The Ancient Volcanoes of Great Britain, Volume 1 (of 2)
CHAPTER XIII
THE ERUPTIONS OF LLANDEILO AND BALA AGE
i. The Builth Volcano--ii. The Volcanoes of Pembrokeshire--iii. The Caernarvonshire Volcanoes of the Bala Period--iv. The Volcanic District of the Berwyn Hills--v. The Volcanoes of Anglesey--vi. The Volcanoes of the Lake District; Arenig to close of Bala Period--vii. Upper Silurian (?) volcanoes of Gloucestershire.
The stratigraphical subdivisions of geology are necessarily more or less arbitrary. The sequence in the sedimentary deposits of one region always differs in some degree from that of adjoining regions. In drawing up a table of stratigraphical equivalents for separate countries, we must be content to accept a general parallelism, without insisting on too close an identity in either the character of the strata or the grouping of their organic remains. We need especially to guard against the assumption that the limit assigned to a geological formation in any country marks a chronological epoch which will practically agree with that denoted by the limit fixed for the same formation in another country. The desirability of caution in this respect is well shown by the vagueness of the horizons between the several subdivisions of the Lower Silurian system. So long as the areas of comparison are near each other, no great error may perhaps be committed if their stratigraphical equivalents are taken to have been in a broad geological sense contemporary. But in proportion as the element of distance comes in, there enters with it the element of uncertainty.
Even within so limited a region as the British Isles, this difficulty makes itself strongly felt. Thus, in the typical regions of Wales, the several subdivisions of the Lower Silurian strata are tolerably well marked, both by lithological nature and by fossils. But as they are followed into other parts of the country, they assume new features, sometimes increasing sometimes diminishing in thickness, changing their sedimentary character, and altering the association or range of their organisms. The subdivisions into which the geologist groups them may thus be vaguely defined by limits which, in different parts of the region, may be far from representing the same periods of time.
Hence, in trying to ascertain how far the volcanic eruptions of one area during the Silurian period may have been contemporary with those of another area, we must be content to allow a wide margin for error. It is hardly possible to adhere strictly to the stratigraphical arrangement, for the geological record shows that in the volcanic districts the sedimentary formations by which the chronology might have been worked out are not infrequently absent or obscure. It will be more convenient to treat the rest of the Lower Silurian formations as the records of one long and tolerable definite section of geological time, without attempting in each case to distinguish between the eruptions of the successive included periods, so long as the actual volcanic sequence is distinctly kept in view. I will therefore take the history of each district in turn and follow its changes from the close of the Arenig period to the end of Upper Silurian time. The stages in the volcanic evolution of each tract will thus be clearly seen.
Above the Arenig group with its voluminous volcanic records comes the great group of sediments known as the Llandeilo formation, in which also there are proofs of contemporaneous volcanic activity over various parts of the sea-floor within the site of Britain. We have seen that in the south of Scotland the eruptions of Arenig time were probably continued into the period of the Llandeilo rocks, or even still later into that of the Bala group. But it is in Wales that the history of the Llandeilo volcanoes is most fully preserved. A series of detached areas of volcanic rocks, intercalated among the Llandeilo sediments, may be followed for nearly 100 miles, from the northern end of the Breidden Hills in Montgomeryshire, by Shelve, Builth, Llanwrtyd and Llangadock, to the mouth of the Taf river. But some 35 miles further west another group of lavas and tuffs appears on the coast of Pembrokeshire, from Abereiddy Bay to beyond Fishguard. The want of continuity in these scattered outcrops is no doubt partly due to concealment by geological structure. But from the comparative thinness of the volcanic accumulations and their apparent thinning out along the strike it may be inferred that no large Llandeilo volcano existed in Wales. There would rather seem to have been a long line of minor vents which in the south-east part of the area appear to have only discharged ashes. Certainly, if we may judge from their visible relics, these eruptions never rivalled the magnitude of the discharges from the Arenig volcanoes that preceded, or the Bala volcanoes that followed them.