On certain Ancient Devitrified Pitchstones and Perlites from the Lower Silurian District of Shropshire
- 1 February 1877
- journal article
- Published by Geological Society of London in Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society
- Vol. 33 (1-4) , 449-460
- https://doi.org/10.1144/gsl.jgs.1877.033.01-04.24
Abstract
T he principal object of the present communication is twofold:—in the first place, to bring under the notice of the Society the occurrence in Shropshire of an extremely interesting series of ancient vitreous and semivitreous lavas, with their associated agglomerates and ashes; and in the second, to show, from an examination of their structure and composition, that originally they were absolutely identical with some of the glassy volcanic rocks ejected during the most recent geological periods. In a previous paper (published in vol. xxx. pp. 529-567, of the Quarterly Journal) I arrived at the same result as to the identity of ancient and recent volcanic products, from an investigation restricted to the basic group of rocks; and I am now enabled to show that those of the acid type afford equally strong evidence in the same direction. The discovery of several highly characteristic varieties of glassy rocks and volcanic ashes of Palæozoic age is, I think, a matter of considerable interest from a petrological point of view, more especially as their mode of occurrence and their relations to the surrounding strata afford the clearest evidence that the geological structure of a part of the district in which they occur has hitherto been misunderstood. On Sheet 61 of the Geological-Survey map a band of “greenstone” is represented as constituting the axis of the somewhat irregular narrow ridge of which Ercal Hill and the Wrekin form the greater portion. It commences half a mile south of Wellington, and extends in a south-westerly directionKeywords
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