MacDonald, J. G. and Heriott, A. (Eds.) 1983. Macgregor’s Guide to the Geology of Arran. Geological Society of Glasgow. 2024 note: Most grid references have been recently estimated. They do not occur in the original publication.
5 Road logs
For the benefit and guidance of those who may wish, or even prefer, to become acquainted with Arran's geology by visiting and examining such rocks as are to be seen by the roadside, or within easy walking distance therefrom, the following "road logs" are offered. Drivers who do not know the island must be warned that parking, even for short periods, is often difficult or even not really feasible without creating dangerous conditions. Where appropriate, references to localities mentioned in Part 4 (the Descriptive Itineraries) are given. Parking space is usually available at the numbered localities given (see
Road Log No. 1: Brodick — The String — Blackwaterfoot — Pirnmill — Lochranza — Corrie — Brodick (A841 — B880 — A841)
1. The shore west of the ferry terminal provides good exposures of the Brodick Beds, these being cut by several dolerite dykes showing the two small areas of brecciation described by Tyrrell as "cryptovolcanic" (Excursion 1, locality 1). The larger of the latter lies near H.W.M. close to a roadside shelter.
2. With permission the pitchstone at the old school
3. On the south side of the road at
Overlooking the summit of the road on its south side is a prominent crag formed by crushed, sheared and partly amphibolitised gabbro which locally is seen to rest on baked Old Red Sandstone and to be cut by veins and dykes of granophyre and aplite.
4. At the bridge over the Allt nan Calaman
5. At Glenloig farm
From the end of the road to Machrie, at a remarkable old pillar box
6. The above granite can be examined on the banks of the Allt nan Dris (NR 931 336; Excursion 14a, locality 1).
Southwards from Ballymichael the road runs just to the east of the largest area of alluvial deposits on the island. These are the marine alluvia of the High Lateglacial Raised Beach (the 100 Foot Raised Beach of the I. G.S. maps) covered in part by more recent fresh water alluvium.
7. At Blackwaterfoot the felsite, and other rocks mentioned in Excursion 13 (locality 9) can be examined conveniently close to the point at which the road turns north. En route to Machrie the granite hills of the northern part of the island come into view with Beinn Bharrain (721 m) in the west followed eastwards by the isolated and lower summit of Sail Chalmadale (481 m).
8. On the shore and to the north of the road junction at Machrie steeply dipping sandstones and conglomerates are cut by dykes and sill-like intrusions of dolerite, felsite, porphyry and pitch-stone, some of which are exposed only at low water. The steep dip of the sediments is particularly well seen in the raised beach cliff.
The New Red Sandstone can be distinguished from the Upper Old Red Sandstone by the presence of small pieces of agate.
9. Northwards, towards Dougrie Lodge, conglomerate and sandstone of the Lower Old Red Sandstone are well seen both on the shore and in the raised beach cliff.
The shore south of Ballykine farm
Note: A graded bed is a sedimentary unit relatively coarse in grain size at its base and becoming progressively finer towards its top. Such a unit, or better, a succession of such units is of great value in determining the stratigraphical order in folded metamorphic rocks.
10. Just south of Imachar Point a large dyke of quartz-dolerite (of late Carboniferous age) cuts the Dalradian schists on the shore and in the raised beach. This intrusion is the most southerly known representative in Scotland of thick, generally east-west trending, tholeiitic dykes which extend in a zone northwards as far as Aberdeenshire. Similar dykes are associated with the Whin Sill of the north of England.
Rather less than 1 km north of this dyke and at the remains of a fence
11. At Pirnmill gritty schists, dipping rather steeply westwards, are readily examined. For details of the rock types see Excursion 9 (locality 17) and Excursion 10 (localities 19, 22 and 23). Although gritty schists (formed from coarse sandstones and fine conglomerates which have suffered mechanical deformation and some chemical reconstitution) predominate, the shore section includes beds of finer grained material, probably originally shales, in which metamorphism is more marked. In these beds white mica gives the foliation planes a glossy appearance, while chlorite imparts a greenish colour to some of the rocks.
12. The Catacol Burn
13. As the road is followed from Catacol to Lochranza it can be seen that the dip of the schists, here mainly gritty, changes from northerly to southeasterly as the axis of the fold, known as the Catacol Synform, is crossed (Excursion 10, locality 29; fig. 13).
