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 13 Rocks of Lower Old Red Sandstone age "Granite" Complex of Etive
Introduction
We continue to employ the convention that "granite" between inverted commas includes quartz-diorite as well as granite as understood by petrographers. The Etive "Granite" Complex (8,
After Kynaston left for South Africa his mapping in Sheet 53 was completed by colleagues. Thus Clough made a new point in tracing a ring-dyke of granite at Meall Odhar, separated in
- Clough's Meall Odhar Granite, or an approximate equivalent, reappears to the west at Stob Gaibhre
[NN 063 467] at the southern border of Sheet 53, and between here and Ben Cruachan occupies in irregular fashion roughly half of the area assigned by Kynaston, in a broad sense, to the Cruachan Granite ". - A crescent "screen" of older, often foliated, rock mapped by Kynaston at Beinn a' Bhuiridh
[NN 093 283] has been definitely proved to consist mainly of altered lavas, attributable to the Lorne traps. Kynaston had recognised lava affinities, but had considered the mass intrusive — probably an early member of the Cruachan suite affected by "movements which accompanied, or immediately preceeded, the intrusion of the enormous mass of the Ben Cruachan granite" (in Kynaston and Hill 1908, p. 101).
Anderson also confirmed evidence pointing to gravitational differentiation in situ (pp. 169, 170).
If we accept Anderson's correlation between the Stob Gaibhre
The Cruachan "Granite" is older than the north-east dykes of the Etive Swarm (p. 197), the Meall Odhar Granite is older than some, but younger than many others, and probably contemporaneous with one prominent example; the Starav Granite is younger than almost all. These time-relations were determined by Kynaston for the Cruachan and Starav members of the complex, and by Clough for the Meall Odhar member at Meall Odhar and by Anderson (1937a, p. 508) further south in Allt Brander
Cruachan "Granite"
The Cruachan "Granite", as exposed at the surface, is divisible into two portions, which are confluent, but still more or less distinct. The one extends northwards into the heart of the Glen Coe Cauldron, while the other surrounds, almost completely, the great core of Starav Granite farther south. The rock is medium-grained and carries both biotite and hornblende. In the northern lobe it is prevalently a true pinkish granite. In the southern lobe it is generally a grey quartz-diorite. H. K.
Northern Lobe
Unusually acid varieties, consisting almost entirely of quartz and felspar, are met with at high altitudes on Aonach Mòr
Anderson after re-examination has written as follows (1937a, p. 504). "The most acid types were found to occur on the long, north-westerly running Aonach Mòr
The northern lobe invades the volcanic series of Glen Coe. The intrusive behaviour of the "granite" is perfectly certain. Occasional small veins of the "granite" shoot out into the lavas, and fragments of the lavas lie embedded in the "granite". Along the western slopes of the Sant na Crèise ridge, between Clach Leathad
The junction is sometimes traversed by numerous aplite veins which cut lavas and "granite" alike. G. W. G.
The margin is also generally well defined against the quartzite of Beinn Ceitlein, and is unaccompanied by any marked fringe of minor "granitic" intrusions. Rather more than a mile north-east of the top of Stob Dubh lit par lit injection has indeed taken place, but only to a small extent, in a thin band of semipelitic schist lying between the "granite" and the quartzite. Here, in keeping with Kynaston's observation recorded above, the thin "granitic" streaks which have gone along the foliation of the schist are of a distinctly more acid type than the normal "granite". C. T. C.
The mapping of the "granite" margin in the lava country of Lairig Gartain
Southern Lobe
Anderson has found that the normal grey hornblende-biotite-quartz-diorite of the southern lobe of the Cruachan intrusion shows a widespread tendency to pass upwards into more acid biotite-granite; but that the latter is somewhat irregularly distributed, and locally appears at comparatively low levels (1937a, pp. 514, 516). This passage phenomenon must not be confused with the abrupt association with possible Meall Odhar Granite, which will be discussed presently. E. B. B.
The grey quartz-diorite of the southern lobe commonly shows a faint foliation in the orientation of its constituent minerals, and of its fairly abundant, dark, flat inclusions. This foliation is approximately vertical, and runs roughly parallel with the curving outline of the intrusion. Thus in Allt nan Gaoirean
The outer boundary in contact with altered schists is sometimes simple and well defined, but is often, on the other hand, exceedingly complex. In the neighbourhood of Beinn Fhionnlaidh
An interesting section occurs on the southern slopes of Glen Ure
In Sheet 53 the complexity observed at the margin of the southern lobe of the Cruachan "Granite" has comparatively narrow limits, and does not materially affect the value of the boundary line drawn by Kynaston. Comparison of the course of this line and that of the contours shows that the boundary is a somewhat irregular, vertical, curved surface — an observation which agrees well with the vertical course of the foliation already referred to. E. B. B.
