Bailey, E.B. and Maufe, H.B. 1960. The geology of Ben Nevis and Glen Coe and the surrounding country. 2nd. Revised Edition. Edinburgh: HMSO
Chapter 14 Rocks of Lower Old Red Sandstone age Ben Nevis
Introduction
In the present chapter the term "granite" between inverted commas will be employed, once again, in the popular sense to include both granite and quartz-diorite (also trondhjemite), especially in relation to the two big units shown as Outer Granite and Inner Granite in
The Ben Nevis massif is geologically divisible into three well-defined concentric zones
- A discontinuous, complex, outer ring, known as the Outer "Granite", steeply bounded externally against contact-altered schists. This Outer "Granite" has three successively younger non-porphyritic Subzones, numbered 1–3 in
(Figure 31) ; all three are as a rule quartz-diorite and carry augite. Then follows a still younger, porphyritic Subzone 4 which is a medium-grained pink granite with large phenocrysts of perthitic orthoclase. - A continuous inner ring, known as the Inner "Granite", with steep intrusive exterior and interior margins. This is of later date than the Outer "Granite". Rather strangely, though more acid and poorer in ferromagnesian minerals than the latter, it is richer in plagioclase, and much of it is now classed as trondhjemite. It is further distinguished by its finer and more even texture. It does not chill at its outer margin against Zone 1, but along its interior margin against Zone 3 it rapidly passes into rhyolite or andesite with vertical, streaky flow-structure. Recent re-examination has shown that this rhyolite is, in some cases at least, separated from the rocks of Zone 3 by a thin layer of flinty crush-rock (p. 162).
- A central core, consisting of some 2000 ft of volcanic rocks, and an unknown thickness of underlying schists; the volcanic rocks are hornblende-andesite lavas, with a fair proportion of agglomerate; a few thin bands of associated sediment are also found, and the whole mass is disposed in a basin with steeply tilted margins. At two localities along the edge of the basin underlying schists are exposed to view, in one case forming a strip 200 yards long. They are phyllites, presumably belonging to the Leven Schists though their regional metamorphism is of much lower grade than that of the Leven Schists outside the igneous complex (p. 72).
A glance at
The tourist path leading from Achintee
From the number of blocks showing a brecciated structure on their weathered surfaces it might be thought that agglomerates constituted a large part of the volcanic pile. A closer examination reveals the fact that many of the apparent agglomerates are andesites, affected by flow-brecciation. These flow-breccias are particularly common in the upper portions of lavas. They may be conveniently studied in the small crags lying to the right of the path on reaching the summit plateau, and also around the cairn on that Càrn Dearg which lies north-west of the summit.
A more detailed account of the various geological units of the hill will now be given in reverse order.
Volcanic pile
It is perhaps possible to separate two varieties among the hornblende-andesite lavas, one with abundant biotite, in addition to hornblende, the other with pseudomorphs, which probably represent a rhombic pyroxene. For the rest they exhibit only those small variations in composition and texture, which enable one to separate flow from flow but are otherwise of no particular interest.
The unstratified masses of agglomerate, which frequently intervene between the lavas, consist of angular blocks of hornblende-andesite of all sizes up to 4 feet in length. Mixed with these are blocks of red porphyritic felsite and occasional pebbles of quartzite and lumps of phyllite. It is often a matter of great difficulty to separate these compacted agglomerates from the lavas that show brecciform structure, and include xenoliths. Very fine exposures of agglomerate are afforded in the glaciated crags towards the head of Allt a' Mhuilinn
The finer-grained parts of the agglomerate may show a certain amount of stratification, and pass gradually into the coarse-grained sediments associated with them. No tuffs with typical ash-structure have been discovered on Ben Nevis. Such rocks are indeed very rare in the related volcanic series of Lorne and Glen Coe.
The sedimentary rocks accompanying the extrusive series include green sandy shales, dark shales with slightly calcareous bands, and a conglomerate composed chiefly of quartzite pebbles. These rocks, which are present in insignificant proportions, closely resemble the sediments intercalated in the volcanic series of Glen Coe, though on Ben Nevis no fossils have as yet been obtained.
