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 1 Introduction
Place names are often difficult to decipher on the Geological Survey one-inch-to the-mile map, Sheet 53. Accordingly all those that are used in this memoir are included in the Memoir index along with their National Grid References, the interpretation of which is explained at the bottom of the 3rd Edition map of 1948<ref>National Grid References with similar interpretation are also given in the index for several localities outside sheet 53.</ref>. Contours have suffered even more than place names in the preparation of Sheet 53; while two very important, comparatively recent roads, one along the south shore of Loch Leven to Kinlochleven, the other through Glen Coe, have not been inserted. The Seventh Series edition of the Ordnance Survey one-inch map remedies these failings. Sheet 46 of this Seventh Series covers the western part of Sheet 53 (Geological), as far as a N.-S. line about a mile east of Fort William, and Sheet 47 covers the remainder. Together these Seventh Series sheets extend well beyond the boundaries of Geological Sheet 53. There is also an Ordnance Survey one-inch Tourist Map of Lorn and Lochaber, compiled from these and adjacent Seventh Series Sheets, which covers the whole area of Sheet 53 (Geological). Attention may also be directed to
Another difficulty arises in regard to the name Ballachulish, employed repeatedly in the sequel. The Gaelic means "distributed township of the narrows". Thus Sheet 53 (Geological) and Ordnance Survey 7th Series Sheet 46 show North Ballachulish
Sheet 53 (Geol.) is divided into two parts by Loch Linnhe running north-east and south-west. The portion of the district lying south-east of Loch Linnhe, and north of Loch Leven, and of the River Leven which drains into the latter, belongs to Inverness-shire. All the rest falls to Argyllshire.
The main centres of population are Fort William, East and West Laroch
The slate quarries of Ballachulish have been worked for generations, and have a great name in Scotland. Other mineral products include granite, quartzite and dolomite. The rise of Kinlochleven is a notable development of the last fifty years. An important aluminium factory has been established here at the head of Loch Leven in the heart of the wild, romantic scenery of the district "twixt Ben Nevis and Glen Coe". It derives its water-power from the great Blackwater Reservoir
Physiography
The following account substantially reproduces what was published in the first edition of this memoir, which itself expanded a preliminary statement in the Proceedings of the Geologists' Association (Bailey 1911). The stock of interpretative ideas from which selection was made, coming fifty years ago, was very much the same as it is today. Some of the conclusions reached were debatable then and are so still. On p. 13 attention will be directed to contributions that have appeared in the interval.
The district is a much dissected portion of the main Highland plateau (cf. Geikie 1901, chap. 7), with a summit-level east of Loch Linnhe of about 3000 ft. Ben Nevis, 4406 ft high, and several other massifs, such as Bidean nam Bian
In the vicinity of Loch Linnhe the eastern segment of the main high-level plateau merges southwards into the much lower plateau of Lorne, to which the island of Shuna
Archibald Geikie has repeatedly drawn attention to the fact that the drainage system traversing the high-level plateau is of later date than the Tertiary volcanic outbursts of the Hebrides. The present district furnishes a good illustration of this, for many of its valleys, such as Glen Tarbert
Structure-guided through-valleys
Through-valleys and hanging valleys are strikingly represented in the drainage system. Some of the through-valleys have clearly been determined by the structure or grain of the country; while others, so far as one can judge, are essentially independent of it. Of the first type the best illustration is the valley of Loch Linnhe, which lies along the shatter-belt'<ref>The term, shatter-belt, is adopted from J. E. Marr, whose Presidential Address, dealing with ' The influence of the geological structure of English Lakeland upon its present features ' (1906, pp. cii — cxxiii), materially assisted in the development of the conceptions set forth in this chapter. Marr, in later years, came to regard glacial erosion as of more importance than when he delivered this address, but many of his conclusions remain unaffected by this change of opinion.</ref> of the Great Glen, a continuous feature traversing Scotland from side to side; another shatter-belt valley is that of Loch Leven and Loch-Eilde Mòr; and yet another holds the upper part of Loch Etive
It must not be imagined, of course, that structurally determined valleys are necessarily through-valleys maintaining their individuality for long distances at a time. In some cases the influence of structure can only be recognised for a comparatively short interval. Thus the river Nevis, above the entrance of Allt Coire na Gabhalach
It is impossible to pass without reference an important book by J. W. Gregory, published (1913) since the present chapter, as first written, was almost complete. Gregory's theme is the origin of fiords, and he includes Loch Linnhe and Loch Leven as characteristic examples of the class. His discussion is wide, and embraces the main topics dealt with in this chapter. In many instances his arguments and conclusions agree with those set forth below, and they are illustrated with a wealth of detail drawn from other lands, which gives them an additional value. In one important particular, however, Gregory's treatment differs from that adopted here, for he attributes a more direct share to earth-movement in the shaping of Scotland, especially the West Highland coast-line. A similar interpretation has been advocated for years in connection with the Norwegian fiords by de Geer and other Scandinavian geologists.
