The Geology of The Country Around Cork and Cork Harbour
The Geology of The Country Around Cork and Cork Harbour
The Geology of The Country Around Cork and Cork Harbour
SU&-Y;
IRELAND.
\I
THE
GEOLOGY
THE
COUNTRY
AND
CORK
(EXPLANATION
OF
OF
AROUND
HARBOUR.
CORK
G. W.
LAMPLUGH,
A. MHENRY,
W. B. WRIGHT,
PUBLISHED
BY ORDER
M.R.I.A.,
F.G.S.,
J. R. KILROE,
H. J. SEYMOUR,
OF THE
LORDS
COMMISSIONERS
OF HIS
MAJESTYS
TREASURY.
DUBLIN:
PRINTED
STATIONERY
OFFICE,
FIGGIS,
JOHN
from
MENZIES
;
Dublin
Edinburgh.
From any Agent for the sale of Ordnance Survey Mapr:or through
from the Ordnance Survey Of?ice, Southampton.
--.-
1905.
Price Three fWilli?zqs.
auy Bookseller
PREFACE:
THIS Memoir has been prepared to aoco_mpany the new colourprinted map of the Cork district.
The boundaries of the map
have been arranged to embrace the country around the city of
Cork, and including the whole of Cork Harbour.
This area
formed part of four sheets of the previous solid geological
maps. It is expected that the present arrangement
will be
found more convenient for local purposes and for visitors to
this beautiful district.
The recent survey had for itIs object the mapping of the
glacial Idrifts and other superficial deposits which were not
included witshin the scope of the original survey made half a
century ago. No re-examination
of the solid rocks was
attempted,
and the boundaries of these formations shown on
the new map have been transferred from the solid maps,
with the exception that certain limited tracts of dark shale in
the south-western
part of the sheet, which were shown as
Coal-IVle.asures on the last edition of the solid m,ap, are
not now shown separately from the Lower Carboniferous rocks,
for reasons given in the sequel.
The short description of the solid rocks contained in the
present volume is mainly compiled from the published- Sheet
Explanations, of the origin.al solid maps, with the addition
of some new matter indicating the results of later researches.
This description, together with a general account of the superficial deposits, forming Part I. of the Memoir, has been
prepared by Mr. G. W. Lamplugh.
The detailed d,escription of the superficial deposits, forming
Part II.,, has been written by Messrs. Lamplugh, J. R. Kilroe,
A. MHenry, H. J. Seymour, W. B. Wright, and H. B. Muff,
by whom the recent survey w,as made ; the respective work of
these officers is indicated by the initials after the paragraphs.
Until this survey was carried out our knowledge of the Glacial
deposits in the district was extremely scanty, and it is believed
that the present Memoir will adcd materially to our knowledge
of the later geological history of the South of Ireland.
The discovery by Messrs. Wright and Muff of an ancient
shore-line beneath the Glacial deposits at very nearly the same
level as .the existing shore-line, h,as wide bearings upon muchdebated questions relating to the geographical conditions of the
British Island at the beginning of the Glacial period, and to
the origin of the present flor#a and fauna of Irerand.
In Part III., the economic geology of the district is dealt
with, including #an account of the water supply and of the
soils. TJader the last-mentioned
head Mr. J. R. Kilroe gives
the results of his ex.amination and mechanical analysis of some
characteristic
samples of the soils and subsoils of the district.
taken
for the
J. J. H. TEALL,
Director.
Geologicat
Survey
Office,
28 Jermyn-street,
January
London.
26t71,1905.
-~__.__
._-___.
-____- ____
--
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Page
Preface
by
the. Directoq
PART
I.--GENERAL
CHAPTER I.-INTN.ODUCTION,
1-8
Table of
and its
.
0-14
CHAPTBR III.-THE
CARBONWEROUSROCKS,
YOST-TERTIARY
DEPOSITS,
OR
SUPERFICIAL
15-35
3a9
or Early Glacial
Preliminary Note, 36, Pre-Glacial
Shore-line, 36.
The Glacial Deposits :-Boulder-clay,
40 ; Boulders, 41;
Glacial Strise, 42 ; Glacial Sand and Gravel, 42 ;
Origin of the Glacial Deposits, 44.
River Gravels, 47 ; AlluPost-Glaoial Deposits :-Old
vium, 47 ; Peat (absence of), 48 ; Intake, 48 ; Raised
Beach 1 48.
PART II.--DE\ThlLED
CHA~TFJRV.-D~TA~LED
DEPOSITS,
111
DESCRIPTION.
DESCRIPTION,
DESCRIVTION OF THE
.
.
.
.
.!
SUPERFNIAL
.
.
.
Introduction, 50.
1. The Upland north of the Cork Valley, 50-65.
Upland north-east of Blarneey, 50. Blarney Valley,
5% Eastern end of Bla#rney Valley and CYountry
northward, 54.
Country beltween the Cork and
Blarney Valleys, 53. Upland east of Kilcully and
north of the C.%rk Valley, between Dunkettle and
Queenstown Juncltion, %. Kilcully, 57, ~Glashaboy
River, 58. Butlerstown a,nd Knockraha, 58. Ballynagaul, 59. Upland between Queenstown Junction
and Pigeonhill, 59. Upland to the earth of C&r&tohill land Midleton, 61.
50-108
86.
88.
PART
III.-ECONOMIC
CHAPTERVI.-ECONOMIC
GEOLOGY,
GEOLOGY.
.
109-X%
Absence of Metalliferous
Ores, 109. Building
Stone
and Ornamental
Marble,
199. Ra#re Minerals,
110.
Slates, 111.
Bricks, 111.
<Silica CXay, 1112.
Sand
and Gravel, 113. tild
Materials,
113.
Water
Suplply
Monkstown,
City,
114.
Midleton,
119.
:-Cork
119.
Queenstown,
118.
Blarney,
119.
Agricultural
Geology : General Notes, 120.
Soils and Subsoils of the Area around
Notes on the
Cork, 121.
APPENDIX.
List
INDEX,
of Memoirs
ant1 Papers
of the Cork District,
.
referring
to the
Geology
. 127-130
.
+
* 131-135
vii
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
PLATES.
PLATE
PP
?S
I)
9)
?)
I.-East
P,assage, Cork Harbour : A Transverse
VaJley,
II.-Antioline
Point,
III.-Carboniferous
Ballintemple,
IV.dff
face
p. 9
?I
>,
P* 28
,,
>?
p. 41.
,,
,,
p. 72
2)
p. 99
of Boulder&y
V.-High-level
Bon t&piece.
near Ring&skiddy,
VI.-Raised
Beaoh and Rock Platform near mouth
of Uork Harbour,
?)
FIGURES IN TEXT.
Page
Fig. 1.
99
2.
9,
3.
?, 4.
*t 5:
0 6.
9) 7.
19 9.
$9 9.
9, 19.
1) 11.
tl 12.
)? 13.
), 14,
## 15.
1
4
12
13
16
17
21
37
64
70
72
75
78
79
85
-z:.
_-
THE
GEOLOGY
OF THE COUNTRY
AROUND
I.-GENERAL
CHAPTER
DESCRIPTION.
l.-INTRODUCTION.
Area
of the
Map,
In carrying
~TOCORKLWDCORKfaRROUR
--G?idazs1czQ.
&IEET.
2sgauw;~*4&&6m.
and inlets between the city and the open sea. This map, to
be known as the Cork District Sheet, is of the same size
as the ordinary numbered sheets, namely, 18 inches by 12
The greater
inches, representing an area of 216 square miles.
part lay within Sheet,s 187 and 195 of the previous survey,
with a smaller portion within-the eastern borders of Sheets 186
and 194. The accompanying Index-map,
Fig. 1, will serve
to show the limits of the new sheet, and also the principal
places, rivers, heights, &a., included within it.
I)
THE
GEOLOGY
OF CORK
AND CORK
HARBOUR.
INTRODUCTION.
I,
RECENT.
(Intak8)
Estuarine
River Alluvium.
River Gravel and Gravelly D&as.
Sand and Gravel.
Boulder-Clay.
GLACIAL.
Local Rubble ( Head ).
Infra-Glacial
Upp8.r
Beds
sUr8s
Beach.
Carboniferous Limestone.
.
Lower Lim8&me
Shale,
ferous Slate and Grits.
and
Carboni-
SANDSTONE.
.
I
( Dingb
THE
GEOLOGY
OF CORK
AND CORK
HARBOUR.
to the
but these minor folds are without much effect upon the outline
of the land.
The position and direction of the principal folds are indicated
on the foregoing Index-ma& Fig. 1, the nomenclature adopted
being mainly that used by Prof. J. B. Jukes in the earlier
memoirs.
On the south the outcrop of the Old Red Sandstone
which forms the chief constituent of the Southern Anticline
is marked by undulating high ground, interrupted
only by the
water-channel
giving entrance to Cork Harbour.
This tract
culminates westward in Doolieve, 600 feet high, but east of
Cork Harbour the ground does not rise, in the present map,
above 318 feet.
The depression on the northern aide of the upland, #marked
en the Index-map as the Cloyne Syncline, is partly filled, in
its lowest and broadest portion, by Cork Harbour, and is here
mainly underlain by Carboniferous Limestone.
This belt of
limestone, however, becomes contracted westward of Carrigaline and disappears before reaching Fivemilebridge ; and the
valley then assumes a narrower and steeper aspect.
The Central Anticline to the northward of this depression
traverses the mlap from east to west as a steep-sided ridge of
Old Red Sandstone, broken only by the transverse water-filled
gorges of East Passage (Plate I.) and West Passage by
which the Great Isl*and portion of the ridge is insulated.
At
the eastern margin of the map the ridge from side to side is
less than a mile in width and its greatest altitude is about
330 feet ; but it expands gradually westward to about three
miles in width, its flattened crest then forming a gently undulating upland with summits ranging up to 579 feet in elevation.
This ridge is deeply trenched on both flanks by the ravines of
small ,streame draining from shallow basins on the summit ;
and on Great Island it is also indented by a large valley running
nearlypartillel with its strike for about tlwo miles.
The Cork Syncline, which forms the principal valley of
the map, is underlain by Carboniferous Limestone and Lower
Limestone
Shales brought down in a deep infold between
the OId Red Sandstone rocks of the Central Anticline and the
similar rocks of the Cork or Northern Anticline.
It is about
two miles wide in the west, and increases to over three miles
near Midleton at the e.astern margin of the sheet.
The lowest
ground of this valley usually occurs immediately at the foot of
the steep slopes by which it is bounded on both sides, and is
due to the rapid weathering of the Lower Limestone shale.
In the middle of the syncline, between the outcrops of this
shale, the massive limestone frequently rises in irregular knolls
which, in a few places, carry the ground above the loo-foot
contour.
The River Lee runs along the northern edge of the valley
from the western #margin of the map to three miles east of tbe
city of Cork, and then turns southward through Lough Mahon
After being
and the gorge ,at West Passage to Cork Harbour.
deserted by the Lee, the low flat on the northern side of tht
Q
Cork Syncline is in part occupied by tidal waters, and is confirmed eastward to the eastern extremity of Little Island and
Harpers Island.
Tidal chann,els then branch southward from
it around Foaty Island and join the broader inlet which separates the northern shores of Great Island from the mainland.
The seemingly aberrant deflection of the Lee. from the broad
longitudinal or strike valley to the narrow transverse gorge
by which it breaks through the Central ridge is a good example
of the phenomenon which recurs again and again in the courses
i>f some of the rivers of the South of Ireland, particularly in
respect to the Lee, the Blackwater, and the Suir. It was from
the study of the peculiarities of these river-courses that Jukes
was led to enunciate, in the year 1862,l his famous principle
that the erosion of such valleys must have been commenced on
a plane which lay above the level of the hills and ridges through
which the gorges have been cut, and that the present hills are
the out,come of the differential resistance of the rocks under
the influence of long-continued subserial erosion.
This principle, which has since found universal application, was stated
as follows by Jukes in describing the Cork district in a
previous memoir (Explanation
of Sheets 187, 195 and 196,
p. 32).
This marine action [by which the original high-level surface is supposed to have been produced] cannot now be traced anywhere except in a
eneral way. The surface produced by it must have been a gently unduPating plain, which was wholly above the present surface, unless the
summits of some of the present hills and ridges may possibly have-formed
art of it. That formerly existing plain has been eaten into vertically
%y the action of the rain and rivers running over it, and these have
removed all the rock that intervened between it and the present surface
of the ground. The result has been that the hard and insoluble sand&ones and grit&ones, whether of the Old Red or C?a#rboniferousslate, now
form hills and ridges, while the soluble limestones, and the more easily
eroded shales and clay mslartes
have ,been worn down into valleys and ffats.
It was long before I arrived at the conviction that this action wad truly
and solely an atmospheric one, but the conclusion was at la& forced
upon me . . . .
PHYB1OQRAPHICAL
FfiAlfURfi8.
. . .
'I&97,
NdUTdi8t,
163-166.
t3
3~14 GI~OLOGY
oP
CORK
ANY COOK
BARBOUY~.
THE PAL2EOZOIC
CHAPTER
IT.-THE
ROCKS.
OEOLO(fY
OP CORK
AND CORK
HARBOUR.
some confusion
to
arisen in regard
. . appears
__
. . have
_
ti it. The name was orlgmally appllled to a, series of sandstones, sh#ales and conglomerates
in the Dingle Promontory
which are supposed to be closely asslociated with Upper Silurian
rocks and are overlain unconformably
by part of the Old Red
Sandstone.
Professor E. Hull1 believed that this Dingle series
W&Sthe equivalent of the Glengariff Grits and of the lower part
of the Old Red Sandstone throughout the South of Ireland.
Consequently he held that a great break existed between the
Lower Old Red or so-called Dingle Beds and the Upper Old
Red or Kiltorcan Beds ; and he reglarded thle former division as
being ,clogely allied with the Upper Silurian, and proposed that
it nshould be relegated
to a new system to be called the
Devono-Silurian
formation,2
while the l.atter division was
recognised as being only slightly older than the Carboniferous.
Even wh,ere the two divisions were apparently
condormable
and in direct sequence, Prof. Hull believed that the great
unconflormity existed, but was concealed by the prevalent later
8folding.
Mr. A. McHenry, who took part in the re-examination of the
ground which led to the issue of the r,evised maps in X379-1880,
is of opinion however that the correlation of the beds showing
Silurian affinities in the Dingle Promontory
with the lower
part of the Old Red Sandstone of the country farther eastward
and south-eastw,ard ,cannot be <sustained ; that the Old Red
Sa#ndstone of the Cork district forms ,a single unbroken series ;
and that the whole is newer than the Dingle Reds of Dingle
-the last-mentioned beds being regarded by Mr. McHenry as
of Upper Silurian age.
So far as the present map is concerned, the evidence seems
opposed to the view that there can be a great unconformity
between the lower and upper parts of the Old Red Sandstone,
although Prof. Hull believes that indications of the supposed
unconformity may be found in the section between Monkstown
and Passage, where he supposes that 2,000 to 3,000 feet of the
lower division are wanting on the northern
sidle of the anticline.8 In the description of this locality given by Jukes, it is
suggested that the beds are displaced by a fault* ; and in any
case it must be acknowleldged that, in view of the possible
complications by folding and faulting, the section is not sufficiently clear to afford satisfactory proof of the unconformity.6
._______________
p---p
-- - - - - I
1 On the Geological Age of the Rooks formin,g izd qxthern Bighltnds of
Glengarlff Grits and
Ireland, generally known as The Dingle Beds
Quart. Journ. Beol. Boc., vol. xxxv. (1879), pp. 699-723 ; see,also A
Slates.
possible explanation of the North Devon Section.
Beol. Mug., deo. ii., vol. v.
(1878), p. 529 ; and On the Relations of the Carboniferous, Devonian, and
Upper Silurian Rooks of the South of Ireland to those of North Devon. 196.
Trans. Roy. Dubl. ~oc., n.s., vol. i. (1880). pp. 136-150.
9 On a proposed Devono-Silurian Formation.
Quart. Journ. Qeol. SOL,
vol. xxxviii. (1882), pp. 200-209.
5 On the Relations $0. (swra cit.) 8 . Trans. R. Dub?. Sot., n.a., vol. i.,
p. 141, and Fig. 4.
* Mem. Qeol. Survey. Explanation of Sheets 187, 195, a.nd 196, p. 47.
5 Mr. &Henry, who sup lied Prof. Hull with the data for this se&Ion, states that
his subsequent work in t%e distriot satisfied him that the section affords no
definite proof of unoonformity.
11
Survey.
&planstion
7.
WkE3
a is a representation in outline, somewhat restored, of a large portion of
one of the fronds reduced to one-sixth of the natural size ; b is a sketch of one of
the leaflets, natural size, showing the venation by longitudinal striae, which are
occasionally forked; c is a single branch in fructification, taken from another
specimen; it shows the spore csses which were originally aggregated into clusters
end grctnulated. (&I&J).
1 R. Griffith and A. Bron niart On the Remains of Fossil Plants discovered
in the Yellow Sandstone %t&a,
&c., Journ. R. Dublin floe., vol. i., p. 313.
W. H. Baii
On Fossils from the Upper Old Red Sandstone of Kiltorcen
Hill, co. Ki 9kenny.
SC. Proc. R. Irieh Acad., ser. 2, vol. ii., p. 46. See also 6.
Htlughton On the Evidence afforded by Fossil Plants as to the Boundary Line
between the Devonian and Carboniferous Rocks.
Joum. Bed. Sot., Dublin,
vol. vi., p. 227*; 0. Heer On .
L [plants] from Kiltorcan.
QUMt.
Jown. Ued. ~oc., vol. xxviii., p. les; &d later works on Palaeobotany.
13
I$.
THE
GEOLOGY
OF
CORK
AND
CORK
HARBOUR.
LOWER
CARBONIFEROUS
ROCKS.
15
CHARTER I&--THE
CARBONIFEROUS
ROCKS.
The method of classification adopted in the original survey
of the Carboniferous rocks of the Cork <district was to separate
out the limestone from the shaly slates and grits which in part
underlie and rn part are .supposed to represent
the detrital
deposits equivalent in age to the lim(estone.
The former,
which constitutes a very definite stratigraphical
subdivision,
was shown on the map as the Carboniferous Limestone or
Lower Carboniferous Limestone,
and the latter, according
to locality, as Lower Limestone Shale or as Carboniferous Slate and Coomhola Grits.
Afcterwards two or thre!e
small tracts of black shale in the south-western
part of the
present sheet were sep*arated out and distinguished as CoalMeasures, but as will be shown in the context there is now
strong reason to doubt whether these beds should be regar,ded
as Coal -Measures.
The position of the Carboniferous
rocks in the synclinal
valleys of the district has ,already bleen indicated.
It may be
further noted that the principal maes of limestone occurs in
the Cork valley (Plate III.), which is underlain by this rock
throughout the area shown on the present map, excepting in
the narrow marginal .strips underlain by the Lower Limestone
Sh,ale. Limestone is also developed in a bro,ad belt along the
middle of the Cloyne syncline east of Cork Harbour, and on
the opposite side ,as far westward as Carrigaline ; but it soon
afterwards dimsappears, and f,arther westward occurs only as a
narrow infold which taper-s out Ibefore Fivemilebridge
is
reached.
A small tract of limes8tone also occurs in the Blarney eyncline, as previously mentioned ; and near the south-eastern
corner of the map, one mile S.E. of Whitewell, the tip of a
small trough-like infold of lrmestone probably enters the sheet,
though obscured by a covering of boulder-clay.
The Lower Limestone Shale or Carboniferous Slate Series
forms only a narrow fringe to the synclines of limestone in
those parts of the map where the limestone occurs extensively.
But south of the Central Anticline, where the area of the limestonedis reduced, the Carboniferous
Slate appears to increase
rapidly in thickness and becomes the predominant
member,
covering wide stretches of country.
At the same time its
lithological characters are changed by the inclusion of bands
of hard sandstone-the
Coomhola Grits --and
it is no
longer confined to the margins of the low ground, but rises into
The apparently correlative
association of this
hilly ridges.
thickening of the Carboniferous Slate series with the dwindling
of the Carboniferous Limestone led Jukes to suppose that there
was a complete replacement
of the limestone by shales and
grits in going southward
and westward from the present
Before this hypothesis is discusseld it will be condistrict.
venient to enter briefly into the composition and palasontology
of the rocks underlying the limestone in the several districts.
This description will be taken mainly from the accounts published in the former memoire.
16
THE
GPOLOGY
HARBOUB.
description
Explanation
of these
beds given
by
i~~~~i~~l~~-~
-@3s&?&
L
( From wanti of &ygontinuous section from
up
LOWER
CARBONIFEROUS
17
ROCKS.
18
THE
GEOLOGY
OF CORE
AND
CORK
HARBOUR.
A list of the fossils which have been recorded from the Lower
Limestone Shale and associated deposits within the area of the
present sheet or from localities only just beyond its boundaries
is given subsequently (pp. 26 and 27). The list h,as been compiled from that of the late W. H. Baily, published in the
Explanation of Sheets 187, 195 and 196, with additions from
a later paper published by Jukes, for which the fossil-lists were
also prepared by Baily.
The names of the fossils in this list,
and also in the subsequent lists, are reprinted as given in the
original records cited, as it was found that much confusion and
risk of error would have arisen if the names had been altered
to their supposed equivalents in present nomenclature without
re-examination
of the original specimens, which is beyond the
scope of the present drift-survey.
It will be noticed that there are very few species in the list
obtained from that part of the Iseries classified as Lower
Limestone Shale by Jukm which have not al,so been obtained
from the Carboniferous Slate district or from the Coomhol,a Grits of 4he same district.
Therefore if these lists may
be taken m fairly representative
of the fauna of the different
rock-groups, there is no palEeontologica1 evidence on which to
establish a distinction between them.
Neither do we find anything in the fossils to support the view of Jukes, on the one
hand, that part of the Carboniferous
Slate of the southwestern district may be equivalent to the C,arboniferous Limestone of the north and north-east, and therefore in part newer
than the Lower Limestone Shale ; nor, on the other hand, to
support the widely held opinion that the CoomhoLa Grit
series may be older than th,e Lower Limestone Shale.