It was thought by some early observers that the volcanic pile reposes upon the surrounding "granite". As a matter of fact the Inner "Granite" is bounded by a vertical chilled margin against the volcanic group — a relation especially well seen in the ridge at the head of Allt a' Mhuilinn
We have already anticipated the question: On what foundation does the volcanic series rest, if not upon "granite" ? It is seen at two places resting unconformably upon the Highland schists in just the same manner as do the extrusive rocks of Lorne and Glen Coe. The larger and clearer exposure illustrating this relation is situated in Allt a' Mhuilinn
The basement beds are traceable at intervals for more than half a mile along the eastern side of the central massif, and are then cut out in both directions by the bounding wall of "granite". It is important to note that along the whole line the beds are dipping steeply inwards towards the centre of the volcanic mass. In one section, indeed, there appears to be a slight inversion. In places, too, the shales are contorted, the sharp folds being frequently fractured, and their limbs displaced. In Coire Gamhnean
Inner "Granite"
The edge, which the Inner "Granite" of Ben Nevis presents to the central volcanic massif, has already been described as "chilled". The result is a marginal zone of fine-grained rhyolite, with small, scattered phenocrysts of felspar and biotite, and with a strong, streaky flow-structure parallel to the vertical junction, along which a seam of flinty crush-rock is developed in (S14044)
The separation of the Inner and Outer "Granites" is perfectly definite. In Allt Daim
That the interval of time which separated the intrusion of the Inner "Granite" from that of the Outer was considerable is shown by the fact that the main phase of dyke injection intervened. The Outer "Granite" is freely cut by porphyritic and lamprophyric dykes which show no sign of falling off in numbers as one proceeds inwards into the "granitic" complex, until, suddenly, on reaching the Inner "Granite", scarcely a dyke is to be found. As a matter of fact only three such dykes have been detected in the Inner Granite — all of them in or close to Allt Daim
Strong as this evidence is, it is not by itself quite conclusive: the three dykes found within the Inner "Granite" all occur close to the margin so that it looks as though the Inner "Granite" may have presented special difficulties to dyke intrusion. Can impenetrability alone account for the absence from the Inner "Granite" of the great swarm of dykes which intersect the Outer ? Fortunately this doubt can be silenced, for in five clear instances the Inner "Granite" is seen cutting right across dykes which traverse the Outer; and in a great number of cases, where bare junctions are not exposed, dykes can be traced so close to the margin that the only feasible interpretation is that they are truncated by it. The five crucial examples are located as follows:
Two in gullies traversing the crags above Allt Daim
Another, 400 yards farther S.S.E. along the same line of crags (S14048a)
Two in Allt Coire Gaimhnean
To this we may add that many of the dykes which cut the Outer "Granite" show contact-alteration under the microscope.
The margin between the Inner and Outer "Granites" is inclined very steeply outwards.
Outer "Granite"
Anderson (1935b) has described and illustrated by appropriate maps the distribution and behaviour of the four Subzones of the Outer "Granite". Here we need only briefly summarise his results. The three outer non-porphyritic Subzones, 1–3 of
Subzone 4 is continuous except for 3½ miles round the south-east end of the Inner "Granite" which here comes directly against external schists.
Subzone 3 is absent for an additional mile in the south-west, south of where it reaches the River Nevis
Subzones 2 and 1 are much less continuous, but they are present in many places, almost always external to Subzone 3; and, if both occur together, as is usual, Subzone 1 is almost always external to Subzone 2. The only important exception is in the northernmost protrusion of the piuton where an outcrop of Subzone 1 is, according to Anderson, bisected by an east-west band of Subzone 2 with central patches of Subzone 3.
Again according to Anderson, the full succession of subzones is seen in Allt a' Mhuilinn
In
The steepness of the margin of the Outer "Granite" as a whole against the schists is visible in many sections around the edge of the complex. On a large scale it is patent from an examination of a contoured map showing the "granite" boundary.
General conclusions
It is obvious, from the foregoing descriptions, that the structure of Ben Nevis admits of an interpretation similar to that applied, in the two preceding chapters, to the Glen Coe and Etive igneous centres.
The Outer "Granite" with its steep walls may be conceived as filling the void created by the gravitational sinking of a subterranean block into underlying magma (
The main phase of dyke injection ensued (p. 202), and after it further subsidence, which, confined to the central area, admitted in complementary fashion the uprise of the Inner "Granite".
Then a subaerial cauldron-subsidence developed, for the roof of the subterranean cauldron gave way, and a block of schists, with its burden of lavas, subsided into still liquid Inner "Granite". The motion developed a streaky flow-structure in the magma, which itself became chilled against the cool descending mass. The latter, during its subsidence, buckled into its basin shape by reason of the friction on its walls; and its cracked margin, on coming in contact with the magma, was penetrated to a slight extent by veins of granite. The sinking block in its descent must have dropped over 1500 feet. We are thus led to the conclusion that the lavas of Ben Nevis, in spite of their great altitude, owe their preservation, like those of Glen Coe, to subsidence. Erosion has cut relatively deeper at Ben Nevis than at Glen Coe, and has cleared away the fringe of fault-intrusion, which, analogy leads us to expect, rose from the reservoir of liquid Inner "Granite" more or less completely to surround the sinking mass at higher levels.
The local history seems to have closed with the injection of a few more dykes which pierce the margin of the Inner "Granite".
A point which is not at all clear, is the relative age of the volcanic series and the Outer "Granite". By analogy with other areas we may suppose that the volcanic rocks were extruded first. If this were so, it is perhaps remarkable that not a single dyke has been found cutting the volcanic rocks. At the same time the schists lying beneath the latter are equally free from dykes, though their outcrop runs at right angles to the trend of the dykes, and is sufficiently long to have included several of them if spaced at regular intervals. We can surmise either that the volcanic mass, in its original position, was above the level at which dykes were injected from the subterranean source, or perhaps that it was sheltered by some such mechanism as is discussed later on p. 201.
The interpretation given above of the development of the Ben Nevis Pluton is hypothetical except in regard to the unequivocal subsidence of the central cylinder of schist and lava. There is indeed a suggestion that outward magmatic push may have been a co-operating factor in making room for the pluton. The Glen Nevis outcrop of Ballachulish Limestone is cut out for a short space by the "granite" margin, but it soon reappears in Sheet 62 (cf.
- a downward sag of the surrounding schists connected with subsidence of a central block,
- an outward magmatic push, or possibly
- a combination of these two causes.
Quite another point is made by Anderson who points out that the coarse non-porphyritic Subzone 3 of the Outer "Granite" is seen through a vertical range of 3900 feet from where it is washed by the River Nevis