The Ancient Volcanoes of Great Britain, Volume 1 (of 2)

iii. TYPES OF OLD VOLCANOES

Chapter 323,529 wordsPublic domain

The three forms of ancient volcanoes now to be discussed are--1st, the Vesuvian type; 2nd, the Plateau or Fissure type; and 3rd, the Puy type.

1. _The Vesuvian Type._--In this kind of volcano, lavas and fragmental ejections are discharged from a central vent, which is gradually built up by successive eruptions of these materials. As the cone increases in size, parasitic cones appear on its sides, and in the energy and completeness of their phenomena become true volcanoes, almost rivalling their parent mountain. Streams of lava descend upon the lower grounds, while showers of dust and ashes are spread far and wide over the surrounding country.

If a transverse section could be made of a modern Vesuvian cone, the volcanic pile would be found to consist of alternations of lavas and tuffs, thickest at the centre, and thinning away in all directions. At some distance from the crater, these volcanic materials might be seen to include layers of soil and remains of land-vegetation, marking pauses between the eruptions, during which soil accumulated and plants sprang up upon it. Where the lavas and ashes had made their way into sheets of fresh water or into the sea, they would probably be found interstratified with layers of ordinary sediment containing remains of the animal or vegetable life of the time.

Conceive now the effects of prolonged denudation upon such a pile of volcanic rocks. The cone will eventually be worn down, the crater will disappear, and the only relics of the eruptive orifice may be the top of the central lava-column and of any fragmental materials that solidified within the vent (Fig. 16). The waste will, on the whole, be greater at the cone than on the more level areas beyond. It might, in course of time, reach the original surface of the ground on which the volcano built up its heap of ejected material. The central lava-plug might thus be left as an isolated eminence rising from a platform of older non-volcanic rocks, and the distance between it and the dwindling sheets of lava and tuff which came out of it would then be continually increased as their outcrop receded under constant degradation.

This piece of volcanic history is diagrammatically illustrated in Fig. 16. The original forms of the central volcano and of its parasitic cones are suggested by the dotted lines in the upper half of the Figure. All this upper portion has been removed by denudation, and the present surface of the ground is shown by the uppermost continuous line. The general structure of the volcanic pile is indicated underneath that line--the lenticular sheets of lava and tuff (_l_, _l_), the dykes (_d_, _d_), and the lavas (_p_, _p_) and agglomerates (_a_, _a_) of the central vent and of the subordinate cones.

The waste, though greatest on the higher ground of the great cone, would not stop there. It would extend over the flatter area around the volcano. Streams flowing over the plain would cut their way down through the lavas and tuffs, eroding ravines in them, and leaving them in detached and ever diminishing outliers on the crests of the intervening ridges. We can easily picture a time when the last of these relics would have been worn away, and when every vestige of the volcanic ejections would have been removed, save the lava-column marking the site of the former vent.

Every stage in this process of effacement may be recognized in actual progress among the extinct volcanoes of the earth's surface. Probably nowhere may the phenomena be more conveniently and impressively studied than among the volcanic districts of Central France. On the one hand, we meet there with cinder-cones so perfect that it is hard to believe them to have been silent ever since the beginnings of history. On the other hand, we see solitary cones of agglomerate or of lava, which have been left isolated, while their once overlying and encircling sheets of ejected material have been so extensively worn away as to remain merely in scattered patches capping the neighbouring hills. Valleys many hundreds of feet in depth have been cut by the rivers through the volcanic sheets and the underlying Tertiary strata and granite since the older eruptions ceased. And yet these eruptions belong to a period which, in a geological sense, is quite recent. It is not difficult to contemplate a future time, geologically not very remote, when in the valley of the Loire not a trace will remain of the wonderfully varied and interesting volcanic chronicle of that district, save the plugs that will mark the positions of the former active vents.

In the British Islands, ancient volcanoes of the Vesuvian type are well represented among the Palæozoic systems of strata. Their preservation has been largely due to the fact that they made their appearance in areas that were undergoing slow subsidence. Their piles of erupted lava and ashes were chiefly heaped up over the sea-floor, and were buried under the sand, silt and ooze that gathered there. Thus covered up, they were protected from denudation. It is only in much later geological ages that, owing to upheaval, gradual degradation of the surface, and removal of their overlying cover of stratified formations, they have at last been exposed to waste. The process of disinterment may be observed in many different stages of progress. In some localities, only the tops of the sheets of lava and tuff have begun to show themselves; in others, everything is gone except the indestructible lava-plug.

