Argyll has two of the west coast’s four great extinct volcanoes

Relax. These very large volcanoes were active between between fifty five and sixty million years ago. They were in Ardnamurchan, Mull, Rum and Skye. Last week a team of thirty three eminent international scientists, led by geologists from the universities of Glasgow and Keele, spent four days studying what is called ‘the Ardnamurchan ring complex’. This is one of the best places in the world for exploring the internal structure of a volcano. The complex lies to the east of Ardnamurchan Point – the most westerly mainland point in the UK – where the hills form clear circles – ring complexes, which are volcanic in origin.

When a major volcano erupts, magma from deep in the earth is thrown into the sky as lava, leaving a circular depression called a caldera. As the lava is hurled skywards, surface rocks around the edge of the hole created then collapse inwards into the depression into the caldera. This had been thought to be how the ring complexes were created but re-mapping work by some of the scientists present last week now indicates that the rings were formed by the collapse of the roof of the magma funnel.

The Ardnamurchan rings are what’s left of the interior of one such volcano, exposed finally by the erosions of the sequence of glaciation and melt.

Satellite photo of Ardnamurchan

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Argyll’s Hebridean Whale and Dolphins Trust takes part in National Watch

The National Whale and Dolphin Watch runs until Saturday 29th June, gathering valuable UK-wide data on the movements of these mammals. Argyll’s Hebridean Whale and Dolphins Trust (HWDT), based at Tobermory on the Isle of Mull, will be taking part in the watch. Watch points on their patch are at Tobermory Lighthouse and at Ardnamurchan Lighthouse, the most westerly point on the UK mainland. Sightings Officer Natalie Ward says that there is a good chance of some sightings in Argyll waters.