The earth-movements to which Gregory appeals are supposed to have accompanied the foundering of the North Atlantic Ocean in late Miocene or early Pliocene times. Some few depressions as the Minch, inside of the Outer Hebrides, and the Midland Valley, south-east of the Highlands,<ref>Gregory, by mistake, ascribed this view to the writer (1913, p. 175).</ref> he attributes to trough-faulting. The fiords of the West Highlands he believes originated for the most part as gaping faults and joints, which have been worn into troughs by subaerial and glacial erosion. According to Gregory not only did new faults originate, but old faults moved again. In this connection it is worth quoting from J. Horne's description of the Inverness earthquake of 1901. "A long crack or fissure… formed in the middle of the towing-path (of the Caledonian Canal, near Dochgarroch Locks), and could be traced at intervals for a distance of 600 yds. In no place was the fissure more than half an inch wide. The position of the Great Glen fracture laid down on the six-inch field map coincides with the trend of this fissure" (in Horne, Hinxman and others 1914, p. 69). Gregory believes that the severance of the original drainage that crossed the line of Loch Linnhe (
While it is impossible to do justice to Gregory's position in a short notice, the following comments may be offered:
- Gregory probably somewhat overrates the proportion of structure-guided valleys in the West Highlands.
- The main features, apart from straightness, of the structure-guided valleys are reproduced in valleys independent of such guidance.
- The shatter-belts which can be examined along the line of certain structure-guided valleys, as at the head of Loch Leven, seem quite sufficient in their nature to locate deep, straight valleys of erosion without assuming gaping fissures.
- If such gaping fissures were very commonly developed during movements affecting the West Highlands in Middle Tertiary times, how is it that we never come upon any that have been, choked with the gravel and sand of the period ?
- A similar conflict of opinion formerly existed concerning the origin of the Zambezi Gorge (Lamplugh 1907, p. 165). Some attributed its zig-zag course to a tectonic rent, but it is now admitted that the gorge is being excavated along intersecting joints which lie latent, so to speak, until the adequate conditions of erosion present themselves. This agrees with the long-accepted interpretation of structure-guided valleys in the West Highlands.
Independent through-valleys
Through-valleys of the second type, that is independent of structure, are well represented on both sides of Loch Linnhe: on the north-west lie Glen Scaddle, Glen Gour, and Glen Tarbert
Two distinct interpretations have been adopted in regard to such through-valleys in the Scottish Highlands. H. M. Cadell (1886), H. J. Mackinder (1907, p. 126), and B. N. Peach and J. Horne (1910, p. 547) regard them as representative of a drainage system which once led continuously across Scotland, more or less from west to east, but is now in large measure broken up into segments owing to the development of subsequent valleys along special lines of weakness. R. S. Tarr (1908), on the other hand, regarded them as a result of glacial erosion. The last-named author summarised his position as follows:
"The through valley condition, a great aid to travel in glaciated lands, is found in the Alps, in Alaska, in Central New York, and in the Scottish Highlands. It is as characteristic of glaciated lands as are the hanging valley, the steepened slope, and the 'canal' valley, and, so far as I am aware, is all but unknown in regions which glaciers have never occupied".
