of Edinburgh^ Session 1883-84. 
823 
2. Loch Corry, near Morvern, has its rocky shores well glaciated, 
A large knoll of red granite, at month of loch, has had its W.K.W. 
sides rounded, and partly striated up to 150 feet. The S.E. side of 
knoll rough and craggy {Eighth Report, p. 29). 
On north shore there is an angular block 27 x27 x11 feet, 
apparently moved 28 yards from a rocky cliff situated to N.W., of 
which it had been part. The hills on the Glen Sanda property, reach- 
ing to a height of 1800 feet and more, are glaciated to their very tops. 
3. On Loch Shiel, several similar cases of large blocks (from 1 to 
10 tons weight) apparently forced from rocky cliffs and carried east- 
wards. 
White granite vein or dyke met with near top of hill, 2718 feet 
above sea, from outcrop of which, blocks detached, and carried east- 
ward nearly one-third of a mile. 
4. In Glen Oban, remarkable examples of rounded rock-surfaces, 
some more than 100 feet high ; also of perched boiddersf on 
isolated rocky knolls, each from 300 to 400 feet high, and inacces- 
sible, as shown in woodcut annexed. 
5. Mid Lochaber. — Memoir by Rev. Professor Duns, on Surface- 
Geology of, and particularly on the boulders found to Is", and W. of 
Ben ISlevis. The Professor says — “ Granite boulders are lying on 
the mica schist rocks, where the side of the mountain slopes down 
so steeply as to make it a puzzle to understand how they can 
remain in position.” 
