During the
Paleocene to Early
Eocene Skye formed one of the main volcanic centres of the
North Atlantic Igneous Province. Gently dipping lavas from the volcanoes cover most of northern Skye, giving a stepped
trap type landscape. The dominant lava type is
basalt, with subsidiary
hawaiite and
mugearite derived from silica-poor magma and minor amounts of
trachyte from a silica-rich magma. Part of the
magma chambers for the volcanoes are exposed at the surface as major intrusions of
gabbro and granite. These coarse-grained igneous rocks are relatively resistant to erosion and now form the
Cuillin hills. The Black Cuillin are formed of gabbro, which erodes to form the characteristically jagged outlines, although this is in large part due to the many minor intrusions, such as dykes and
cone sheets that cut the gabbro. The Red Hills are formed of granite and have a more rounded topography. All pre-Quaternary rock types on the island are affected by a major
swarm of dykes, which forms part of the North Britain Palaeogene Dyke Suite. Most of the dykes are basaltic in composition but a minority are
trachytic. The dominant trend of the dykes is northwest–southeast although they are locally in part radial near the old volcanic centre. On the Trotternish peninsula, mafic magma was intruded along the bedding planes of the Jurassic sedimentary rocks beneath the lavas to form
sills that are up to 90m thick. They commonly display
columnar jointing, such as in the upper part of the Kilt Rock at
Staffin. ==Quaternary==