The bedded or stratified rocks of the Connecticut Valley vary greatly, from the coarse bouldery deposits in Mount Toby to the fine-textured, red and black laminated beds at Whittemore’s Ferry. Conglomerate, arkose, graywacke, shale and even limestone are represented, but there is little true sandstone. Sandstone is an even-textured, granular rock, most commonly composed of cemented quartz grains. Its uniformity of grain-size and composition reflects prolonged weathering of the original rock and good sorting of the fragments as they were transported to their new resting place. The sequence of exposure, transportation and deposition was too rapid in the ancient Connecticut Valley to permit appreciable decay and sorting; hence sandstones are absent. Limestones and salt beds are likewise rare, but the metamorphosed limestones which are found in the western highlands and in the Berkshire valley demonstrate that limestone-forming processes played a significant, if intermittent, part in the history of the region.

CONGLOMERATE is consolidated gravel. Pebbles and boulders of all sizes are packed together by the stream which was moving them, and the spaces between the larger fragments are filled with the sand that settled in from the stream bed. The entire mass is cemented by silica, limonite, carbonates or some other substance deposited by percolating ground-water. The Devil’s football near the Mount Holyoke House is a famous piece which was dislodged from the hillside above; and excellent specimens may be collected on Mount Toby, on Mount Sugarloaf, and in the cut at Mount Tom Junction.

ARKOSE resembles conglomerate, but the individual grains consist of mineral fragments, among which reddish feldspar is prominent. Quartz and mica may be present, too; and all the pieces are characteristically angular, commonly ranging from ¹/₁₆ to ⅛ inch in size. The rock is red and crumbles easily. Beds of arkose alternate with conglomerate on the steep sides of Mount Sugarloaf.

GRAYWACKE is light to dark gray in color, and the fragments composing it are sand size pieces of older rocks. A few mineral grains, such as quartz, may be present, but mica is rare. Graywacke occurs interbedded with arkose in some parts of the valley.

SHALE is a thinly laminated sediment composed of microscopic quartz, feldspar, mica and kaolinite grains. Most shales in the Connecticut valley were deposited as muds in old lake beds. Some are red and record ephemeral pools, but others show from their black color, their coal layers, and their fish skeletons, that the water bodies in which they accumulated remained in existence for a comparatively long time.

LIMESTONE is a rock composed of calcium carbonate, and it consists essentially of an aggregate of calcite crystals or calcite fragments. It will give off gas bubbles in a very dilute solution of hydrochloric acid, and it exhibits other properties peculiar to the mineral calcite. A thin, sandy limestone bed has been identified in several sections of Holyoke.

The Igneous Rocks

Igneous rocks were once molten, and in this hot fluid state some were extruded at the surface as lava flows. Congealed flows reveal the motion, which brought them to their present resting places, in the banding and streaks that are so evident in the patterns of steam holes and minerals; but their massive structure bears witness to stagnation as they hardened. Other molten masses insinuated themselves into underground openings, where they solidified as intrusives, varying in size from small dikes less than an inch wide, to huge masses that can be measured in miles in any direction. Most of the igneous rocks in the highlands of western and central Massachusetts are massive intrusive types; light-colored varieties predominate, but some dark-colored dikes cut the older rocks both east and west of the valley. Dark-colored, massive and banded lavas are conspicuous in the ranges within the valley.

Igneous rocks may be divided into three general groups for practical classification, and each major group may be further subdivided. Rather conveniently each of the major groups may be recognized by the prevalent color of its rocks—whether dark, medium-colored, or light. And within each major classification there may be flows, characterized by banded structures and fine textures; small intrusives composed of well formed crystals in a fine-grained groundmass; and large intrusives consisting of goodsized, equi-granular crystals. Not all of these types can be found in central Massachusetts, but the variety of igneous rocks is surprising and offers some excellent possibilities for the collector.

The Dark Rocks

The dark rocks owe their color to iron-bearing minerals like olivine, pyroxene (augite), amphibole and biotite. All of these minerals weather to a rusty red surface, which is typical of their outcrops at many places.

BASALT is a black rock, dense in some places but perforated with bubble holes or vesicles, at others. It occurs throughout the length of the Holyoke, Tom and Pocumtuck Ranges; and fragments of basalt are abundant in the Granby tuff and agglomerate.

DIABASE resembles basalt but is distinguished by the thin, short crystals embedded in it. These crystals of labradorite feldspar resemble pieces of clipped thread, and they sparkle in reflected light. Almost all dark-colored dikes and the slowly cooled central portions of thick lava flows consist of diabase.

PERIDOTITE is a dark green, coarse, granular rock composed of olivine and subordinate amounts of pyroxene. It occurs near Westfield and Blandford, and at many places in Vermont.

The Medium-Colored Rocks

The medium-colored rocks contain approximately the same proportions of light- and dark-colored minerals. The dark iron-bearing minerals are relatively stable, but the light-gray feldspars decompose to kaolin and give the weathered rock a chalky white surface. Surface flows of this group are unknown in central Massachusetts, but the coarsely granular intrusives are well represented.