This appeal from glaciated to unglaciated topography, to ascertain such features as have resulted from glacial erosion, is a most encouraging sign of the times. A like comparison was employed many years ago by A. C. Ramsay (1862, p. 201) in relation to rock basins; the extension of the principle, and its detailed application is, however, mainly due to American geographers such as W. M. Davis (1909) and Tarr. But when attention is paid to the through-valleys of Scotland as a whole, their distribution seems too systematic to admit of a semi-accidental origin connected with glaciation. The evidence points strongly to the alternative conclusion, namely that the majority of them are remnants of a once continuous drainage system. In
Secondary watersheds
Once a river system has been broken up, following the development of subsequent streams along such lines of weakness as the Loch Linnhe and Loch Leven shatter-belts, secondary watersheds must originate as a matter of course in the isolated segments. According to the view adopted here, the low cols of the through-valleys of Scotland are, for the most part, such secondary watersheds in the process of development, rather than primary watersheds which have been all but obliterated by glacial erosion. That glacial erosion has, however, modified these cols is in some cases almost certain. Thus a powerful lateral stream which issues from the north directly upon the col of Glen Tarbert
The through-valleys near their cols have, as a rule, very low gradients. This is admirably illustrated in Glen Coe and in the long upper reaches of the River Leven. The latter are now occupied by the Blackwater Reservoir
The word corrom, which has been used above to signify a delta-watershed, is based on the Gaelic cothrom, a balance. The stream already mentioned, which issues upon the col of Glen Tarbert
The divide at the head of Glen Nevis is a corrom. As a matter of fact the present-day corroms of Glen Tarbert
In many through-valleys of the Highlands the modern watershed is not a corrom. In some cases this may have resulted from the shifting of the position of the watershed by glacial erosion, but it is not unlikely that in other instances landslips helped, in pre-glacial times, to determine the divides between the consequent and obsequent drainage of the segmented rivers. The watershed of the Lairigmòr valley is situated at the foot of Stob Bàn, the bulging flanks of which are constituted of landslip material (
Hanging valleys
Segmentation of a through-valley system, such as has been outlined above, may well rejuvenate a mature river system by a process of short-circuiting. This conception leads us to inquire into the origin of the hanging valleys of the district. First, it may be pointed out that the hanging-valley system shows evident trace of glacial action. A fine illustration of this is afforded by a hanging valley, or corrie, draining into Glen Nevis, 1½ miles east of Polldubh
Turning to a side issue we may mention that this Steall
The important point, to return to the question of glacial erosion, is that the Steall
But inquiry cannot cease here with the mere recognition of ice-work in the development of the present-day hanging-valley system. Scottish geologists are well-nigh unanimous in regarding glacial erosion as responsible for the majority of the rock basins of the Highlands.<ref>No more convincing example can be given than Loch Coruisk, described by A. Harker (1901a, p. 238). Many other authors might be cited, and the subject has been most completely dealt with by Peach and Horne in their report of 1910.</ref> It is unnecessary, therefore, to point out that on this assumption many tributary valleys in one part or another of the country must have been left hanging through glacial over-deepening of corresponding trunk valleys. It is well, however, to consider each case on its merits, and, accordingly, it is advisable to inquire whether glacial over-deepening can be called in to explain the hanging tributaries of Glen Nevis. This glen affords an imposing example of a U-shaped canal valley in the four miles of its course in which it drains north-westwards towards the open country near Fort William. Several minor hanging tributaries rush swiftly down its slopes from Ben Nevis. At Polldubh
Altogether Glen Nevis affords fairly satisfactory evidence of the existence in this district of a hanging-valley system, which has not been determined by glacial over-deepening. This inference is corroborated by an inquiry into the drainage system of the River Leven. The upper reaches of the Leven valley are thoroughly mature, and belong to a widespread high-level valley topography, which includes in the clearest possible manner the hanging portions of the downstream tributaries of the Leven itself. A little below the Blackwater Reservoir
The case of Allt na h-Eilde
Industrial development has emphasised this beautiful example of hanging scenery. Since the photograph of
Peach and Horne's "intermediate plateau of the Highlands", figured with its lochans in
If we take the Leven and Coe together we reach the conclusion that the original drainage system of the district, having reached a stage of maturity, became in part rejuvenated as a result of widespread beheading and resultant short-circuiting: the main valleys were cut back by waterfall and cataract action; the tribuary valleys made use of their opportunities as soon as presented; a hanging-valley system was thus developed, such as occurs in the Zambezi district at the present time (cf. Lamplugh 1907); then followed intense glaciation; in many cases trunk valleys were opened out, side spurs were truncated, and the walls of certain minor hanging tributaries totally obliterated.