If the
Carboniferous
Slate and Coomhola Grits be relegated to the
Upper Devonian, it would appear to be necessary to regard the
greater part of the Lower Limestone Shale of the Cork district
(See Note at end of list, p. 27.)
as Upper Devonian also.
The views of Jukes on the question of classification, to which
reference has been made, are expressed in the following statement, extracted from the Explanation of Sheets 187, 195 and
196, pp. 32-37 : I havz, however, arrived at a conclusion difEerent from my original
one respecting the relations between the rock groups of the district,
which it will be well to give a brief account of here. Wherever th6 Carboniferous Limestone occurs in this district, it lies above beds of dark
gray or black shale or slate. These beds are thicker near Cork than they
are farther to the north, about Mallow for instance, or anywhere in
that latitude, either at Kenmare to the west, or at Dungarvan to the east.
Proceeding from, &Fk to the aou+h and west towards Kinsale, these
gray slates become still thicker, but are still capped by the limestone as
far as Carrigaline. The most obvious supposition is that the lowest limestone beds about ,Cork are the same beds which are the lowest at Mallow,
and that the lowest beds about Carrigaline are the same as the lowest
at Cork ; in fact, that while the limestone remained the same over the
whole area of the south of Ireland, a great thickening took place in the
oeds below the limestone in the south-western part of the county of Cork.
This increase of thickness in those beds, as we proceed towards the southwesi, is an undoubted fact. ; but I now believe that it was accompanied
by a corresponding thinning out and dying away of the limestone, and
LOWER
CARBONIFEROUS
19
ROCKS.
20
THE
GEOLOGY
OF CORK
AND
CORK
HARBOUR.
.
On a reexamination
of the Carboniferous limestone between Carrigaline and Cork Harbour, with this idea as a basis, I saw that two
points, that had previously struck me as remarkable, favoured this
hypothesis.
One of these points is near Carrigaline Church and Castle. A mass
of dark gray, fine-grained grit is visible at the corner of the cross-roads,
while immediately north of it there comes in thick, massive, gray, crystalline, crinoidal limestone. Neither of these rocks are at all like the beds
that usually occur at the base of the limestone, where it passes down into
the Lower Limestone shale, so that it is probable that the bottom beds
at this locality are not the regular basal beds of the limestone, but some
higher ones. I was at one time half inclined to suspect that the limestone might be unconformable to the lower rocks at this place, but the
exposure of the latter is too small and obscure to found such a supposition on.
I The other instance i.s much more telling, though it has to be sought
in an obscure locality. It is on the south side of the promontory of
Ringaskiddy, on the eastern shore of the shoal inlet there
where some beds of dark gray shale and thin gray grit bands, verk liketh;?
Carboniferous slate beds (and not like any beds that are called Calp),
come in above some 800 or 900 feet of thick, gray, crystalline limestone.
These look very much like beds of Carboniferous slate beginning to be
intercalated between beds of the limestone, or like beds of Carboniferous
slate con&g in over the Eimestme, and as if the limestone was beginning to die away as an inlier in the slate.
Lastly, we may appeal to the general palseontological evidence procurable from the Carboniferous slate itself. With t-he exception of the shells
called Czcc~ZZccaand Cwrtomtus, and a few other fossils which are found
almost solely in the gritstones (and which we m.ay suppose, therefore, to
have been sand-loving animals)., and a few species, such as Modiola
Macada,mi and Avicula Danmomensis,
which are found chiefly in shales
or slates (and appear, therefore, to have been inhabitants of muddy
bottoms), most of the species found in the Carboniferous Slate are also
found in the Carboniferous Limestone. It is true that the limestone has
many species which are not found in the grits or in the shales or slates,
but it is obvious that we may attribute this also to the nature of the
different sea bottoms which were favourable to them, and not to the different periods of their existence.
Certain animals loved clear seas and calcareous bottoms, certain
others preferred sand, and others again mud, all inhabiting simultaneously different parts of the same sea ; while others, and those the most
abundant in individuals, ranged indiscriminately throughout. Among
the latter we may include those common Carboniferous species, Fenestella
antiqua, A thyris ambigua, Producta scabricula, Rhynchonella plezlrodon,
Spirzfem
czcspidata and S. striata (varieties of which latter species are
probably the disjmcta
of Sowerby, Vmmezcillii of Murchison), Streptoand Terebratbla
hastata, which range throughout
rhynchus crennistria,
the Carboniferous Slate, as thev do throughout the Carboniferous Limestone, occurring in the grits and slates side by side with the fossils that
are peculiar to those beds.
[ I feel, then, now assured that the Carboniferous Slate must be taken
to be contemporaneous with the Carboniferous Limestone, and that here
and there in the Carboniferous Slate country of Cork, small patches of
Coal Measure shales come in conformably on the topmost bed of the
Carboniferous Slate, just as they do on the top of the Carboniferous
Limestone in the northern part of County Cork, and the rest of the S.
of Ireland.
The deposits of sand and mud which first succeeded the formation of
the Old Red Sandstone in South Ireland and South Wales, were continued uninterruptedly through the whole Carboniferous period to the
southward and westward of a line which runs through Kenmare Bay,
ark Harbuur, and the Bristol Channel, while to the north of that line
those muddy and sandy deposits were interrupted during a large part
of the period, and the Carboniferous Limestone was formed from the
waste of the bodies of marine animal organisms, which flourished in the
abeence of the mtchanic$ detritus.
Coomhols Grits.
- --
.
.
.
.
.
.
...
.1
*
.
Carboniferous lA;meatone,
The Carboniferous
submarine forests of
* The Barrier Reefs of the N.E. coast of Australia are 1,200 miles long, having
through part of that space a thickness of at least 1,800 feet. After crossing
Torres Straits they terminate on the coast of New Guinea, in a large massive reef
oalled Warriors Reef. Immediately to the eastward and northward of this there
is a wide open sea in which there is not a particle of Coral to be seen for at least
120 miles, the bottom consisting entirely of mud and silt, brought into the sea
there by the rivers which drain, a parently, the larger part of the Island of New
Guinea. The change here, then, Hom a purely calcareous formation to one consisting entirely of mud and sand, is as abrupt as can possibly be imagined, both
formations having been deposited simultaneously side by side with each other.
L;OWE!R
CA~kO~IFtiROU$
R6CK&.
This conclusion will apply to the Eifel limestones and the other rocks now called
Devonian in Europe and America, as well as to those of the British Islands. It
will also follow that no part of the Old Red sandstone can properly be called
Devonian, as the topmost bed of the Old Red sandstone will then be shown to
have been in existence before any of the beds containing the marine Devonian
shells were deposited.
The upper art of the series called Old Red sandstone, that containing plant
remains and fis% of the genera Pterichthys, Coccosteus, &c., will then form the
conformable base of the Carboniferous series, while the lower art, containing fish
of the genera Cephalaspis, &c., will more properly belong to t%e top of the Upper
Silurian Series.
These hypothetical conclusions, however, are here put forth as problems for
solution, having a sufficient amount of probability to make them worth enter-
taming, and not as demonstrated theorems.
E.B.J.]
pod; hkebeen found to occur in the North Devon grits and slates, while
about sixteen have been recognised in the Irish corresponding beds.
Of the twenty-one North Devon species, nine or ten only have been
recognised in the Irish brown grits, not quite half of the species being
common to the two.
They contain in common Athyris (perhaps concentrica), Spkifera
disjuncta and Cyrtina heteroclita 1 hitherto considered to belong to the
Devonian age, but there is no reason why they should not have existed
also in that of the Carboniferous period.
The absence, however, in these Irish beds of any example of Eh.
laticosta, Strophdosia caperata, Productus pra&ngus, and Gngulla mola,
species so common and characteristic of the ,North Devon beds, is very
remarkable ; but our not having met them among the specimens sent from
Ireland fovr e,xamination, is no proof that they do really not occur in
these Irish grits.
1Since the above was written, this correlation has been restated by Dr.
Wheelton Hind in a paper to which further reference is given on p. 26.
ti4
THE
HARBOUR.
In a paper1 published
in 1866, Jukes expressed
his conviction, after personal
examination
of the Devonshire
sections,
that the rocks of North Devon belong partly to the group
called Carboniferous
Slate in Ireland,
and partly to the Old
Red Sandstone.
And Ias he still adhered to the view that the
Csrboniferous
Slate was in part deposited
synchronously
with
the Carboniferous
Limestone,
he suggested
that the upper
portion of the Devonian
series in Devon might also be equivalent to the Carboniferous
Lime,stone.
The following
concise re-statement
of his views
to the Gork rocks as a whole, is given by Jukes
quoted paper (p. 345) :-
with regard
in his last-
1 On the Carboniferous Slate (or Devonian Rocks) and the Old Red Sandstone
Quart. Joum. Geol. Sot., vol. xxii., pp.
of South Ireland and North Devon.
320-371.
See also the following other papers by Jukes :- Additional Notes
on the Grouping of the Rocks of North Devon and West Somerset, privately
printed, Dublin, 1867. Notes for a Comparison between the Rocks of the
South-west of Ireland and those of North Devon and of Rhenish Prussia [containing a :ood list of fossils and fossil-localities], Journ. R. Geol. Sot. of Ireland.
vol. i. (1867), pp. 103-138 ; Further Notes on the Cla.ssification of the Rocks
of North Devon, ibid., vol. i. (1867), pp. 138-143 ; and Notes on parts of South
Devon and Cornwall, ibid., vol. ii. (1871), pp. 66-107.
2 A possible explanation of the North Devon Section, Geol. Mag., dec. ii.,
vol. v. (1878), p. 532 ; and ,.Cn a proposed Devono-Silurian Formation, Quart.
Journ. GwZ. Qoc., vol. xxxvm. (1882), p. 208.
LOW&% CAttkbNIFEBOUS
ROCKS.
25
strength
of this correlation
some authors,
including
Jukes and
Hull, have urged that the Devonshire
beds should be classed as
Lower CarboGif erous .1
It has, however,
been supposed by most later workers that
the Carboniferous
Limestone
period is represented
in Devon
and Cornwiall by part of the Culm series2-a
shaly and sandy
group differing
widely from its equivalents
in other parts of
Britain-and
fhat the Pilton and Mtarwood beds which underlie this series are older than the Carboniferous
Limestone
and
must be retained
in the Upper Devonian.
If this method of
classification
be finally adopted
for the English
rocks it will
re-act to some extent
upon the system adopted
by Jukes in
Ireland,
and, as previously
rioted, it would probably
become
requisite
to relegate
a large part of the Carboniferous
Slate
series to the Upper Devonian.
Within
recent years the fossils of the Pilton
and Marwood
beds have been carefully re-described
by the Rev. G. F. Whidborne in vol. iii. of his Monograph
of the Devonian
Fauna of
the South of England
(&!onogr. P&zon.t.
Sot.,
~01s. l., 1896,
li., 1897, and iii., 1898) ; but no similar work has yet been done
on the Cork fossils, and the list given below is based entirely
on the determinations
made by Baily over forty years ago.
It is highly desirable
that the fauna of the Carboniferous
Slate
and Coomhola
Grits should
be re-examined
in the light of
present
palpontological
knowledge,
,and until this has beer1
done further
discussion
of the correlation
is hardly possible.
But the absence
of some characteristic
Devonshire
species,
commented
on by Davids,on,
and the comparative
poverty
of
the Irish fauna, suggest that the conditions
in the two regions
were not identical,
and that only part of the Pilt,on and Marwood series is represented
by m.arine deposits in Ireland.
As a summary
of our present
knowledge,
.it may be concluded that in the dilstrict under
discussion,
after the long
period of lacustrine
conditions
represented
by the Old Re,l
Sandstone,
a wide-reaching
depression
occurred by which the
area was submerged
beneath
the sea.
This submergence
took
place before the close of the Devonian
period-if
we accept the
limits usually assigned to that period in the south of Englandand was continued
throughout
Lower
Carboniferous
times.
The earliest
sediments
accumulated
during this submergence
are therefore
of Ialte TJpper Devonian
age, but .pass insensibly
1 See Correlation Tables in Renort of Sub-Committee on Carboniferous,
Devonian, and Old Red Sandstone, published in Report of International Leological Congre.%s,London 1888.
2 For some recent conclusions regarding the Culm Series, see Mr. W. A. E,
Usshers papers The British Culm-measures, Proc. Somerset drchocol. & Nat.
Hist. Sot., vol. xxxviii. (1892), pp. 111-219, and The Culm-measure types of
Great Britain, Trans. Inst. Mining Engineers, vol. xx. (1901), pp. 360-387.
See
also Messrs. G. J. Hinde and H. Fox, on Radiolarian Rocks in the Lower Culm,
Quart. Journ. Oeol. Soe., vol. li. (1!395), p. 662. Since the above was written,
however, Dr. Wheelton Hind has urged, on palnontological grounds, that the
Lower Culm is equivalent to the Pendleside Series of the North of
England, and t,herefore newer than the main mass of the Carboniferous Limestone ; see his paper < On the Homotavial Equivalents of the Lower Culm of
North Devonshire, a&. Mag., dec. v., vol. i. (Aug., 1904), pp- 392-403.
26
THE
GEOLOGY
CORK
HARBOUR.
t
-1 T-car-
bog jfeous
Coomhole
Grit.
PLANT.q.
.
.
.:
AOTINOZOA.
..
EOHINODERMATA.
.
Actinocrinus polydactylus, Miller
.
Cyethocrinus pinnatus, Qoldf. .
---(1 Actinocrinus) varisbilis, Phi&!. :
Cyathocrinus (1 Actinocrinus), and other crinoidal remains.
Plstyorinua
.
.
.
.
.
.
..
..
ii
JJ
J
B
..
CRUSTAOEA.
Cypridina (Leperditia) subrecta, PO&.
of the CarboniferousSeriesin Great Britain and some of their European Equivalents. Trans. Ed&b. Geol. Sot.. vol. vii. (ZSSS), p. 360.
POSSILS
OF THE LOWER
LIMESTONE
SHALE,
Lower
LiK&;ne
27
ETC.
~~bOll;OUS
.
oomhob
Qrit.
BRYO~OA.
Ceriopora rhombifera, Phi&
Fenestella antiqua, Goldf.
..
..
..
..
BRACHIOPODA.
Athyris ambigua, &our.
.
.
.
.
Discina nitida, Phi&
Orthis Michelini, Lkv. (including some speci:
mens which may possibly be 0. interlineata, Sow.)
Productus scabriculus, Martin
.
.
.
--semireticulatus, var. Martini, Sow. .
Renssellseria stringice s ? F. Roemer
.
.
Rhynchonella pleuro $ on, Phil?. (or R. latiCosta).
Spirifera cuspidata, Martin
.
.
.
---striata, Martin (along with forms
usually named S. disjuncta or S. Verneuili)
Spirifefep cristata, var. octoplicata, J. de 0.
Streptorhynchus crenistria, Phill.
Terebratula hastata, J. de C. Sow.,
.
.
.
.
BB
B
J
ii
J
..
z..
....
..
ii
..
::
3
B
..
..
LAMELLIBRANcHI_~TA.
Avicula damnoniensis, Sow.
.
.
.
Aviculopecten nexilis, Sow.
.
.
.
Cucullaea Hardingi, Sow. (including vars.
trapezium and amygdalina).
Curtonotus elegans Salter (and vars. elongatus
and rotundatus).
Cy ricardia Phillipsi, &Orb.
.
.
.
Do Pabra ? sp.
Modiola Macadami, P&X
:
:
:
:
Nucula, sp.
Sanguinolites, sp:
1
1
1
1
1
Sedgwickia bullata ? MCoy
.
.
.
..
ii
..
..
..
BB
B
B
..
..
BB
B
..
..
GASTEROPODA
(with HETEROPODA).
Acroculia striata, Philt.
Bellerophon subglobatus,
---sp.
Euomphalus, sp.
:
Natica, sp.
Pleurotomaria, sp.
1
Turbo, sp.
.
.
.
.
.
.
1
.
1
.
1
.
1
.
:
.
:
.
MCo~
CEPHALOPODA.
Goniatites, sp.
Orthoceras unduiatum; SOW:
:
---sp.
.
.
.
.
J
J
ti
..
..
..
..
..
..
3
..
ii
..
i3.
ii
..
..
..
..
..
Note.-As it was held by Jukes that the Lower Limestone Shale, Carboniferous
Slate, and Coomhola Grit were equivalent deposits and all of Carboniferous
age, their classification for purposes of fossil-collecting was probably considered
to be of secondary conse uence, and therefore the separation indicated in the
original list, from which tx e above table has been compiled, has evidently been
more or less arbitrary. Jukes stated in his paper (Quart. Journ. Geol. Sot., vol.
xxii., p. 337) that CucuZZ@a, and Curtonotus were found at several localities,
but always in grits, the situation of which showed them to be low down in the
Carboniferous Slate.
As these fossils are recorded in the list from all three
divisions, it may be inferred that the grit-bands with the peculiar fauna ocour in
the Lower Limestone Shale as well as in the Carboniferous Slate.
ab
Carboniferous Limestone.
The following is the short description of the
Carboniferous
Limestone
given by Jukes in the Explanation
of Sheets 187,
195 and 196 (p. 9) : The Carboniferous Limestone preserves nearly the same characters
over the whole area, being a pale gray compact or crystalline limestone,
almost always thick bedded. It is, however, so much cut up by numerous
joints, and often so much affected by an imperfect slaty cleavage, that
it is generally impossible to say which are the original planes of stratifycation, and determine its dip by any observatioss made in the limestone
itself.
CARBONIFEROUS
LIMESTONE.
29
OF FOSSILS
FROM
THE
OF
THE
CORK
DISTRICT
publications : -
CARBONIFEROUS
; compiled
from
LIMESTONE
the following
BAILY, W. H.-List
in previous Memoir Geol. Survey : Explanation of Sheets
187, 195 and 196 (1864), pp. 8-18.
of Brachiopoda in Mem. Geol. Survey : Explanation
DAVIDSON, T.-List
of Sheets 192 and 199 (1864), pp. 27-28.
DONALD, MISS J.-
Notes on some new and little known species of Carboniferous Murchisonia, Quart. J ourn. Geol. Sot., vol. xlviii. (1892) ; and Notes
on Murchisonia and its allies, ibid. vol. li. (1895), p. 221.
FOORD, A. H.-
Monograph of the Carboniferous Cephalopoda of Ireland,
Fa,Gzont. Sot. for 1897-1903.
HAU~HTON, S.- On some Fossil Pyramidellidae from the Carboniferous
Limestone of Cork and Clonmel, Proc. Dublin Univer. *Zool. & Botan. Assoc.,
vol. i. (1859), p. 282.
HIND, W.--- MFmograph of the British Carboniferous Lamellibranchiata,
Pakeont Sot. for 1897-1904.
JONE;. T. R., J. W. KIRKBY, and G. S. BR.\DY.- Monograph of the British
Fossil Bivalved Entomostraca from the Carboniferous Formations,
Palceont.
SOS. for 1874 and 1884.
-
Monograph
of
the
British
Palaeozoic
JONES, T. R., and H. WOODWARD.
Phyllopoda, Palaeont Sot. for 1899.
of the British Carboniferous Trilobites,
WOOD WARD, H.-- Monograph
Pakont
Sot. for 1883 and 1884 ; and Monogr. of the British Fossil Crustacea
belonging to the Order MerJstomata, Part V., ibid. for 1878.
WRIC4HT J. - Description of a new Palmchinus, Joum. R. Beol. Sot. Ireland,
vol i. (1864), p. 62.
ACTINOZOA.
Authority
: Baily,
op. cit.
Platycrinus
: Wright,
gigas, Phill.
op. cit.
Pahechinus quadriserialis, J.
Wright.1
1 No locality is mentioned for this fossil in the original description, but we are
informed by Mr. J. Wright that it was obtained from Ballynabointra, 2+ miles
west of Midleton.
30
THE
GEOLOGY
OF CORK
AND CORK
HARBOUR.
CRUSTAOEIA.
Authority : H. Woodward, op. cit.
Cyclus Wrighti, H. Woodw.
Brachymetopus diacors, MCoy
Griffithides globiceps, Phill.
ourahcus, De Vern.
seminiferus, PhiU.
Cyclus ii[arknessi, H. Woodw.
Phillip& Colei, MCoy
jonesianus, H. Woodw.
,,
derbiensis, Mart.
radialis, Phill.
,t
,,
gemmulifera, Phill.
torosus, H. Woodw.
,9
,,
Authority : Jones and Woodward, op.
Chzenocaris tenuistriatct, MCoy.
cit.
.
BRYOZOA.
Fenestella
9,
1,
9,
9,
FOSSILS
OF THE CARBONIFEROUS
LIMESTONE.
31
LAMELLIBRANCI~IATA.
QASTEROP~DA.
Authorities : B&y
Note.-Mr. J. Wright informs UEthat his collection contains also the following
species hitherto unreoorded, the majority being from the old Windmill Quarry
ornatum, De Kon. ; Euomphalus aequalis, Sow. ;
(see p. 32) :-Dentalium
E. oalyx, PhiZZ.; E. catillus, Mart. ; Littorina solids, De Kon. ; Loxonema oonstriota, Mart.; L. Lefebvrei, LEw. ; Maorooheilus ourvilineus, PhiZZ.; M. nobilie,
sow. ; Murohieonia striatula, De Kon. ; Natica ampliata, PhiZZ.; N. elliptica,
Phill. ; N. elongata, PhiZZ.; N. spirata, Sow. ; Platychisma fallax, De Kon. ;
P. helicoides, Sow. ; Pleurotomaria altavittata, MCoy ; P. oonica, Phi& ; P.
oallosa, De Kon. ; P. decussata, MCoy ; P. expansa, De Kon. ; P. naticoides,
De Kon. ; P. tornatilis. PhiZZ.; P. Y vanni, LEv. ; Trochella prisoa, MCoy ; Turbo
biserialis, PhiZZ.
CEPHALOPODA.
Food
32
THE GEOLOGY
OF CORK
AND
CORK
HARBOUR.
Becheri Beds,
CARBONIFEROUS
33
In view of more recent work on the palzeontology of the Carbcniferous rocks, however, the reasons adduced by Jukes for
considering these beds to be Coal-Measures are no longer valid,
as their fauna would now be classed as Lower Carboniferous.2
The following is the list of fqsils (with tlhe original nomeE.clature) from the black shales given by Baily in the former
memoir, in part from localities within the present sheet, and
in part from places just outside its southern margin :FOSSILS
OF THE
POSIDONOMYA
BEDS.
