[420] Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc. vol. xii. (1856), p. 171; xiv. p. 300; and Journ. Geol. Soc. Ireland (1876), p. 91.

[421] Sheet 71 of the Geol. Surv. Ireland, and accompanying Explanation. These were the work of Mr. W. A. Traill.

[422] Trans. Roy. Irish Acad. vol. xxx. (1894), p. 477. This is part i. of what is intended to be a series of papers.

One of the first features in this tract of country to arrest the eye of the geologist is the situation of this centre of protrusion and that of Slieve Gullion along a north-west line, coincident with the general direction of the numerous basic dykes of the region. Whether or not the successive intrusions took place contemporaneously in the two areas, they have followed each other in the same order. In the Barnavave district the igneous rocks occupy an area of about 20 square miles. They consist of a central and chief mass composed of acid materials, which have risen through the basic rocks now found as an interrupted ring round them.

In his more recent examination, Prof. Sollas has devoted special attention to the influence of the solvent action of the acid magma upon the basic rocks and upon its own composition and structure. Besides confirming the work of previous observers as to the order of appearance of the two kinds of material, he has obtained evidence that the gabbro had not only completely solidified, but was traversed by contraction-joints, possibly even fractured by earth-movements, before the injection of the granophyric material. He found that this material, like that of the Inner Hebrides and St. Kilda, must have been in a state of great fluidity at the time of its intrusion, and made its way into the minutest cracks and crevices. In observing the solvent action of the granophyre, he ascertained that this action took place even in comparatively narrow dykes, which probably consolidated at no great depth beneath the surface.[423]

[423] Op. cit.

c. The Slieve Gullion District.—This area is separated from that just described by a narrow strip of Silurian strata, so that its isolation as a separate igneous district is complete. It will be observed from the map to continue the same north-westerly line as the Slieve Foye tract, the two together running in that direction for a distance of some 16 miles. It is interesting to note the adoption of this predominant north-westerly trend even by eruptive masses which were mainly of acid material.

This district measures about ten miles in length by from one to five miles in breadth. The rocks are, on the whole, similar to those in the area south of Carlingford Lough, and bear the same relation to each other, the acid being intrusive in the basic series. It is worthy of remark that the Tertiary eruptive rocks have made their appearance in the midst of the older granite of Newry. This granite has been already alluded to as disrupting Upper Silurian strata, and being probably of the age of the Lower Old Red Sandstone ([vol. i. p. 290]). In long subsequent ages, after protracted denudation, during which its cover of Silurian and Carboniferous formations was stripped off and it was laid bare, it was broken through by the whole series of basic and acid protrusions of Slieve Gullion.

This district is portrayed on Sheets 59, 60, 70 and 71 of the Geological Survey of Ireland, which show a central core of basic and acid material piercing the Newry granite.[424] Round this core and touching it at its north-western and south-eastern end, but elsewhere separated from it by a space of several miles, runs a curiously continuous band of igneous material which is marked as "quartziferous porphyry" and "felstone-porphyry" on the Survey maps.

[424] The ground was chiefly mapped and described by Mr. Joseph Nolan and Mr. F. W. Egan.