CHAPTER XVIII.
FORMER GLACIAL EPOCHS; GEOLOGICAL EVIDENCE OF.
Cambrian Conglomerate of Islay and North-west of Scotland.—Ice-action in Ayrshire and Wigtownshire during Silurian Period.—Silurian Limestones in Arctic Regions.—Professor Ramsay on Ice-action during Old Red Sandstone Period.—Warm Climate in Arctic Regions during Old Red Sandstone Period.—Professor Geikie and Mr. James Geikie on a Glacial Conglomerate of Lower Carboniferous Age.—Professor Haughton and Professor Dawson on Evidence of Ice-action during Coal Period.—Mr. W. T. Blanford on Glaciation in India during Carboniferous Period.—Carboniferous Formations of Arctic Regions.—Professor Ramsay on Permian Glaciers.—Permian Conglomerate in Arran.—Professor Hull on Boulder Clay of Permian Age.—Permian Boulder Clay of Natal.—Oolitic Boulder Conglomerate in Sutherlandshire.—Warm Climate in North Greenland during Oolitic Period.—Mr. Godwin-Austen on Ice-action during Cretaceous Period.—Glacial Conglomerates of Eocene Age in the Alps.—M. Gastaldi on the Ice-transported Limestone Blocks of the Superga.—Professor Heer on the Climate of North Greenland during Miocene Period.
CAMBRIAN PERIOD.
Island of Islay.—Good evidence of ice-action has been observed by Mr. James Thomson, F.G.S.,[154] in strata which he believes to be of Cambrian age. At Port Askaig, Island of Islay, below a precipitous cliff of quartzite 70 feet in height, there is a mass of arenaceous talcose schist containing fragments of granite, some angular, but most of them rounded, and of all sizes, from mere particles to large boulders. As there is no granite in the island from which these boulders could have been derived, he justly infers that they must have been transported by the agency of ice. The probability of his conclusion is strengthened by the almost total absence of stratification in the deposit in question.
North-west of Scotland.—Mr. J. Geikie tells me that much of the Cambrian conglomerate in the north-west of Scotland strongly reminds him of the coarse shingle beds (Alpine diluvium) which so often crowd the old glacial valleys of Switzerland and Northern Italy. In many places the stones of the Cambrian conglomerate have a subangular, blunted shape, like those of the re-arranged moraine débris of Alpine countries.
SILURIAN PERIOD.
Wigtownshire.—The possibility of glacial action so far back as the Silurian age has been suggested. In beds of slate and shales in Wigtownshire of Lower Silurian age Mr. J. Carrick Moore found beds of conglomerate of a remarkable character. The fragments generally vary from the size of one inch to a foot in diameter, but in some of the beds, boulders of 3, 4, and even 5 feet in diameter occur. There are no rocks in the neighbourhood from which any of these fragments could have been derived. The matrix of this conglomerate is sometimes a green trappean-looking sandstone of exceeding toughness, and sometimes an indurated sandstone indistinguishable from many common varieties of greywacke.[155]
Ayrshire.—Mr. James Geikie states that in Glenapp, and near Dalmellington, he found embedded in Lower Silurian strata blocks and boulders from one foot to 5 feet in diameter of gneiss, syenite, granite, &c., none of which belong to rocks of those neighbourhoods.[156] Similar cases have been found in Galway, Ireland, and at Lisbellaw, south of Enniskillen.[157] In America, Professor Dawson describes Silurian conglomerates with boulders 2 feet in diameter.
Arctic Regions.—The existence of warm inter-glacial periods during that age may be inferred from the fact that in the arctic regions we find widespread masses of Silurian limestones containing encrinites, corals, and mollusca, and other fossil remains, for an account of which see Professor Haughton’s geological account of the Arctic Archipelago appended to McClintock’s “Narrative of Arctic Discoveries.”[158]