PLANT&.
Noggerathia
I,
dichotoma
? Goepp.
BRAUHIOPODA.
Spirifera
pinguis,
Sow.
CONOHIFERA.
Aviculopecten
Lunulioardium,
papyraceus,
sp.
Posidonomya
9,
Bow.
CEPHALOPODA.
Qoniatites
9,
Orthoceras
,,
cinctum, Bow.
scalare, Goldf.
:ISClES.
Caelacanthus
elongatus,
Huxley.3
Palsoniscus,
sp.
34
1 The l'mreotme
of the Cerboniferoue Rocks of the Pennine System.
I&e. Qd. & Pdptech, Sot., vol. xiv. (1902), pp. 422-468,
Plot,
35
: near
Fivemilebridge,
Cork.
Balhnhassig
, south
of
D2
36
THE
GEOLOGY
CHAPTER
IV.-THE
SUPERFICIAL
HARBOUR.
POST-TERTIARY
OR
DEPOSITS.
SHORE-LINE
1I
BENEATH
GLACIAI,
DEPOSITS.
37
. .
..
* .*
ZI(
r: P
6.
4.
3.
2.
1.
38
!EiB
0EOLOoP
OF
CORB:
ANb COI?&
E~A~BOUR.
59
.
TBB GEOLOGY Ol? CORX AND CORK BARBOUR.
It is especially noteworthy
that throughout the extent to
:vhich this old shore has been traced along the southern coast
of Ireland no appreciable difference in its level could be
detected,1 thus showing that there has been no differential
movement of the south of Ireland in an east and west direction
nince pre-glacial tim,es. There can be no doubt, also, that the
same shore-line is indicated on the opposite side of St. Georges
Channel, by the Raised Beach of Gower, described by Mr.
R. H. Tiddemanz; and it is probable that an old shore-line
which occurs in Devon and Cornwall is of the same period.3
Still more remarkable is the fact that an ancient sea-beach has
been found beneath the drifts in the east of England, on the
south side of Flamborough Head,4 at about the same level.
This pre-glacial insulation of Ireland has an important bearing on questions relating to the distribution of the flora and
It must be remembered, however, that
fauna of the country.
a land-connection
with Great Britain may have been established during the subsequent
Glacial and Post-Glacial
reelevation.
BOULDER-CLAY.
41
the upland, leaving the rock uncovered only on the ridges and
in the steep-sided valleys.
But farther southward the proportionate area of drift becomes much less, except in the broad
synclinal valleys.
On the Central Ridge, the drift is practically
confined to the flanking slopes and to a few isolated patches in
upland basins.
Where least abundant it is also least worthy
of the term boulder-clay , being often no more than a
clayey local rubble containing a few scratched stones, and
scarcely to be distringuished from the previously-&scribed
head of the coast sections,
Moreover, this scanty drift has
frequently
been re-arranged
by sabzrial downwashing since
the Glacial Period, with further detriment to its distinctive
character (p. 52). There is, however, sufficient evidence to
show thacf the glaciating agent has passed over the whole district, and that the highest summilts within the present map
have been overwhelmed by it.
The boulder-clay of the low synclinal valleys differs from
thaB of the uplands in its greater average thickness, and in the
far larger proportion of striated stones which it contains, as
well as in the abundance of limestone-detritus
which is scarcely
ever found in the upland drift.
In the Cork valley, especially
in the tract west of the city, although the drift has the compact
unstratified and well-glaciated aspect of a !boulder-clay_, it is
sometimes
composed almost entirely
of sand, gravel and
boulders, with h:ardly any clayey matrix ; and there has then
been difficulty in deciding whether it should be mapped as
sand and gravel (i. e., &ratified drift) or as /boulder-clay
(p. 68). This condition has probably b,eon brought about by
the incorporation
of the pre-glacial fluviatilo deposits of the
Lee.
In the Cloyne valley, on both sides of Cork Harbour, the
boulder-clay,
largely derived from the Carbonif erous rocks,
more often assumes the normal character of a compact boulderstudded till, as may be well seen in the cliff-sections south
of Ringaskiddy (Plate IV.).
Boulders.-Except
in these low-lying
sections,
where
glaciated blocks of limestone are sometimes numerous, there is
a notable rarity of large boulders in the Cork drifts, mainly
due, no doubt, to the slaty cleavage prevalent in the counltryrock, which is unfavourable
to the . production
of cubical
blocks. It is necessary, however, to qualify this statement in
respect to the south-eastern part of the m,ap, where a peculiar
close-grained siliceous breccia occurs rather abundantly in large
transported
blocks.
These boulders are common over the
summit of Great Island (p. 89) and on the upland between
Cork Harbour and the open coast (p. 207), up to the western
margin of the map ; while the most westerly example observed
was found on the high ground 6 mile SE. of Old Court, west
y
of Passage West (pr89y.
The source of these boulders has not been ascertained, but
they have probably been derived from a much-crushed
and
silicified portion of the Carlboniferous Limestone
in which
chert was originally abundant.
43
also found in some of the glens on the southern side of the main
valley (p. 88) )and in the synclirral hollows of Blarney (p. 53)
and Riverstown (p. 59).
In the Cloyne valley east of Cork Harbour, several tracts of
sand and gravel have been mapped, including an esker-like
ridge bordering the Saleen estuary (pp. 95-6). On the opposite
side of Cork Harbour, gravels #associated with the boulder-clay
were found along the border of the Owenboy estuary east of
Carrigaline and on the flank of the hill east of Crosshaven, as
well as in several places on the undulating ground between the
Owenboy and Monkstown Creek (p. 94). A few small patches
also occur higher up the valley of the Owenboy, above its gorge
at Balls (p. 92).
South of the Cloyne valley, very little stratified drift was
found, except immediately north of Power Head, where there
is a moundy tract of sand and rather fine gravel containing, as
previously mentioned, some far-transported
pebbles.
The stratified drift o.f the northern upland deserves especial
attention because of its belaring on the question as to the origin
It occurs on the highest ground within
of the glacial deposits.
the map, heaped up in isolated mounds which show the arched
bedding characteristic of glacial fluviatile deposits.
The largest
of these mounds lies a little beyond the north-east margin of
the present sheet at the place called Sandyhill, about three
miles N.N.E. of Midleton, at an elevation of 592 feet above
Ordnance Datum.
_
A lbelt of pebbly loam, which )appears to be a local variety of
the upland boulder-clay, stretches west-south-westward
across
the upland from this place ; and most of the high-level gravels
in the northern part of the map lie within this belt. They are
piled up in mounds on a high rock-spur at Birch Hill (p. 62),
3 miles N. of Carrigbohill, here reaching an altitude of 500 feet.
A mile and a h(alf farther west, near Ballynakilla, they form a
thin capping on a rounded summit reaching to 640 feet above .,
of Birch
O.D. (p. 62). At Pigeon Hill, 2 miles W.N.W.
Hill, they occur as conspicuous mounds on the open upland at
an elevation of about 600 feet, the largest mound being about
35 feet high .and over 200 y#ards in length.
Large sand-pits
excavated in this mound reveal good sections showing the
irregularity
and steep cross-bedding of the deposits, and it is
at this place that the high-level gravels may be best studied
(p. 59). F,arther westward _ag#ain, north of Knockraha and
just beyond the northern margin of the map, moundy gravels
fringe a high-lying valley at 373 feet above sea-level ; and other
instances, described in the next chapter, are found in several
places at lower levels to the southward and westw.ard (pp.
56-8). PitIs for the local supply of gravel and s.aad have been
opened in nearly all the districts where the stratified drift
44
THE
QEOtOaY
OF
CORE
The drifts of the Cork *district confirm the general conclusions which have been drawn from the Btudy of other parts of
Ireland that the glaciation of the country has been effected by
land-ice.
The comparison of these drifts with those of the
districts farther north, described in lthe preceding mem$rs on
the neighbourhood of Dublin and of Belfast, brings out some
notable differences which throw much light upon the conditions
of the glaciation.
Instead of the massive drumlins of compact boulder-clay of
the Belfast district or the thick smooth sheets of camplex drift
of the Dublin lowland, with their large proportion of fartravelled ,erratics, we find in the neighbourhood of Cork a preponderance of loose rubbly drift derived entirely from the 104
rocks, sprinkled rthinly and interruptedly
over the surface and
rarely building up new topographical
features except on a
small scale in (the bro.ad deep valleys.
The presence of a few
large boulders and of scratched stones and occasional striated
rock-surfaces
on the uplands, together with the high-lying
hummocks of stratxified drift and some traces of the effect of
glacial drainage among the hills, give sufficient evidence that
the glaciation has extended over the whole area included in
the present sheet ; but these indications are slight as compared
with the equivalent
effects at altitudes twice as great in
northern Irel,and, and it is evident rfhat in the Cork district the
glaciating agent has .acted with greatly diminished force, which
we may assume to imply that the thickness of lthe enveloping
ice-sheet w)as far less than in the nonth.1
Within the present map no marine remains, nor indeed
fossils of any kind (except those of Carboniferous age contained
in derivative pebbles) have been found in the drift, though in
the e,astern <boulder-clay which is visible in the coast sections only a little way beyond the eastern margin of the sheet,
fragments of marine shells are f,airly abundant (p. 105). In
the absence of any facts rto supply a basis for the idea that the
drifts might Ibe of marine origin, it is unnecessary here to
repeat the reasons put forward in preceding memoirs on the
1 It may here be mentioned that in consequence of thwe inconspicuous effect!,
the previous literature relating to the glaciation of this part of the country 1s
remarkably scanty-more
sc,anty, indeed, than for any other part of Ireland. A few
observations
were given by Jukes in the previous
memoir on the district
(Explanation
of Sheets 187, 196, and 196, pp. 68-60), in which he expressed
doubt whether most of the drift was anything more than detritus due to subThe posthumous
notes of Prof. H. Carvill-Lewis in The
aerial weathering.
0lacia.l Geology of Cheat Britain and Ireland (Longmans, London, 1894), contain
a few observations made in the neighbourhood
of Cork, but are too incomplete
Prof. E. Hull, in his P2iysicuZ Geology and
to require further notice here.
Qeograpittl of Ireland (Stanford, London, 2nd ed., 1891), p. 292, devotes a few
eentencee to the glaciation of the district, and shows that it has been covered
by an ice-sheet; and the same author has a brief note on Haulbowline Island
in a short paper in Journ. ROT{. Geol. Sot., Ireland, vol. iv. (1877), p. 111.
Finally, Mr. J Porter, in disc&sing
the origin of certain Cork valleys (I&&
Naturalist
vol. xi,, 1902, p. 163), makes passing mention
of the presence of
glacial drift in the district.
This comprises the literature of the subject known
to the present writer.
ORIGIN
OF THE GLACIAL
DEPOSITS.
45
46
THE
OEOLOOY
HARBOUR,
POST-GLACIAL
DEPOSITS.
I 47
Post-Glacial Deposits,
L
48
THE
GEOLOGY
HARBOUR.
even here they are not very extensive, while in the transverse
volleys they me for the most part too small to be represented
on the one-inch map except by exaggerating
their breadth.
Some flat wet tracts on the southern side of the Cork valley
appear to have suffered periodical inundation until artificially
drained, and in these places the extent of the alluvium is not
dependent upon the size of the streams.
The swampy alluvial
hollow east of Blarney probably owes its condition to the comparatively rapid lowering of its limestone-floor
by solution
(p. 53). The re-arranged drift of the shallow upland basins,
due to the gradual slidmg or washing of the material down the
adjacent slopes, sometimes merges into true alluvium in the
hollows which have held temporary ponds (p. 52).
Peat.-There
is a curious absence of peat throughout
the
district, in spite of the conditions in many places being apparently those favourable to its accumulation,
as, for example, in
the wet upland hollows, which in most parts of Ireland would
be found deeply lined with peat.
This may imply some slight
difference of clicmate, possibly a greater degree of summerwarmth, than in the interior and western parts of the country.
Whatever the cause may be, there are no deposits of economic
importance within the present map, and it is only at the borders
of a few small natural ponds on the uplands that peat has been
dug, and the quantity obtained is insignificant,
Intake.-The
ramifying tidal inlets with broad muddy foreshores that penetrate
the country surrounding
Cork Harbour h,ave presented mlany Favourable opportunities
for the
artificial reclamation of land,*and embankments for this purpose
have been raised in many places with good result.
The tracts
of intake are separately shown on the new map where the
scale has permitted.
Great changes have been brought about during the last two
or three centuries by the balme means within the boundaries of
the city of Cork, so that where the old maps show marshes and
An account of the progress
creeks there are now busy streets.
of these changes, illustrated by reproductions
of the old maps,
.ilrill be found in the next chapter (pp. 78-80, figs. 13 (and 14).
Raised Beach?-Of
the Post-Glacial
Raised Beach which
is so conspicuous at from 10 to 20 feet above present eea-level
on the east coast of Ireland from Dublin northward no definitea
trace was found in the Cork district.
Along the shores of
some
of the inlets draining
into Cork Harbour, particularly
on the northern side of that which separates Great Island from
the mainland, there is sometimes a shelf of a few yards width
which is only overflowed by exceptionally
high tides and is
more or less overgrown by vegetation ; and at its landward
margin there is frequently a sloping bank of drift also clothed
with vegetation, representing a 10~ weathered cliff upon which
the sea has at present no erosive action (p. 85). This shelf
may possibly indicate a very slight recent uplift, but the feature
is so interrupted and so insignificant that it may possibly be
POST-GLACIAL
49
DEPOSITS.
Journ.
Roy. Riut. d
.6Q
PART II.
CHAPTER
V.--DETAILED
SUPERFICIAL
DESCRIPTION
OF THE
DEPOSITS.
Ilntrodzcction.---In
dealing with the details of the Glacial drifts and
Post-Glacial deposits of the district included within the map, the descriptions will be arranged as far as possible in separate divisions corresponding to the principal topographical features of the area as defined in on
earlier chapter (pp. 4-8).
In every case more than one oficer took part in the mapping of the
several divisions.
The descriptions which follow represent the combined reports of the individual members of the field-staff, the share of
each in the work being indicated by the initials appended to the
paragraphs of which he is the author. The divisions will be described
in the following order :1,
2.
3.
4.
6.
The
The
The
The
The
I.-THE
DETAILS
: DRIFTS
NORTH OF CbRK
51
VALLEY.
52
THE
QEOLOQY
OF CORK
AND CORK
EARBOUR.
in that the drift lies within the valley of a small tributary of the
Martin River, and furnishes additional evidence of the preglacial age of
this valley-system,
On the eastern side of the railway 500 yards N. of the above=
mentioned bridge there appears to be a patch of true gravel (shown on
the map) which is indicated by the shingly character of the soil and the
abundance of waterworn stones, though no section is exposed.
Reference has been made above to the wet drift-lined hollows of the
upland. These usually represent portions of broad shallow valleys
belonging to the period of mature topography of the plateau before the
commencement of the new cycle of erosive activity represented by the
deep gorges of the present streams. They recur at short intervals on
all parts of the upland, and from the agricultural standpoint constitute
the worst laud of the district. A good example is afforded by the rushy
hollow east and north-east of Ballygibbon House, in which lies a minor
water-parting with swampy ground draining partly southward and
partly northward into separate tributaries of the Martin. The wet
slopes are underlain by clayey rubble which appearsto have been formed
by the gradual downward sliding and reconstruction of the boulder-clay.
Similar material has accumulated in the bottom of the hollow, and passes
insensibly into alluvial stream-wash when traced into the proximity of
the present drainage channels. Jn its actual position this clayey rubble
can scarcely be considered to be a glacial deposit, since it has been rearranged by subsequent agencies, mainly no doubt by the action of rain
and of small springs, the latter being usually abundant on these slopes.
On the other hand, it is essentially composed of the same material as the
undisturbed glacial drift, and merges gradually into it, so that no
dividing line can be drawn between them. An attempt was made in
surveying some parts of the district to map this basin-drift separately
from the original drift, but the division was found to be too arbitrary
and unsatisfactory to be worth adopting ; and on the published map the
rearranged stony clay is shown as part of the boulder-clay. The term
4glncialoid drift has been applied by Mr. G, H. Kinahanl to material
of similar origin in other parts of Ireland ; and it is important to
recognize, as Mr. Rinahan has pointed out, that this drift may occasionally be so displaced as to overlie deposits of later date than the Glacial
period. Thus, in the present district, at the foot of steep slopes the
clayey hill-wash has sometimesoverspreadcomparatively modern streamgravel.
The above description will serve for nearly all the wet tracts of this
kind, which are se common not only on the northern upland but also
on the broader parts of the Central and Southern ridges. Almost all
the minor streams of the district have their source in high-lying shallow
basins presenting these characters. It is not a little remarkahle, as
previously mentioned (p. 48), that these boggy tracts should be
almost all devoid of peat, while the conditions seem to be exactly
those under which upland peat has most readily accumulated in other
parts of Ireland.
Blarney Valley.-- Owing to the presence of the narrow infold of
Carboniferous Limestone brought,down by the Blarneysyncline, a broad
trough-like longitudinal or strike valley has been formed to the eastward and westward of Blarney, through the more rapid weathering of
the calcareous rock. The Martin River, on issuing from its gorge in Old
1 Wlaoialoid or Re-mm ed &&al
pp. 111-117, 168-17gi
(1874),
Drift.
GwL
iWag.
(I
54
THE
GEOLOGY
OF CORK
AND CORK
HARBOUR.
deposit includes a few large boulders of limestone and of hard grit, these
being found principally, but not exclusively, .just above the floor of the
pit. One of the limestone blocks measured 10 feet by 6 feet by 6 feet,
while the largest block of grit which was noticed measured 3 feet in
diameter. The blocks appear to have been glaciated, but those of
limestone are now so deeply corroded that the original surface has
vanished. It is very instructive to observe the difference in this
respect between the grit-boulders, which still retained their original
shape, and the limestone-boulders, often reduced to mere skeletons. If
. the large blocks have suffered to this extent, it is clear that the smaller
pebbles of the same material could not have persisted, even though they
may at first have been abundant in the deposit.
The continuation of the slope on the farther side of a small stream
to the eastward of the pit seems to be principally bare rock, but gravel
reappears in approximately the same position at 400 yards east of the
stream, and, as mentioned below, forms an irregular fringe round the
eastern end of the Blarney depression. The deposit is evidently of
Late-Glacial age, and has probably been accumulated when the hollow
was still partly filled either by ice or by the waters of an ice-dammed
G.W.L.
Eastern end of Blarney
Valley and country northward.--Good
gravel conlposd of rounded pebbles of local rocks associated with
some sand forms a rude terrace along the north side of the eastern
part of the Blarney bog, and two small patches occur on the south side.
The small pits opened at one time in these gravels are now overgrown,
A gravel terrace also exists at the eastern end of the bog. In this case
gravel is not merely confined to a fringe along the side of the bog, but
extends up the steep slope to the east, and forms moundy features on
the plateau about iO0 feet above the level of the bog. A pit near the
edge of t.he bog though now overgrown shows that the gravel is here
over 20 feet thick.
Just above the gravel-pit a narrow streamless valley nearly 400 yards
long runs between two craggy hills in a south-easterly direction towards
the small patch of alluvium marked on the map. It is dificult to connect this gap either with the modern or any late-glacial river system.
The Monard River, from its entrance into the map to a point just
above the railway viaduct, flows in a narrow alluvial flat bounded
either by steep walls of rock or gentler slopes of drift. Below this point
the river enters a narrow rock-gorge in which the Monard Iron Mills
are situated, Its course through the gorge is marked by two waterfalls
from w.hich the mills derive their ppwer. At the outfall of the stream
into the Blarney bog there is a dry alluvial fan a few feet above the
general level of the bog. Just above the point where the river enters
the gorge, the left bank of the inner valley is broken and a hollow of
the same size as the upper part of the Monard River valley, but partly
filled with drift, runs through to the alluvial flat south of Monard, and
seems to mark a pre-glacial course of the river.
East of the alluvium mentioned above there is a small area of craggy
ground. The railway is carried through a gap which passes through
the watershed into the drainage basin of the Shandon River,
The
craggy sides of the gap appear to have been glaciated, so that the gap is
presumably of pre-glacial age. It may possibly be connected with the
river-system at some period before the Monard River was diverted westward through the Blarney depression.
bBTAfL$ : DRIFTSNoRTB0P
co&x VALLEY.
In the low ground running east from Blarney Lake, by Turret Farm
and on to the Blarney River valley, thin boulder-clay occurs over
the rock to a limited extent, and forms wet clay land on the lower
slopes and in the hollows.
A. MoH.
Uplam? east of Kilcully and north of the Cork valley between Dunkettle
and Queenstown Jurxtion .-The portion of the northern upland between
these limits when viewed from a distance so as to lose sight of the
minor irregularities of the surface, presents the appearance of a rather
level plain rising here and there into low hills. On attempting to
traverse it however without following the roads, one finds the way
intercepted by numerous deep gorges, the sides of which are always
steep and sometimes so craggy and precipitous as to be almost
impassable.
The streams which occupy the bottoms of the gorges
have well-marked alluvial flats, from 30 to 150 yards wide, in which
they wind from side to side of the valley. They are however by no
means sluggish, having an average fall of 50 feet in the mile. The
gradient is of course much greater in the tributary streams than in the
main rivers. In the former it rises to 140 feet in the mile, in the
latter it sinks as low as 30 feet or less. The valleys are in general
characterised by a complete absence of terraces above the level of the
present alluvium.
These steep-sided gorges have a general trend from N.N.W. to S.S.E.
across the strike of the rocks. At Riverstown there is a wide open
east and west strike-valley caused by the more rapid erosion of the
Carboniferous Limestone and Lower Limestone Shale occupying a small
synclinal trough. The Glashaboy River enters this from the north at
its west end, and emerges at once to the south. At its eastern end, near
67
rock-slope.
A, McH,
$8
The country for about two miles east of Kilcully is very varied in
its topographical features. Considerable areas show the broad smooth
upland topography so characteristic of the districts further east, but here
and there rugged crags can be seen, many of them more or itss iceThe road which runs south from Whites Cross passes along
moulded.
the bottom of a broad old-looking valley, the stream in which is fed from
two tributary gorges which open into it on the east, and carry off the
drainage of marshy drift-filled upland basins.