Relation to Etive Dyke-Swarm
The Cruachan "Granite", Glen Coe lavas, and adjoining schists are cut by a very large number of north-east dykes, most of which are porphyrites. Such dykes occur in profusion in the district included in Sheet 53, and, though absent in the Starav Granite, are met with again, equally numerous, in Ben Cruachan itself at the southern end of the Etive Complex (
A point of some interest is that the number of dykes found in the Cruachan "Granite" appears to fall off somewhat rapidly in the central region before the Starav Granite is reached. Much of the ground in which this decrease is suspected is somewhat heavily drift-covered, but Allt nan Gaoirean
Fine-grained strings of aplite are common within the Cruachan "Granite", and, except in the neighbourhood of the Starav Granite, they all appear to be older than the suite of north-east dykes. It was impossible to make out any rule in regard to their direction.
Veins of pegmatite, aplite, or micro-granite, which are probably connected with the Cruachan "Granite", are only occasionally found at a considerable distance outside its margin. There is an example on the north side of the River Etive, nearly two-thirds of a mile east of Dalness; the vein here is striking N.N.E., and is at a distance of 200 or 300 yards from the "granite" margin. Another is found about a mile east of Stob Dubh, a little to the west of a later quartz-porphyry dyke.
Meall Odhar Granite
An arcuate outcrop of very acid, practically binary, granite forms a strip between Stob Dubh and Meall Odhar
For half its course in its type area the Meall Odhar Granite is a marginal intrusion insinuated between the Cruachan "Granite" on the south-west and the schists on the north-east. For the other half of its course, it continues its path south-eastwards without any indication of change, although here it merely separates the two lobes of the Cruachan "Granite". The arcuate character of its course is sufficiently pronounced to mark it as a ring-dyke. It is generally between 100 and 200 yards broad, and is traceable for about 2 miles.
The Meall Odhar Granite usually weathers into bigger blocks, and disintegrates less readily, than the Cruachan "Granite". The margins are never chilled, as illustrated in a hand specimen and slice of a contact with Cruachan "Granite" (S13764)
At a point almost a mile south-east from the southern lochan on Beinn Ceitlein
A very acid granite, similar in character to that of Meall Odhar
Relation to Etive Dyke-Swarm
It was during an early stage in the phase of dyke injection referred to in connection with the Cruachan "Granite" that the Meall Odhar Granite, at any rate of the type exposure, rose into position.
The majority of the north-east porphyrite dykes, that come in contact, cross it; but some are cut by it. Veins of the granite are seen, for instance, in a north-east dyke, 930 yards south-east of the south lochan on Beinn Ceitlein
About 200 yards further east, where quartzite gives place to Cruachan "Granite" on the northern side of the Meall Odhar intrusion, strings of the latter again cut porphyrite dykes. In the same locality other small intrusions of the Meall Odhar Granite, in an uncrushed condition, occupy lines of fault which slightly displace various thin aplitic veins belonging to the Cruachan "Granite
A little further south-east, about 1333 yards south of the above-mentioned lochan, narrow bands of pegmatite traverse the Meall Odhar Granite and the Cruachan "Granite" alike; but they may be genetically connected with the former. About 566 yards south-east of the same lochan strings of aplite and pegmatite are abundant in the quartzite on the north-east side of the Meall Odhar Granite, and have probably originated from it.
It has already been mentioned that Anderson has found evidence further south in Allt Brander
While earlier than some, and later than others, of the great Etive Swarm of north-east dykes, there is reason to believe that the Meall Odhar Granite is contemporaneous with a quartz-porphyry dyke which has been followed for 8 miles towards the north-east until lost sight of a mile north of Beinn a' Chrùlaiste
The phenomenon just described of a dyke ceasing at some particular point merely to make a fresh start on a parallel line a short distance to one side is of course quite familiar. In fact the quartz-porphyry dyke dealt with in the preceding paragraph furnishes another clear example of the same kind about a mile south-west of Stob Dearg
Starav Granite
Only the northern edge of the Starav Granite is included in Sheet 53. The mass consists of pink quartzose granite, coarser in texture and more acid than the normal Cruachan "Granite"; it is further characterised by a marginal zone with large porphyritic felspars, both pink and white. Scenically the Starav Granite is remarkable for the nakedness of its rock slopes. H. K.
Kynaston did not attempt to map the boundary between non-porphyritic interior and porphyritic margin, for there is a gradual transition spread over a quarter of a mile. Anderson by drawing an approximate line (1937a, fig. 2) found that the non-porphyritic interior lies well to the north-east of the centre of the Starav Pluton. He showed that the width of the porphyritic edge varies from half a mile in Sheet 53 to 3½ miles in Sheet 45. A similar asymmetry holds in the placing of the Starav Pluton in relation to the Cruachan Pluton. E. B. B.
