Page:The Journal of geology (IA journalofgeology11893univ).pdf/24
There can be little doubt that a strong unconformability exists between them. A close examination of the ridge of old gneiss in Tyrone and Fermanagh showed me that though the actual basement-beds of this Dalradian series could not be seen resting on the coarse gneiss, the lithological character, and tectonic arrangement of this series are only explicable on the supposition of a complete discordance between it and the gneiss. As these two groups of rock have never been found in close proximity in Scotland, and as the determination of the true age of the Dalradian series is a question of such great stratigraphical importance in the general mapping of the United Kingdom, I requested Mr. A. McHenry, of the Geological Survey of Ireland, to continue the tracing of the mutual boundaries of the old gneiss of the Ox Mountain and the Dalradian series in County Mayo. He informs me that he has found in that series a conglomerate full of blocks of the old gneiss, and resting in one locality apparently unconformably upon it. If this observation is confirmed it will finally set at rest the relative position of the coarse massive gneiss and some portion, at least, of the Dalradian series. Of course there is no absolute proof that the coarse gneisses of Ireland are really the equivalents of the Lewisian masses which they so closely resemble. But there is a strong presumption in favor of their identity.
In England and Wales many detached areas of rock have been claimed as pre-Cambrian, and successive formations have been classified among them. I have already dealt in part with this question, and without attempting here to review the voluminous literature of the subject, I will content myself with stating briefly what seems to me to have been established on good evidence.
There can not, I think, be now any doubt that small tracts of gneiss, quite comparable in lithological character to portions of the Lewisian rocks of the north-west of Scotland, rise to the surface in a few places in England and Wales. In the heart of Anglesey, for example, a tract of such rocks presents some striking external or scenic resemblance to the characteristic