All round the margin of this boss, the limestone has been converted for a variable distance of a few feet or many yards into a granular crystalline marble. The lighter portions of the limestone have become snowy white; but some of the darker carbonaceous beds retain their dark tint. The nodules of chert, abundant in many of the limestones, project from the weathered faces of the marble. The dolomitic portions of the series have likewise undergone alteration into a thoroughly crystalline-granular or saccharoid rock. The most thorough metamorphism is exhibited by portions of the limestone which are completely surrounded by and rest upon the granite. The largest of these overlying patches was many years ago quarried for white marble above the old Manse of Kilchrist. I have shown by lithological, stratigraphical and palæontological evidence that this limestone, instead of belonging to the Lias, as was formerly believed, forms a part of the Cambrian or possibly the very lowest Silurian series, being a continuation of the fossiliferous limestone of western Sutherland and Ross-shire.[391] Mr. Clough and Mr. Harker, in the progress of the Geological Survey in Skye, have ascertained that the distinctive characters of the three groups of strata into which the limestone can be divided may be recognized even through the midst of the metamorphism.[392]

[391] Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc. vol. xliv. (1888) p. 62.

[392] Annual Report of Director-General of the Geological Survey for 1895.

The generally vertical line of separation between the rock of Beinn an Dubhaich and the contiguous limestone has been taken advantage of for the segregation of mineral veins. On the southern boundary at Camas Malag, a greenish flinty layer, from less than an inch to two or three inches in width, consisting of a finely-granular aggregate of some nearly colourless mineral, which polarizes brilliantly, coats the wall of the granophyre, and also both sides of the vein which proceeds from that rock into the limestone. But the most abundant and interesting deposits are metalliferous. Fragments of a kind of "gossan" may be noticed all along the boundary-line of the boss, and among these are pieces of magnetic iron-ore and sulphides of iron and copper. The magnetite may be seen in place immediately to the south of Kilbride. A mass of this ore several feet in diameter sends strings and disseminated particles through the surrounding granophyre, and is partially coated along its joints with green carbonate of copper.

From the Skye area important evidence is obtainable in regard to the relation of the acid eruptions to (1) earlier eruptive vents filled with agglomerate; (2) the bedded basalts of the plateaux; (3) the bosses, sills and dykes of gabbro and dolerite; and (4) the great system of basic dykes.

(1) Relation of the Granophyre to older Eruptive Vents.—The granophyre of Beinn na Caillich and the two Beinn Deargs has invaded on its north-eastern side the Cambrian limestone and quartzite, and has truncated the sheets of intrusive dolerite and gabbro that have there been injected into them. But to the south-west it rises through the great Strath agglomerate already described, and continues in that rock round to the entrance into Strath Beg. The eruptive mass is in great part surrounded with a ring of agglomerate, as if it had risen up a huge volcanic chimney and solidified there, though probably there were more than one vent in this agglomerate area. Again the thick mass of agglomerate north of Belig is interposed between the bedded lavas and the great granophyre mass which extends northwards to Loch Sligachan. On the west side of the Blaven ridge, a number of masses of agglomerate are found on both sides of Glen Sligachan, along the border of the same great tract of acid rock.

Fig. 348.—Section from Beinn Dearg to Beinn an Dubhaich, Skye.
a a, Cambrian limestone; b b, volcanic agglomerate; c c c, basalt-dykes older than granophyre; d1, granophyre of Beinn Dearg; d2, granophyre in the agglomerate neck; d3, granite of Beinn an Dubhaich; e, basalt-dyke younger than granite.

With regard to the relation of the granophyre of the Red Hills to the great agglomerate of Strath, we may infer that the granophyre has not risen exactly in the centre of the old funnel, but rather to the north of it, unless we suppose, as already suggested, that some of the agglomerate belongs to the cone that gathered round the eruptive orifice. It is interesting to observe, however, that granophyre, from the same or from another centre of protrusion, has likewise risen along the outer or southern margin of the agglomerate, generally between that rock and the limestone, but sometimes entirely within the agglomerate. The distance between the nearest part of this ring of eruptive rock and the edge of the boss of Beinn an Dubhaich is under 400 yards, the intervening space being occupied by limestone (or marble), much traversed by north-west basalt-dykes. Most of these dykes do not enter the rocks of the vent, and are abruptly truncated by the mass of Beinn an Dubhaich. The probable structure of this locality is shown in Fig 348.

The masses of agglomerate which further westward so curiously follow the margin of the great granophyre bosses, and those which are entangled in that rock and in the gabbro, probably indicate, as already suggested, the position of a group of older volcanic funnels which provided facilities for the uprise of the basic and acid magmas. The group of vents which, as we have seen, probably rose out of the plateau-basalts, and first served for the rise of the masses of gabbro, has by the subsequent protrusion of the granophyres been still further destroyed and concealed.