Peach and Horne continued their work and published
The Geological Structure of the North-West Highlands of Scotland in 1907 with Geikie, in his retirement, making the final editing. Their research was into one of the most geologically complex regions of Britain, and they introduced the term "
Moine Thrust". In his preface to the memoir, Geikie refers the area of the Moine Thrust as being a place to study "some of the more stupendous kinds of movement by which the crust of the earth has been affected". The introduction to the memoir, written by Horne, provides an accessible description of geological structure that had been uncovered. Horne describes four groups of rocks, dealing with them from oldest to youngest, west to east. First, along the west coast, the
Lewisian complex of
gneiss stretches from
Cape Wrath to
Loch Torridon and then out to the
Hebridean islands
South Rona and
Raasay. The topology is low, rounded and hollowed, only occasionally forming peaks such as at
Ben Stack. The rock is ancient and highly metamorphosed of igneous and occasionally sedimentary origin, with many igneous
dykes and
sills intruding. Before this was overlaid by Torridonian sandstone it was subject to immense stress towards west-northwest deforming the intrusions and the heat generated produced further metamorphosis. There was then a long period of erosion of what was then a land surface before the much later Torridonian sandstone sedimentation. Secondly. the overlying Torridonian sandstones show gently inclined sedimentary strata with minor faults and joints that have eroded away to form the buttresses of high mountains. No definite fossils could be found. After a long period of marine erosion, the rock that was laid down on top, white over dark red, could be dated as
Cambrian, indicating that the Torridonian sandstone was
Precambrian. Where later earth movements thrust into and over the sandstone it became metamorphosed into
schist. '' fossils from northwest Scotland Thirdly is a series of marine sedimentary layers –
quartzite,
dolomite and
limestone – within which was discovered Cambrian age trace
trilobite fossils. Peach and Horne remarked that the fauna are "identical" to those in the corresponding geological strata in North America. Occasionally the sedimentary rock rests on the basement gneiss when the Torridonian sandstone had been completely eroded away, such as just south of
Loch Assynt. These layers are separated from the underlying sandstone by an unconformity during which time interval the sandstone was folded and greatly eroded away, sometimes completely. The Cambrian sediment became intersected with sills and dykes, particularly near
Inchnadamph. Fourthly, and what became the most interesting feature for the geologists, was the immense horizontal movement of rock over all these layers that occurred subsequently towards the west-northwest. The underlying rock became broken up into slices that became piled up (
imbricated) between thrust planes that also became folded. Basement Lewisian gneiss could be thrust up to the surface and rock strata could be shifted around to the extent that they could become inverted in their sequence – for example gneiss could overlay limestone. The main thrust, the
Moine Thrust, moved schist from the east towards and over the pre-existing rock on the west while the effect of
shearing at the thrust itself was to metamorphose the material at the interface into a
mylonite structure. In "
pipe rock" the deformation had the effect of bending over fossilised vertical worm casts so they become flattened horizontally. At one time this material extended much further to the west but it, and the underlying rocks, have been eroded, so exposing the underlying rocks and their geological history. The work has been described as "one of the most notable geological memoirs ever published in the English language". According to Butler, the memoir has provided a "startling synthesis" describing, for the first time, the folds within imbricate slices and thrust sheets and the thrusts that delimit them. So definitive was the work that it was not until 1980 that the structural evolution of the region again started being reinvestigated including with deep seismic profiling techniques.
Imbricate faulting was proposed to explain the asymmetrical pattern of the
stratigraphy that could not be explained by folding. The 1907 memoir and its accompanying 1-inch (1:63360) geological maps have been inspiring to geologists and have given what was arguably the start of thrust belt research worldwide and showed the importance of field mapping for tectonic research. ==Afterwards==