The south-western portion of this elliptical ring possesses a peculiar interest from its including certain remarkable masses of breccia or agglomerate. These rocks have been mapped by Mr. Nolan, and are described by him in the official Explanation, but in more detail in two separate papers.[425] Having had an opportunity of paying a brief visit to the ground, I can confirm the general accuracy of his mapping and description, and am able to add a few further particulars to the facts enumerated by him.

[425] Sheet 70 of the Geol. Surv. Map of Ireland and Explanation thereto; also Journ. Roy. Geol. Soc. Ireland, vol. iv. (1877), p. 233; Geol. Mag. 1878.

The tract of ground where these agglomerates appear forms a prominent ridge which rises several hundred feet above the lower country on either side, and extends in a W.N.W. direction for about seven miles, nearly along the line of junction between the Newry granite and the Silurian strata. The ridge has a breadth varying from a few hundred yards to upwards of a mile. It is separated from the main igneous mass of the Slieve Gullion area by an intervening strip of lower ground from three-quarters of a mile to about a mile and a half in width, which is occupied by the Newry granite. At the north-west end of the ridge the newer eruptive rocks lie within the area of that granite, while at the south-east end they rise entirely amongst the Silurian strata.

Beginning at the south-eastern extremity, we find the agglomerate occupying several detached eminences and surrounded by altered Silurian grits and shales. Further west the rock occurs in larger and more continuous masses, appearing at intervals, especially along the southern borders of the quartz-porphyry which forms by much the greater part of the ridge. Actual junctions of the agglomerate with the older rocks around seem to be seldom visible. I found one, however, above the gamekeeper's house on the southern flanks of the hill called Tievecrom. The Upper Silurian grits and shales, in a much indurated and shattered condition, are there traceable for several hundred feet up the slope, until they are abruptly cut off by the agglomerate. The line of separation appears to be nearly vertical, the truncated ends of the strata being wrapped round by the mass of fragmental material.

The most remarkable features of this agglomerate, which has been well described by Mr. Nolan, are the notable absence of truly volcanic stones in it, and the derivation of its materials from the rocks around it. I found only one piece of amygdaloid, but not a single lump of slag, no bombs, no broken fragments of lava-crusts, and no fine volcanic dust or enclosed lapilli. The rock may be said to consist entirely of fragments of Silurian grits and shales where it lies among these strata, and of granite where it comes through that rock. Blocks of these materials, of all sizes up to two feet in breadth, are confusedly piled together in a matrix made of comminuted debris of the same ingredients.

The agglomerate on the ridge of Carrickbroad has no definite boundary, but seems to graduate into an andesitic rock, and then into a quartz-felsite or rhyolite. This apparent gradation is one of the most singular features of the ridge. The andesite resembles some of the "porphyrites" of the Old Red Sandstone. It is close-grained, with abundant minute felspar-laths, and numerous large porphyritic felspars, which latter are sometimes aggregated in patches, as in the old porphyries of Portraine, Lambay Island and the Chair of Kildare. This rock has undoubtedly been erupted at the time of the formation of the agglomerate, or at least before the loose materials were compacted together; for it is full of separate stones of the same materials, and becomes so charged with them as to become itself a kind of agglomerate, with a small proportion of andesitic matrix cementing the blocks.

A thin slice prepared from one of the specimens obtained by me from this hill has been studied by Mr. Watts, who reports that the fine-grained andesitic matrix in which the stones are imbedded has often been injected into their minute fissures, and that the minute fragments enclosed in this matrix consist here of a trachyte-like porphyry, felsite, andesites, basalts of various degrees of fineness and olivine-basalt, together with isolated grains of felspar, such as might have been derived from the breaking up of some of these fragments.

Westward from Carrickbroad, the chief eruptive rock is a dark, sometimes nearly velvet-black, flinty, occasionally almost resinous, quartz-porphyry or rhyolite, with abundant quartz and large felspars and occasional well-marked flow-structure. This material, near the much smaller protrusion of andesite, is curiously mixed up with that rock, as if the two had come up together. Sometimes they seem to pass into each other, at least the separation between them cannot be sharply drawn. There can be little doubt, however, that the acid magma continued to ascend after the other, for it sends veins and strings into the more basic material, and encloses blocks of it. This thoroughly acid porphyry plays the same part as the andesite in regard to the stones of the agglomerate. Throughout its whole extent, it is found to enclose these stones, which here and there become so numerous as to form the main bulk of the mass, leaving only a limited amount of quartz-porphyry (rhyolite) matrix to bind the whole into an exceedingly compact variety of breccia. Occasionally the acid rock cuts through the ordinary clastic agglomerate, as may be well seen on the southern face of Tievecrom.

A specimen of this porphyry with its enclosed fragments, which was collected by me from above the old tower at Glendovey, Carrickbroad, has been sliced and examined by Mr. Watts under the microscope, and is thus described by him: "The large fragment in this slide consists of ophitic olivine-dolerite full of large phenocrysts of olivine. It is broken up and penetrated by veins of quartz-porphyry, rich in quartz, which exhibits a beautiful flow-structure. The felspars and augite of the dolerite do not appear to have suffered much alteration at the margin of the fragment, but the olivines are much serpentinized, the serpentine passing into a border of actinolite which runs in veins into the neighbouring rock and even passes out into the quartz-porphyry at the junction, impregnating it with actinolite and chlorite for some distance. A few particles of basalt also occur and a portion of a granite-fragment comes into the slide, from the edge of which a piece of biotite has floated off into the quartz-porphyry."

The essentially non-volcanic material of the agglomerate shows, as Mr. Nolan pointed out, that it was produced by æriform explosions, which blew out the Silurian strata and granite in fragments and dust. These discharges probably took place either from a series of vents placed along a line of fissure running in a north-westerly line, or directly from the open fissure itself. Possibly both of these channels of escape were in use; detached vents appearing at the east end and a more continuous discharge from the fissure further west.