It appears, then, that the glaciation of this district has accentuated a hanging-valley system previously in existence. Concurrently it has often produced very obvious results in the modelling of the walls and bottoms of the various glens in addition to the removal of lateral spurs. Allt Coire an Eòin
Corries and landslips
At the head of Allt Coire an Eòin
There is a general consensus of opinion that corries are restricted in their typical development to glaciated lands, and are therefore of glacial origin. From the preceding discussion of through-valleys and hanging valleys, for which, as we have seen, a similar claim is also advanced, it will be evident that this line of argument must be followed with great caution; still it seems to the writer that the case for the glacial origin of corries has been established. The only agency at present at work in the district which might be regarded as responsible for the production of corries is landslipping. Reference has already been made to big landslips on Stob Bàn above the watershed of the Lairigmòr valley (
Where slipping occurs along the two sides of a straight ridge, the cracks limiting the slips are sometimes straight themselves, and determine the production of a more or less continuous "knife-edge" arete. The best locality to convince any observer of this peculiarity, and of the considerable importance of landslips generally in shaping the physiography of some parts of this district, is the ridge summit separating Allt Coire Rath
Many of the landslips referred to above have probably resulted from the instability of valley sides over-steepened by glacial erosion. Slipping in such cases is a step towards the re-establishment of gentler gradients, although its immediate result is often to produce cliffs and crags. Special conditions, tending to repeated landslipping, and the rapid transport of slipped material, are required for really successful corrie formation. Such conditions are apparently afforded at the bergschrund of a glacier — the crevasse, that is, which forms every summer between a glacier-head and the containing valley. The bergschrund is in many respects analogous to the landslip cracks which occur so abundantly in some parts of the present district. The tug of the glacier before the bergschrund forms will be a powerful incentive to landslipping on a large and small scale, while the glacier itself is admittedly an efficient carrier of slipped material.
The importance of the bergschrund in connection with corrie formation was first suggested by Johnson (1904). In 1883 he descended a bergschrund at the back of a miniature glacier of the Sierra Nevada. The crevasse was about 150 ft deep and for the most part was' walled on both sides by ice. About 20 or 30 ft from the bottom, the fissure reached the valley side, and from this point down the parting had taken place, not between ice and ice, but between ice and rock. Johnson found that the zone of bare rock thus exposed bore evidence of intense and repeated frost action. In fact, he regards this localised frost action as the main element in the problem of corrie formation, although he states that plucking likely supplements the initial rupturing due to the frost. We are, however, inclined to lay greater stress on the plucking, but this is a point which can only be settled by further investigation of present-day glaciers. According to another view elaborated by Harker (1899, p.487), the bergschrund is not taken into consideration, and corrie formation is attributed to direct glacial grinding. "Erosion", he points out, "near the sources of a river is very feeble; a glacier, on the other hand, springs into being, like Athene, fully armed". Maufe noticed that, while the bottom slope of the great Ben Nevis cliff overlooking the head of Allt a 'Mhuilinn is strikingly smoothed and striated, the cliff itself is rough as though it owed its form to plucking.
