Bailey, et al. 1924. Tertiary and Post-Tertiary geology of Mull, Loch Aline, and Oban (a description of parts of sheets 43, 44, 51, and 52 of the geological map). HMSO [for Geological Survey]
Chapter 28 Late Basic Cone-Sheets
Introduction
The Late Basic Cone-Sheets are lettered tI on the one-inch Map, Sheet 44: t because Beinn Talaidh is virtually built of them; and I because they are steeply inclined towards a centre, or series of centres, on the line C1 C2,
No better introduction to the Late Basic Cone-Sheets could be desired than is afforded in the Gaodhail River, above the track which leads up Glen Forsa from the Sound of Mull road, east of Salen. An accurately measured section is illustrated in
The measured section of
Corra-bheinn and Cruachan Dearg, on the other side of the Mull axis of symmetry, repeat many of the conditions of Beinn Talaidh and the Gaodhail River. It has been stated in Chapter 22 that the Corra-bheinn Gabbro, for 100 or 200 yds. inwards from its southern and western margins, is practically free from cone-sheets, except where such are included as xenoliths. Farther in, cone-sheets of Lath Basic types begin to appear, at first sparsely, but afterwards more abundantly and in thicker belts, until, at the summit of Corra-bheinn, they form more than half the rock and make up multiple sheets 30 or 40 yds. wide at the outcrop. Even here, they have not reached their full development, for, on Cruachan Dearg, there is evidence for a thickness of at least 1000 ft. of cone-sheets with only here and there a thin intercalated wedge of the gabbro country-rock still happily preserved. Where the rock, just south-west of the cairn, is quite bare, we can never pass a greater thickness of rock than 8 or 9 ft. without coming to a chilled margin; but it is possible that many of these margins belong to thin sheets which have split thicker ones. (C.T.O.) Further information will now be considered under three headings —Distribution, Time-Relations, and Petrology.
Distribution
The one-inch Map, owing to its small scale, has to indicate the distribution of the Late Basic Cone-Sheets in a somewhat diagrammatic fashion. Where lenticles of country-rock are shown on this Map in the midst of a ground-colour of Late Basic Cone-Sheets, one must realize that the lenticles are generally much smaller than represented, and at the same time much more numerous. Apart from size and number, as little as possible has been sacrificed; but, in certain cases, it has been found impracticable to convey on the one-inch Map any idea of the tune-relations of country-rock to associated. Late Basic Cone-Sheets. For instance, near Gaodhail Cottage, in Glen Forsa, southwards to the tributary Allt nan Clàr, an important intermediate cone-sheet (aI) is shown as having a fairly continuous outcrop: in point of fact, this acid sheet, wherever seen, is cut into thin slices separated by Late Basic Cone- Sheets. E.B.B.
As a first approximation, it may be stated that the assemblage-outcrop of the Late Basic Cone-Sheets centres on the head of Loch Bà, (C2 of
The main gaps in the assemblage-outcrop are due to interruption by later intrusions, and, as such, will be dealt with incidentally in the sequel. In Glen More, above Ishriff, there is evidence of a fairly important partial gap of an original character. There are quite considerable areas of basalt-lava in this district (B and pB,
Time-relations
Enough has been stated, in the present and foregoing chapters (21, and 22), to indicate a time-scale running as follows: (1) Early Basic Cone-Sheets; (2) Corra-bheinn Gabbro; (3) Late Basic Cone-Sheets.
The injection of Late Basic Cone-Sheets continued intermittently through a very long period, in fact, nearly to the close of igneous activity. Thus it happens in several cases that an intrusion belonging to a different category may cut some of the Late Basic Cone-Sheets, and in turn be cut by others. The quartz-Gabbro of Coir' a' Mhàim (south-east of Corra-bheinn) supplied the first-recognized example of this, which is now accepted as a commonplace of Central Mull. (C.T.C)
It has been pointed out that, in an approximate sense, the Early Basic Cone-Sheets centre about C1 of
1. A Ring-Dyke of quartz-gabbro, with subordinate associated granophyre, runs from the east slope of Beinn Talaidh through Loch Sguabain, in Glen More (1 of
2. Just inside the Glen More Ring-Dyke, lies the Ishriff Ring-Dyke, composed of granophyre. Throughout most of its course, the Ishriff Ring-Dyke cuts the great majority of the Late Basic Cone-Sheets which it encounters; but where it crosses Maòl nam Fiadh (2,
In the light of these two examples, it is apparent how carefully one has to proceed in matters of this kind. Thus, half-way between Glen More and Beinn Chàisgidle, Late Basic-Cone-Sheets cut very freely through a whole series of ring-dykes. It would be unsafe to infer from this that the Ring-Dykes of Beinn Chàisgidle are earlier than those of Glen More, for it is quite probable that the Cone-Sheets themselves are of materially different dates in the two districts. Again, a first glance at the one-inch Map might suggest a comparison between the relative immunity from cone-sheets of the ring-dykes of the Glen More district with that of the Knock and Beinn a' Ghràig Granophyres, which belong to the ring-dyke system as developed near the foot of Loch Bà, (Chapter 32). But any such comparison is misleading. The Glen More and Ishriff Ring-Dykes are, in all probability, separated from the Knock and Beinn a' Ghràig Ring-Dykes by an interval of time that admitted of extensive cone-sheet injections. As already pointed out, what is taken as a continuation of the Glen More Ring-Dyke through Tarr na h-tramha is freely cut by Late Basic Cone-Sheets in its western part. In the same neighbourhood, the Beinn a' Ghritig Granophyre cuts every sheet it encounters.
