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 16 Rocks of Lower Old Red Sandstone age dykes and sheets
<ref>A fuller treatment in some respects has been given elsewhere (Clough, Maufe and Bailey 1909, p. 640).</ref>
Early lamprophyre sheets
A fuller treatment in some respects has been given elsewhere (Clough, Maufe and Bailey 1909, p. 640).
Many more or less horizontal sheets of hornblende-vogesite and spessartite traverse the schists in that part of the district which lies east of Caolasnacon on Loch Leven. They yield very readily to erosion, and thus often give rise, indirectly, to scarps and waterfalls. Very good examples run along the hill slopes west of Allt Coire an Eòin
The most southerly example known in Sheet 53 occurs at the base of the thin tremolitic hornfels, representing the Ballachulish Limestone, 1060 yards slightly east of south of Dalness
The lamprophyre sheets are certainly of comparatively early date, for very numerous examples have been seen to be cut by the north-east dykes. They are probably earlier than even the Moor of Rannoch "Granite", since, though well developed in its vicinity, they are nowhere known to cut it. It is likely that they are of the same general age as the little appinite bosses of the last chapter, for petrographically they differ from the appinites only in their finer texture. W. B. W., E. B. B.
In agreement with the view that these lamprophyre sheets are of earlier date than most of the igneous rocks of the district, it is interesting to note that a typical example exposed in a cutting in private ground, at the east end of the Aluminium Factory
Lamprophyres, unclassed
On the river Leven, at the fall between the two main lochans a little down from the Blackwater Dam, a remarkable mass of lamprophyre occurs with distinctly foliated margin. At this point there is also a complex of porphyrite dykes which are chilled against the lamprophyre and against one another.
In the path to the north another lamprophyre is exposed with inclusions of quartz, quartzite, quartzose schist and granite. The granite is coarse and contains abundant very pink felspars. There is one large fragment of granite from which crystals have floated off at the margin into the lamprophyre magma. W. B. W.
Of other unclassed lamprophyre intrusions we may note the east-north-east dyke (S11612)
Another example is a thin north-east lamprophyre dyke (S11523)
On the north slopes of Sròn na Crèisee
Early felsite and andesite intrusions of Glen Coe
The horizontal lamprophyre sheets dealt with in the first section of this chapter are quite likely earlier than the Glen Coe lavas. The felsites and andesites now to be considered
Certain early felsites along the northern front of the Cauldron-Subsidence have already been referred to (
Other felsites of similar type occur in Garbh Bheinn
A few dykes of quartz-porphyry, felsite and hornblende-andesite cut the lavas within the cauldron. Some are traversed by the N.E. dykes, and they do not enter the Fault-Intrusion or Cruachan "Granite". Their local distribution shows that they belong to the Glen Coe centre. H. B. M.
Other examples, not shown in
Various patches of quartz-felsite and rhyolite, about 800 yd N.N.W. of the ordnance station, 2731 ft, on Beinn Ceitlein, are probably of intrusive nature, and, if so, belong to the early suite now considered. The Fault-Porphyrite chills against one of them. C. T. C.
See also south of Stob Beinn a' Chrùlaiste
Etive Swarm of north-east dykes
Two great swarms of north-east dykes are represented in
The Etive Swarm is interrupted in its centre by the Starav Granite, which, as explained in chapter 8, is of later date than the N.E. dykes. Even before reaching the margin of the Starav Granite there appears to be a somewhat sudden decrease in the number of the dykes. This relation is rather peculiar, as the diminution occurs within the Cruachan "Granite", the more marginal portions of which are cut quite freely by the dykes. A possible explanation will be offered presently.
For half a dozen miles south of the Starav Granite, in Sheet 45 (Geol.) and
Allusion has been made to the existence of multiple dykes in the Etive Swarm. The most striking example is a multiple dyke (S14410)
The example given in the last paragraph shows the difficulty of arriving at any generalisation concerning the sequence of the various types of dykes inter se. As a further illustration, one may note the behaviour of the quartz-porphyry dykes south-east of Dalness. In various places they cut into, or are chilled against, porphyrite dykes; but in other places the reverse relations have been observed. A quartz-porphyry in the River Etive half a mile east-north-east of Alltchaorunn
Two quartz-porphyry dykes cross the flinty crush-rock associated with the inner branch of the Glen Coe Boundary-Fault south-east of Dalness, without being crushed or thrown by it; and one of them can also be traced without any displacement across the outer branch on Beinn Ceitlein
Several examples of quartz-porphyry dykes cut by porphyrites might be cited from the north-eastward continuation of the Dalness district. Another relation commonly observed is the cutting of other dykes by "pock-marked" microdiorites. The pock-marks which characterise these late dykes are little pits due to the weathering out of chloritic pseudomorphs after rhombic pyroxenes. Albitised pyroxene-microdiorites are well developed in the neighbourhood of Stob Mhic Mhartuin
That there should be an irregularity in the sequence of dyke-types, and that quartz-porphyry dykes, for instance, should be later than some of the porphyrites and earlier than others, is in keeping with the evidence already given in chapter 13 regarding the relations of the dykes to the Meall Odhar Granite. It will be remembered that this granite seems to coalesce with a quartz-porphyry dyke, is cut by many porphyrite dykes, and cuts a few. C. T. C.