The corries of the district seem to favour a north-easterly aspect. One realises this on looking north from Bidean nam Bian
Rock-basins
We may now pass on to notice a few instances of glacial over-deepening recorded in rock basins within the limits of the present district, some of which are included in the Murray-Pullar survey (1910). Loch-Eilde Mòr and Loch-Eilde Beag are probably, both of them, rock basins. They are situated on the shatter-belt which has determined the position of Loch Leven. Loch-Eilde Mòr is 100 ft deep. The shallow lochans in the flat upper reaches of the River Leven almost certainly include rock basins. Loch Achtriochtan in Glen Coe is another example. Maufe has pointed out that this loch lies in soft phyllites behind a barrier of relatively harder rocks which here cross the glen on the down-stream side of a powerful fault; differential erosion of the softer material has given rise to the loch basin. Loch Coire na Creiche
Various
Enough has now been said of glacial erosion. Glacial accumulation also deserves attention as a formative element in the topography. The main glacial accumulations are of the nature of morainic debris, more or less restricted to the valleys. Well-shaped moraine ridges are rare, but a few occur, including a fine terminal crescent on the lip of the Allt Coire Giùbhsachan valley, where the latter overhangs Glen Nevis. Most of the morainic drift has a hummocky surface. There is no more characteristic type of scenery than that afforded by hummocky drift where developed to perfection, as in the upper reaches of the River Leven valley and on the Moor of Rannoch at the head of Glen Coe.
A few words may now be added in regard to certain post-glacial and late glacial changes in the physiography of the district.
The summits of the high ridges were certainly exposed to frost action during late glacial times when the valley bottoms were still occupied by glaciers. This has contributed to render the results of frost conspicuous on many of the mountain tops. It is common, where the slope is gentle, to find the whole surface littered with slabs and fragments which have been prized loose by water freezing in joint fissures, but which have not travelled appreciably from their original source. The great domed surface of Ben Nevis affords a capital example of such an accumulation merging insensibly into genuine scree on the steeper slopes. On other mountain tops the debris covering, especially where it is composed of comparatively small fragments, has crept forward in a succession of steep-fronted, flat-topped waves or terraces. The movement appears to take place in times of storm, when rain is driving, and the whole surface is laden with water. In exposed situations the direction of movement, as indicated by the steep fronts of the terraces, is clearly determined rather by the direction of the prevalent gales than by that of the hill slope, so long as the inclination of the latter is not pronounced. In such cases any heather that manages to survive has assumed a prostrate habit and turned its head away from the blast. Patches of the surface are swept bare, and Lilliputian lochs are excavated with miniature storm-beaches to match. The turf in front of the advancing terraces of debris is turned up on end, broken and overwhelmed.
Frosts and torrents have been busy, too, among the cliffs and crags, picking out every little shatter-belt, and thus dissecting the relatively smooth surface left by glaciation. Great gullies have been cleared, and debris sent hurtling down to build widespreading cones of scree on the lower slopes. This type of frost action is illustrated very finely in Glen Coe, where precautions have been taken to prevent the scree from encroaching upon the road in times of flood. One can see that this scree formation, like the large-scale slipping so pronounced in the district north of the Leven valley, is busily undoing the work of the glaciers, and tending to produce a topography more in harmony with existing conditions.