These inequalities of denudation arise not only from variations in the durability of volcanic rocks, but still more from the relative position of these rocks in the terrestrial crust, and the geological period at which, in the course of the general lowering of the surface, they have been laid bare. Not only are volcanic rocks of many different ages, and lie, therefore, on many successive platforms within the crust of the earth: their places have been still further dependent upon changes in the arrangement of that crust. Fracture, upheaval, depression, curvature, unconformable deposition of strata, have contributed to protect some portions, while leaving others exposed to attack. Hence it happens that the volcanic record varies greatly in its fulness of detail from one geological system or one district to another. Some chapters have been recorded with the most surprising minuteness, so that the events which they reveal can be realized as vividly as those of a modern volcano. Others, again, are meagre and fragmentary, because the chronicle is still for the most part buried underground, or because it has been so long exposed at the surface that only fragments of it now remain there.

In the descriptions which will subsequently be given of ancient British volcanoes of the Vesuvian type, it will be shown that at many successive periods during Palæozoic time, and at many distinct centres, lavas and tuffs have been piled up to a depth of frequently more than 5000 feet--that is to say, higher than the height of Vesuvius. Sometimes the vent from which these materials were ejected can be recognized. In other places, it is still buried under later formations, or has been so denuded as to be represented now merely by the column of molten or fragmental rock that finally solidified in it. Examples will be quoted of such ancient vents, measuring not less than two miles in diameter, with subsidiary "necks" on their flanks, like the parasitic cones on Etna.

I shall show that while the ejected volcanic products have accumulated in greatest depth close to the vent that discharged them, they die away as they recede from it, sometimes so rapidly that a volcanic pile which is 7000 feet thick around its source may entirely thin out and disappear in a distance of not more than ten or twelve miles. I shall point out how, as the lavas and tuffs are followed outwards from their centre, they not only get thinner, but are increasingly interstratified among the sedimentary deposits with which they were coeval, and that in this way their limits, their age, and the geographical conditions under which they were accumulated can be satisfactorily fixed.

As illustrations of the Vesuvian type in the volcanic history of Britain, I may refer to the great Lower Silurian volcanoes of Cader Idris, Arenig, Snowdon and the Lake District, and to the Old Red Sandstone volcanoes of Central Scotland.

2. _The Plateau_ or _Fissure type_ is, among modern volcanoes, best developed in Iceland, as will be more fully detailed in Chapter xl. In that island, during a volcanic eruption, the ground is rent open into long parallel fissures, only a few feet or yards in width, but traceable sometimes for many miles, and descending to an unknown depth into the interior. From these fissures lava issues--in some cases flowing out tranquilly in broad streams from either side, in other cases issuing with the discharge of slags and blocks of lava which are piled up into small cones set closely together along the line of the rent. It was from a fissure of this kind that the great eruption of 1783 took place--the most stupendous outpouring of lava within historic time.

By successive discharges of lava from fissures, or from vents opening on lines of fissure, wide plains may be covered with a floor of rock hundreds or thousands of feet in thickness, made up of horizontal beds. The original topography, which might have been undulating and varied, is completely buried under a vast level lava-desert.

The rivers which drained the country before the beginning of the volcanic history will have their channels filled up, and will be driven to seek new courses across the lava-fields. Again and again, as fresh eruptions take place, these streams will be compelled to shift their line of flow, each river-bed being in turn sealed up in lava, with all its gravels, silts and drift-wood. But the rain will continue to fall, and the drainage to seek its way seaward. When the last eruption ceases, and the rivers are at length left undisturbed at their task of erosion, they will carve that lava-floor into deep gorges or open valleys. Where they flow between the lavas and the slopes against which these ended, they will cut back the volcanic pile, until in course of time the lavas will present a bold mural escarpment to the land that once formed their limit. The volcanic plain will become a plateau, ending off in this vertical wall and deeply trenched by the streams that wind across it. And if the denudation is continued long enough, the plateau will be reduced to detached hills, separated by deep and wide valleys.

