Abstract

In a paper on the Permian formation in the Maritime Alps, etc. (Geol.Mag., 1916, pp. 7–17), I mentioned incidentally that it extends from those Alps, viz. from the Montgioie range east into Liguria as far as the Savona Hills. As in the former so also in the latter region, that formation is composed of essentially gneissic schists known as apenninites or besimaudites belonging to the Lower Permian or Permo-Carboniferous, and of sericitic schists, quartzites, and clastic rocks or ‘anagenites’ which constitute the Upper Permian or Verrucano proper, forming a transition to the Lower Trias. The geological limit of the Permian in the Savona Hills coincides more or less with the geographical line of division of the Alps and Apennines at the Colle or saddle—also called Bocchetta—d'Altare; but another geological line of division exists still further east, at the junction of the Triassic and Eocene formations in the Chiaravagna Valley near Sestri Ponente, immediately west of Genoa. In reality the geological division is marked, not by either of those lines but by a contact-zone between them. This contact-zone occupies the whole of Western Liguria and comprises two distinct and dissimilar parts: one, the Triassic calc-schists and pietre verdi area or Voltri group, which extends for about 25 kilometres along the Riviera littoral west of Genoa from Sestri Ponente to Voltri, Varazze, and Celle Ligure, and the other or Savona group, which skirts the littoral for about 15 kilometres from Celle to Savona and Zinola, and is composed for the greater part of a crystalline massif of granitic, gneissic, and amphibolic rocks.

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