While the ridges show signs of the severe treatment to which they have been exposed since they emerged from the glaciers, the stream-courses have also suffered to some slight extent. Many of the rivers have cut gorges a few feet deep, and it is interesting to see how their mode of attack varies with the nature of the rock. If, for instance, the stream is crossing quartzite, it quarries out fragment by fragment, making use of joint and bedding planes; if, on the other hand, mica-schist has to be removed, pot-holes are drilled, or a continuous channel is ground out with smooth flowing contours. Beautiful examples of breached pot-holes, forming arches through which the water plunges, may be seen from the road where Allt Nathrach
But of all post-glacial changes, the most important from the human point of view is one that is limited to the coast-line. A more or less continuous terrace, often backed by low, rocky cliffs, fringes the shores of Loch Linnhe and Loch Leven, and carries most of the roads of the district and the railway leading to Ballachulish. It is a record of the activities of the sea at a time when the land stood some 30 ft lower than at present. Fertile beach deposits, dating from this period, have determined the sites of the crofting villages of Onich, North Ballachulish
We may bring this discussion of the physiography of the district to a close by considering the influence of rock structure, which is responsible for many conspicuous minor features. Most of the country is composed of crystalline schists of various kinds, each with a more or less characteristic type of weathering. Thus white quartzite, interfolded among darker mica-schist, is strongly developed in the district between Ben Nevis and Glen Coe, and gives rise to remarkable scenic effects (
Contributions to interpretation since the First Edition
The foregoing account of river development within Sheet 53 (Geol.) was composed under inspiration gained from the writings of Cadell, Mackinder, Peach and Horne, dealing mainly with other parts of Scotland. Since then a fairly extensive related literature has appeared, again chiefly concerned with outside districts. Some of the conclusions reached are in harmony with those set out above, while others are discordant. Among the former we find that both Bremner (1942, p. 54) and Linton (1951b, p.68) consider that east, rather than south-east (the latter favoured by Mackinder, Peach and Horne), is the characteristic direction of consequent streams in the Highlands. East is the direction indicated in
Bremner's other general conclusions, right or wrong, introduce no special difficulty. For instance he thinks that the consequent streams suggested in
He regards the basin of the Irish Sea as due to depression in early post-uplift times. He does not, however, specifically refer to the Hebridean subsidences responsible for taking Tertiary lavas and underlying Cretaceous sediment in many places below present-day sea level; but he does remark that "the volcanics themselves fell a prey to the subaerial forces of denudation and now enter into the substance of the peneplain". Presumably this refers more especially to the Cuillin summits of Skye, composed of Tertiary gabbro and yet planed off at approximately 3000 ft.
Hans Cloos (1939) has given a closely similar picture. He thinks he can recognise a dome-shaped bulge, of which Great Britain constitutes the eastern portion and Ireland and the Outer Hebrides the western. In between he regards the Irish Sea and the Hebridean subsidences as a rift-valley, due to collapse of what had been for a time the most elevated belt of the upward bulge.
Linton (1951b) differs from Bremner and Cloos, for he speaks as though the Hebridean subsidences (or relative subsidences) dated from the beginning of the post-Cretaceous upheaval. "If our eastward slope", he says, "broke towards the west along the margins of the 'Hebridean Rift' there must from the outset have been two sets of rivers, the one set flowing eastward to the North Sea depression, the other westward into the Rift".
He thus pictures "from the outset" a watershed or watersheds on the Scottish mainland dividing eastward- from westward-draining rivers. Many of these oppositely directed rivers today occur in pairs, each of which occupies a through-valley; but he cannot accept the suggestion that many a pair originated as a single eastward-flowing stream. "If this is so", he asks, quoting J. Solch",where are the western mountains from which those rivers came ?" The answer of course is another question: Where are the thousands of feet of hard solid rock that presumably once covered the gabbro summits of the Cuillins ? All of us are merely groping our way towards a clearer understanding.
Linton, like Tarr, whose work is mentioned earlier in this chapter, is a firm believer in most of the through-valleys of the Highlands having originated as a result of glacial erosion. He has examined some with care, and has satisfied himself that he can reconstruct the approximate position and form of watersheds that have been almost obliterated by what A. Penck has termed glacial transfluence. He has rendered good service by directing attention to overseas publications on this subject. It is, however, surprising to read that "transfluence was first recognised in Scotland, though not called by that name, by Peach and Horne thirty years ago" (Linton 1951a, p. 11; the reference given is Peach and Horne 1910). Surely the phenomenon has been familiar to all Scottish geologists since Jamieson wrote of ice passing from upper Glen Roy
Those who visit Sheet 53 (Geol.) will probably pass through Glen Coe. They should pause at Lochan na Fola