tuff above and below them to unite into one continuous mass. They seem to have been accumulated in hollows of the tuff during somewhat prolonged intervals of volcanic quiescence, and to have been suddenly brought to an end by a renewal of the eruptions. There are some four or five such intercalated groups of calcareous strata in the thick series of tuffs, and we may regard them as marking the chief pauses in the continuity or energy of the volcanic explosions.
An attentive examination of these interpolated sedimentary deposits affords some interesting information as to the submarine conditions in which the eruptions took place. The intercalations, sometimes 12 feet or more in thickness, consist mainly of dark limestones, enclosing the usual Carboniferous Limestone fossils; black shales, sometimes showing very fragmentary and much macerated remains of ferns and other land-plants; and black impure argillaceous chert or flint, arranged in bands interposed between the other strata, and also in detached lumps and strings. The dark flaggy limestones and black shales may be paralleled lithologically with those of Castletown and Poyll Vaaish. Indeed, there seems to be little doubt that they represent the contemporaneous type of marine sediment that was gathering on the sea-floor outside the volcanic area, and which during intervals of quiescence or feeble eruptivity spread more or less continuously into that area. The thick mass of tuff must thus have been strictly contemporaneous with a group of calcareous muddy and siliceous deposits which gathered over the bottom beyond the limits of the showers of ashes.