III.—A Petrological Study of the Arthur's Seat Volcano
- 1 January 1956
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh
- Vol. 63 (1) , 37-70
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0080456800003008
Abstract
Synopsis: Aethur's Seat is the remains of a dissected Lower Carboniferous volcano, from which were erupted a series of basaltic rocks representative of the province to which it belongs. The rocks occur as lavas, intrusions and tuffs, and include basalts of Dalmeny, Jedburgh, Dunsapie, Craiglockhart and Markle types, in addition to mugearite. For convenience the basalts of Dunsapie type have been subdivided into Normal and Feldspathic varieties.The volcano has been remapped; some minor departures from the six-inch Geological Survey map are recorded and certain changes in the numbering and classification of the lavas have been made.The petrographic characters of the various volcanic rocks are described in detail, with modal and chemical analyses. The composition of the parental magma of the volcano was probably very similar to that of Normal Dunsapie basalt. Markle and Craiglockhart types were produced as complementary differentiates of the parental liquid by a process of gravity differentiation, in which sinking of ferromagnesian crystals, particularly augites, played an important part. The basalts of Dalmeny and Jedburgh types, which in Arthur's Seat have strong chemical resemblances, probably represent only slightly differentiated parental magma. Concentrations of soda-rich volatiles produced intense albitisation in the Markle basalts and the mugearites. It is considered that the mugearites of Arthur's Seat crystallised initially as Jedburgh or Dalmeny types, and were altered to their present state during a deuteric phase.An attempt has been made to reconstruct the eruptive history of the volcano. The magma source appears to have been replenished with parental magma at least twice during the period of activity. The first and last eruptions were of Dunsapie basalt; the albitised products appeared at a fairly late stage.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- The significance of flow structure in the microporphyritic ophitic basalts of Arthur’s SeatTransactions of the Edinburgh Geological Society, 1952
- The crystallization process of basaltAmerican Journal of Science, 1936
- The Braefoot Outer Sill, Fife - Part IITransactions of the Edinburgh Geological Society, 1934
- Note on corroded ferromagnesian phenocrysts in a Scottish basaltTransactions of the Edinburgh Geological Society, 1932
- Some observations on the Long Row and the Dasses, Arthur's SeatTransactions of the Edinburgh Geological Society, 1912
- II.—Albitization of Basic Plagioclase FelsparsGeological Magazine, 1909
- XII.—On the Carboniferous Volcanic Rocks of the Basin of the Firth of Forth—their Structure in the Field and under the MicroscopeTransactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, 1880
- The structure and arrangement of the rocks of Arthur’s SeatTransactions of the Edinburgh Geological Society, 1879
- On the Microscopic Structure and Composition of British Carboniferous DoleritesQuarterly Journal of the Geological Society, 1874
- I. Of certain Natural Appearances of the Ground on the Hill of Arthur's SeatTransactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, 1790