The injection of the dykes bears witness to a redistribution of earth-stresses, which, taking place after all subsidence of the Glen Coe block had ceased, brought about an important modification of the original outline of the cauldron amounting to an elongation normal to the direction of the dykes. The dykes have added their own width to the cross-section of the country which they traverse. This feature is brought home by a consideration of
In the River Etive, a little above Alltchaorunn
Two main features call for interpretation. The parallelism of the dykes, and the concentration with reference to the Etive centre.
The N.E. direction, so characteristic of the dyke phase, is perhaps foreshadowed in the elongation of the Etive boss and its alignment with the Glen Coe Cauldron (cf. Richey, in Sum. Prog. 1915, pp. 36, 37). Be this as it may, the parallel N.E. dykes bespeak a period when the Etive igneous centre was involved in some terrestrial readjustment affecting a much larger region. The stress as transmitted to the Etive district must have been of the nature of relative tension or, in other words, marked relief of pressure. This, in the presence of magma under suitable conditions of hydrostatic pressure, led to the formation of dykes orientated at right angles to the direction of least compression.
The fact that the dykes are not all of one epoch, but constantly cut one another with chilled edges, shows that the growth of the regional stress was maintained over a long period. The introduction of the dykes gave intermittent relief to the growing "tension."
The concentration of the Etive Swarm is easy to understand. The intrusion of the Meall Odhar Granite, intervening at an early stage of the dyke phase, and that of the Starav Granite, coming at the close of the same, afford almost a demonstration of the existence, during the whole of the dyke phase, of a large body of unconsolidated magma in the pipe extending from the Cruachan "Granite" down to the general magma basin below. This unconsolidated magma would be incapable of resisting tensional stresses, and its weakness would be a quite sufficient cause to locate the Etive Dyke-Swarm. Probably the dykes were injected from the pipe rather than from the molten reservoir beneath. C. T. C., H. B. M., E. B. B.
One further point demands explanation: we find the outlying portions of the Cruachan "Granite" cut by dykes as freely as the surrounding schists, but the inner portion, near the edge of the Starav Granite, appears for the most part to have escaped. This suggests that the unconsolidated subterranean magma, which located the Etive Swarm of dykes, existed in the form of peripheral ring-dykes, or ring-bosses, and not of great central bosses filling subterranean cauldrons. The Meall Odhar ring-dyke of granite is a case in point, for it is almost certainly connected with a north-east quartz-porphyry dyke (p. 172), which is found outside, but not inside, the partial ring. Sgòr an Fhuarain
To realise the significance of this conception, one has merely to consider what would have taken place had the regional "tensions", which led to the production of the Etive Swarm, come into being before the consolidation of that irregular ring-dyke, the Fault-Intrusion of Glen Coe. It is obvious that a swarm of dykes would have originated, extending outwards on either side from the ring of Fault-Intrusion, and that few if any of the dykes would have penetrated within the circumference of the boundary-fault. In like manner had the "tensions" been communicated to the district, when the Inner "Granite" of Ben Nevis was in its present situation and still liquid, the Ben Nevis Swarm of dykes would have been excluded from the lavas and schists surrounded by the granite. Now although the Inner "Granite" of Ben Nevis did not rise to its present position till after the intrusion of the great majority of the Ben Nevis dykes, we do find the central lavas and schists free from dykes. It is reasonable therefore to suggest that the dyke-swarms of Etive and Ben Nevis, each with its central region of discontinuity, have proceeded from ring-dykes, of which the Meall Odhar Granite may be taken as a type.
In chapter 14 Maufe refers the immunity of the central schists and lavas of Ben Nevis to another cause (p. 184), but his account was written before the explanation outlined above had been thought of, and there was no subsequent opportunity for reconsideration. The ring-dyke theory of the location of centrally discontinuous dyke-swarms has a further application in Ben Nevis: it satisfactorily accounts for the observation that the few dykes of the swarm which are later than the Inner "Granite" do not enter beyond its marginal portions. E. B. B.
Ben Nevis Swarm of north-east dykes
The Ben Nevis Swarm of dykes is so closely comparable with the Etive Swarm that we need not enter into detail in regard to it (
The relations of the dykes to the Outer and Inner "Granites" of Ben Nevis, and to the lavas and underlying schists which form the central portion of the mountain, have already been discussed in chapter 14. Anderson's discovery in Sheet 62 (Geol.) of early members of the swarm forming a small group running east-north-east and cut off by the Outer "Granite" is a welcome addition to our knowledge (p. 179) since the first edition of this memoir appeared. The explanations offered above in regard to the origin of the Etive dykes are equally applicable in the present instance. H. B. M.
Dykes north-west of Loch Linnhe
North-west of Loch Linnhe there are various dykes which probably belong to the Lower Old Red Sandstone period. Notable among them are certain broad felsite dykes well developed in the vicinity of Glen Tarbert
These felsite dykes range up to about 20 ft in thickness, and as they weather with a terra-cotta hue they often make conspicuous objects. Both in the field and under the microscope they recall the acid intrusions of the Old Red Sandstone rather than of the Tertiary period. They freely cut the Strontian "Granite" in Sheet 52 (Geol.), and also other minor masses of plutonic rock with which they happen to come in contact. E. B. B.