The manner in which the Beinn a' Ghràig and Knock Granophyres cut through great numbers of Late Basic Cone-Sheets will be treated in greater detail in Chapter 32. All that need be emphasized at this juncture is that apparently one at least of these granophyres was followed by a minor revival of cone-sheet injection (p. 345). J.E.R.
In comparing the dates of ring-dykes and cone-sheets, it is probably safe to refer the Glen More and Ishriff Ring-Dykes of Chapter 29 to the latter part of the first half of the Late Basic Cone-Sheet period, and the Knock and Beinn a' Ghràig Ring-Dykes of Chapter 32 to a similar stage of the second half of the same period. The wonderfully continuous felsite of the Loch Bà Ring-Dyke of Chapter 32, so far as can be determined, is later than all the cone-sheets of Mull. E.B.B., J.E.R.
Petrology
The Late Basic Cone-Sheets may be divided petrographically into two main types, namely, the quartz-dolerites and tholeiites that compose the greater part of Beinn Talaidh, and the variolites and tachylytes best seen in Cruachan Dearg. These types are often intimately associated in the field, and are sometimes linked by examples of a transitional character. Other variants from the normal representatives have affinities with such types as the craignurites (p. 227), leidleites (p. 281), and certain central types of lava (Chapter 10).
Situated well within the pneumatolytic zone of Central Mull (
Talaidh type of quartz-dolerite
(Anal. VIII.;
The most prevalent variety of Late Basic Cone Sheet is a moderately basic rock of quartz-dolerite affinities (S18467)
For the purposes of description, it will be convenient, as well as logical, to consider the mineralogical and structural features of the type in two sections—one dealing with the coarser and earlier crystalline constituents, and the other with the fine-grained acid mesostasis. Further, we shall take for the basis of our description the comparatively unaltered representatives of the type, that occur mainly on Cruachan Dearg, and to a less extent in the Gaodhail River.
Early constituents
Most of the augite appears to have separated from the magma during the period occupied by the crystallization of the relatively basic plagioclase, and may be in hypidiomorphic, ophitic, and seemingly eutectic, relationship with the latter within the same field of view. It is usually of a pale brownish tint, but occasionally shows a lilac tinge and slight pleochroism indicative of the presence of titanium.
The dominant type of crystallization of the augite is columnar. The columns are usually a little less than a millimetre in length and a fifth of a millimetre in breadth, and show a general lack of well-defined crystal-faces other than those of the prism-zone. They are elongated parallel to the C axis, and thus show traces of the prismatic cleavages parallel to their length. In cross-section, they frequently have a roughly octagonal outline due to the somewhat equal development of the prisms and pinacoids. They have the peculiarity of almost always carrying moderately large, and frequently well-formed, crystals of magnetite in their peripheral portions—a peculiarity also met with among the quartz-dolerites of West Lothian.<ref>J. D. Falconer, Igneous Geology of the Bathgate and Linlithgow Hills, Trans. Roy. Soc. Edin., vol. xlv., 1908, Pl. II., Fig. 2, p. 150.</ref>
Frequently, the crystals are simply twinned parallel to the orthopinacoid, and, almost invariably, show traces of salitic striation. This striation sometimes occurs throughout the crystals, but, at other times, is developed locally, more particularly at the crystal-borders and in the neighbourhood of the twin composition-plane.
