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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 May 2009
The Tertiary volcanic centre that dominates the constitution of Rhum, one of the Scottish Inner Hebridean group of islands, is immediately provocative to the visiting geologist. The higher mountains are entirely ultrabasic in composition and their near-horizontal, terraced layers remain nearly constant in composition to about 1 km above sea level. Any initial assumption of geological simplicity is quickly dispelled by those and more detailed features. Horizontal layers of ultrabasic rocks with coarsely crystalline texture do not fit happily on a Tertiary landscape, towering high above the adjacent Hebridean lava flows of similar age. And what of the rocks themselves? Thin layers entirely of calcic plagioclase feldspar compete for attention with thick olivine-rich layers, while any day of traversing the Hallival or Askival mountain slopes will reveal a wealth of superbly exposed question marks in the form of spinel–sulphide layers, slump structures, finger structures, ‘harrisitic olivine’ formations, undulatory ‘trough-like’ structures, ultrabasic veins and currently lesser features. Search as one may (and little is hidden from view), there is no marginal gabbroic envelope between the ultrabasics and the country rocks that would lead to a Skaergaard analogy, and no overlying gabbroic layered rocks that would elicit guidelines from the Bushveld or Stillwater intrusions. This is Rhum, and much of what is on that small island is unique and, indeed, still defies full explanation. It is the achievement of this issue, through its several contributors whose voices succeed mine, that the uniqueness of Rhum is welcomed, many of the problems challenged, and many of the secrets unravelled.