Fig. 359.—Section at Creag na h-Iolaire, Glen More, Mull, showing basalts and gabbros resting on and pierced by granophyre.
a, much indurated and altered basalts and dolerites; b b, gabbro; c, granophyre; d d, basalt dykes.
This strip of granophyre sends abundant apophyses from its mass into the dark basic rocks around it. Some of the best sections to show the nature of these offshoots are to be found on the steep hillslope which mounts from the watershed in Glen More southward into the Creag na h-Iolaire (Eagle's Crag), and thence up into the great gabbro ridge of Ben Buy. From the main body of granophyre a multitude of veins ascends through the basalts and gabbros from two feet or more in breadth down to mere filaments ([Fig. 358]). Even at a height of 300 feet up the hill some of these veins are still three inches broad, and present the usual granophyric structure, though rather finer in grain than the general mass of the boss, and sometimes assuming a compact felsitic and spherulitic texture at the immediate contact with the surrounding rock. One of the most striking proofs of the posteriority of these veins is furnished by the perfect flow-structure they not infrequently exhibit along their margins, their long felspar crystals being arranged parallel to the walls in lines that follow the sinuosities of the boundary between the two rocks. Patches of gabbro and of the indurated basalts may be seen lying on the granophyre, from which veins and strings ramify through them ([Fig. 359]). Similar veins can be traced upward into the main body of coarse gabbro, forming the ridge of Ben Buy. Some of them are of the usual granular granophyric texture, others are dull and fine-grained (claystones of the older authors).
Hence it is evident that the granophyres of Mull have been protruded not only after the accumulation of the plateau-basalts, but after these were traversed by the sheets and veins of gabbro. The amount of acid rock injected into these older rocks over the mountainous part of the island is enormous; but I reserve further reference to it for the section on acid Dykes and Veins, for these are the forms in which it chiefly occurs in that region. It should be added, that in the localities here referred to basalt-veins and dykes are generally abundant, cutting through all the other rocks ([Fig. 359]). So numerous are they that the geologist ceases to take note of them when his thoughts are engaged upon the problems presented by the masses through which they rise.
iii. THE ACID BOSSES OF SMALL ISLES
In the island of Eigg three small bosses or sheets of acid rock occur. That at the northern end rises through the Jurassic sedimentary rocks, and forms a bold cliff from 150 to 200 feet high. It is a light grey granophyric porphyry, with rounded blebs of quartz in a micropegmatic base of quartz and felspar. The other two masses, of smaller size, cut through the bedded basalts[403] (Map VI.).
[403] Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc. xxvii. (1871) p. 294.
In the opposite island of Rum, the acid protrusions play a much more important part. On the east side of the hills, they occur in sheets at the base of the gabbros; on the west side, they form a large tract of hilly ground, which, stretching along the coast-line for about three and a half miles from the headland of A' Bhrideanach to Harris, forms there a range of shattered sea-cliffs, that tower for 1000 feet above the Atlantic breakers that beat about their base. The area extends inland to the slopes on the west side of Loch Sgathaig, a distance of about three and a half miles, descending in a range of precipices along its northern front, and reaching in its culminating summit, Orval, a height of 1868 feet above the sea. The rocks of which this triangular area consists resemble those of the Mull bosses. They are chiefly quartz-porphyries, becoming felsitic in texture towards their contact with adjacent rocks. In some places, as was noticed by Macculloch on the sea-cliffs,[404] they have a rudely bedded structure. Thus on the north-west front of Orval, this structure is shown by parallel planes that dip outwards or north-west at 30° to 40°, and which are made still more distinct by an occasional intrusive dyke or sheet of basalt between their surfaces. I have already alluded to indications of an internal arrangement in the granitoid bosses of Skye (p. 381).
[404] Western Islands, vol. i. p. 487.