Glashaboy river enters the map 2;5 miles
Gkad~aboy River. -The
north-east of Kilcully,
receiving immediately on its left bank the
stream from the Black Glen. It pursues a zig-zag course in a general
south-easterly direction till about half a mile north of Sallybrook, running all the way in a narrow steep-sided gorge and receiving tributary
streams from two lateral gorges. It then turns due south, and this
direction it practically maintains until it enters the tidal estuary of the
Lee at Dunkettle.
In this north and south stretch the character of the
valley changes somewhat.
It retains to a great degree its steep-sidedness but becomes considerably wider and has a broad alluvial bottom
150 yards wide or more. Glacial gravels are abundantly banked against
its sides and on the more gentle portions of its slopes. As usual they
are often found in the angles between the river and its tributaries.
At Riverstown the Glashaboy receives on its left bank a tributary
of considerable volume, formed by the junction of the Butlerstown and
Glenmore streams.
Here the entire valley has been choked with
glacial gravel, and the river has been diverted from its original course
and has cut a gorge through the rock since the deposition of the drift,
entering the old valley again about 200 yards further south. The road
from Glanmire to Sallybrook passes through a cutting in the gravel
which occupies the old valley, and reveals no rock, though not at any
point more than a few feet above the present level of the river. The
new rock-gorge is about 60 feet deep and from 200 to 300 yards long. Its
narrowness contrasts remarkably with the wide valley above and below.
Estimating by the position of the contours and the height of the ordinary
tides, which affect the river to within half a mile of the mouth of the
gorge, the crests of the sides of the gorge appear to be from 70 to 80 feet
above 0. D. Supposing this to represent the height of the old barrier,
it will be seen, on tracing the i&foot contour above the gorge, that
after the retreat of the ice the dam of drift must have caused an
irregular lake to be formed, which occupied the lower part of the
three valleys which diverge from this point. The delta-deposits of this
lake may be traced in a series of gravel terraces which border the valley
of the Glashaboy for about a mile above the diversion, the highest lying
at a height of 76 feet above 0. D., a level which corresponds with that
of the top of the sides of thegorge. Similar terraces may be seen at the
same level in the other valleys and at about the same distance up them,
RzctZerstom and Knockraha .-The
country in the neighbourhood of
Butlerstown and Knockraha is more or less thinly and unevenly covered
with drift, The drift is very local in its origin, but flints may be found
here and there in the arable fields, and a boulder of disintegrated
granite, 6 inches in diameter, was found on the upland at a height of
300 feet, half a mile north of Butlerstown House.
The drift is everywhere more or less rubbly ; but to the south, in the neighbourhood of
Blossomgrove House, it thickens and approximates to the character of
a good tough boulder-clay.
59
cemented
by iron-oxides
masses.
See JeoL
60
CORE BARBOUR.
subangular and rounded pieces of red slate and fine red sandstone, but
pebbles of yellow and green grits and vein-Quartz also occur. Fine
reddish loam partially fills the interstices between the pebbles. Near
the top of the section the beds lie horizontally, but they gradually bend
downwards so that at 6 feet from the top they are dip at an angle of
32O to the north. Following the section round towards the west the
beds dip at the same steep angle, but the direction of dip appears to
swing round to the west. At the west end of the pit, beds of fine sand
come in. These quickly thicken and unite to form a bed 8 feet thick
which can be followed round into the north-east corner of the pit, It
consists of fine sand with pinkish layers of laminated loam. Its upper
surface is unevenqand it is overlain by an irregular mass of coarse gravel
and fine sand which exhibits current-bedding
The sand-bed in the
north-east corner of the pit is split up by gravel into tongues which thin
out. The general dip of the bedding is here nearly 36O to the northnorth-west.
The gravel is generally overlain by one to two feet of yellow
stony wash.
The section in the smaller pit opened in the SW. part of the mound
exposes about 25 feet of coarse and fine gravel and sand exhibiting
curved bedding.
A smaller gravel mound lies 100 yards to the north and several others
occur on the slopes of the valley which trends westward past Glenmore
House to Riverstown.
Small pits have been opened in these gravels.
The pit in the mound east of Reanasallagh Gorse shows three to five feet of
gravel resting on 8 feet of reddish loamy sand. On the south bank
of the stream, 5GO yards above the ford, the boulder-clay overliea a
fine loamy sand which appears to be about 20 feet thick, but the section
is much overgrown.
Gravel is also seen on the roadside west of the
ford and in a pit opened in a small mound near the road-fork 700 yards
S.S.W. of Killeena.
Here about two feet of sandy wash overlies more
than three feet of sand and gravel. The gravel is composed of pebbles of
the local grits, sandstones, and slates which are not as a rule well
rounded,
In Ballinbrittig the boulder-clay forms a fairly uniform though often
thin covering over the rocks, but it is absent from the ridges to the north
of Windsor Hill and Spring Hill.
The strip of alluvium marked on the
map to the north of Ballinbrittig, lies in a valley whose sides are steep
but not high. This depression runs through the watershed from the
Glenmore valley on the north to Wakehams Glen. It may have
carried off the waters of a lakalet formed by the obstruction of the
Glenmore valley by the retreating ice. The watershed is also cut
through at a slightly lower level by a small valley with rocky sides
just south of the patch of alluvium west of Ballyregan,
In the quarry near the bend in the valley west of Spring Hill the surface of the rock is striated from W. 35O N. to 5. 36 E. The stris run
along the hill-slope and are overlain by two to three feet of sandy
drift, Their direction is partly determined by that of the valley
in which they occur. Striae trending from W. 20 N. to E. 20 S. are
exposed on the side of the lane a little over a furlong to the W.S.W. of
the quarry mentioned above, and here the direction does not seem to _
have been influenced by any local feature.
The hill-slope from Johnstown House eastwards is covered by a
reddish stony boulder-clay, which sometimes forms rude terraces simulating solid features. A section in the lane near Killora Lodge cuts
through one of these terraces and exposes 10 feet of red stony boulderclay.
(I
DETAILS
61
Limestone boulders are very rare on the upland, but a boulder 3 feet
long lies just south of Windsor House, and another, 2 feet long, was
met with near an old lane a quarter of a mile north of the 6n in Ballinbrittig.
H.B.M.
869
THE GEOLOGY
HARBOUR.
there occurs a belt of a very loamy boulder-clay (probably the continuation of that mentioned previously, 1). is), which is more gravelly
than that which is developed in the country to the N. and S. of it. This
pebbly.loam was traced for a distance of about one mile and a half in a
strip a few hundred yards or so in width.
It appears to be associated
in some way with the moundy glacial gravels, presently to be described,
which are developed here and there along the margin of the belt.
Towards the western limit of this gravelly boulder-clay, about half a
mile north-west of Killeendooling, a number of far-travelled erratics
were found lying on the surface of an arable field on the western side of
the N. and S. valley running past (Xortacrue Mills.
They included
several specimens of a greenish porphyritic andesite, of a type similar to
that occurring on the west side of the Leinster granite; also a few chalk
flints, chert, and one pebble of a fine-grained granite with pink felspar
phenocrysts.
Further west, close to Knockakeen bridge, a boulder of a similar
granite was noticed in the wall on the N. side of the road. This
measured 10 inches by 8 inches by 6 inches, and was well rounded. In
an old lane (now obliterated) one mile N. by E. of Knockakeen bridge,
Jukes, in the previous Survey Memoir, recorded the presence of granite
boulders, apparently similar to that just described. A careful search
was made in the locality without discovering any remaining traces
of these boulders.
It is probable, however, that the one found
further south, as above-mentioned, has been carried from the locality
where Jukes observed the erratics, in order to furnish material for walling. The granite found by Jnkes was believed by him to have come
from County Calway, and if this supposition be correct; the pebbles of
porphyritic andesite above referred to may have been derived from the
Limerick volcanic area. In several localities+ther large isolated blocks
of Old Red grits and slates occur, often set up on end to form standingstones. One of these standing-stones, 400 yards to the south-west of
Ballytrasna House, and just outside the northern boundary of the map,
is inscribed with Ogham characters.
There are a number of isolated areas, usually of limited extent, in
this district in which stratified drift consisting of sands and gravels
occurs. In two cases --viz., around the trig. point, one mile N. by W.
of the new Queenstown water-works (situated in the valley just
W. of Tibbotstown), and at Birch Hill, 14 miles north-east of the
same place-these
take the form of high-level mounds occurring respectively at maximum elevations of 640 feet and 500 feet. Their position
in regard to the topography can only be explained on the supposition
that they are the result of some form of glacial drainage. In the firstmentioned locality the gravel is exposed in a few shallow pits near the
summit of the hill, and is rather variable in character, including gravelly
clay, red sand in places, and also sub-angular and angular slaty debris,
as-if near rock. This deposit is evidently of no great thickness, and is
irregularly banked on a sandstone core. At Birch Hill we find a smaller
area, but with apparently a much greater thickness, of well-rounded and
stratified sand and gravel ; and a little to the S.E. are three small
mounds which appear to be built up wholly of gravel.
Isolated patches of stratified drift also occur at lower levels. Thus,
at the,northerly end of the va*lley in which is situated the Carrigtohill
water-reservoir, is a small area of rubbly gravel, a pit on the road leading up to the farm-house on the east showing a section up to 8 feet
in thickness. Gravel also occurs intercalated in boulder-clay at Ballycurrany House, and at the Queenstown waterworks ; and there is a
63
small area of gravel similar to the last at the north side of the valley,
half a mile west of the ruins of Ballyspillane Church
Along the
bottom and sides of a small valley running N.N.E. one mile N. W.
of Ballyedmond, which has apparently served at one time as an
overflow channel for the impounded waters of the chief western tributary
of the Owennacurra, gravel mounds occur, the mtlterial being mostly a
rather coarse well-rolled gravel, but rubbly in places. Towards the
northern end one of these mounds is cut through by a miniature
drv gap of crescentic form.
Glacial stria were observed in three localities in the district, viz..,
at the Queenstown water-works, where their direction was E. 15-20 S. ;
at three-quarters of a mile S.W. of the same place, with a SE.
direction ; and again close to the extreme N.E. corner of the map,
directed to E. 16OS.
Over most of the area mapped as bare ground there occurs a layer
of rubbly material mainly developed by the weathering down of slaty
rocks in situ, and occurring in amongst the hollows between rock knobs.
It is of rather variable thickness, but seldom exceeds a few feet in depth
except in such places as the lower portion of steep hill-slopes, where it
has accumulated as the result of down-wash.
The floors of the gorges in this district are usually too const.ricted to
have allowed the accumulation of much Late-Glacial or Post-Glacial
river-drift.
A narrow strip of recent alluvium is usually found in the
bottom of all the valleys, but, except to the south-east of Leamlara,
and along parts of the Owennacurra River, its width is generally under
20 yards, On the one-inch map it has been necessary somewhat to
exaggerate its breadth in order that its presence might be indicated.
Where the upland valleys open out upon the low around, however,
the tracts of river-borne detritus become much more ikportant.
Thus
in the low-lying longitudinal valley which extends eastward from just
south of Ballyedmond to BYllyspillane old Church, there is an extensive
area of ancient river gravel, good sections of which are exposed along
the artificial cutting for the stream flowing from the last-mentioned
locality.
This gravel appears to have been deposited by the slacbwaters of the three streams which open from upland gorges into
this depression, and the greater part was probably accumulated not
long after the Glacial Period.
A well-marked terrace may be
seen to the right of the road going north from Ballyedmontl Bridge,
running for a distance of six or seven hundred yards nearly parallel
to the course of the Owennacurra River at this place.
The remnant
of a higher terrace of similar gravel forms a prominent feature, rising
up well above the general level, some 300 yards or so north of the
mill near Clonmnlliou House.
In concluding the description of this district, attention may be called
to some interesting examples of the effect of the Glacial Period upon
the drainage system.
The general course of the rivers, as has been pointed out earlier in
the memoir, was originated in Pre-Glacial times, . and has remained
Certain minor features, however, were proessentially unchanged.
duced in Glacial times that throw much light upon the conditions during
the glaciation.
The most striking of these are the glacial overflowchannels, of which there are several in this district.
One very fine
example, perhaps the most remarkable in the whole sheet, occurs southeast of Leamlara House, at the place marked Tattans Gorse on the
one-inch map. This is a narrow gorge excavated, with nearly vertical
sides 70 feet high in places, through the sloping sides of a hill rising
to a height of 397 feet above O.D. A reference to the accompanying
DETAILS : DRIFTS
NORTH
OF CORK VALLEY,
65
In Pre-Glacial times the two streams (the eastern and the weslern),
on either side of Leamlara House, together with the one further south,
appear all to have united above Dooneen bridge, and flowed thence
past Rnockakeen bridge to join the Owennacurra near Ballynaclashy
House.
Toward the close of the Glacial period large floods of water,
draining off the country to the north consequent on the melting of the
ice-sheet, found their Pre-Glacial channel blocked either by a remnant
of the ice sheet, or possibly by large accumulations of Glacial drift, so
that they could not pass along their former outlet at Dooneen bridge,
The water had therefore to find a new outlet, which it did along a course
subsequently rapidly deepened to form the northern gorge at Tattans
Gorse, through which the water of the Leamlara stream still flows.
VALLEY.
This portion of the Cork valley presents a large variety of drifts and
alluvial deposits.
In order to show the relative distribution of the
different superficial deposits, in the 24 square miles represented by Sheet
74, of the six-inch-scale field-map the area occupied by each has been
estimated, and the result is shown in the following table. The Cork
valley occupies nearly all the southern half of this sheet, and
the northern half covers a strip of the upland north of Cork, the city
lying approximately in the middle of the area represented by the map.
The table may be taken as roughly indicative of the proportion of driftcovered ground in the same belt to the eastward and westward of this
particular six-iuch sheet,
J.R.K.
B
THE
66
GEOLOGY
OF
CORK
AND
CORK
HARBOUR.
Boulder-clay,
:
1
Glacial Sands and Gravels,
Old-River (gravelly) Alluvium,
Recent Alluvium,
.
Slob, reclaimed,
.
1
:r
74
8*3
,,
,,
l-4
9,
,,
,,
,,
:
Total,
. ii-
DETAILS
: DRIFTS
AROUND
67
CORK.
by Mr. OFlynn,
junr.,
of Messrs. OFlynn,
builders and
F !
68
THE
GEOLOGY
OF
CORK
AND
CORK
HARBOUR.
large-sized stones, to justify the appellation boulder-clay as distinguished at least,from sand and gravel. Under the conventional method of
representing the glacial deposits on the map either as boulder-clay or
as sand and gravel, it became necessary to separate the two
divisions from each other by a boundary line and to show them by
distinctive colours, but in this area the boundaries are generally indefinite, as material of intermediate composition is prevalent in many
places, and the definition in such cases must be to some extent a matter
The general character of the boulder-clay in
of individual opinion,
the different districts has, however, been indicated, as far as possible, by
short verbal descriptions printed across the map.
Sections are laid open in road.cutCings and quarries to the south-west
of Cork, from which the following details have been gathered. In the
large quarry half a mile south-west of Victoria Cross a thickness of
12 to 15 feet of brown clay is presented, with boulders and fragments of
limestone, and pebbles of red and green grit. The clay contains pockets
of clayey gravel in which pebbles of much-weathered chert and of white
quartz commingle with those of red and green grit. In.another quarry
half a mile east of Bishopstown House, boulder-clay rests upon stratified
sand and gravel which fills a pocket in the limestone, opening downward
into a former cavern, now also tilled with stratified sand and gravel.
Stony clay is to be seen in a small road-cutting, 6 feet deep, near
Looneys Cross, and at another point between this place and Leslies
Cross.
In the old disuaed quarry in Lower Glasheen, south of George IV.
Bridge, clay 6 feet in depth, with boulders of local rock, covers the
limestone at the eastern end of the quarry ; while between the quarry
and Fernhurst a section has recently been laid open, which showed clay
dovetailing with and resting upon gravels, all reposing upon glaciated
limestone.
The boundary of the boulder-clay and gravels passes through
this point.
Three hundred yards north-west of Cork Lough in a limestone quarry,
now abandoned, the rock is covered with 10 to 20 feet of boulder-clay,
containing blocks of red sandstone and of limestone asswell as pebbles
of red, green, and grey grit, The tract surrounding the lough shows a
thin superficial coat of sandy clay over sand.
The sand is frequently
to be met with at a depth of 3 feet, and the soil is particularly gravelly
in a few places. Southward, towards the alluvial flat, the surface layer
is much more ar_gillaceous. Between Cork and Douglas also, the loamy
covering is thin : sand and gravel, which however are usually
clayey, are reached within 2 feet or 2 feet 6 inches of the surface. East
of Beaumont, near Besborough, the clay is gravelly ; and the drift over
a wide district is apparently thin ; while, near Besborough Farm, the
railway has bc:en cut throu.gh a considerable thickness of gravelly clay
with boulders, which seems to dovetail with sand and gravel, east of
Besborough House and at Lakeland.
lhe clay-covering over gravel
and sand, between Ringmahon cross-roads and Lakeland, is so thin
as to be almost negligible.
The stratified glacial drift of the district will now be described, referring first to these deposits as they are to be observed in the low tract
bordering the Lee on the south. One of the best sections of gravel
over the limestone is that to be seen in a pit on the south side of Ballygaggin road, opposite the Munster Dairy School. The gravel is being
dug out for building and other purposes, and a depth of 30 feet is
exposed. On the whole it is coarse, contains some sand, and shows but
a rude stratification,
It is studded with boulders, some of which are
69
.
Reddish stratified sand,
.
Brown and gray sand alternating* in thin seams,
Blanched sand, .
.
.
,
.
:
Black carbonaceous (or iron-oxide) seam,
Pebbly layer with small cavities, such as would be leit
after the dissolving out of limestone pebbles,
.
Stratified sand and gravel,
.
.
.
.
Total,
Ft. In.
2.6
0:1
Iii::
14.11
Reference was made above to large caverns and fissures in the limestone. Some are as much as 10 or 12 feet in width, while many are
Some of the smaller ones do not open
quite narrow, and attenuated
all the way upward to the summit of the rock-face, where exposed in
quarries, yet all are full of material- sand and gravel, in many instances
70
THE GEOLO&Y
OF CORK
ANb
CORK
lTAitt3OUki.
Cave in limestone laid open in Ballinaspig More quarry, filled with stratified
sand and gravel, and covered with boulder-clay.
Numerous small caverns are laid open in the large quarry at Carrigmore, Ballintemyle (see Plate III.).
These are partly filled with brown
laminated clay and fine sand. The clay may in part be residual material
after dissolved limestone ; but its colour suggests that it is the finest
portion of inwash from drift, shown to be such by the associated sand
and gravel containing red and green grit pebbles, Clay has not been
noticed elsewhere by the writer, either in the caverns or fissures ; and
together with the sand and gravel filling them, they contain coarse
well-rounded shingle, with pebbles corresponding to those in the gravel.
These are of red, green, and gray grits, some chert, white quartz, and
rarely pebbles of limestone.
These, it. will be remembered, are the
characteristic materials of the surface-gravels, as above described.
Sometimes the surface-gravels are observed covering the rock which
contain the fissures ; but not infrequently the present surface-deposit
resting upon the rock is a sandy boulder-clay, containing a prepondarante oi limestone fragments.
It would thus appear that the fissures
aud caverns become filled with materials washed out of a glacier, and
that the surface at certain points was then swept clear of the gravelspossibly by a temporary renewal of glacial conditions before another
covering was laid down consisting of more locally-derived materials.
iYuckpool.-Th e important deposit of sand, gravel, and shingle lying
to the north of Cork, near Blackpool, has been described by Jukes, who
has also given a sketch illustrative of the mode of occurrence of this
interesting deposit : (Fig 11 of ( Explanation of Sheets 187, 195, and
196.)
Much of the material has been removed, but the original surface
seems to have had an undulating surface throughout, declining towards
the east; and dropping suddenly towards Blackpool.
The stones are
all well rounded and waterworn, consisting of red, green, and gray
DI~TAILS : RIFTS
AROUND
CORK.
71
grits, with which are interspersed a few of limestone, all much corroded
and the smaller ones reduced, when dry, to friable masses of porolls
lamellarly-arranged dust. The existence of these limestone blocks
in the drift shows that the transporting agent must have crossed
a limestone tract ; and their scarcity proves that the area of this rock
traversed must have been trifling compared to the entire gathering
ground which fed the tranxporting glacier. Such circumstances would,
have been fulfilled by supposing that the glacier had come from the
westward-a
conclusion confirmed by the direction of glacial striae ;
and as the Old Red Sandstone forming the valley side near Killeens
House is ice-smoothed, there can be little question that a large proportion
of the material of the Blackpool deposit was carried by a glacier moving
eastward along the Anagloghduff valley, joined probably near Rathpeacon by another from Blarney, by Killeens Gap, where the rock
is also glaciated.
As pointed out by Jukes in the former memoir, it is noticeable that
the layers of gravel and sand in the deposit in question, dip with striking
regularity to the eastward, at angles varying from forty degrees to
almost horizontal.
This regularity of internal structure, as well as the
decline in level eastward, point to deposition in water of sufficient
depth to admit of uninterrupted sedimentation,
The circumstances
also point to a continuance of the conditions for a period sufficiently
long for the piling up of the gravels, layer over layer, to 100 feet in
height near Blackpool, and for the extension of the deposit for a mile
eastward, and three quarters of a mile north to south. Some 4,000,OOO
cubic yards of gravel, sand, and shingle have thus been accumulated
here. The position of these gravels, and their relation to Gouldings
Glen, are shown in the accompanying view, Plate V.
At Victoria Barracks the gravel is found at the 250 feet contour
approximately ; and at the gravel pits north of Gouldings Glen they
The waters which carried the
attain almost the same elevation,
detritus from the glacier must consequently have flowed at this elevation at least, and possibly upon the surface of ice which at the time
may be supposed still to have partially filled the Bride River valley.
The necessary conditions for the deposition would be furnished by a
glacier lake, temporarily formed through the damming up of waters by
a glacier. Such an impediment may be supposed to have existed at
the time in the Cork valley ; which had not been lowered by melting
below the level of 270 to 300 feet, near the present Summerhill North,
and probably sent a tongue northward into the Shandon gorge.