This geological history is illustrated by the diagram in Fig. 17. The stippled ground underneath (_x_, _x_) represents the original undulating surface of the country on which the plateau eruptions were poured out. The lavas of these eruptions are shown by the horizontal lines to have entirely buried the heights and hollows of the old land, and to have risen up to the upper dotted line, which may be taken to mark the limit reached by the accumulation of volcanic material. The dark lines (_d_, _d_) which come up through the bedded lavas indicate the dykes with their connected vents. Denudation has since stripped off the upper part of the volcanic series down to the uppermost continuous black line which represents the existing surface of the ground. The level sheets of lava have been deeply trenched, and in one instance the valley has not only been cut through the volcanic pile, but has been partly eroded out of the older rocks below. To the right and left, the lavas end off abruptly in great escarpments.

The succession of events here depicted has occurred more than once in Britain. The Plateau type is chiefly developed in this country among the great Tertiary basalt districts of Antrim and the Inner Hebrides, which reappear in the Faroe Islands, and again still farther north in Iceland. But it also occurs among the volcanic rocks of the Old Red Sandstone and Carboniferous periods.

As compared with the other volcanic types, that of the Plateaux is distinguished by the wide extent of surface which its rocks cover, by the great preponderance of lavas over tuffs, and by the regularity and persistence of the individual sheets of rock. In Britain, the plateau-lavas are even still often approximately horizontal, and lie piled on each other in tolerably regular beds to a thickness of 1000, and in one place to more than 3000 feet. They form wide level or gently undulating tablelands, which rise in bold escarpments from the surrounding country and have been deeply carved into valleys. The sides of their cliffs and slopes are marked by parallel lines of terrace, arising from the outcrop of successive sheets of lava (Figs. 11, 265).

With the Tertiary basalt-plateaux are connected thousands of dykes, that follow each other along nearly parallel lines in a general north-westerly direction, and mark the position of fissures up which the molten lava ascended. Occasional necks of agglomerate or basalt indicate the sites of some of the eruptive vents.

The Carboniferous volcanic plateaux have been more extensively denuded than those of Tertiary age, so that a large number of their vents have been laid bare. In general these vents are of comparatively small size, though larger than those of the Carboniferous Puys. In some districts, abundant dykes traverse the rocks on which the plateaux rest, though the fissures seem to have been less numerous than in Tertiary time.

3. _The Puy type_, as before remarked, takes its name from the well-known _puys_, or volcanic cones, of Central France. Volcanoes of this type form conical hills, generally of small size, consisting usually of fragmental materials, sometimes of lava. Where a cone is partially effaced by a second, and even by a third, successive slight shiftings of the vent are to be inferred (see Figs. 29 and 214). In many cases, no lava has issued from such cones, nor were the ashes and cinders dispersed far from the vent. Hence, in the progress of denudation, cones of this kind are easily effaced.

From the uniformity of composition of their materials, the simplicity and regularity of their forms, and their small size, it may be inferred that many of these cones were the products of single eruptions. They may conceivably have been thrown up in a few days, or even in a single day. The history of Monte Nuovo, in the Bay of Naples, which was formed within twenty-four hours in the year 1538, is a memorable example of the rapidity with which a cone more than 400 feet high may be thrown up at some distance from a central vent.

The smallest independent volcanoes are included in the Puy type. In many instances the diameter of the funnel has not exceeded a few yards; the largest examples of the type seldom exceed 1000 feet in width.

Where lavas have been discharged, as well as ashes and stones, a more vigorous activity is indicated than where merely cones of tuff were formed. The lavas may come from more than one side of a cone, and may flow in opposite directions for a distance of several miles. It is observable that considerable streams of lava have issued from the base of a cinder-cone without disturbing it. The molten rock has found a passage between the loose materials and the surface on which they rest,[20] though, in some cases, the cone may have been thrown up after the emission of the lava.

[Footnote 20: M. Boule, _Bull. Carte Géol. France_, No. 28, tome iv. p. 232.]

In the history of a puy there is commonly a first discharge of fragmentary material; then lava may flow out, followed by a final discharge of loose stones and ashes. Hence the products of such a vent group themselves into three layers--two of breccia separated by an intervening sheet of lava.[21]

[Footnote 21: M. Boule, _Bull. Carte Géol. France_, No. 28, tome iv.]