A character of these columnar crystals, as in the acicular augites of the craignurites (p. 226), is the occurrence of a slender central rod of serpentinous material that presumably replaces original rhombic pyroxene or enstatite-augite.
As commonly happens with columnar augites, of which the crystallization from a sub-basic magma was accompanied by a marked separation of an acid residuum, the crystals are sometimes curved and otherwise distorted. This is due to intercrystal pressure through the movement or withdrawal of the liquid mesostasis from the immediate neighbourhood. Similar curving of columnar augites has been noted by us in the less basic portions of the differentiated mass of Cruach Choireadail (p. 325), and was described and figured by Dr. Falconer<ref>J. D. Falconer, op. cit., p. 140, and Pl. II., Fig 3</ref> from the quartz-dolerites of Linlithgow.
In association with felspar, the columnar augites occasionally take on a stellate grouping, both augite and felspar crystals radiating from a common centre. This would appear to be the first stage of a structure which is highly characteristic of certain varieties of the Talaidh Sheets. In such rocks, the augite, commencing from a centre, spreads out sectorially by a continuous branching of several stocks in a cervicorn (antler-like) growth. Between crossed-nicols, it appears that this structure is not that of an ophitic individual with simultaneous extinction of its component parts, but that each stock has its own orientation, and that the extension of each branch is in the general direction of the prismatic zone-axis. In some of the fine-grained Talaidh Sheets that have tholeiitic affinities, this cervicorn structure of the augite is most conspicuously developed (S14810)
The main felspar of these rocks builds columnar once-twinned, somewhat narrow crystals, that frequently attain greater lengths than the columnar augites with which they are associated. Often, they adopt a stellate grouping, and show a remarkable constricted development of their initial portions.
The extinctions vary somewhat from their central to marginal parts, and indicate a range of composition from acid labradorite, through andesine, to oligoclase. Like the columnar augites, they have frequently suffered deformation and have become curved (S16558)
Cervicorn association of felspar and augite most commonly occurs within the limits of a single felspar-crystal of somewhat tabular form, and may possibly represent a eutectic crystallization. Less frequently, however, the augite growths may pass from one individual felspar to another, and thus indicate the independent and earlier crystallization of the pyroxene.
Iron-ore is usually an abundant constituent. That, which occurs in intimate association with the columnar augite, appears from its form to be either magnetite or titanomagnetite; but, scattered indiscriminately through the rock, are moderately large grains and patches which, from their manner of alteration, seem to be ilmenite.
Mesostasis
The mesostasis is mainly collected into well-defined areas and varies considerably in amount. It appears as a very fine-grained crystalline mass, usually turbid, characterized by the acicular habit of its ferromagnesian constituent, and, to a less extent, of its felspar. It is composed of acicular augite and long narrow crystals of oligoclase in a somewhat chloritized microcrystalline matrix of alkali-felspar and quartz. Occasionally, quartz-patches reach moderately large dimensoins, and, sometimes, it is possible to detect a granophyric relation between quartz and alkali-felspar in the finer portions of the matrix. Apatite, as slender needles, is frequently abundant (S14806)
Albitization and other secondary changes
As was stated above, these rocks of quartz-dolerite character have the inherent faculty of auto-albitization which they exercise to a variable degree. Where the acid residuum (mesostasis) is in contact with the earlier products of consolidation, it has frequently exerted upon them a local corrosive action. The original relatively basic felspars of the rock have been eaten into and replaced by a fresh growth of felspar of more alkaline character, and the columnar augites have developed on their exposed surfaces a fringe of fibrous green hornblende. These replacements may, in extreme cases, extend throughout the respective crystals.
Passing now to the more general type of alteration, we find it fairly well exemplified by sheets of Talaidh Type in Cruachan Dearg (S16561)
Variolitic rocks of Cruachan Dearg
A series of fine-textured more or less tachylytic sheets, occurring on Cruachan Dearg, and, to a more limited extent, at other localities, possess an extremely beautiful variolitic structure
These variolitic rocks consist of slender radiating and branching prismatic crystals of augite, sometimes showing titaniferous colouration, joined together transversely by numerous short rods of magnetite, and set in a colourless glassy matrix that makes but a small proportion of the rock. This base has sometimes denitrified (S16553)
With the development of a cervicorn, rather than a delicate variolitic, structure on the part of the augite, and an increase in the number of recognizable felspar-crystals, these rocks pass over into variolitic and tholeiitic varieties of the Talaidh Type. In all these transitional varieties (S16408)
A word may be said in conclusion concerning a beautiful variant of the variolitic type collected from the Gaodhail River (S14805)