The lake thus formed would have extended a mile and a half northward from Barrack Hill to Ballincolly ; and from New Inn near
Glanmire, three and a half miles westward to Kilnap, where gravels rest
upon the north side of the Bride River valley, considerably above the
200 feet contour line, and 150 feet above the present stream.
Gouldhags Gbn .-After the deposition of the gravels, and a lowering
of the Cork valley glacier sufficiently to admit of drainage passing
through the Shandon gap, a channel was initiated through the gravels,
across the rock-shoulder of Barrack Hill, the water having been thus
diverted from its original course, which lay perhaps 150 yards further
north. The channel could not have been deepened to its present extent
by the drainage which it now carries ; it was more probably eroded by
a much more copious water-flow, fed probably by the melting ice
which still lingered on the surrounding uplands ; and which experienced
partial renewals from time to time before final disappearance.
The
channel ultimately assumed the form now known as Gouldings Glen.
The glen is about 100 feet deep at the disused Corn-mill, and presents
comparatively fresh faces of rock on either side. The south side at this
72
THIS
GEOLCKiP
OB
N&B
AND
CbRB
HARBOUB.
point is a rock face throughout : and the rock face on the north side
iR some 50 feet lower, which 7would show that the gorge has been
sculptured out of the I original I hill side. The cross-section,, Firr. 11,
may be taken as illustrative
of the conditions.
v
DETAILS
73
the glens are of pre-glacial origin, though they may have been
deepened during glacial and
post-glacial times ; and represent the
_
eflFects of river erosion. But while Glashaboy river has a drainage
basin of about 59 square miles, the Bride river now flowing through
the Shandon Glen drains only 16 square miles. It is very improbable
that so small a stream as the latter could erode the Glen so
as to keep pace with the Zowering of the ground ,within ; the present
cut must have been formed by a much larger river.
The writer
suggests that the Martin river may, ah one period of its history, have
maint,ained its south-e&erly
direction-that
common to so many
streams in the region --and formed the gorge, before the comparatively
rapid lowering of the limestone tract at Blarney occasioned the sharp
diversion of the river towarda the west, to join the Shournagh and other
rivers. The drainage area of Martin and Bride rivers combined is 47
square miles.
A comparison of the Anagloghduff and Glennamought streams is interevtiug : the former runs in a well established apparently old valley, with
a fall of some 50 feet in three miles ; whereas the latter has a fall of
over 100 feet in little more than a mile and a halt: It has been
previously shown (p. 51) that the latter in its lower reaches occupies
a comparatively new course. Its original direction was probably southeastward past Kilcully,
ultimately to enter the Bride river by
Ballyvolane.
The Lee Valley.-- The quest for water supplies by the Cork Corporation, and private persons and companies, has brought to light much
information concerning the Lee Valley deposits, .and the depth of its
ancient rocky bed beneath the present alluvial surface. The valley as
now seen is the result of the filling up of an original hollow with comparatively loose gravelly materials, in part possibly of glacial origin ;
and with river-gravels and alluvial deposits, consequent upon the partial
submergence of the vall,:y which occasioned the present regimen of the
river.
104 feet.
1
.
995::
aid
iz
::
72
67
i:
73
,,
74
THE GEOLOGY
EARBOUR.
Thickness.
BORE 1.
Ft. In.
Made ground,
Rough gravel,
Peat,
.
I$;;
gravel,
.
.
Fiene gravel,
Rough gravel,
Boulders,
Rough gravel,
Fine gravel,
Rough gravel,
Fine gravel,
Rock,
:z
.
.
.
.
1
.
1
.
1
.
:
.
.
.
.
:
.
.
.
.
:
.
.
.
.
BORE 2,
Made ground,
Peat,
.
Gravel,
Peat (dark),
Peat (light),
Loamy sand,
Gravel,
Depth.
70
18
22
25
30
34
38
45
53
66
57
60
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Thickness.
Depth.
Ft. In.
4 0
1 0
Ft. In.
$9
2
6
0
1:
21
22
29
60
0
0
6
6
[FIG. 11.
CORK.
75
74
THE GEOLOGY
ITARBOUR.
BORE 1.
Made ground,
Rough gravel,
Peat,
.
I$o;fh gravel,
gne gravel,
Rough gravel,
Boulders,
Rough gravel,
Fine gravel,
Rough gravel,
Fine gravel,
Rock,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Depth.
Ft. In.
Ft. In.
:;
11
?-0
18 0
26) 0
22
:
4
7
;
0
0
30
34
38
45
0
0
0
3 00
66
63
60
57
Thickness.
BORES.
Made ground,
Peat,
.
Gravel,
Peat (dark),
Peat (light),
Loamy sand,
Gravel,
Thickness.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Ft. In.
4 0
: :
;:
:
Depth
Ft. In.
50
21
1:
29
22
0
0
6
[FIG. 11.
cn.
G --
--
3
.c
O--_
.2
ti
75
36
THE
BAR~ouIL
This total represents the least height at which the land stood above its
present level at that stage of -Pre-Glacial times when the valley was
eroded and the extent to which submergence has since taken place.
The existence of peat at a depth of 7 feet below datum in the Cork
alluvium -as shown in the case of the Beasley Street borings-proves
that the land stood higher than at present iu Post-Glacial times ;
and this accords with the fact that submerged peat was fount1 at a
depth greater than 50 feet1 in Dunworly Bay on the south coast.
It
may have stood much higher than the levels indicated by the peat at
Cork, though not for a period sufficiently long for the complete clearing
out of the supposed glacial deposits in the valley ; but nothiug definite
can be said as to the full extent of Post-Glacial submergence on the
strength of facts so far ascerf ained.
Douglas,-The
broad, flat tract now occupied by alluvium, and
stretching eastwards by Douglas, may once have carried an important
river entering from the west, and receiving the streams which drained
the ridge as at present. Now, however, only those draining the slopes
at Garrane and eastward euter the Douglus tract, all to the west flow
towards the Lee by Bibhopstown : and the intervention of boulder-clay
at Garrane and Bishopstowu, 35 feet higher than the tracts on eithcl
side, proves that the drainage cannot have been very different from the
present since Glacial times. The flats are probably partially-filled
hollows of solution, the rock bottom of which, near Ballinaspig, is some
130 to 140 feet higher than the rock bed of the Lee at Cork.
Besides the old river-gravels of the Lee valley already described,
some small tracts of flood-washed detritus lie along the northern foot of
the central Old Red Sandstone ridge, mostly in the form of fans thrown
out upon the flat ground by former more copious representatives of
present streams. These streams drain the northern slopes of the ridge
at Lehenagh More, Pouladuff, Ivy Hill, and one opposite Bloomfield. The
deposits con-ist almost wholly of Old Red Sandstone detritus-grit
and
slate, and ale in some parts quite shingly.
Towards their margins the
gravels of the fans minglo with a,lluvial mud, and appear to be overlain
by it, as if the waters which carried the mud spread widely over the
gravels so as to form a lake or lakes before the area was drained. A
large portion of the flat tract is still a marsh.
Another small area of gravel, with shingle, appears above the surface
of the alluvium on the north side of the tract near Ballincurrig Rouse,
the existence of which it is difficult to account for.
AExplanation of Sheets 194, 20 I, snd 202, page 27&
DETAILS
: DRIFTS
AROUND
CORK.
77
A river terrace older than the fans above mentioned, and probably
formed by a glacier-fed torrent descending the glen near Ivy Hill, is
to be seen at its exit ; and a deposit of coarse shingly gravel and some
sand exists at the entrance to the glen south of Douglas, at the Rectory.
This latter deposit may have an origin similar to the former ; though it
more probably belongs to the series of glacial sands and gravels, covered
with boulder-clay along the valley, and therefore indicating a period of
deposition more ancient than the glacial-flood gravels.
The later alluvium of the tract running eastward by Douglas, mentioned above, is almost as wide and important as that in the valley of
the Lee and is more varied in character.
It is strongly clayey at its
margin, due south of Cork ; marshy to the east by south of the city ;
moory to the south of St. Josephs College at Ballinaspig ; gravelly at
some points, and in other places having the more usual character of
loamy mud. Terraces of a slightly higher elevation than portions of
the alluvium adjoining, are to be noticed, testifying apparently to the
formation of the whole deposit by stages ; but these terraFes do not
appear to differ much in character. Thus, a band of higher level than
ordinary strikes across the tract opposite Garrane : R stream section cut
through it south of Looneys Cross, shows clay with pebbles over peat
and gravel.
AEluvium of the Lee Valley. -The
alluvium of the Lee valley, from
opposite Inchigaggin House, where an old river deposit is represented,
to Victoria Bridge, consists of a sandy loam, occasionally so clayey
at the surface as to hinder percolation, so that rushes are commonly
noticed here and there. Between the bridge and the city, along the
Mardyke, the deposit is more generally sandy, though the sand contains
a proportion of clay or very fine silt, Near the turn from Western
Road to George IV. Bridge a bed of gravel was noticed about four
feet beneath the surface. Its thickness was not ascertained as the bed
was almost concealed by water.
Alluvium occurs along a hollow which carries some of the water of
the Douglas tract into the Lee by Glasheen. The surface layer is of
the usual kind, viz., moory loam ; and the same may be said of the
narrow strips of alluvium which margin the streams in Anagloghduff
and other valleys to the north and north-east of Cork. In the Bride
River valley patches of clay and gravel skirt the ordinary alluvium at
certain points, and seem to belong to more ancient regimens of the
streams, lying, as they do, somewhat higher than the portions of the
deposits adjoining.
River gravel was taken out of a deepened sewer
along the Watercourse Road, north of Ladys Well Brewery,
The
brewery occupies approximately the site of a former wet alluvium
known as Devonshire Marsh ; and the name Blackpool, borne by this
portion of the city, suggests that the marsh (perhaps it may be said the
margin of the pool ) was peaty. A well sunk by the proprietors,
Messrs. Murphy, Limited, in the brewery yard revealed some IS feet
of mud and artifioial (I filling.
Cork Lough, a permanent lakelet to the south-west of the city,
occupies a hollow in the drifts. As there is no surface&tlet,
any
water which may escape from it must find its way through the underlying cavernous limestone, but au ancient discharge in times of flood
may have run towards Glasheen, where the general surface level is considerably lower than thatt of the ground on the north, east, and south
sides of the lakelet, and where a hollow is now seen. On C. Henwoods
map of 1828 the lakelet was shown as 445 yards in length by 330 in
78
THE GEOLOGY
HARBOUR.
79
80
THE
GEOLOGY
OF
CORK
AND
CORK
HARBOUR.
width;
at present it is 433 yards long and 225 yards wide, so that,
in so far as the measurements are reliable, it appears that consi&rable
shrinkage has taken place within recent years : and the lough is now
filling up with vegetable growths.
1 l?he small maps have been prepared from data presented on a map in Smiths
History of Cork, 1760, afterwards enlarged for Geo. Mbarthy, Esq., Estates
Commissioner, J. Connors map of 1774, C. Henwoods of 1828, and a very
complete outline of the old cities prepared by the Messrs. Robert Walker and
Son, Architects and Civil Engineers, Cork, who were good enough to give a copy
for the present purpose.
2 Irish Names of Places,
by P. W. Joyce,
I,L.D.. M.s.,L.~
DETAILS : DRIFTS
81
82
THE
aEOLOGY
OF
CORK
AND
CORK
HARBOGR.
Eoaty Island.- The superficial deposit over the greater part of Foaty
Tsland is a reddish boulder-clay, which is best exposed in the cliffs
It contains boulders of Old Red
half a mile west of Belvelly Bridge.
Sandstone, Carboniferous slate and chert, and a few of Carboniferous
The north-eastern part of the Island is occupied by ridges
Limestone.
and mcunds of gravel and sand, which reach a height of over 100 feet.
Small outlying patches of gravel occur near Fota station and at a
point nearly half a mile to the east-north-east of it. At the latter
locality a pit-section exposes eight feet of bedded sand and fine gravel
without the base of the deposit being seea.
Along some portions of the shores of the islands mentioned above,
as well as on the shores of Great Island near Belvelly, and of the
mainland to the north of the islands, there is a small terrace or bank
of gravel at the foot of the cliff. This terrace is only covered by high
spring tides, and, together with the cliff at the back of it, ia more or less
overgrown by vegetation. This feature suggests, but is scarcely eufllcient
to prove, that there has been a recent slight rise of the land relatively
to the sea (see p. 48).
H,B.&f.
Cork va2ley between Poaty Island and MidZeton.-In
its easterly
extension the- Cork valley varies in width from 2 miles on the west,
near Carrigtohill, to nearly 3 miles in the neighbourhood of Midleton.
It is bounded on the southern side by an inlet of the sea, separating
Great Island from the mainland.
The central and northern portion
forms nearly level or gently undulating ground, broken through
frequently by steep knoll-like crags of limestone, rising up above the
100 ft. contour. The ground between these outcrops of rock is generally
smooth.
The country immediately around Midleton, and for a short
distance to the westward for about a square mile, is practically flat, the
only pronounced features within it being the abundant sink holes and
trough-like hollows, probably due to-the solution of the limestone,.which
are especially noticeable in the townland of Knockgriffin.
All along the
southern side of the valley, however, the ground is very moundy, the longer
axes of the mounds being in places irregular in direction, but in others,
especially where an esker-like form is developed, orientated nearly E.
and W., or slightly N. of E. Around Ballyannan Old Castle, and also
near Rossmore Bay, 14 miles S. of Carrigtohill, where the glacial
gravels occur in strong force, a kame-like structure is very noticeable.
The physical character of the ground in this part of the Cork valley
is mainly dependent upon the nature of the drift deposits which are
more extensively developed here than in any other part of the present
map; the undulating plain is mostly covered with boulder-clay, the
moundy ground with glacial gravel and sand ; and the flat area around
Midleton is portion of an extensive fan of delta-gravel brought down
in late-glacial and post-glacial times by the Owennacurra River,
These
drift-deposits will now be described in the order st,ated.
DETAILS
: DRIFTS
WEST
OF MIDLETON.
83
84
THE GEOLOGY
HARBOUR.
House, and
DETALS:
85
$b
Ta33
GhOL6GP
Ol? C&K
ANb
CQRK HAk$OUfl.
of very limited extent which appear to rise slightly above the level of
the highest tides of the present day, and may ptibly
indicate a slight
relative sinking of the sea-level in recent times. The largest area of
this kind lies to the west of Brown Island, covering a space of some
six acres, while a second but much smaller tract occurs on the western
Both of these low platforms are partly covered
side of Brick Island.
with masses of the shells of edible molluscs, principally of the oyster,
but with an occasional Mytilus, Cardium, and Littorina.
These
banks of shells, which range up to six feet in thickness, appear to be of
artificial origin, probably representing .ancient kitchen middens, as
such accumulations are generally called. It is noteworthy, however,
that wherever traces of this platform were seen, to the east of the
localities mentioned above and on the opposite shore at Rathcoursey,
oyster shells were associated with it. The level of tile shelf is so
slightly above tire present limits of erosion, that a merely local diminution in the height of the highest tides might be sufficient to account for
it. But as in this district no other trace was found of the PosGGlacial
raised beach which is so marked a feature on the east coast everywhere
north of Dublin, the presence of this slight shelf deserves notice.
The underground drainage in the limestone has been incidentally referred to in connection with the sink holes in the Midleton gravel-fan,
It should be further stated that in two places, one at Water Rock
House and another near the Midleton Distillery, surface-streams are
In the former case the stream flows down
seen to pass underground.
into a cave at the foot of a limestone knoll, and re-appears probably at
the smithy, 300 yards west of Whitegate House.
The presence of
numerous caves in the vicinity of Midleton also attest to the former
circulation of underground streams. In one of these caves, laid open
in a quarry east of Midleton workhouse, the bones of animals were
obtained, as described in 1865 by Prof. Harkness.1
At Ballinacorra the Owennacurra river makes a sudden bend to the
west just after emergin,0 from a narrow channel cut in the limestone at
It is probable that this is a post-glacial channel, and that the
Bailich.
old channel lies further west, and more in line with the gorge of East
Passage. If this be the case, the diversion was doubtless caused by the
mass of glacial gravel accumulated in this neighbourhood? as above
described.
H. J.S.
Q.-THE
CENTRAL
RIDGE.
Quarry at Midleton.
Qed, Mcrg.,
87
88
THI~G~~oI;oQ~
OF ~08~
ANb CORK
B~M30T312.
drift, for the country-rock lies beneath the soil at an average depth of
about a foot ; and in no place were they found actually embedded in
the drift. Several of these flints were noticed on the hill-top of LeheIt is just
ndgh More, at an elevation of over 600 feet above O.D.
possible that they may indicate a former extension of the Eastern
Drift into this area, of which,no other traces now remain,
The ice-stream which passed southward along the Irish sea-basin is
known to have reached the ground ten or twelve miles to the eastward,
as the characteristic boulder-clay formed by it, in which flints are
aIways present, is seen in sections on the coast a little to the east of
Power Head, as mentioned in a subsequent part of this memoir (p. 105).
Stratified drift is very sparingly developed on the Central ridge,
though it occurs in a few limited patches on the lower part of its
northern slopes, and in one or two places of considerable interest at
higher levels.
In the open valley south of Douglas, on the north slope of the hill
behind Montpellier, a spread of gravel and sand covers the boulder-clay
from the 250-ft. contour down to the stream a little east of DonnyPits in ,hiS deposit show t6enty feet of fine sand with
brook.
streaks of coarse and fine gravel in irregular lenticular layers, dipping
at low angles with the hill-slope. The stones in the gravel are all of
local rocks.
A mile to the south of Orossnacroha a deposit of gravel and sand
occurs near the top of the steep slope of a broad valley opening northward at an elevation of 400 feet. This gravel appears to be intercalated with the local boulder-clay, as may be seen in a small pit close to
the stream on the east side of the road, which shows the following
section :Red-brown boulder-clay with matched stones,
.
46 feet.
Yellowishgravellyclay,
Lentioular layer of red 0la;ley grakl,
Coarse end fine grey gravel,
.
Boulder-clay,
.
.
.
:,
64
9)
.
.
.
.
::
The stones in the gravel are of Old Red Sandstone, Carboniferous grit
ahd shale, and vein quartz, with occasionally pebbles of black chert,
probably derived from the Upper Shales (See p. 36).
This gravel has probably been accumulated at the margin of the ice
when the valley below was still blocked by a glacier,
As regards the Post-Glacial deposits, the streams flowing northwards
and southwards from the Central ridge are mostly too small and too
steeply graded to produce well-defined alluvial flats, though usually
bordered by strips of stony loam and clayey gravel, in part representing the action of the stream at a time when its volume was greater
than at present, and in part the result of rain-wash from the bordering
slopes. Where, however, these streams enter the largelow-level valleya
on the north and south of the ridge, and their gradient is suddenly
checked, delta-like fans of shingly gravel have been invariably formed
along the borders of the broader alluvial flats of the main rivers.
Examples of these detrital fans occur on the north-west at Curraheen
and Bnllinaspig Cottage, and on the south along the valley of the Owenboy, at Halfway House ; a little to the west at Ballinhassig ; half way
between Ballinhassig and Fivemilebridge.; and at several places further
east.
AMcH.
Rochestowti, Passage IVest, and Molnkstown.-The high ground on the
western side of the transverse gorge of West Passage is almost devoid of
drift. A little local rubble, more or less rearranged by rainwash, lying
in the upland basins is all that can be seen. In the wall by the roadside, SW yards S.E. of Old Court, a large boulder of the siliceous
broccia, measuring 3 feet by 2 feet by lh feet, was noticed, at an
elevation of nearly 400 feet above sea-level. Boulders of this rock are
abundant on Great Island, and farther eastward, as will presently be
described ; but this is the most westerly point at which they have been
observed.
The .gorge known as the Glen, at Monkstown, is 40 to 50 feet deep,
and is a good example of the steep-sided and steeply-graded valleys
which descend abruptly from the broad upland basins all over the
district.
Between Passage and Rochestown there are two deep basins filled
with thick clayey drift. The ridge separating these is trenohed by a
well-marked ( dry gap sloping steeply from west to east. There is a
considerable quantity of glacial gravel in the valley of the Rochestown
stream.
Hop Island is a mound of boulder-clay rising out of the slob.
Qreat Is2a~d.~The western end of Great Island contains a deep
basin-like valley bounded on the south, west, and north by high ground,
and filled with thick drift. This basin originally held at its west end a
small lake about a quarter of a mile across, but the retaining barrier has
been cut through artificially, and its site is now an alluvial flat. The
basin is drained eastward by the Ballyleary stream into Cuskinny
Bay.
The hills which bound this basin on the west, and separate it from
the West Passage, sink into a rather low co1 about half a mile south
of Carrigaloe. A small valley connecting the basin with the West
.W.B.W.
Passage has been cut in some way at this point.
The low-lying ground on the northern side of Great Island about
Belvelly and Rosslague is underlain by Carboniferous rocks, and,
Thistract is covered
strictly speaking, forms part of the Cork Valley.
As on Foaty Island,
by a reddish boulder-clay of varying thickness.
the rocky substratum of Carboniferous Limestone reaches the surface
over a comparatively small area only, and the soil which is derived from
the boulder-clay or gravel is essentiuliy a non-calcareous one. The
boulder-clay thins out against the flanks of the hills. Its upper limit
is masked by a stony loam or hillwash, but seems to be marked by a
change in the angle of slope.
The higher parts of the hill-slopes and the hill-tops are covered by a
thin soil containing much angular rubble of local origin, and a few pebbles
lying on rock. The basins and depressions in the upland are, however,
lined by boulder-clay, which in the bottoms of the basins is covered by
alluvium or by a stony wash. The boulders in the clay are chiefly
of Old Red Sandstone and Carboniferous Slate.
Carboniferous LimeScattered over
stone pebbles even on the IoW ground are not common.
the hills at all altitudes are boulders of a brecciated siliceous rock,
which sometimes reach a large size. Near Belgrove Lodge, and again
260 yards above Glenmore*Bridge,J are boulders of this rock nine feet
long, Boulders of similar kind were noted in the boulder-clay of the
coast-sections to the SW. of Cuskinny, and also half a mile east of
Ashgrove.
