Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-p9bg8 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T07:41:47.533Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Age of the Girvan-Ballantrae Serpentine

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 May 2009

J. G. C. Anderson
Affiliation:
Carnegie Research Fellow, University of Glasgow

Extract

Between Kennedy's Pass, 4 miles south of Girvan, and Currarie Port, 3½ miles south of Ballantrae, the coast is occupied by a varied assemblage of igneous rocks that have a north-easterly strike and extend inland for several miles (Text-fig. 1). The most important members of this assemblage are a series of spilite lavas and two large outcrops of serpentine. In the present paper it is not intended to give a general description of these rocks, but to concentrate upon the age-relationship of the serpentine to the lavas and associated sediments, in which Lapworth and later workers discovered Arenig fossils.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1936

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

List of References

Balsillie, D. 1932. “The Ballantrae Igneous Complex, South Ayrshire,” Geol. Mag., LXIX, 107131.Google Scholar
Balsillie, D. 1935. Age Relations of the Ballantrae Igneous Complex, South Ayrshire, privately published, St. Andrews.Google Scholar
Balsillie, D. 1936, “Lewisian Rocks in South Scotland,” Scotsman, 11th 04.Google Scholar
Benson, W. N. 1913. “Spilite Lavas and Radiolarian Rocks in New South Wales,” Geol. Mag., L, 1721.Google Scholar
Benson, W. N. 1913. “The Geology and Petrology of the Great Serpentine Belt of New South Wales,” pt. i, Proc. Linn. Soc., N.S.W., xxxviii, 490517.Google Scholar
Benson, W. N. 1915. “The Geology and Petrology of the Great Serpentine Belt of New South Wales. Pt.IV: The Dolerites, Spilites, and Keratophyres of the Nundle District,” Proc. Linn. Soc., N.S.W., xl, 121173.Google Scholar
Bonney, T. G. 1878. “On the Serpentine and Associated Igneous Rocks of the Ayrshire Coast,” Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc., xxxiv, 769785.Google Scholar
Brögger, W. C. 1890. “Die Mineralien der Syenitpegmtitgänge der südnorwegischen Augit- und Nephelinsyenite,” Zeit. f. Kryst. und Min., xvi.Google Scholar
Brögger, W. C. 1934. “ The South Norwegian Hyperites and their Metamorphism,” Skrifter Videnskaps-Akademi i Oslo, I. Matem.-Naturvid. Klasse No. 1, 1421.Google Scholar
Daly, R. A. 1933. Igneous Bocks and the Depths of the Earth, New York.Google Scholar
Forbes, D. 1867. “On the Alleged Hydrothermal Origin of Certain Granites and Metamorphie Rocks,” Geol. Mag., IV, 4959 and 225–230.Google Scholar
Greg, R. P., and Lettsom, W. G. 1858. Manual of the Mineralogy of Great Britain and Ireland, London.Google Scholar
Geikie, J. 1866. “On the Metamorphie Lower Silurian Rocks of Carrick, Ayrshire,” Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc., xxii, 513534.Google Scholar
Geikie, J. 1867. “On the Alleged Hydrothermal Origin of Certain Granites and Metamorphie Rocks,” Geol. Mag., IV, 176182 and 287–8.Google Scholar
Harker, A. 1909. The Natural History of Igneous Rocks, London.Google Scholar
Hartley, J. J. 1933. “The Geology of North-Eastern Tyrone and the adjacent portions of County Londonderry,” Proc. Roy. Irish Acad., xli, B 16, 218285.Google Scholar
Hartley, J. J. 1936. “The Age of the Igneous Series of Slieve Gallion, Northern Ireland,” Geol. Mag., LXXIII, 226–8.Google Scholar
Jehu, T. J., and Campbell, R. 1917. “The Highland Border Rocks of the Aberfoyle District,” Trans. Roy. Soc. Edinb., lii, 175212.Google Scholar
Kynaston, H. 1908. In “The Geology of the Country near Oban and Dalmally,” Mem. Geol. Survey.Google Scholar
Lapworth, C. 1889. “On the Ballantrae Rocks of the South of Scotland and their Place in the Upland Sequence,” Geol. Mag., XXVI. 2024 and 59.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lewis, J. V. 1914. “Origin of Pillow Lavas,” Bull. Geol. Soc. Amer., xxv, 591654.Google Scholar
Murchison, , Sir, R. I. 1851. “ On the Silurian Rocks of the South of Scotland,” Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc., vii, 137178.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Murchison, 1867. Siluria, 4th ed., London.Google Scholar
Nicol, J. 1844. Guide to Geology of Scotland, Edinburgh.Google Scholar
Peach, B. N., and Horne, J. 1899. “The Silurian Rocks of Scotland Vol. I, Scotland,” Mem. Geol. Survey.Google Scholar
Pringle, J. 1933. In “Report of Summer Field Meeting, 1932: Girvan-Ballantrae,” Proc. Geol. Assoc., xliv, 57–9.Google Scholar
Pringle, J. 1935. “British Regional Geology: The South of Scotland,” Mem. Geol. Surv.Google Scholar
Rietz, , Torsten, DU. 1935. “Peridotites, Serpentines, and Soapstones of Northern Sweden,” Geol. För. Förh., Stockholm, lvii, 133260.Google Scholar
Staub, R. 1922. “Ueber die Verteilung der Serpentine in den alpinen Ophiolithen,” Schweiz. Min. u. Petr. Mitt., ii, 78149.Google Scholar
Steinmann, G. 1926. “Die ophiolitischen Zonen in der mediterränen Kettengebirgen,” Congr. Géol. Internat., xiv session, Madrid, Fasc. 2, 637667.Google Scholar
Teall, J. J. H. 1899. In “The Silurian Rocks of Britain, Vol. I, Scotland,” Mem. Geol. Survey.Google Scholar