Glacial deposits are common across Mull and since the last ice age, peat, river and beach deposits have developed whilst
slope failure has occurred in some coastal areas.
Glacial legacy A series of glaciations during the last 2 million years has carved erosional features such as glacial cirques into the landscape in and around Mull and left a variety of depositional forms such as moraines. Deposits of
till from the last ice age are widespread around the island. Ice thicknesses have been reckoned at between 700m and 900m across Mull at the height of the last Ice Age with
Ben More likely protruding above the ice surface as a
nunatak. The absence of mainland erratics in the centre of Mull suggests it nurtured its own ice dome whilst elsewhere mainland ice streamed westward across the island.
P-forms have been developed in basalt bedrock on the south side of Loch na Keal suggesting erosion by subglacial meltwater. Meltwaters deposited sand and gravel at the north end of Loch Don in the form of
deltas. An icefield developed on Mull during the
Loch Lomond Stadial, separate from that of the mainland forming terminal moraines at Kinochspelve and Loch Don.
Raised beaches Raised marine deposits of
Holocene age sand, gravel and silt are found around the coast and sometimes stretching inland by some way. The shores of Loch Tuath and Loch Spelve are notable in this respect, as too the eastern part of the island. These wave-cut platforms and raised beaches date from the period during and after the end of the last ice age when global sea levels were rising as ice-sheets melted in conjunction with the
isostatic rebound of the land now relieved of the weight of ice.
Landslips A number of landslips have occurred around the south and west coasts of Mull. A major one forms the eastern side of Carsaig Bay whilst a couple of smaller ones occur further west. Multiple slips affect the coast between Rubha a’ Ghearrain and Rubha na-Uamha on the Ardmeanach peninsula, notably at Balmeanach and ‘The Wilderness’. Each has occurred where basalt lavas overlie
incompetent Mesozoic sedimentary rocks.
Peat Peat deposits are widespread around Mull, particularly on lower ground of valleys in the interior of the island and in the western part of the Ross of Mull.
Alluvium Alluvial deposits occur along valley floors and are postglacial in age. Some
river terrace development is seen in Glen Forsa. == Economic geology ==