1 a Glenmore is the name given on the six-inoh map to the deep valley
lying betken Ballymore and Waterstown.
:
.
:
8 feet
12 ,,
10 ,,
6
14 ::
Soil,
:
Yellowloam iith an lar at&es,
Reddish-brown boulr er-olay with a
variety of sub-angular and rounded
stones, some of wbioh are striated, .
Stiff yellow olay with few small stones,
Sharp sand, iron-stained in plaocs, with
.
oontcrted bands of fine gravel,
Rather finer sand (baes not mm), .
l
1 foot
2 feet,
6 feeti.
2 in. to 14 feet.
4 to 6 feet.
4 feet.
Gravel and sand is exposed on the shore on the east side of the
fiosslague promohtory, and w&s formerly worked in pits a shot%distance
inland.
Coarse gravel up to five feet thick occurs in the cliffs half-a-mile:east
of Ashgrove House, where it is overlain and underlain by head. The
gravel thus takes the place of the boulder-clay, and towards the east it
bWIAILS
: DRlFJ!fi dF
CAtCRhlALfNl.!l VALLEY.
91
The n&m
slope of the ridge east of Great Island is also bare of
drift, except along a narrow platform W. of Bawnard. In one or two
places, however, rmtably on the steep slopes N. of Rathcoursey House,
the slaty surface-rubble, derived mainly from the decay of the local
rock, is upwards of six feet in thickness. This material is probably
equivalent to the Upper Head described in the coast sections.
H. J. S.
J.--THE
VALLEY.
4 feet by 4 feet, lie half buried in the sand at the bottom of the pit in a
manner that suggests the close proximity of the limestone beneath the
gravel-mound. This gravelly deposit occurs as a low ridge, about i of a
mile long, narrowing down along the slope to the Owenboy River in a
south-westerly direction, to the point where the river takes its sharp
southerly bend into the deep rock-gorge of Ballea, by which it cuts its
passage through the intervening high ground and reaches the estuary at
Carrigaline. At the junction of the small stream that flows southwards into the Owenhoy, just above the bend, a limited patch of coarse
gravel, five to fifteen feet thick, occurs ; and directly opposite, on the
south side of the river, another small patch of gravel is found.
Again at Ballea Bridge (upper), stratified gravel and sand is developed to a thickness of ten feet. At the lower end of the Ballea gorge,
a little east of Ballea Bridge, where the river again turns eastward, a
fan of moundy gravel occurs, in which a pit has been worked just north
of Munro House. This deposit forms two elongated mounds, the
southern rising above the alluvial flat, and having a limestone core,
seen at Munro House, while the northern mound borders the alluvium
and is banked against the slope of Ravenswood Hill.
The alluvial deposits of the Owenboy are frequently exposed in the
banks of the river, and are composed principally of rubbly gravel,
covered with loamy earth.
The broad belt above Hilnahoue has already been referred to ; below
this point and in the Ballen gorge the river leaves very little room for
alluvium ; but below the gorge the alluvial flat suddenly expands.
The following section may be taken aB typical of the river-banks
between Ballea and Carrigaline :Brown loamy wash, greyish at bottom in places
and sometimes
with a
taining wood,
Coarse rubblg gravel, .
Boulder-clay with scratched
peats
layer,
oon1 to 3 feet.
1 to 2 feet.
:
23 to 3i feet.
stones, seen for
.
The stones in the river-gravel are of chert, grit, and shale, derived
from the Carboniferous rocks and Old Red Sandstone, and of vein quartz :
A.&H.
no limestone pebbles were observed.
DETAILS
: DRIFTS
OF CARRIGALINE
VALLEY.
93
94
THE
GEOLOGY
OF CORK AND
CORK
HARBOUR,
A little north of the section just described, and nearly opposite the
Golden Rock, the beds seen in the cliff are as follows :Boulder-clay
with little or no limestone,
10 feet.
Stratifiedsand and gravel, with springs issuingat base:
10 to 15 fee&
Boulder-clay,
ravelly in places, with some admixture
of slaty loca P rubble, and a fair amount of limestone,
but not so much as in other sections,
.
.
5 to 10 feef.
--30
The outcrop of gravel in the above section may be traced fro: the
cliff top round the northern slope of the hill.
The platform of the pre-glacial raised beach can be seen at intervals
along this shore, with remnants of the local rubble or li head overlying
it in places.
Coast Sectiofzs at Czcrraghbinny and Loughbeg.--The
platform of
the raised beach may be traced also all round the E. and N. coasts of
the headland of Carraghbinny, being overlain generally by 10 to 16 feet
of I6head, and in one place by 15 feet of boulder-clay, consisting entirely
of detritus from the Old Red Sandstone and Carboniferous Slate.
In the middle of the tidal flat of Lough Beg (now partially reclaimed)
a low mound of drift rises up in the shelter of some limestone crags, and
on their lee-side with respect to the direction of ice-flow, The sea
has cut a cliff-section across it, showing a fairly uniform thickness
(7 to 9- feet) of upper boulder-clay on an inner core of lower boulder-clay,
conforming to the shape of the ground, and exposed to a depth of 5 feet
in. the middle. The inner core is tough, and contains, in addition to
Old Red Sandstone and Oarboniferous Slate, a considerable propoition
of blue limestone, often in large well-glaciated blocks,
The upper
band has little or no limestone and is rather sandy in its matrix.
The
upper portion of the lower layer is in places very stony. The line of
junction is never well d&ned.
Estuary of the Owenboy. -The
remaining portion of the Owenboy
valley will be described here, though, strictly speaking, it lies within the
areA ,defined as the Southern Anticline.
The river is tidal to a short
distance above Carrigaline.
Here its course is along the southern edge
of the limestone syncline. Two miles to the east, however, instead of
continuing along the low-lying hollow. which stretches from Coolmore
House to Lough Beg, it turns in a south-easterly direction and passes
into a deep gorge in the southern ridge of Carboniferous Slate and Old
Red Sandstone.
It does not emerge again from the high ground until
it enters the harbour between Crosshaven and Curraghbinny.
On the northern shore of the estuary east of CarrigJine, where the
banks are low and composed of limestone, a terrace of gravel similar to
that on the north side of Little Island fringes the shore. In the cliffsectioas this gravel is seen to overlie boulder-clay, which throws out
springs at its base.
An isolated mass of glacial gravel lies on the slope of the hill above
The Point near Crosshaven.
A large pit in it shows 30 feet of current
bedded sand and gravel, composed of well waterworn pebbles of Carboniferous Slate and Old Red Sandstone, and an occasional band containing some limestone pebbles.
The bedding dips at an angle of 20 to
the west or south-west.
Two glaciated surfaces were observed in the gorge of the Owenboy
near Drakes Pool, the prevalent direction of the striae varying from
E. loo N. to E. 5 S. In addition to the strise there are some small
patches of boulder-clay and glacial gravel in the gorge, proving that it
was in existence previous to the glaciation.
W.B.W,
95
Soil,
Yellow smhy cl&, pas&g do& into reddi& brown
boulder-clay,
.
.
.
.
.
Sharp sand and gravel (base not BBen), .
.
.
6
1 In*
3
B
1
96
THE
GEOLOGY
OF CORK AND
CORK
HARBOUR,
97
A short distance to the north of the striated surface,, and near the
landing-place, there is beneath the boulder-clay a u caloroted breccia
which rests on and against an irregular limestone surface about highwater mark. It consists of one to three feet of angular limestone
fragments passing up into a deposit two feet thick, which also
contains boulders of limestone and other rocks, some of which are
striated. The limestone breccia may represent the u head of other
sections,
H.B.M.
S.-THE
SOUTHERN
RIDGE
AND
COAST-LINE
Upland
south of Balli&assig. -The
local clayey drift is very
generally spread over the low undul&ing upland tract between the
Owenboly valley and the Old Red Sandstone ridge of Doolieve,
with the exception of aI bare high tract which extends from just
north of Mead&own by Ballee Gaotle and Ravenswood to the 101~
ground on the east. It is across t$his ridge that the Owenboy River
takkea a sharp 8turn southwards and, for over half a mile, has cut
for itself the deep rock-gorge prelviously referred to (page 94).
Oa the nelw upland tract south of Ba;linha,ssig the boulder-clay,
which is elxposed in many places, d,itfIerslin tbe colour od its matrix
frolm that of the ridge north of the Owenboy, being generlly a
stiff yellowish clay, with scratched stones and included pebbles of
the Old Red rocks and elf the black Carboniferous shales and
In. the lower ground itI is apparently of considerable thicksl&!s.
nes$ md makes a wet cla!yey land on the long slopes and in the
hollows, as, for example, in t,he tracts extending east and weat in
the vicinity od Badlinaboy, Nigga, Bridge, and Mead&own.
At the Ballinphelic
Brickworks, a mile to the south-east of
Fivemile bridge
the open pits show over twelve feet off yellow
stony boulder-clay with scratched stoneIs of the usual types resting
on a glaciated rock-surface with &riae running nearly from west to
east. At this place there is in one part oC the section a deposit
of fine plastic bluish-grey alluvial mud or marl overlying the
boulder-clay to a depth of 5 or 6 fee;tj, and eves it a foot or so
of black peaty soil. The blue marl contains, diatoms, and is evidently the1 deposit4 of a small lake or tarn which occupied a hollolw
in the boulder-clay until drained by the deepening of itre outlet
channel.
The yellow boulder-clay
ext*ends as a drif%covering
over the
upland basin to1 the soiuth oaf Meadstown, and eastward to the
strea.ms which ,draJn northwards from the Old Red Sandstone ridge
Sections adong tlhe streams show up to ten feet, of t,his
of Doolieve.
drift
The higher portion of Doolieve is nolw almost e&rely bare
of drift, but here and there on its slopes patches elf rearranged
stony clay are still noticeable, and there is no reason to doubt that
its whole area up to the summit, 600 feet above O.D., has been glacia-ted. The denudation of the drift since! Glacial times by atmosphelric agencies has, however, removed most of the evidence of its
A. McH.
fornmr gl~aciation.
Upland 8021th ailzc? so&h-e&
of Carviga&e.---The
same conditions as those described in the preceding paragraph are cont,inued
in the eastward prolongation of the upland, where theI high grolund
bo the south of thei Owenboy .has only irregular patches of drift
more or less rearranged and lodged in the hollows and shelterA
places.
The upland bjasins generally contain a stony clay apparently partly rain-wash, from which scratched boulders may be
occasionally extracted.
One of these basins to the south-easlt of
H
98
THE GEOLOGY
HARBOUR.
head )
:
.
.
2 feet.
5 ,t
Afi%
inohes to several
DETAILS
: DRIFTS
OF SOUTHERN
99
COAST-LINE.
IO0
THE
GEOLOGY
OP CORK
AND
CORK
HARBOUR
DETAILS
: DRIFTS
OF S&JTR&&N
It is overlain
high-water mark.
which are large sub-angularblocks
a few rounded stones.
COAST-LfNfi.
101
White Buy.-On
the south side elf Carlisle Fort beach-gravels
come in beneath the head, and rest on the smoothed platform,
which is about five feet abmove high-water
mark.
The gravel
reaches aI thickness elf 10 feet,, and consists of well-rolled pebbles
of the local rocks with an admixture, near the top, of a few augular
or slightly rounded slabs of slate. The head consists of angular
fragments of the local slates and vein-quart$z. The top two or three
feet is usually more loamy, and includes a few drift pebbles.
A
little further into White Bay the upper portion of the head with
the pebbles ia separated from t,he lower part) by reddish boulderThe follo,wing section is taken 300 yards
clay wit,h striat,ed stones.
W.N.W. elf the Glan-na?gow stream : Up er head,
.
Re gdish stony boulder-clay,
Lower head,
Rolled beach-gravel,
Rook-platform.
.
.
.
c
3 feet.
4 ,,
12 ,,
7
,,
From this point the surface oln which the beach-gravel rests rises
towards the east until it, reaches a height, of 15 feet above highwater mark. It then falls again to the south beyond Glan-na-gow.
Whilst the exceptional height to which the pre:glacial beach rises
in this locality might be attributed to a local dlfferentiaSl uplift, it
is a more probable supposition to assume that the gravel was driven
up during south-we&erly gales on to the terrace-like fe,ature which
flanks the Glan-nagow
stream.
About
50 ya,rds west o$f the
mouth of tlhe strea(m the rocks which form the lower part of the
cliff are intSerruptSedby a( driftfilled valley which is about 30 yards
wide.
The rocky sides of the valley slope1 steeply inwards and a,lso
inland.
A little angular rubble, like heaid, is banked on t,heir
sides, and is overlain by gra$vel, which thickens to,wards the middle
elf t*he valley.
It is there eight feet thick, but its base is not semen.
Above the gravel there comes a reddish-yellow
clay containing
numerous pieces of vein-quartz.
This clay is about 10 feet t,hick
in the middle of the section, butI thins out tlolwards the sides. It is
succeeded by one to three feet of fine gravel, which is in turn overlain by reddish stony boulder-clay
about1 nine feet thick. The
boulder-clay and gravel overlap the lower deposits, and rest on the
rock on both sides of the valley.
The gravel beneath the boulderclay resembles the gIacia1 gravel of inland sections, and not that
of the pre-glacial raised beach.
Where a rola$ddescends to the shore 400 yards &. of Glan-na-gow
the section in the cliffs is as follows : Weathered boulder-clay, with some rubble,
Red boulder-clay,
Lower head (base-hidden by talui),
2 to 3 feet.
4 feet.
12
99
_j
a,ppears in the cliffs, until below a ruined cottage it cuts oat the
lower head and comes to rest directly on the rock-platform, whicn
is striated from W. 15O N. to E. 15O 8.
About
4 feet.
1
l
1
1
18
3 i&hes.
Beyond this sect8ion, the boulder-clay dies out, and the platform,
which is much cutI up by recent marine erosion, is overlain by
head alone. _
The local nature of the head is strikingly illustrated by this
line of colast-section.
At the polint in the section now reached the
old cliff and shore-platform consist of red and green slat-es, and t,he
head is formed of the same materials.
To the north, where the
pre-glacial cliff consists of blaok or da,rk grey Carboniferoua slate,
the hea,d, is composed entirely of black or dark-grey slat,e fragments.
To the southward nearer Roches Point, where t>he green
beds are absent from the cliff, green slate fragments are wanting
in the head, which consists of red slate only.
A little over 100 yards south of the section given above, large
sub-angular blocks with a little beach gravel rest on the pre-glacial
platform, and bloiwn saad is mixed with t,he lower part of the head.
The boulder-clay again comes down to the platfolrm 300 yards
further south.
It contains here a numb&y of well-rolled ellip
soidal pebbles which have evidently been derived from the preglacial beach.
Amongst them were found a pebble of felsite of a
type occurring in co. Waterford, and another of microgranite.
Rolch*ea Po~vind
.-Nearly
400 yards beyond and just north of the
coastgua,rd station nea,r Roches Point,, boulder-clay nine feet thick
overlies loose, bedded aand, which is over five feet thick.
It is probably a blown sand overlying the pre-glacial beach.
Blown sand
covered by lower head is banked against the preglacial
cliff in
the quarry near the signal station.
A surface of rock exposed at
tlhe side of the pa$h just within the lighthouse grounds is striated
from W. 5O N. to E. 5O S. On the south side o,f Roches Point the
head is composed of angular pieces of red sandst,one, and rests on
the rock-platfoerm, which is raised a few feet above high-water mark
of spring tides.
Belo,w Roches Tolwer half aI mile to t,he east of the lighthouse
blown sand occurs below the lower head, and in one place a little
gravel rests on the rock-plat,form.
TraboZgart.---The lower head may be traced into the bay at Trabolgan, where it ia overllain by 20 feet od stony boulder-c1a.y.
The
head is composed of the local red sandstane and slate, but a broken
piece of chert with its edges rubbed was found in it,. Its base
here passes belo,w high-water mark. About 18 feet of greenish
sandy loaIm with a few small1 &livers of slate was exposed on the
shore below the head, by the removal of the beach during a storm.
Some beds of the loam were pierced by small vertical pipes filled
with ferruginoua ma,tter. They appeared to have been rqotlets.
The boulder-cla,y is a hard reddish sandy clay full of sub-angular
and rounded pebbles of Old Red Sandstone and of Carboniferous
rocks, with the, exception of the limestone, which wals not no.
COAST-LlNE.
10s
There also occur large pebbles of vein-quartz, and one flint was
Near the, outfall of a.n artificial cut there is a
found in the clay.
bed of gravel, three feet thick, near the base of the clay.
On thle aa& #side:of Trabo81gan Bay, alnd about 80 yards S.E. of
the mouth of the &rea,m, the pre+glaciaJ shore+platfolrm, folur toI
five feet above high-water mark, is covered with large more or less
rounded blocks of local rock, between which well-rounded beachThe gravel and blocks are overlain by head,
gra.vel is packed.
In one pa-rt of the section
with traces of boalder-clay
above.
blown sand occurs above the1 gmved asd blocks, and ia mixed with
the base of the head.
At the eastern horn of the bay, the head with beach gravel
b,eneath it in places, rests on tlhe rock-platform and forms a wellmarked terrace which runs round the point into the next! bay.
This
indenta;tion ie due to the partid excavation of aI short butt deep
driftrfilled valey.
The, raised-beach plat8form ia seen at theI bIaslet
of the cliffs on blolth sidee of t.he valley.
The pre-glacial rock-cliff
is here close behind t1h.emoldern cliff and the slhore-platjfo,rm is six
ta eight feet above high-wa&er mark.
Tolwards the) middle) of the,
vallley, where the ejxpoeed edge of the platform is farther from the
odd cliff, itI sinks belolw the\ modern beach. Wedl-rounded be!a#ch
gravel rests on the pla$ttorm. On the west side of the bay it is
cemented by iron-oxide, and bridges over a small ca!ve cut in t,he
rocks by recent marine action.
Embedded
in the gravel aIre
sexvera large blocks elf slandstoae which, during the erozion oQ the
pre-glacial cliff, fell on to the old beach and there became more
or lees rounded.
A considseralble quantity ob bclolwn sand overlies
the pre-glacial beach on the west side of the bay.
The next deposit
above is the lower head, which is well exposed in the old roadway.
It relachesl a tihicknelss of about 35 feet, and consists of a,ngular
irregulas lumps of red sandstone and slate.
The spaces between
the fragments a,re often filled with a reddish loam, but are sometimes quite open.
As usua,l, the oaly structure observable in the1
rubble is a linear arrangement of t,he flatter slabs of sla,te. The
materials of which the hea$d is composed are identical witah those
forming the preglacial
cliff, which is here about 150 feet high.
The deposit; appears to have accumulated in the same manner as
screes, and would seem to indicate more frequent frosts than occur
at the present, day.
In the middle of the ba$y, as in Trabolgan Bay,
the base of the lolwer heaId passes below high-water mark.
This
fact, a.nd the occurrence of a quantit,y 09 blown sand close down on
to the pre-glacial beach, shows that the beach wa;a elevated before
the oncoming of the ice of the Glacial Period in the district.
The
lower head is overlain by reddish stony boaIder-cIay containing
subangular and rounded pebbles of Garboniferous
Slate and Old
I3ed Sandstone.
Stlanding a1tlthe western horn o,f the bay, one
notices that the surface of the boulder-clay has a decided dip from
west to east, that is to say, the boulder-clay is banked up on the
western flank of the valley, a fact which has been noted previously
as podntling ta aI motion of t*he ice1 frolm we& t,ol elasit. On t,he
eastern side elf the bay there is a little anguIa,r .rubbIe with drift
pebbles in a loamy matrix, lying on the boulder-clay.
GyJeem.-Passing
ea&wasds towards Gyleen, the cliffs show a
t,hick mass of head rest,ing on the smoothed rock-platform
and
banked against t,he old cliff.
Large blocks of sandstone or slate
more or less rounded are sometimes seen lying on the platform and
ihi
covered by head; and 400 yards west of Cotters Point blown sand
is seen at the base of the head. Nearer the Point the pre-glacial
cliff recedes inland slighUy and the platform, owing to ite seaward
slope, comes down to the modern shore. Just east of Cotters
Point the section in the cliffs is : ( Head, with some pebbles,
.
.
6 feet.
Angular slaty head,
.
.
. 12
.
3 f&t.
.
Raised-beach gravel,
Smoothed rock-platform.
.
.
.
withEsandy matrix,
1 fzot.
3 feet.
DETAILS
105
I2
,,
& ::
The lower hea,d consists o,f angular fragments of red slate a,nd
sandstone lying flat, with a red or yellowish loam filling up the
interstices between the fra,gments.
Its base is hidden by the
gravel of the beach, but the lower part of the shore is formed of
slates a,nd sandstones w(hich have been planed down to level scam-s.
This shore-platform is the seaward portion of the pre-glacial platform, which extends inward beneath the terrace of drifts to the foot
of the pre-glacial cliff.
Sections similar to the above are exposed in the cliffa farther
The
eastward, but the red boulder-clay is not always present.
head beneath the marly boulder-clay is sometimes disturbed, and
the parallelism of its fragments destroyed.
Tongues of marl, from
a few inches to a foot thick and up to 16 feet long, penetrate into
the head from east to west. Lenticles of head are seen separated
from the main mass of the deposit and are drawn out or contorted
in the marly boulder-clay.
In the middle of the bay at a small break in the cliffs is the
follolwing section : Upper head,
.
.
.
.
.
.
2 to 6 feet,
Marly boulder-clay,
Lower head,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
8 feet,
6 feet.
1The flints include black and mey flinta, and worn brown-coated ones.
2 A boulder of this granite, 2 feet long, was seen near the base of the marly
boulder-clay in the middle of the bay.
106
107
108
THE:G%OLOGY OE'CORBAND
CORK HABBOUB.
109
BUILDING-STONE.
PART III.
CHAPTER
VI.-ECONOMIC
GEOLOGY.
Building Stone.
The Old Red Sandstone has been extensively quarried for
rough walling throughout
the district, under the name of
of shaly bands and of a
brownstone , but the prevalence
rude cleavage-structure
tell considerably against its qualities
as a building stone. It has nevertheless been used, with limestone dressings, in several important buildings in the city of
Cork.2 The flaggy beds in the upper part of the formation
have afforded the principal supply in the neighbourhood of the
city.
