Structures in and around volcanic necks at Dunbar are interpreted as belonging to two different stages in volcanism. Some, which are related to an early neck emplacement stage, include small ring structures—probably incipient (crypto-volcanic) necks—filled with marginally flow-banded breccias, dykes of similarly margined unbedded tuff, and tuff-penetrated wall rocks. Among the last are sandstones veined along planes of minor fracture by very fine sand.
Other structures belong to a later stage during which bedded tuffs, that had originally accumulated sub-ærially, subsided into the necks in a process here likened to caldera formation. In one large neck the bedding is relatively undisturbed, but in smaller necks there are high inward dips from the margins and collapse structures, sometimes accompanied by reconstitution of the clastics, at the centres. Diagnostic features of subsidence margins are anastomozing veins of carbonate, locally accompanied by hæmatite, and these appear to be related to dykes of flow-banded sandstone and sandy tuff intruded along fractures initiated inside the necks during subsidence. Other structures described are ring-fracture, with or without gouge, and down-drag of wall-rocks: these suggest a solution to the space problem posed by caldera mechanism.