The block east of the rift moved south and rose, while that to the west was depressed into a tilted and asymmetric basin. Mountain streams flowing eastward to the Atlantic were caught at the base of the rift, and a new set of torrents dashed down the west-facing scarp of the elevated block. After every cloudburst these new streams left their contributions of boulders in screes along the east side of the basin. The gravels steadily increased in thickness, covering the hills and valleys that furrowed the lowland floor. Much of the ancient relief still lies buried beneath the fill, but some of the eminences were exhumed one hundred and fifty million years later and have received man-given names like Mount Warner and Bernardston Ridge. As the basin subsided vertically for more than a mile, the mountain streams spread fans westward across most of its floor, restricting the contributions of the western rivers to a zone which is now less than two miles wide. The largest of the eastern rivers wore a valley three miles wide where it entered the lowland northeast of Granby.

Then volcanoes broke loose in the basin floor. Lava oozed through the sand west of the Notch in the Holyoke Range, and it frothed out of the openings or was blown violently from them. But by sheer persistence the rivers still dominated the scene as volcanic activity waxed and waned, and 1,500 feet of alluvial wash piled up around the volcanic cones. The energy of the volcanoes was ultimately spent, but for some time lava poured out of craters along a line extending southward from the main eruptive center, and from a second center which approximates the course of the Connecticut River from Sunderland to Turners Falls. It flowed westward into the middle of the basin in a series of sheets until it was 400 feet deep; it pressed upward against the sand plains along the western hills; it surged east up the fan slopes where it ended in a frothy wall; and it spread southward from these two centers and from others to New Haven. The lava, now tilted, gives substance to the Greenfield Ridge, the Mount Holyoke and Mount Tom Ranges, and the long line of hills that pass through Hartford and Meriden.

Spectacular was this outburst in its time, and profound was its influence upon later scenery, but short was its duration. Before weather could redden the lava surface, streams washed gravel over it; and only at the main centers between the Mount Holyoke Hotel and the Amherst-South Hadley road were the volcanoes able to hold out against the relentless activity of running water.

The block east of the rift continued to move southward and to rise, while the streams draining it entrenched themselves in an effort to remain at grade with the basin floor. The moving mountain mass pushed the lava flow up on end and twisted its eastern edge around, dragging it along to the south. The rock splinters which were formed in the process sliced the basin sediments into small blocks, some of which can be seen north of Turners Falls and also at the Holyoke Range. Ultimately the upward and southwestward movement along the rift piled the eastern blocks against the more westerly ones, pushing the west side of each eastern block up on the east side of the adjacent western one, and depressing its eastern side more deeply into the basin floor. The many fractures which were made weakened the basalt lava sheet along certain zones where, in recent time, the elements have worn the notches in the Holyoke Range.

Fig. 19. Block diagram showing the main features of central New England at the opening of the Cenozoic era.

Fig. 20. Block diagram showing the main features of central New England at the present time.

Streams from the eastern highland stubbornly filled up the holes and planed off the raised blocks during the entire period of intermittent movement. In the midst of the tussle between earth forces and fluvial agents the volcanoes again broke into explosive eruptions, and volcanic ash filled many of the block-like depressions all the way from Granby to localities south of Holyoke. Then the fiery vents cooled, and the earth movements diminished in their vigor. But they left a mountain front so steep that talus and landslide deposits accumulated at its base near Mount Toby; and the block mountain range was so high that glaciers may have wreathed its summit. The mountain mass descended southward, and it was penetrated by at least one low pass northeast of Granby.

In the basin itself, alluvial fans encroached from the eastern mountain front, but out in the middle of the valley ephemeral playas and shifting lakes were numerous. Rushes fringed the lake shores; fish stocked their waters; and dinosaurs lumbered over the adjacent flats. The region was one of violent rains and seasonal droughts, of hot days and frosty nights—a semi-desert country lying in the lee of the Appalachian ranges, somewhat as the intermontane valleys of the West lie in the rain shadow of bordering mountains. Eight thousand feet of sediments poured into the Triassic trough while these conditions lasted, but the situation altered slowly as the Jurassic period dawned.