VI. THE NORTH-EAST OF IRELAND
In the north-eastern counties of Ireland there are two regions which afford ample material for discussion in connection with the protrusion of acid rocks during the Tertiary volcanic period. One of these, which for distinction may be called the Carlingford region, embraces the tract of country which includes the Mourne Mountains on the north-east side of Carlingford Lough and the ranges of Slieve Foye and Slieve Gullion on the south-west side. The other lies mainly within the basaltic plateau, the largest of its scattered portions forming parts of the hills of Carnearny and Tardree in the county of Antrim (Map VII.).
1. The Carlingford Region
a. The Mourne Mountains.—This compact and picturesque group of hills, about twelve miles long and six miles broad, and reaching a height of 2798 feet in Slieve Donard, presents a comparatively simple geological structure, since it consists almost entirely of granitic rocks which pierce, overlie and underlie Upper Silurian grits and shales. So far as regards the contact of these rocks with the disrupted sedimentary formations, all that can be asserted is that the granite must be later than at least the older part of the Upper Silurian period. But for at least two reasons, the eruptive rocks may be regarded with some confidence as part of the Tertiary series. In the first place, there is a strong petrographical resemblance between the Mourne Mountain granite and that of the Island of Arran and the granitic parts of the granophyre of the Western Isles. And this resemblance is so close as to furnish a cogent argument in favour of grouping all these rocks together as parts of one geologically contemporaneous series. In the second place, the Mourne Mountain granite abruptly cuts off a large number of basic dykes which, running in a general N.N.W. direction, may be looked upon as almost certainly members of the Tertiary system of protrusions.
The manner in which the granite of the district behaves towards certain detached areas of Silurian strata with their accompanying dykes is one of the most astonishing features in the whole assemblage of intrusive rocks in Britain. As has been excellently shown in the Geological Survey Map and sections by Mr. W. A. Traill, the granite has carried up on its surface broad cakes of vertical Silurian strata, together with all their network of dykes.[418] A cake of this kind, from 50 to about 200 feet thick and nearly two miles broad, has been bodily uplifted from the rest of the mass and carried upward by the granite, so that the truncated ends of the beds of grit and shale with their system of dykes stand upon a platform of granite, from which also numerous veins penetrate them. There can be little doubt that the basic dykes thus broken through are parts of the great Tertiary system, and if so, the granite which disrupts them cannot be older than Tertiary time.
[418] See Sheets 60, 61 and 71 of the one-inch map of the Geological Survey of Ireland, and Sheets 22, 23 and 24 of the Horizontal Sections. The Explanation to these Sheets of the map was written by Professor Hull, Mr. Traill having previously retired from the service. The Mourne Mountain area is now undergoing critical revision by Prof. Sollas for the Geological Survey, and important additional material for the elucidation of this district may be expected from him.
Besides the older basic dykes disrupted by the granite, a younger but much less abundant series traverses that rock, and also follows a general north-westerly direction. These later dykes in some cases cross more acid dykes which have risen through the granite. There is no trace of any superficial discharge from the Mourne Mountain area. But from the analogy of other districts we may easily conceive that the granite represents the underground parts of volcanic material which has now been entirely removed.
b. Slieve Foye and Barnavave District.—This area embraces the mountainous ground lying between Carlingford Lough and Dundalk Bay, and culminating in Slieve Foye (1935 feet). It measures roughly about six miles in extreme length and four miles in breadth.
The remarkable assemblage of basic and acid materials in this area has received considerable attention from geologists. The relative order of the two groups of rocks was first clearly recognized by Griffith, who showed that the granite (granophyre) is intruded into the gabbro.[419] Professor Haughton subsequently confirmed this observation, and proved the post-Carboniferous date of the intrusive materials, which he compared with those of Skye.[420] The general distribution of the rocks was traced out in some detail by the Geological Survey, and described in the official Memoirs.[421] More recently the district has been examined by Professor Sollas, who, bringing the photographic camera and the microscope to the aid of field-geology, has elucidated the structure and relations of the rocks, and has obtained abundant evidence that the acid and basic rocks maintain there the same relative order as among the Inner Hebrides.[422]
[419] Journ. Geol. Soc. Ireland (1843), p. 113.