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

CHAPTER XLVI

Chapter 58453 wordsPublic domain

TYPES OF STRUCTURE IN THE ACID ROCKS--BOSSES

Returning now to the consideration of the acid rocks as these manifest themselves in the volcanic areas of Britain, I would remark that three distinct types of structure may be noted among them, viz. (1) bosses, (2) sills or intrusive sheets, (3) veins and dykes. These types, as above remarked, belong entirely to the underground operations of volcanism, for though the rhyolitic fragments in the tuffs and agglomerates of the plateaux prove that acid lavas existed near the surface, no undoubted case of superficial lava belonging to the acid series has yet been observed.[386]

[Footnote 386: The rhyolites of Tardree in Antrim have recently been claimed by Professor Cole as true lavas grouped round an eruptive vent. For reasons to be given in the next chapter I regard them as intrusive masses, though they may not improbably have been connected with streams of lava now entirely removed.]

The bosses of acid material in the British Tertiary volcanic series are irregular protrusions, varying in size from knobs only a few square yards in area up to huge masses many square miles in extent, and comprising groups of lofty hills. As a rule, their outlines are markedly irregular. Beneath the surface they plunge down almost vertically through the rocks which they traverse, but in not a few instances their boundaries are inclined to the horizon, so that the contiguous rocks seem to rest against them, and sometimes lie in outliers on their sides and summits. From the margins of these bosses apophyses are given off into the surrounding rocks, sometimes only rarely and at wide intervals, in other places in prodigious numbers. Sometimes the acid material has been injected in thousands of veins and minute threads, which completely enclose fragments of the surrounding rock.

The rock of which the bosses consist is generally granophyric in texture, passing on the one hand, particularly in the central parts, into granite, and on the other, and especially towards the margin, into various more compact felsitic varieties, and sometimes exhibiting along the outer edge more or less developed spherulitic and flow-structures.

Decided contact metamorphism is traceable round the bosses, but is by no means uniform even in the same rock, some parts being highly altered, while others, exposed apparently to the same influences, have undergone little change. The most marked examples of this metamorphism are those in which the Cambrian limestone of Skye has been converted into a pure white saccharoid marble. But the most interesting to the student of volcanic action are those where the altered rocks are older parts of the volcanic series. As the bosses of each volcanic area offer distinctive peculiarities they will here be described geographically.