14. The car park at North Sannox Bridge
From Sannox southwards to Brodick Old Quay, the shore, and in places the adjacent raised beach cliffs, allow ready examination of, successively, the upper part of the old Red Sandstone (Excursion 6, locality 22; Excursion 4, localities 1–3); the Carboniferous succession in this part of the island (Excursion 4, localities 4–12); the Corrie Sandstone facies of the Brodick beds intruded by dykes which are especially numerous opposite Corrie Terraces
It is suggested that the following parts of the Corrie shore section are likely to prove of most interest to the visitor who is short of time.
- The conglomerates, cornstones. volcanic agglomerate etc.. at the Upper Old Red Sandstone/Lower Carboniferous junction (NS 023 441; Excursion 4, localities 3 and 4).
- The olivine basalts, with phenocrysts of augite and olivine, north of the school. Weathering into spherical masses is shown in these rocks.
- The Corrie Limestone, seen in mines west of the road opposite the harbour. For details and a warning which should be heeded see Excursion 4 (locality 8).
- The sandstones, thin limestones and associated strata a little north of the Corrie Hotel. These rocks are of Carboniferous Limestone age.
- In the little bay just south of the hotel, sandstones, fireclays and shales belonging to the Upper Carboniferous outcrop. Fossil plants and fresh-water "mussels" are locally present.
- The unconformable junction of the dune-bedded Corrie Sandstone (brick red) on Upper Carboniferous sandstone (whitish, with contorted bedding) occurs a little south of the Corrie Hotel
[NS 026 431] . A thin sheet of basalt cuts the Carboniferous a little below the unconformity.
Road Log No. 2: Brodick — Lamlash — Whiting Bay — Kildonan — Bennecarrigan (A841) returning to Lamlash via the Ross Road (unclassified)
En route to the summit 3 km south of the ferry terminal, red sandstones and boulder clay are commonly exposed on the east side of the road. Dykes can also be seen, e.g. just south of the Corrygills road (Excursion 3, locality 1).
15. At the summit
16. Between Kingscross Bridge
17. Especially at low water the shore at the north end of Whiting Bay
18. (with care) Creag Dhubh
19. A short distance south of the houses at Largybeg variegated manly sediments (which have yielded microfossils of Triassic age) are cut by a rather irregular sill of dark, fine-grained quartz-dolerite. Above lies the rudely columnar Dippin sheet of coarse analcime-olivine-dolerite. This rock is exposed in two small roadside quarries near the 12 mile stone. In both quarries the sheet is cut by dolerite dykes.
By taking the unclassified road to Kildonan part of the Arran dyke swarm is readily seen, especially at low tide. In this area the dykes run mainly NNW—SSE and they vary greatly in width.
20. A particularly massive dyke (of crinanite) occurs near the point
En route past Auchenhew look out for Auchenhew Hill and Levencorroch Hill, lying to the north of the road. They are capped by a dolerite sill which has been cut through by a deeply incised stream, the Levencorroch Burn.
21. Close to the junction of the private road to Craigdhu farm with the main road
The main road is now followed via Shannochie and Lagg to the south end of the Ross Road at the church
Rather more than a mile north of the church in a quarry
Almost on the summit of the road and on its northwest side is a small quarry in which an "igneous breccia" composed of angular fragments of basic rocks are included in a matrix of pale-weathering silicic rock. Tyrrell (1928, p. 140) has sketched a specimen from this locality. Please do not hammer here: loose material can be readily had from the adjacent hillside.
In the vicinity of the 8 mile stone
22. The picnic area within Forestry Commission ground a short distance west of Croc is close to the eastern margin of the Monamore analcime-olivine-dolerite intrusion. A traverse of the Monamore Burn shows highly-baked conglomerate followed upstream by the intrusion which is cut by several dolerite dykes and includes screens of sandstone. At the remains of an old footbridge there is a small body of quartz-felsite. Farther upstream a much larger body of granophyric felsite occupies the banks and bed of the burn. The rock of the main intrusion has smooth, rounded surfaces in which pot holes have been formed.
Intrusions of felsite and pitchstone are to be seen cutting sandstone in the Monamore Burn almost opposite the road to Glenkiln (Glenkill on older maps).