Cone sheet

A cone sheet is a type of high-level igneous intrusion of subvolcanic rock, found in partly eroded central volcanic complexes.

Viewed from above, their outcrop is typically circular to elliptical.

They were originally described from the Ardnamurchan, Mull and other central complexes of the British Tertiary Volcanic Province (now recognised as part of the North Atlantic Igneous Province).

Cone sheets are widely distributed at the lower levels of volcanic complexes.

Soon after cone sheets were first described, their formation was explained in terms of intrusion along conical fractures extending from the top of an intrusive body into the overlying rocks, caused by high magmatic pressure.

A cone sheet at Mingary, Ardnamurchan , Scotland
Closer view of a cone sheet at Mingary, Ardnamurchan
Tejeda cone sheets on Gran Canaria . The lower two-thirds of the photo shows the Tejeda cone sheet swarm of Miocene age; the cone sheets dip down towards the bottom left. The cone sheets are overlain by Pliocene flat-lying lava flows and pyroclastic rocks . [ 1 ]