The margin of the Starav Granite is very simple and approximately vertical. H. K., H. B. M., E. B. B.
Relation to Etive Dyke-Swarm
Before Kynaston left the Scottish Survey he had raised the question whether the Starav Granite might not be later than the majority of the great suite of north-east porphyrite dykes which cut the Cruachan "Granite", and in many cases the Meall Odhar Granite too. This question has been answered in the affirmative: it is now considered that the Starav Granite is later than most, if not all, of these dykes. Before we arrived at this conclusion we revisited several exposures. The results have been already published (Clough, Maufe and Bailey 1909, p.641), and accordingly, so far as they are concerned with localities in Sheet 45 (Geol.), they will only be dealt with in very brief abstract in the present account.
A NNE lamprophyre dyke cuts across the junction of the Starav and Cruachan Granites, and is chilled against both of them, in the bed of the River Kinglass
It has been pointed out that there is apparently a falling off in the number of dykes cutting the Cruachan "Granite" before the Starav Granite is reached; but various sections show that this does not account for the absence of dykes in the latter. The junction of the two granites is exposed for over a quarter of a mile in Allt nan Gaoirean
Half a mile upstream from the point at which the Starav Granite and the Allt nan Gaoirean
Similar evidence is afforded south-east of Meall Odhar in Allt Dochard
The field evidence is corroborated by microscopic study of the dykes. At any rate one of those taken from the contact in Allt nan Gaoirean
Another feature of the porphyrite dykes is confined to the neighbourhood of the Starav Granite. A very large proportion of the dykes in Allt Dochard
Foliation was also noticed in the Allt Ceitlein dyke, and in three of the dykes in Allt nan Gaoirean
Other examples, from a district in which the great majority of the dykes are unaffected, occur about a mile S.S.E. of the Ordnance Station, 1731 ft, on Beinn Ceitlein
Some rather similar sheared dykes also occur in the Meall Odhar Granite, and enclose pieces of it at a locality about 800 yards south-east by south from the lochan on the south end of Beinn Ceitlein
This locality lies about half a mile outside the Starav Granite. C. T. C.
Allt Buidhe Fault
The fault shown in
Mechanics of intrusion
The northern lobe of the Cruachan "Granite" seems to have invaded the Glen Coe Cauldron very shortly after subsidence en bloc had ceased, since it merges with the Fault-Intrusion at the east side of the Cauldron (p. 165), although it definitely cuts across the same intrusion at the west side, near Dalness.
Erosion has exposed the domed roof of this northern lobe, and shown that it consists of untilted lavas. Accordingly, it appears probable that the roof has not been bent up, but that the floor has sunk down in order to make room for the invading magma as the plutonic infilling of a subterranean cauldron
The southern lobe of the Cruachan "Granite" is naturally interpreted in like fashion. Kynaston has shown that it has a steep, smooth, eastern and southern edge which may readily be interpreted as the approximate margin of a subterranean cauldron. The western and north-western boundary is locally more complex in Sheet 45, and is margined by a fringe of "granitic" tongues; but these may be compared with the more irregular parts of the Fault-Intrusion of Glen Coe. Moreover the close marginal association with the Meall Odhar partial ring-dyke and with the Allt Buidhe partial ring-fault emphasises the probability of a subterranean cauldron interpretation. The Allt Buidhe Fault is presumably a concentric flanking dislocation tending to enlarge the scope of the Cruachan subterranean cauldron by downthrow towards its centre.
When we wrote our 1909 account we also pointed to strong supporting evidence supplied by Kynaston's mapping and description of partial ring-structures at Beinn a' Bhuiridh
The Meall Odhar Granite of the type outcrop is a typical example of a ring-dyke. Like most of its kind it is partial in the sense that it is merely arcuate in plan and does not complete a closed curve. It is quite uncertain whether it opened up a single fissure, or occupied a space between two parallel fissures left vacant through contemporaneous foundering of an intervening strip of country-rock.
The similar granite of Stob Gaibhre
That the Starav Granite likewise marks the site of a subterranean cauldron is rendered probable from the verticality of its margins. The core of Cruachan "Granite" which it replaces must either have gone up or down; that the movement was downwards seems likely from the analogy of the Glen Coe subsidence lying at so short a distance to the north.
The foliation of some of the dykes in the neighbourhood of the Starav Granite may be ascribed to the movements which accompanied the introduction of the latter. Other mechanical aspects of the Etive Dyke-Swarm will be considered in chapter 16. E. B. B.