Great changes are wrought on puys and their connected lavas and tuffs during the progress of denudation. The cones are eventually destroyed, and only a stump of agglomerate or lava is left to mark its place. The connection of a lava-stream with its parent vent may likewise be effaced, and the lava itself may be reduced to merely a few separate patches, perhaps capping a ridge, while the surrounding ground has been hollowed into valleys. If the waste continues long enough, even these outliers will disappear, and nothing but the neck or stump of the little volcano will remain.

The accompanying diagram (Fig. 18) may help to make these changes more intelligible. The upper dotted lines show the original forms of three puys with the covering of loose materials discharged by them over the surrounding ground. The lower shaded portion represents the surface as left by denudation, and a section of the three vents beneath that surface. The whole of the cones and craters has here been swept away, and only the volcanic "neck" is in each case left. In the vent to the right, the material that fills it up is a coarse agglomerate, which projects as a rounded dome above the surrounding country. The central pipe is filled with fragmentary materials, through which molten rock has risen, giving off dykes and veins. In the vent to the left hand, only lava is seen to occupy the orifice, representing the column of molten rock which solidified there and brought the activity of this little volcano to an end. It will be observed that in each of these volcanic hills the present outlines are very far from being those of the original volcano, and that the eminence projects because of its greater resistance to the forces of denudation that have not only removed the superficial volcanic material, but have made some progress in lowering the level of the ground on which that material was accumulated.

The typical area for the study of Puys is the extraordinarily interesting volcanic region of Central France. There the volcanic cones are clustered in irregular groups, sometimes so close as to be touching each other; elsewhere separated by intervals of several miles. They may be traced in all stages of decay, from the most perfect cones and craters to the isolated eminence that marks the site of a once active chimney. Their lavas, too, may be seen as detached fragments of plateaux, many hundred feet above the valleys that have been excavated since they flowed.[22]

[Footnote 22: See Desmarest's classic map and his papers in _Mem. Acad. Roy. Sciences_, Paris, 1774, 1779; _Journ. de Physique_, 1779; Scrope's _Geology of Central France_, 1827, and _Extinct Volcanoes of Central France_, 1858; Lecoq's _Époques Géologiques de l'Auvergne_, 1867; M. Michel Lévy, _Bull. Soc. Géol. France_, 1890, p. 688; M. Boule, _Bull. Carte Géol. France_, No. 28, tome iv. 1892.]

Another well-known region of modern Puys is that of the Eifel, where the cones and craters are often so fresh that it is difficult to believe them to be prehistoric.[23] One of the most remarkable denuded puy-regions in Europe covers a wide territory in the Swabian Alps of Würtemberg. No fewer than 125 denuded necks filled with tuff, agglomerate and basalt have there been mapped and described. They are of higher antiquity than the Upper Miocene strata, and have thus probably been exposed to prolonged denudation. In external aspect and internal structure they present the closest parallel to the Carboniferous and Permian "necks" of Britain described in Books VI. and VII. of the present work.[24]

Among the Palæozoic volcanoes of Britain many admirable illustrations of the Puy type are to be found. Their cones are almost always entirely gone, though traces of them occasionally appear. The "necks" that show the position of the vents are in some districts crowded together as thickly as those of Auvergne. During the Carboniferous and Permian periods in Central Scotland, clusters of such little volcanoes must have risen among shallow lagoons and inland sheets of water, casting out their ashes and pouring forth their little streams of lava over the water-bottom around them and then dying out. As these eruptions took place in a region that was gradually subsiding, the cones and their ejected ashes and lavas were one by one submerged, the looser materials being washed down and spread out among the silt, sand or mud, and enveloping the remains of any plants or animals that might be strewn over the floor of the lake or sea. Hence the Puys of Palæozoic time in Britain have been preserved with extraordinary fulness of detail. They have been dissected by denudation, both among the hills of the interior and along the margin of the sea. Their structure can thus be in some respects made out even more satisfactorily than that of the much younger and more perfect cones of Central France.

[Footnote 23: The Eifel district has been fully described by Hibbert, Von Dechen, and other writers. Von Dechen's little handbooks to the Eifel and Siebengebirge are useful guides.]

[Footnote 24: These Würtemberg vents have been elaborately described and discussed by Professor W. Branco of Tübingen in his _Schwabens 125 Vulkan-Embryonen und deren tufferfülte Ausbruchsröhren, das grösste Gebiet chemaliger Maare auf der Erde_, Stuttgart, 1894.]