The evidence first regarded by scientific men to be demonstrative of the formation of extensive lakes during the Glacial period by the direct influence of ice-dams exists in the Parallel Roads of Glen Roy in Scotland.
Fig. 62.—Parallel roads of Glen Roy.
According to the description of Sir Charles Lyell, "Glen Roy is situated in the western Highlands, about ten miles north of Fort William, near the western end of the great glen of Scotland, or Caledonian Canal, and near the foot of the highest of the Grampians, Ben Nevis. Throughout nearly its whole length, a distance of more than ten miles, three parallel roads or shelves are traced along the steep sides of the mountains, each maintaining a perfect horizontality, and continuing at exactly the same level on the opposite sides of the glen. Seen at a distance they appear like ledges, or roads, cut artificially out of the sides of the hills; but when we are upon them, we can scarcely recognize their existence, so uneven is their surface and so covered with boulders. They are from ten to sixty feet broad, and merely differ from the side of the mountain by being somewhat less steep.
“On closer inspection, we find that these terraces are stratified in the ordinary manner of alluvial or littoral deposits, as may be seen at those points where ravines have been excavated by torrents. The parallel shelves, therefore, have not been caused by denudation, but by the deposition of detritus, precisely similar to that which is dispersed in smaller quantities over the declivities of the hills above. These hills consist of clay-slate, mica-schist, and granite, which rocks have been worn away and laid bare at a few points immediately above the parallel roads. The lowest of these roads is about 850 feet above the level of the sea, and the next about 212 feet higher, and the third 82 feet above the second. There is a fourth shelf, which occurs only in a contiguous valley called Glen Gluoy, which is twelve feet above the highest of all the Glen Roy roads, and consequently about 1,156 feet above the level of the sea. One only, the lowest of the three roads of Glen Roy, is continued through Glen Spean, a large valley with which Glen Roy unites. As the shelves, having no slope towards the sea like ordinary river terraces, are always at the same absolute height, they become continually more elevated above the river in proportion as we descend each valley; and they at length terminate very abruptly, without any obvious cause, or any change either in the shape of the ground or in the composition or hardness of the rocks.” [CS]
[CS] Antiquity of Man, pp. 252, 253.
Early in his career Charles Darwin studied these ancient beaches, and ascribed them to the action of the sea during a period of continental subsidence. In this view he was supported by the majority of geologists until the region was visited by Agassiz, who saw at once the true explanation. If these were really sea-beaches, similar deposits should be found at the same elevation on other mountains than those surrounding Glen Roy. Their absence elsewhere points, therefore, to some local cause, which was readily suggested to the trained eye of one like Agassiz, then fresh from the study of Alpine glaciers, who saw that these beaches were formed upon the margin of temporary lakes, held back during the Glacial period (as the Merjelen See now is) by a glacier which came out of one glen and projected itself directly across the course of another, and thus obstructed its drainage. The glacier of Glen Spean had pushed itself across Glen Roy, as the great Aletsch Glacier in Switzerland now pushes itself across the little valley behind the Eggishorn.