Abstract
The crystals to which this paper refers are found at Bail Hill, about three miles north of Sanquhar, in Dumfriesshire. At this locality volcanic rocks of Arenlg age outcrop in the midst of the greywacke of the Southern Uplands. The rocks are mainly lavas, and include some coarse-grained tufts which are composed chiefly of augite- and hornblendeandesites. Ill the andesitic fragments, there arc numerous porphyritic crystals of a black augite, which call be easily separated from the rest of the rock. Isolated crystals of augite and hornblende occur also in the matrix of the tufts. No mention of this occurrence is made in Heddle's 'Mineralogy of Scotland', and apparently the only reference to it in previous literature is the short petrographic description in the Geological Survey Memoir.

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