The spectacular remnants of Paleocene lava fields in the Inner Hebrides are dominated by thick sequences of simple (sheet-like) flows and more complex compound flows. Interbedded with these lavas are sedimentary units, deposited within canyons, broad river channels, lakes and mires. In some cases, sufficient time intervals between eruptions allowed trees to develop on the volcanic landscape, now preserved as moulds and casts, together with slabs of bark and rafts of leaves. Elsewhere, magma interacted with sediment in a dynamic manner, producing a variety of distinctive lithologies, including peperites and hyaloclastites. Understanding the architecture of these volcanic and sedimentary systems allows us to get a glimpse into the dynamic development of these lava fields.
This talk will comprise a pictorial trip through the volcanic sequences of the Inner Hebrides, looking at examples of volcanic-sedimentary systems from Skye, Canna, Sanday, Rum, Eigg and Mull. There will be no mention of rock chemistry or isotope signatures – just field views from my collection of the past forty years!

Since retiring from my university research and teaching ‘career’ I have set up a website which I hope captures the fabulous geology of the islands of Skye and Raasay (www.skyegeology.com). My swan song is an update of the 2005 BGS memoir The Palaeogene volcanic districts of Scotland which I co-authored with my good friend and mentor Henry Emeleus, to be published online in 2026, and which makes full use of my photograph collection.
Beyond my university work, I also produced revisions of the BGS maps of Skye and was involved with the discovery of the Rosebank and Cambo oil fields.
To be honest, I had a ‘career’ that allowed me to indulge myself in my passion for field-based geology. Not really ‘work’……..