Bailey, et al. 1924. Tertiary and Post-Tertiary geology of Mull, Loch Aline, and Oban (a description of parts of sheets 43, 44, 51, and 52 of the geological map). HMSO [for Geological Survey]
Chapter 27 Sheets exclusive of cone-sheets: elsewhere in Mull and neighbourhood
Introduction
The previous four chapters have been devoted to the sills of south-western Mull. Attention will now be given to certain sills and sheets occurring in other parts of the island and its neighbourhood. A minor field of basic and intermediate sill-intrusion is encountered on the two sides of Loch Aline in Morven (Sheet 44). The sills here are lettered D on the one-inch Map, except that two intermediate examples are lettered F. Tertiary tholeiite-sheets (D) are occasionally met with in Lismore, and in Lorne, south of Oban (Sheet 44).
A quite distinct field of the same type includes the north coast of Mull between Caliach Point and Ardmore Point (Sheet 51). In this case, the sills (D) belong, on account of their position, rather to the Ardnamurchan than the Mull centre.
It is thought that the sheets, or sills, mentioned above, may be ascribed to intervals in Late Basic Cone-Sheet time (Chapters 28–32). Of earlier date, probably, than of some part of Early Basic Cone-Sheet time (Chapters 21–22), is a sheet-complex of rather exceptional character. It constitutes much of the more westerly Creag na h-Iolaire, north of Ben Buie, and its component rocks are lettered eD on the one-inch Map. They are not cone-sheets, and their field-relations, and early date, separate them from most of the other sills or sheets of Mull. They are, however, dealt with in this chapter because they do not furnish material enough for separate treatment.
A final section is devoted to a couple of thoroughly early dolerite-sills (D)—earlier than the Early Basic Cone-Sheets. They are considered last, in spite of their age, because the Loch Aline sills have much in common with most of the sills of South-West Mull, described in the immediately preceding chapters.
A few trachyte-sills, lettered O, have already been discussed along with bostonites and syenite in Chapter 14. E.B.B.
Loch Aline district (Sheet 44)
A few sills have been shown on the one-inch Map on both sides of Loch Aline, and some of very minor importance have been omitted. West of Loch Aline, the bay east of Eilean na Beitheiche supplies an interesting section of a tuff-filled vent, cut through and veined by a basalt-sill. Two other sills, 10 and 2 ft. thick respectively, descend to the shore a little east of Savary Glen. All these three are seen cut by basalt-dykes. On approaching Loch Aline village, the reverse relation of a sill cutting a dyke is encountered, as shown on the one-inch Map.
On the east side of Loch Aline, the most noteworthy sills are those near Glais Bheinn summit, and in the valley of Allt na Sanmachain. Here, the rock-types (S14961)
Inninmorite (p. 282) is found on the shores of Inninmore Bay beneath the keeper's cottage (S14948)
Inninmorite occurs elsewhere in the district as a sill, marked D, above Doire Daraich on the south-east coast (S15805)
Lismore and Lorne (Sheet 44)
A Tertiary sheet allied to leidleite (S13751)
Two more sheets, with southerly inclinations, occur, one at the south end of the island, the other on Eilean Musdile. Their relations to dykes are not exposed. (H.B.M)
In the Oban district of Lorne, thin Teritary tholeiite sills are met with in two main localities where they cut Old Red Sandstone sediments and lavas. The more northerly is about Gleann Sheileach, where good exposures are afforded on Druim Mòr, and also near the base of the Old Red Sandstone, along the south side of the glen. The sills are about 5 ft. thick, and of the Salen Type of tholeiite (p. 285), though with rather less olivine than is often the case (S19042)
Northern Mull (Sheet 51)
A minor field of thin tholelitic sheets extends inland for a couple of miles between Caliach Point and Ardmore Point. The sheets may be described as irregular sills with a marked transgressive tendency. They dip, throughout most of the area, towards the south-west; but, at Caliach Point, they incline in the opposite direction, towards the east or north-east. Sir Archibald Geikie, in his Ancient Volcanoes (Vol. II., p. 158), has figured an example, from Caliach Point, cut through by a north-west dyke.
Only one specimen has been sliced. It comes from the west side of Ardmore Bay, and is thoroughly fine-gained, suggesting a rapidly cooled rock of tholeiitic composition. G.V.W.
Creag na h' Iolaire sheets (Sheet 44)
The southern slopes of the more westerly Creag na h' Iolaire, north of Ben Buie, consist largely of a complex of dolerite and basalt sheets, which are too irregularly disposed to be referable to any of the cone-sheet assemblages. Some of the sheets are porphyritic, others non-porphyritic. A sliced specimen (S17194)
So far as can be judged, the intrusions, referred to this complex, are later than the intrusive felsite of Chapter 17, as well as the neighbouring lavas. Their relationship to the many small outcrops of breccia, or agglomerate, that occur along with them, varies greatly. Sometimes sheets cut agglomerate, sometimes agglomerate cuts sheets. The Late Basic Cone-Sheets of Talaidh Type (Chapter 28) clearly traverse the Creag na h' Iolaire Complex. (C.T.C.)
Two early sills, Mull (Sheet 44)
Probably the biggest basic sill in Mull is a coarse dolerite, with chilled margins, which lies somewhat transgressively among the lavas of Beinn Fhada, a couple of miles north of Loch Uisg. This dolerite gives rise to conspicuous crags, and it is easy to recognize that it has been folded, along with the lavas, into a syncline centring about Coir' Odhar (cf. one-inch Map and
The olivine of the Coir' Odhar sill is entirely decomposed, as might be expected from the intrusion's position well within the Pneumatolysis Limit of
The other sill, selected for notice in this paragraph, occurs intruded into the Lias and Trias of the anticlinal core, exposed north and west of Càrn Bàn (cf. one-inch Map and