Sedgwick, in the paper above quoted, gave an account and figure of the expansion of the Cleveland dyke at Bolam, to which allusion has already been made. He showed that from a part of the dyke which is unusually contracted a great lateral extension of the igneous rock takes place on either side over beds of shale and coal. While in the dyke the prisms are as usual directed horizontally inward from the two walls, those in the connected sheet are vertical, and descend upon the surface of highly indurated strata on which the sheet rests.

The most important examples known to me are those which occur in the coal-field of Stirlingshire. In that part of the country, the remarkable group of dykes already referred to, lying nearly parallel to each other and from half a mile to about three miles apart, runs in a general east and west direction. From one of these dykes no fewer than four sills strike off into the surrounding Coal-measures. The largest of them stretches southwards for three miles, but the same rock is probably continued in a succession of detached areas which spread westwards through the coal-field and circle round to near the two western sheets that proceeded from the same dyke. Another thick mass of similar rock extends on the north side of the dyke for two and a half miles down the valley of the river Avon. These various processes, attached to or diverging from the dyke, are unquestionably intrusive sheets, which occupy different horizons in the Carboniferous series. The one on the north side has inserted itself a little above the top of the Carboniferous Limestone series. Those on the south side lie on different levels in the Coal-measures, or, rather, they pass transgressively from one platform to another in that group of strata.

Fig. 250.—Section to show the connection of a Dyke with an Intrusive Sheet, Stirlingshire Coal-field.
a, Dyke in line of fault; b, Sill traversing and altering the coal; i, Slaty-band Ironstone.

No essential difference can be detected by the naked eye between the material of the dyke and that of the sheets. If a series of specimens from the different exposures were mixed up, it would be impossible to separate those of the dyke from those of the sheets. A microscopical examination of the specimens likewise shows that they are perfectly identical in composition and structure, being chiefly referable to rocks of the dolerite, but partly of the tholeiite type. I have therefore little doubt that these remarkable appendages to this dyke are truly offshoots from it, and are not to be classed with the general mass of the sills of Central Scotland, which are of Carboniferous, partly of Permian, age. The accompanying diagrammatic section ([Fig. 250]) explains the geological structure of the ground.

An interesting and important fact remains to be stated in connection with these sheets. They are traversed by some of the other east and west dykes. This is particularly observable in the case of the sheet which extends northwards from the dyke through the parish of Torphichen. Two well-marked dykes can be seen running westwards among the ridges of the sheet. It is obvious, therefore that these particular dykes are younger than the sheet. But, as will be shown in the sequel, there is abundant evidence that all the dykes of a district are not of one eruption. The intersection of one eruptive mass by another does not necessarily imply any long interval of time between them. They mark successive, but it may be rapidly successive, manifestations of volcanic action. Hence the cutting of the sheets by other dykes does not invalidate the identification of these sheets as extravasations from the great dyke by which they are bounded.

15. INTERSECTION OF DYKES

Fig. 251.—Intersection of Dykes in bedded basalt, Calliach Point, Mull.

Innumerable instances may be cited, where one dyke, or one set of dykes, cuts across another. To some of these I shall refer in discussing the data for estimating the relative ages of dykes. In considering the intersection from the point of view of geological structure, we are struck with the clean sharp way in which it so generally takes place. The rents into which the younger dykes have been injected seem, as a rule, not to have been sensibly influenced in width and direction by the older dykes, but go right across them. Hence the younger dykes retain their usual breadth and trend (Fig. 251). In trying to ascertain the relative ages of such dykes we obtain a valuable clue in studying the respective "chilled edges" of the two intersecting masses, as has already been pointed out.