The best building stone of the district is obtained from the
Carboniferous
Limestone,
and this rock has supplied the
material for most of the principal buildings of the city, and a
considerable quantity has also been sent out of the district. The
chief quarries now being worked lie around Ballintemple, near
Blackrock, and on Little Island, but there are numerous others
around Midleton and in almost every p.art of the district where
the limestone occurs. The following description of the Ballintemple stone was given by G. Wilkinson in his well-known
book on Irish B&ding
Stone@ : -
The stone here is of a
whitish grey, very handsome in appearance, and retains its
original colour. Stones of very large size, suitable for columns,
can be easily obtained, some of 3 feet in diameter, and from
5 to 6 feet in length. Most of the public buildings in Cork have
been erected with stone from these quarries, and exhibit some
excellent specimens of masonry, as in the Courthouse and
The capitals of the Corinthian columns at the
Savings Bank.
Courthouse are well executed in this beautiful stone.
Mem. Geol. lbvey.
Explanation of Sheets 187, 196, and 196, p. 66.
9 See G. H. Kimhans Ewnmnic Geology of Ireland, p. 326.
8 Practical Geology and Ancient Architecture of IreJaw& London, 1846, p, 176,
See also G, H, Kinahan, y.m
c&, p. 168,
1 Sea
110
BUIZjDING
111
MATERIAL.
In the Carboniferous
rocks of the Carr&aline valley the
mineral wu.ueU%e occurs in veins and nodular masses, sometimes of considerablme size. The most, celebrated locality for
the mineral is Tracton, where some very fine specimens were
W(avellite has been got also at Minane Bridge and
obtained.
All these places, however, lie a little outside the
Ringabella.
18. J. S.
southern limit of the map of the Cork district.
Slaters.
A band of black slate in the C.arboniferous Slate was formerly
worked for roofing slates in a quarry three-quarters
of a mile
The slates appear to have been
N.N.E. of Trabolg8an House.
H. B. M.
generally small in size and rather thick.
Bricks.
Owing to the extensive use of building-stone and the relative scarcity of good material for brick-making,
this industry is comparatively
restricted in the neighbourhood of Cork,
There are at present only two brick-yards in operation within
the limits of the map, one at Ballinphelic, three miles east of
Ballinhassig, and the other at Belvelly, on the north-western
In most places the drift is either too
corner of Great Island.
sandy or too rubbly to yield a satisfactory brick-clay.
The section at Ballinphelic has been previously described
(p. 97). The hard yellow boulder-clay of this locality is dug
and mixed with a proportion of the alluvial silt or clay which
has deposited in a small basin in the boulder-clay when this
was occupied by a tarn or pond. In its wet state the alluvium
is bluish grey in Icolour, drying to a pale grey, and as previously mentioned, it contains a few Idiatoms. A hard strong
brick, of fairly regular reddish colour, is produced, and ridgetiles, chimney-pots, and other articles in earthenware are also
m,ade. The products are conveyed to Ballinhassig Station,
nearly four miles distant, by means of trolleys running on an
overhead cable. The chief part of the output finds its market
in Cork.
A. MCH.
At Belvelly, bricks are manufactured from an alluvial clay.
The section in the brick-yard is as follows :-
Greyish olay,
*.
Thin p&y leyef, with wood,
Greyish 01&y, with stoma in lower pa&,
Ft. In.
1
6
/
THE GEOLOGY OF CORK AND CORK HARBOUR.
112
Silica Clay.
A depsit of peculiar character, originally supposed to be
capable of use as a pottery clay, was formerly worked on
the north side of the Rostellan Demesne in a pit situated at
the angle in the estuary, three-quarters
of a mile below Saleen.
It is a white siliceous meal, slightly gritty to the touch, and
composed of small particles of chalcedonic silica. It is traversed
by lines which dip at an angle of about 70 to <the south. They
are parallel to the cleavage-planes in the Carboniferous Limestone, which is exposed close to the south wall of the pit. On
its north side the nearest outcrop of rock is one of Carboniferous
The
Slate, just beyond the bridge at the head of the estuary.
deposit therefore probably forms the base of the Carboniferous
Limestone beneath which it dips.
The deposit strikes W. loo S. to E .lo0 N., following closely
Along the line
the northern edge of the Limestone outcrop.
of strike it has been met with in Castle Mary Demesne, a short
distance east of the margin of the map. It may also be traced
westwards along the shore of the estuary.
In some places it
contains lumps of a hard ,white, cleaved siliceous rock, which
appears to be in situ at a point 700 yards west by south of the
pit. This rock contains casts of crinoids and seems to be a,
silicified limestone.
From information on an old plan of the workings, supplied
by Mr. E. St. J. Lyburn, of the Department of Agriculture and
Technical Instruction
for Ireland, the following succession
could be made out when the pit was open. It commences with
the Limestone on. the south side.
Carboniferous Limestone, [?I
Brown hematite iron-ore,
Compact clay,.
.
Whit0 k&x,
.
Cotwe silex.
:
.
White silex,
.
.
White clay,
.
.
White silex,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
. 12 to 16 ,,
6t438 ,,
.
20 ,,
6 to 0 feet.
about 6
,,
of the
coarse silex.
of
partial:
analysis
Survey
of ?nirwral
of ITeland."
sent
No.1.
Silica,
Ale09+Fe,&,
by
Geologid
No.8.
ROAD
MATERIAL,
ETC.
113
Road Materials.
The rock used for repairing the roads is chiefly limestone in
the main valleys, and the hard beds of the Carboniferous Slate,
and Old Red Sandstone, termed locally brownstone in the
hilly districts.
The former is generally not of the best quality, ana is unsuited for roads with heavy traffic, so that the results are somewhat unsatisfactory.
The brownstone roads, on account of their situation on
sIbping ground, are generally better, and with care in the selection of the material, might still be considerably improved.
In
the country districts much of the material consists of the loose
stones collected from the fields, and these, though partly made
1
114
,
Water Supply,
I
/
31
70
8
10
i&--i
CORK WATE&SUPPLY.
115
Thickness
Feet.
84
16 s-1
frequeni
76
10
23
2
. ---
12
220
Total depth,
..
Ft.
:
.
.
:
.
.
:
.
:
.
:
.
:
.
Total depth,
In.
.i ,
. 2; :
.
.
ii:
.
.
.
.
.
.
E
0 IS
7
0 6
6 0
46
Comparing the results of borings at the several points mentioned, and 4aBsuming, as b,efore, that the w,ater which flowe,d on
a rock bed 80 feet below datum at the Waterworks near George
IV. Bridge, found a channel of discharge sufficiently
deep
beneath where the IJeq now runs, say in the vicinity of St.
Patricks Bridge, we are able to draw the approximate section
across the valley shown in Fig. 12, p. 75.
I3
116
THE
GEOLOGY
OF
CORK
AND
CORK
HARBOUR.
114
CORK WATER-SUPPLY.
Gallon (70,000
River Samples.
23rd.
Chlorine,
Sodium Chloride,
:
:
:
Magnesium and Calcium, Sulphates and
Carbonates,
Nitric Acid and Nitrates,
Nitrites,
Phosphates,
:
:
:
:
Injurious Metals,
.
.
.
Total Hardness,
.
.
.
Permanent Hardness,
.
.
Iron,
Total Solid Matter,
:
:
:
Loss on Ignition,
.
.
.
29th.
Tunnel Samples.
23rd.
29th.
___---
1.20
I.97
1.20
1.97
1.30
2.14
1.30
2*14
4.6
-13
Nil.
:tt :
4.4
*I1
Nil.
Nil.
Nil.
5.6
-28
Nil.
Trace.
Nil.
4.9
-22
Nil.
Trace.
Nil.
5.w
4.V
Trace.
7 *20
lmc;G
41$
Nil.
z
4.20
4*4O
Nil.
9.30
1.50
i:,:
Trace.
8.40
1.60
118
Results
ANALYSES
in Pa&
per Million.
Tunnel Samples.
River Samples.
23rd.
23rd.
29th.
-040
-090
0.6
-030
-080
0.5
Pale
Green.
Earthy
@=&$).
Pale
Green.
Earthy
(Sll$).
Soft.
Soft.
29th.
--
Free Ammonia,
.
.
Albuminoid Ammonia,
Oxygen consumed in three hour;
at 80 F.
Colour in Tidys 2f. glass tube, .
Smell (when warmed at 100 F.),
Sediment,
Taste, .
.
.
.
.
a020
-130
1.6
Dark
Green.
Earthy.
. Moderate.
Soft.
.
-015
-125
1.3
Moderate
Green.
Earthy.
Moderate.
Soft.
Dr. E. J. McWeeney, M.A., M.D., D.PH., kc., gave the following report on a sample of filtered Lee river-water, sent him
2 Dec., 1902 :- Only six colonies of bacteria developed from
1 cc. ; instead of 80, which was the figure obtained from unfiltered river-water. This is excellent water from the bacJ. R. K.
teriological standpoint.
Queenstown.l-The
drinking
water of Queenstown
is
supplied by pipes to taps and pumps in the streets, and is
derived from Smalls Well, which lies above the town, 100
yards N. of the National School, at an altitude of 270 feet. The
supply is very constant and averages 30,000 gallons a day, all
the year round.
In addition to this there is the main supply, which is laid on
in the houses and which is brought from the waterworks at
Tibbotstown,
N. of Carrigtohill.
Before the construction
of
these works an additional supply was obtained by pumping the
water from a spring in Ballywilliam, and from the Ballywilliam
stream across the hill into Queenstown.
The large number of springs in the neighbourhood of Queenstown, their great volume and constancy, and the heights at
The amount
which some of them occur, are very remarkable.
of ground on the island lying at a higher altitude than Smalls
Well, and which might act as a catchment area for the water,
is quite inadequate to account for the constancy and volume of
the supply.
Smalls Well is moreover only one of a large
number of springs occurring at all altitudes in the neighbourhood of Rushbrooke and Queenstown.
In winter, springs burst out at the highest point of the ro,ad
between
Ballywilliam
and Queenstown.
This road goes
Mainly from information
the Town Commissioners.
to
WATER-SUPPLY.
119
through a co1 with slightly higher ground to east and west, but
this high ground is of very small extent, and there appears to
There is a fine
be free drainage from it in other directions.
spring near the slaughter-house
from which a great part of
Queenstown was at one time supplied.
When the slaughterhouse was built the use of this spring as a source of supply was
discontinued, and it was walled in.
Perhaps the most remarkable springs of all are those at
They have been described by
Ballynoe, near Rushbrooke.
Prof. Hull in a paper read before the Royal Dublin Society in
1889,l and me,asurements of the volume and temperature of the
water were made by Mr. Doran.
His observations show that
the temperature of the water is quite constant, being the same
as the mean annual temperature of the locality, namely, 51 F.
The springs issue at about high-water mark of ordinary tides.
They were not perceptibly affected by the long drought of 1887.
During the construction of the docks at Haulbowline, a small
Ereshwater spring is said to have been found. Its volume was,
however, too small for it to have been of any importance as a
source of supply.
Mr. Doran is of opinion that the springs on Great Island are
fed from some source outside the island, the local rainfall being
insufficient to accbunt for them ; and although there is difficulty
in seeing how this actually takes place, there seems no reason
W. B. W.
to doubt the correctness of the conclusion.
Monkstown.-The
water-supply of Monkstown is obt.ained
from a small reservoir in a spring-fed hollow on the upland
above the town, about a quarter of a mile north of Parkgarriff
W. B. W.
House.
Midie,ton.-The
organiseId water-service
for Midleton is
supplied from two reservoirs, situated about half-way in the
Ballynaclashy
House and
, east and west valley
between
Knockakeen Bridge, the water from the stream being filtered
at the reservoirs.
CarrigtohilL-This
village takes its supply from a small
reservoir in the valley, 2 mile north-east of Carrigtohill railway
H. J. S.
station.
Bhrney .-A
small reservoir close to the railway line and
650 yards S.E . of the Great Southern and Western Railway
Station at Blarney, collects the water springing from a hollow
on the hill-slope, and feeds the stand-pipes in the village.
G. W. LI.
In the country districts water is obtained either from gurfacestreams and small springs or from wells which are usually
shallow. The Old Red rocks, except where much fissured, are
not well adapted for the storage of water in quantity, from their
shaly character and steep inclination, and are for the most part
sufficiently impervious to arrest the waters descending through
On the Temperature of the Water of Ballynoe Springs, near Queenstown,
845. Proc. Roy. Dublin 8oc., vol. vi., p. 807.
Agricultural
Geology.
121
of local
.
.
.
:
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
6,400 acres.
5,350
,,
1,::
::
880 ,,
245 ,,
(335 ,,
Broad char.acteristic
differences between the boulder-clays
of the valley #and those Icovering the higher grounds have
In the valley they are usually
already been mentioned.
gravelly and sometimes ,sandy , giving corresponding
loams.
Under closer ex,amination much of the soil is little more than
fine sand, as that lying around Cork Lough, advantage of which
is taken for extensive market gardening.
A mile south by
east of Cork Lough, at Wilton (now St, Josephs College) and
in part of Inchigaggin, the loams become cl,ayey. In general,
the boulder-clays on the higher ground give stony loams, the
finer material containing a goodly proportion of clay and very
fine silt ; but owing to the large proportion of fragments of
the soils
atfine, chiefly grit, contained in the boulder-clay,
admit of being easily tilled, and the drainage is fair. On
gently sloping ground, both in the hilly tracts %nd in the
valley, unless where the soil and subsoil are sandy, there is a
li,ability to the accumulation
of a clayey rain-wash covering,
which hinders percolation and renders the surface wet and
the herbage coarse.
The soils formed of local detritus are naturally well drained ;
and, containing a goodly proportion of argillaceous matter in
122
123
MECHANK!ALANALYBESOF BOIL6.
in those which are very stony, a sieve with round holes 2 mm.
diameter being used. The coarser m,aterials were further
separated into portions more and less than $ inch in diameter ;
and the proportions of the stony contents, where given, were
determined in the coarsest portions.
The samples are arranged
to correspond with the superficial deposits from which the soils
are formed, 1 to 6, inclusive, being soils after local detritus ;
7 to 37, boulder-cl,ay soils and subsoils ; 38 to 40, upon glacial
gravels ; 41 and 42, upon gravelly delta-fans ; 43 to 47, upon
alluvium ; 48 and 49, upon estuarine alluvium or slob-land.
TABLE of Soils and Subsoils, showing their Localities, Nature, Depths,
and the Petrological character of their contents.
I
soil:
ABBREVIATIONS:-R=
~8.=
subsoil
; 1. =
g.--grag:
7; -red
coloured
; d.=
dark-ooloured.
I
>.
I
Desoriptior
M;o-u\,~sovel, 1 m. E. by P. of
Ulogheen, 2 m. W. of Uork,
.
,
.
.
.
.
.
do.
Do..
do.,
do.,
12
13
do.,
,Do,
St.J~MQJ~s
Uollege,
Do.,
do.,
14 Market-garden,
16
Do.,
do.,
.
.
.
.
Do..
do.,
Do..
do.,
.
.
.
do.,
do.,
.
.
20 Bloomfleld, E. of Douglas,
21
-
Do.,
.
.
.
Spital-lands,
do.,
16 Dampstead, 2 m. S. of Gork,
17
3
%
do.,
9
.
.
,
.
r. b.
s
A
1.
2/ m.
--
Locality.
Do.
ii!
NC
- -
11
; p.= purple;
Presence( x )eomparative
abundance:fx x Iand perdifferent
iZ%geof
stones &cwoighte of Sample, ii
each case. being 169
st.1.
Ei
69
76 234
-
r. b. st. cl. 1,
r. b. at. 1.
473.
6. st. cl. 1
697
11 18
1;
1. b. st. 1.
48
7.8 442
.! 434
p. st. 1.
60
7.4 3P6
72 261
b. gv. IS.
929
2.7
4.4
r. b. g. cl. SR
919
I.6
66
37
D.gv. cl. 1. 8,
b. cl. S.
86% 36
_
22
l-2
I.6
99
26
LPO
T. b. I. 5.
616 56 12.8
d. b. s. 1. S.
80.6 72 123
r.79.s. Ss.
fat.1. s.
.
_
163
4%
74
19 7%
26
:x
p. b. gv. 1. S.
70 16.7
10 154
1: b. st.1.8.
r.at.cl.S&
B
I
163
X'
a
p.
71 40'2
_
.*G
0
_
-
2 182
-
124
TM3
Gl%-%OGY
OF
CORK
AND
CORK
BARBOU#.
TABLE
ABBREVIBTIONS.-S.
cl. = clay
; s.= sand,
Percentages
by Weight
SamZes of
-__
r.=red ; p, =purple
coloured
; d.==dark-coloured.
; b. = brown
; f.=flne ;
; Z.=light-
Presence( x )comparative
abundance( x x )and percentage
of
different
kinds of stones, &c.weights of Sample, in
each case, being 100.
i-4
!
Locality.
No.
23
Do..
24
Ballmue,
do.,
do.,
Do.,
do..
do..
do.,
do.,
Lota, f m. W. of Glanmire,
do.,
L)o.,
Poulacurry, N. of Riverstown.
do.,
Do.,
37
38
39
t m.
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
N. of Qouldings Qlen,
Do.,
by N. of Ivy Hill, S
Do.,
m. W. of last point,
Do.,
do.,
m. S. by E. of Cork Lough, in
Ballyphehane.
48
leas Ravenscourt,
49
Do.,
.
.
r. b. gv. cl. E
.
.
.
.
--z
-I
4.8 14.1
81:
s0
12
18
83:
60
10
r. b. s. 1. S
87?
24 lo
10
r. s. ss.
18
ES.!
33
91
b. pebbly 1.
8
63.t 61
30?
Gi !25
21
768 49
181
18:
Lo1 91
508
st. cl.
18
18
d. b. gv. 1. f
10
p. b. st. Ss.
18
b. st. gv. 1. E
r. b. st. c. SE
18
1. S.
IO:
r. b. cl. Ss.
.
.
.
do.,
LtGEuT$;
18
h. pv. 1. s.
b. 8.
10
b. 1. S.
1. b. gv. 1. 8
r. b. gv. cl. E
1..b.
do.,
35
36
do.,
Do.,
33
34
do.,
31
32
do.,
Do.,
22
30
1 m. S.E. of Ballin
27
28
do.,
Do.,
25
2f
i
--
--
-22
s 9
3
d
Description
66
35 2
Q.3
><x
><x
18
b. gv. s. S.
U-3 69
El8
191
b. gv. s. 9.
10
(67 80
163
44
b. gv. Ss.
18
18.1 89
(30
21 383
13
*o
b. gv. S.
58 30 242
k2 290
p. b. gv. S.
93
70 237
16 220
r. b. s. 5.
12
78
13
r. 8. ss.
54
b, s. S.
65 156
37 11% I
99
1. 8. ss.
18
98.9
1. p. b. 8.
861 50
b. s. gv. 1. S
857 I 32
3
X
113
89
16
II
1
x
2
x
9i
49
10.0
NOT&--The percentages given in the last column refer to extraneous material chiefly, suoh as
cindere. coal, &CA,added to the soil in manure, in some cases finding their way into the subsoil.
MECHANICAL
125
ANALYSES OF SOILS.
TABLE
FineGravel
I-
No
II
mm
ml.
mm
l--6.
nm.
mm
5-25
10
12
13
14
16
19
21
23
26
96
1522
14.8
16I7
998
326
459
753
616
12t!
7.6
747
6.72
6.3
6%
645
89
TO7
7.32
1126
5%
372
463
445
lP8
825
6.0
383
662
5%
8%
818
965
797
14.24
1106
11.82
595
666
11.0
987
75
510
7.0
896
mm
1.
*25-l
-.
3
5
6
'I
3
nm.
Silt
and
CJlay.
-7
,m
2-l.
and Sand.
Less
than
mm.
1
165
1205
160
12.61
25.08
2337
22.9
1046
70
1857
15.4
851
11.87
1391
1845
Silt
No,
Irn.
mm
Irn
mm
In.
mm
nm.
In
2-l.
l-*5.
6--25
2k.1
375
397
10.3
C65
1875
7.57
14%1
14.5
1496
8%8
1.9
17
2
63
5%
372
459
115
4%
1075
695
10.55
892
133
7.86
53
3.87
%5
94
Pl5
935
968
684
635
932
7#82
12.45
c77
133
1153
233
4362
94
1199
762
16.77
2151
937
126
10%
14.25
1461
1085
1@3
149
23.4
22.15
192
1376
l&O5
6019
5565
6667
6692
3948
a33
56.96
7l34
75.83
45.12
58.87
70.52
72.47
67.91
6059
26
27
29
31
33
35
38
39
41
42
43
44
46
47
48
-
and
Clay.
-.Less
than
mm.
1
6641
69.85
6634
699
5032
64%
47%
5695
4913
5708
47.5
30.28
703
5854
6692
10.
126
these soil-contenta ,aids in percolation, as well as in the cultivation, although the openness of the soil, and the degree of
percolation through it, as well as its necessary aerification,
and conditions for the active propagation and operations of soil
micro-organisms,
also depend upon tilth.
The character of
the subsoil, which is untouched by the plough, must determine facilities for natural drainage ; and is consequently
an
important consideration.
BIBLIOGRAPHICAL
127
LIST.
APPENDIX.
LIST OB MEMOIRS AND PAPERS REFERRINQTO THE GEOLOGY OF
of the South of
1840.
WEAVBIR,T.-On
the Geological Relations of the South of Ireland.
Bed. Hoc., ser. 2, vol. v., pp. l-68.
Tram.
1844.
HAINBIS, C. Y.-On
some beds of Limestone in the valley of Cork. Rep.
British Aseoc. for 1843. Trans. of Sets., p. 61 (abstract).
JENNINQS,F .-On some Geological Phenomena in the vicinity of Cork. Rep.
Britbh Aseoc. for 1843. Trans. of Sets., p. 61 (abetract).
1845.
Ireland.
1863.
WILLSON, W. L.-Notes
on the Geology of the Southern Portion of the County
of Cork. Journ. CYeol. Sot. Dublin, vol. v., pp. 209-212.
1856.
HAU~HTON,S.-On the evidence afforded by Fossil Plants as to the Boundary
line between Devonian and Carboniferous Rocks.
Journ. Geol. 8oc, Dublin,
vol. vi., pp. 227-241.
WELLAND, W. J.-Note
on the Carboniferous Limestone of Midleton, To. Cork.
Journ. Qeol. Sot. Dublin, vol. vi., pp. 217-218.
.
1867.
GEOLOQICAL
SURVEY.-Geological
Map, Sheet 186. (Revised Edition in 1879).
------Sheet 187. (Revised Editions in 1863 and 18791.
-----Sheet 196. (Revised Editions in 1879 and 1891).
GRIFFITH, R.-Notes
explanatory of the Subdivisions of the Carboniferous
System
. .
on his large Geological Map of Ireland, &c. Journ.
Qeol. fIoc. Dub&
vol. vii., pp. 267-277.
JUKES. J. B., AND J. W. SALTER.-Notes on the Classification of the Devonian
and Carboniferous Rocks of the South f Ireland. Journ. Ueol. SOL, Dublin,
vol. vii., pp. 63-67.
KIOLLY,J.-On Localities of Fossils of the Carboniferous Limestone of Ireland.
Journ. Gal. 8oc. Dublin, vol. vii., p. l-62.
--On the subdivision o !! the Carboniferous Formation of Ireland.
Joum. 6W. %oc. Dublin, vol. vii., pp. 222-267.
1868.
GBOLO~IOALSORVEIY
.-Geological Map, Sheet 194. (Revised Editions in 1878
and 1891).
GRIS~TTE,R.-On the Remains of Fossil Plants discovered in the Yellow Sandstone Strata, situate at the base of the Carboniferous Limestone Series of Ireland,
in conneotion with a Communioation on that subject received from M. Adolphe
Brongniart.
Joum. R. Dublin Hoc., vol. i., pp. 313-326.
128
THE
GEOLOGY
OF
CORK
*AND CORK
HARBOUR.
1859.
HARKNESS, R .-On the Jointings in the Carboniferous and Devonian Rocks
Quart.
in the district around Cork ; and on the Dolomites of the same district.
Journ. Geo!. Sot., vol. xv., pp. 86-104 (also in abstract Rep. British Assoc. for
1857, Reports of Sections, p. 68).
HAUQHTON.S.-On some Fossil Pvramidellidze from the Carboniferous Limestone of Corkand Clonmel. Proc. Dddin University 2001. and Bot. ASSOC.,vol. i.,
pt. iii., p. 282 (see also ibid, p. 60).
1860.
GEOLOGICALSURVEY.-Horizontal
Sections, Sheet 6 (Cork District).
GRIFFITH,R.-Notes
on the Stratigraphical Relations of the Sedimentary Rocks
Journ. Geol. Sot. Dublin, vol. viii.,
of the South of Ireland, &c. (read 1857).
pp. 2-15.
1861.
GEOLOGIIUAL
SURVEY.-Explanation of Sheets 185 and 186, by J. B. Jukes and
G. V. Du Noyer. pp. 35. Svo., Dublin.
1862.
GEOLOGICAL
SURVEY.-Explanation
of Sheets 194, 201, and 202, by J. B. Jukes
and G. V. Du Noyer. pp. 27. Svo., Dublin.
GRIFFITH [SIR] R.- The Localities of the Irish Carboniferous Fossils, dc.
(read 1860). Journ Geol. Sot. Dublin, vol. ix., pp. 21-139.
JUKES. J. B.-On the Mode of Formation of some of the River-vallevs in the
South ofIreland.
Quart. Journ. Geol. SOL, vol. xviii., pp. 378-403 ; (alsoabstract
in Journ. Geol. Sot. Dublin, vol. x., pp. 72-74).
1863.
SALTER,J. W.-On the Upper Old Red Sandstone and Upper Devonian Rocks.
Quart. Journ. Geol. Sot., vol. xix., pp. 474-496.
1864.
DAVIDSON,T.-List
of Brachiopoda from the Carboniferous Limestone
Mem. Geol. Survey :-Explanation
of Sheets 192 and 199, pp. 27-30.
Monographs in Monogr. Pakeont. SOL, vol. xvii. (1863), pp. 106-114,
xxiv. (1880), p. 310.
GEOLOGICAL
SURVEY.-Explanation of Sheets 187, 195, and 196, by J.
with Paheont. Notes by W. H. Baily. pp. 65. Svo., Dublin.
of Cork.
See also
and vol.
B. Jukes
1865.
HARKNESS, R.-Animal
Remains found in a Limestone Quarry at Midleton,
co, Cork. Geol. Mug., vol. ii., p. 281 (abstract).
1866.
BAILY, W. H.-On
Fossil Plants froqthe
South of Ireland. P&c. Dublin
Nat. Hid. Sot., vol. v., pp. 41-63.
HUXLEY, T. H.-Illustrations
of the Structure of the Crossopterygian Ganoids
[includes figures and description of fossil fish from Ballyheedy].
dlernoir8 of
the Geological Survey, British Organic Remains, dec. xii., pp. 23-25.
JUICES,J. B.-On
the Carboniferous Slate (or Devonian Rocks) and the Old
Red Sandstone of South Ireland and North Devon.
Quart. Journ. Geol. Sot., vol.
xxii., pp. 320-371.
1867.
JUKES, J. B.-Notesifor a:Comparison between the Rocks of the S. W. of Ireland.
and those of N. Devon, and of Rhenish Prussia (read 1865). Journ. I/. Geol,
SOC. I&and, vol. i., pp. 103-138.
--Further Notes on the Classification of the Rocks of North Devon (read
1865). Journ. R. Geol. Sot. Ireland, vol. i., pp. 138-144.
-Additional Notes on the Grouping of the Rocks of North Devon and
West Somerset. Privately printed, Dublin, Svo., pp. xxii. and 16.
WRIQHT, J.-Description
of a New Palaechinus (read 1864). Joum R. Geol.
Sot. Ireland, vol. i., p. 62,
__
BIRLIOGIRAPHICAL
120
LIST.
1870.
WOODWARD,H.-Contributions
vii., pp. 654-669.
&uZ. i&g.,
vo
1871.
ANDREWS,W.-On
Oyster Deposits (read 1867). Joum. R. Gkd. Sot. Irebad,
vol. ii., pp. 13-15.
JUKES, J. B.-Notes
on parts of South Devon and Cornwall, with Remarks on
the true Relations of the Old Red Sandstone to the Devonian Formation (read
1867). Journ. R. Qeol. Sot. Ireland, vol. ii., pp. 67-107.
1874.
ATKINSON,G. M.-Kitchen
Journ.
HULL, E.-On
the Relations of the Carboniferous, Devonian, and Upper
Silurian Rocks of the South of Ireland to those of North Devon. !/k-me. R. &,&in
&c., vol. i., pp. 136-150.
KINAHAN, G. H.-The
Old Red Sandstone (so-called) of Ireland in its Relations to the Underlying and Overlying Strata (read 1878). Journ. R. (Jed.
fg l$and, vol. v., pp. 106-113 ; also m SC. Proc. R. Dublzn Sot., vol. ii., pp.
~NA~AN, G. H.-Dingle Beds and Glengariff Grits (read 1879). Journ. R. &o,!.
Sot. IreZand, vol. v., pp. 165-169.
1881.
KINARAN, G. H.-Cork
Rocks.
1882.
HIJLL, E.--On a proposed Devono-Silurian
&-ML,vol. xxxviii., pp. 200-209.
Formation.
1883-1884.
a~,
WOODWARD,H.-A Monograph of the British Carboniferous Trilobites.
[For Cork species described see list,
p&on&
BOG., ~01s. xxxvii. and xxxviii.
a*
p* 301.
_._I
g
130
THE
GEOLOGY
OF CORK
AND
CORK HARBOUR.
l&80-1889.
KTNAHAN,G. H.-Economic
Geology of Ireland.
Journ. R. Ged. Sot. Ireland, vol. viii. [also in SC. PTOC. R. Dublin Sot., ~01s. iv., v., and vi., and issued as
oomplete work, Dublin, lSS9].
1890.
HULL, E.-On
the Temperature of the Water of Ballynoe
Queenstown. SC. Proc. R. Dublin Sot., vol. vi., pp. 307-309.
Springs, near
1891.
HULL. E.-The
Physical Geology and Geography of Ireland (2nd ed.)
oiation of Cork district described, p. 292). Stanford, London.
(Gla-
1892.
DONALD,MISS J.-Notes
on some new and little-known species of Carboniferous
Murchisonia. Quart. J own. Ged. Sot., vol. xlviii., p: 573 [describes Murchisonia
(Cerithioides) telescopium] ; see also ibid, vol. li. (1895), p. 221,
1893.
Irish
FARRINQTON, T.- The Magnesian Limestone of the Cork District.
Naturdist, vol. ii., pp. 135-139.
PORTER, J.-Magnesian
Limestone in the neighbourhood of Cork. Irish
Naturdiet,
vol. ii., pp. 221-223.
1894.
LEWIS, H. CARVILL.- Papers and Notes on the Glacial Geology of Great
Britain and Ireland. (Cork district, pp. 100, 101, 106, 107, 135-140).
Longmans,
London.
1896-1904.
HIND, W.-A
Monograph of the British Carboniferous Lamellibranchiata.
Monogr. Pa&on& Sot., ~01s. li.-lviii. (for Cork species described see list, ante p. 31)
1897-1903.
FOORD, A. H.-Monograph
of the Carboniferous Cephalopoda of Ireland.
Monogr. Pakeont. Sot., ~01s. li. to Ivii. (for list species described see list, ante p. 31.)
1899.
INDEX.
A
Adiantztes ( Aroheopteris)
*;&la,
100.
A cultural Geology,
Acnesk,
83, 84.
Ailsa Craig Rock,
Alluvial fans, 47,
66, 91.
Alluvium, 47, 48,
77, 84, 89, 91,
Amethyst Quartz,
Ans$e;i~lica-clay,
105.
64 ;
120.
10.5.
Bailich, 86.
Baily, W. H., 18, 19, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29,
33, 128.
Ballea, 43, 92.
Ballinacorra. 83.4756. 113.
Ballinaspig Cottage; 66, 80.
Cave, 69, 70.
Ballinl%ttig, 60, 61.
Ballincurrig House, 76.
Ballinhassig, 23, 35, 87, 91, 97.
Ballinphelic Brick Works, 97, 111.
Balli&ostia. 108.
Ballintem]poie, 70, 109.
Ballintubbrid House, 83.
Ballyannan Castle, 82, 83.
Ballycotton, 17.
Ballycroneen Bay, 104,106 ; sections, 105.
Ballycurrany House, 62.
Ballvedmond, 61, 63.
Ballygaggin Rouse, 66.
Ballvpibbon House, 61, 52.
Ball$ecdy,
19, 33..
Ballynaclashy House, 65.
Ballyna aul, 59.
Ballyna f ina House, 57.
Ballynakilla, 43, 61.
Ballynoe Spring, 119.
Ballyregan, 60.
Ballyspillane Church, 63, 84.
Ballvwilliam, 118.
Baltimore. 36. 37.
Bantry Bay, l7.
Barnstaule, 19.
Barrack&Hill, 7 1.
Barrys Court, 84.
Barrykilla, 107.
Beach deposits, 39.
..
Gravel, 90.
Beaumont House, section in cluarry, 69.
Belvellv Brick Works, 90, 91 ; se&ion
at, ll1.
Besborough, 68.
rail-cutting, 69.
Bib&graphical list, 127.
Birch Hill, 43, 62.
Bishopstown House, 68.
Black Bog, 67.
..
Glen. 58.
Blackpool, 70, 113.
Blackrock, 28, 32, 66, 110.
Blackwater River; 6.
Blarney, 43, 48, 50, 113.
Bog, 54, 55.
,P
Castle, 8, 63.
,,
depression, 64.
,,
Lake, 56.
9)
Syncline, 8, 11, 16.
,,
Valley, 50, 52, 53, 64, Sti, 56.
Bloo&eld, 67, 76.
Bloomsgrove House, 58.
Blown Sand,, 37.
Bones, Animal, 86.
Boreenmanagh, 110.
Borings, Beasley-street Wells, 74, 76,
114 ; Carrigrohane, 76 ; Lee Valley,
73 ; Waterworks, 75 ; Wells, 116.
Boulders, 41, 54, 56, 58, 61, 62, 68, 82,
91, 107 ; Carboniferous Limestone, 41,
82, 91, 96, 100 ; Carbo liferous Slate,
82, 89, 91, 96; Chert, 82, 96, 104;
Gneiss, 106 ; Granite, 42, 106 ; Old Red
Sandstone, 82, 89, 91, 96, 100, 104;
Siliceous Breccia. 41. 88, 89, 102, 107.
Boulder Clay, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43,
46. 50. 52. 53, 54, 55, 56, 57, 58, 59,
60; 61; 62; 67; 68; 69; 70; 81; 83, 86,
87, 90, 91, 93, 94, 95, 97, 98, 99, 100,
101, 192, 105, 107, 108, 120.
Brady, G. S., 29, 129.
Braunton rocks. 19.
Breccia, 97, 107.
Bricks. 111 : Brick Island, 49, 86 ;
Works, 84-90, 97.
Bride River, 42, 46, 66, 67.
Valley, 71, 72, 77.
Br%tol channel, 21.
Brooklyn, 57, 68; 59;
..
_
Brookville, 59.
138
C
Cahermore Castle, 84, 112.
Camden Fort, 99
Carboniferous Rocks, 4, 6, 7, 8, 13, 15-35.
Carlisle Fort, 101.
Carnsore Point. 37.
Carrigabrockel~ 98.
Cagg;pG75,
15, 17, 18, 19, 20, 60, 91,
133
INDEX.
Fossils, 26 ; Carboniferous, 16, 20, 22, 23
26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32, 34 ; Coomholr
Grits, 17, 19 ; Old Red, 9, 11, 21, 23
24, 26 ; Slate, 20, 24.
G
Garrane Cutting, 67, 76.
General Descrintion. 1.
Geological Str&ture of district, 4.
George IV. Bridge, 69.
Glac&l Deposit; -2, 7, 40-47, 60-108
Origin of, 44.
Glacial Lake, 71 ; Period, 7, 38, 45, 63
65 ; Striae, 42, 45, 63, 71, 87, 94, 97
107.
Glanmire, 46, 113 ; Road, 11.
Glan-na-Cow Stream, Section near, 101
Glashaboy River, 6,66,57,68 ; Gorge, 72
Glasheen Lower, 68.
Glen, The, 89. .
Glenamought Stream, 57.
Glendaniel. 57.
Glengariff Grits, 10.
Glenmore, 69. 60 ; River, 58.
Glounthaune,- 81.
Golden Rock, 93, 94.
Gorges, 52, 66, 57, 58, 61, 63, 88, 92, 97,
Gortacrue Mills, 62.
Gouldings Glen, 46, 71 ; Section, 72.
Gower Raised Beach, 40.
Graball Bay, 99.
Granite Boulders, 42, 58, 62, 106.
Gravels and Sands, 47, 62, 53, 54, 68,
59, 62, 66, 67, 68, 69, 71, 76, 77, 81,
i 82, 83, 84, 88, 89, 90, 91, 92, 94, 95,
p 101, 102, 113, 122.
Gravel Mounds, 46.
Great Island, 5, 6, 39, 41, 48, 82, 84, 89,
91, 99, 107, 119.
Griffith, Sir R., 11, 12, 17, 19, 127, 128.
Gyleen, 103.
d
Johnstown House. 60.
Jones, T. Rupert,29, 129, 130.
Jovce. P. W.. 80.
Jukeq; J. Beete, 6, 6, 7, 9, 10, 11, 13,
15, 16, 18, 22,23,24., 26,27, 28, 32, 33,
34, 42, 44, 62, 70, 71, 108, 127, 128,
129,
K
Kellv. J.. 127.
Kenmare Bay, 20.
Kettle-hole, 81.
Kilcronan, 55.
Kilcully, 46, 56, 57, 58, 73.
Killeena, 59, 60.
Kiheendooling, 62.
Killeens Gap, 71 ; Hill, 56.
Killora Lodge, 60.
Kilnahone Mill, 91.
Kilnap, 71.
.
Kiltorcan Beds, 9, 11 ; fossils from, 11,
12, 13.
Kinahan, G. H., 62, 109, 110, 129, 130.
Kinsale, 17 ; Old Head of, 17, 19.
Kirkby, J. W., 29, 129.
Kitchen Middens, 49, 86.
Kitsborough, 66.
3nockakeen Bridge, 62, 65.
Knockgriffin, 82, 84.
Knockraha, 43, 58, 59.
H
Haines, C. Y., 127.
Halfway House, 88.
Harkness, Prof. R., 86, 110, 128.
Har rs Island, 6, 82.
Haurbowline, 113, 119.
Hau hton, Dr. S., 29, 127, 128.
He a%, 98, 99, 100, 101, 103.
Lower, 37, 38, 45, 90, 98, 100, 106,
9,
107.
Upper, 37, 38, 47, 87, 91, 98, 100.
Hiide, G. J., 26.
Hind, Dr. W., 23, 26, 26, 28, 29, 33, 34,
35, 130.
Hop Island, 89.
Hull, R., 7, 10, 24, 25, 34, 44, 119, 129,
l
130.
Huxley, T. H., 128.
I
Ice Sheet. 7. 38. 39, 65, 106, 109
_
floating, 39 ; lobe; 46, 46 ; movement, 42, 87 ; West British, 46,
46 ; fvernian, 45, 46 ; Stris, 60.
,9
L
iadys Well Brewery, 7-7.
iakeland, 68.
iand Ice, 44, 45 ; drainage, 44.
,aurel Hill, 53.
&amlara, 63, 65 ; Valley, plan of, 64.
Leamount, 66.
Jee River, 5, 6, 47, 53, 54, 65, 66, 67.
,,
,, Valley, 47, 66, 73, 77 ; borings
in, 73.
Estuary, 58.
Aihenigh More, 76, 87, 88.
Aies Cross. 68.
Ame, 28, 116.
,imerick Volcanic series, pebbles, 62.
Amestone, Blocks, 53 ; Brecoiated, 28 ;
Glaciated, 57, 68, 69, 93, 94 ; as
Building Stone; 109.
Red, 28, 110.
isg&l Cross Roads, 61.
,ittle Island, 6, 28, 32, 42, 81, 109, 110.
roam, 47, 50, 61, 53.
,ota Lodge, 67, 72.
134
? i I
M
Macroom Railway Terminus, 69.
MWeeney, Dr. E. J., 118.
Mallow, 18, 19.
Mangerton Anticline, 8.
Map of Cork; 16th Century, 78; 18th
Century, 79.
Marble, 28, 83, 109, 110.
Mardyke, 77. .
_
Marina, The, 80 ; Point, 90.
Marl, 97, 105.
Martin River, 50, 62, 53, 73.
Marshes, Clarks, Dunscombs,
Hammonds, Reap, West, 80.
Marwood Sandstones, 19, 23.
Meadstown, 34, 97.
Midleton, 28, 32, 47, 60, 61, 65, 82, 84,
109 : Brick earth, 112.
Limestone, 109 ; Marble, 110.
,,
Waterworks, 61.
Millbro, 66.
Millstone Grit, 34.
Minane Bridge, 111.
Monard, 46, 64 ; Iron Mills, 54, 56 ;
River, 54. 55.
Monastery Schools, 67.
Monk&own, 9, 10, 17, 88, 8% 99.
creek, -43, -92.
_
MO&e Granite boulder, 106.
Munster Dairy School, 68.
Myrtleville Bay, 98.
N
New Inn, 67.
Northern Anticline, 6.
Northesk, 81.
0
Ogham Stone, 62.
Old Court, 41.
Old Red Sandstone, 2, 4, 7, 8, 9-14,
16, 20, 23, 24, 50, 53, 54, 76, 76 ;
Fossils, 9, 21 ; Lower, 9 ; Ridge, 86,
87 ; thickness of, 9 ; Upper, 11, 13 ;
Valley, 59, 61, 62, 94.
OToole, Mr., 73.
Overflow Channels, 63.
Owenboy River, 43, 46, 87, 91, 92, 94,
Oi&nacurra
84, 86.
P
Palaeontographical Society, 28, 29.
Passage, 10, 89, 91.
East, 5, 6.
,,
West, 5, 6, 41, 88, 99.
Pe~~plain, 8.
Peat, 48, 76, 77.
Q
Quartz Porphyry, 105, 106.
Queenstown, 17.
Junction, 56, 59, 81.
,,
Waterworks, 61,62, 63, 118.
s,
Radiolaria, 35.
Raffeen, 92, 93, 113.
Railway Cuttings, 61, 64, 65, 93.
Rain-wash, 55.
Ramhill, 110.
Rathcoursey, 86.
Rathpeacon House, 57.
Reanasallagh Gorse, 69.
Rear, Marsh. 80. 120.
Reclamation, 48, 81, 82, 84, 94, 95, 108.
Rh&ic beds, 26.
Ronayne Court, 67.
Ringabella Bay, 16, 98, 111.
Ringaskiddy, 41, 93.
Ringmahon Cross, 68,
River diversion, 7. 11. 86.
terrace, 63,77. .
,3
Gravel, 47, 63, 84 ; Fans, 47.
R;Gerstown, 16, 43, 66, 68, 69, 60 ;
Syncline, 7, 11.
Road material, 28, 113.
soches Point, 102.
ilochestown, 88.
Rock Close, 63.
2ockville, 83, 84.
%osemount. 57.
Zoss cliff, 34.
Xo&more Bay, 82.
Xostellan, 95, 108, 112.
8
St. Finbars, 67.
galeen Estuary, 43.
Stream, 96,
*,
13.5
INDEX.
Sallybrook, 68.
Salter, J. W., 128.
Sand, Building, 113.
Sandy Hills, 43, 113.
Scotchmans Point, 99.
screes, 38.
Sections fi ured, Cork City, 76 ; genera
across j istrict, 4 ; Gouldings Gler
ShL:ball y, 92.
Shandon Gap, 7 1.
,,
g;z>;;,
73, 118.
U
Uplands, 60, 66, 69, 61, 107.
basins, 67, 68.
,f
Drainage, 61, 108,
,,
heights,
67.
,,
topography, 108.
Upp; Devonian, 14.
Ussher, R. J., 96.
Ussher, W. A. E., 26, 40.