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+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=US-ASCII" />
+<title>Town Geology</title>
+</head>
+<body>
+<h2>
+<a href="#startoftext">Town Geology, by Charles Kingsley</a>
+</h2>
+<pre>
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Town Geology, by Charles Kingsley
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: Town Geology
+
+Author: Charles Kingsley
+
+Release Date: November 24, 2003 [eBook #10251]
+
+Language: English
+
+Chatacter set encoding: US-ASCII
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TOWN GEOLOGY***
+</pre>
+<p><a name="startoftext"></a>Transcribed by David Price, email ccx074@coventry.ac.uk</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines3"><br /><br /><br /></div>
+<h1>TOWN GEOLOGY</h1>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines3"><br /><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>PREFACE</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>This little book, including the greater part of this Preface, has
+shaped itself out of lectures given to the young men of the city of
+Chester.&nbsp; But it does not deal, in its present form, with the geology
+of the neighbourhood of Chester only.&nbsp; I have tried so to recast
+it, that any townsman, at least in the manufacturing districts of England
+and Scotland, may learn from it to judge, roughly perhaps, but on the
+whole accurately, of the rocks and soils of his own neighbourhood.&nbsp;
+He will find, it is true, in these pages, little or nothing about those
+&ldquo;Old Red Sandstones,&rdquo; so interesting to a Scotchman; and
+he will have to bear in mind, if he belong to the coal districts of
+Scotland, that the &ldquo;stones in the wall&rdquo; there belong to
+much older rocks than those &ldquo;New Red Sandstones&rdquo; of which
+this book treats; and that the coal measures of Scotland, with the volcanic
+rocks which have disturbed them, are often very different in appearance
+to the English coal measures.&nbsp; But he will soon learn to distinguish
+the relative age of rocks by the fossils found in them, which he can
+now, happily, study in many local museums; and he may be certain, for
+the rest, that all rocks and soils whatsoever which he may meet have
+been laid down by the agents, and according to the laws, which I have
+tried to set forth in this book; and these only require, for the learning
+of them, the exercise of his own observation and common sense.&nbsp;
+I have not tried to make this a handbook of geological facts.&nbsp;
+Such a guide (and none better) the young man will find in Sir Charles
+Lyell&rsquo;s &ldquo;Student&rsquo;s Elements of Geology.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+I have tried rather to teach the method of geology, than its facts;
+to furnish the student with a key to all geology, rough indeed and rudimentary,
+but sure and sound enough, I trust, to help him to unlock most geological
+problems which he may meet, in any quarter of the globe.&nbsp; But young
+men must remember always, that neither this book, nor all the books
+in the world, will make them geologists.&nbsp; No amount of book learning
+will make a man a scientific man; nothing but patient observation, and
+quiet and fair thought over what he has observed.&nbsp; He must go out
+for himself, see for himself, compare and judge for himself, in the
+field, the quarry, the cutting.&nbsp; He must study rocks, ores, fossils,
+in the nearest museum; and thus store his head, not with words, but
+with facts.&nbsp; He must verify&mdash;as far as he can&mdash;what he
+reads in books, by his own observation; and be slow to believe anything,
+even on the highest scientific authority, till he has either seen it,
+or something like enough to it to make it seem to him probable, or at
+least possible.&nbsp; So, and so only, will he become a scientific man,
+and a good geologist; and acquire that habit of mind by which alone
+he can judge fairly and wisely of facts of any kind whatsoever.</p>
+<p>I say&mdash;facts of any kind whatsoever.&nbsp; If any of my readers
+should be inclined to say to themselves: Geology may be a very pleasant
+study, but I have no special fancy for it.&nbsp; I had rather learn
+something of botany, astronomy, chemistry, or what not&mdash;I shall
+answer: By all means.&nbsp; Learn any branch of Natural Science you
+will.&nbsp; It matters little to me which you learn, provided you learn
+one at least.&nbsp; But bear in mind, and settle it in your hearts,
+that you will learn no branch of science soundly, so as to master it,
+and be able to make use of it, unless you acquire that habit and method
+of mind which I am trying to teach you in this book.&nbsp; I have tried
+to teach it you by geology, because geology is, perhaps, the simplest
+and the easiest of all physical sciences.&nbsp; It appeals more than
+any to mere common sense.&nbsp; It requires fewer difficult experiments,
+and expensive apparatus.&nbsp; It requires less previous knowledge of
+other sciences, whether pure or mixed; at least in its rudimentary stages.&nbsp;
+It is more free from long and puzzling Greek and Latin words.&nbsp;
+It is specially, the poor man&rsquo;s science.&nbsp; But if you do not
+like it, study something else.&nbsp; Only study that as you must study
+geology; proceeding from the known to the unknown by observation and
+experiment.</p>
+<p>But here some of my readers may ask, as they have a perfect right
+to ask, why I wish young men to learn Natural Science at all?&nbsp;
+What good will the right understanding of geology, or of astronomy,
+or of chemistry, or of the plants or animals which they meet&mdash;what
+good, I say, will that do them?</p>
+<p>In the first place, they need, I presume, occupation after their
+hours of work.&nbsp; If any of them answer: &ldquo;We do not want occupation,
+we want amusement.&nbsp; Work is very dull, and we want something which
+will excite our fancy, imagination, sense of humour.&nbsp; We want poetry,
+fiction, even a good laugh or a game of play&rdquo;&mdash;I shall most
+fully agree with them.&nbsp; There is often no better medicine for a
+hard-worked body and mind than a good laugh; and the man who can play
+most heartily when he has a chance of playing is generally the man who
+can work most heartily when he must work.&nbsp; But there is certainly
+nothing in the study of physical science to interfere with genial hilarity;
+though, indeed, some solemn persons have been wont to reprove the members
+of the British Association, and specially that Red Lion Club, where
+all the philosophers are expected to lash their tails and roar, of being
+somewhat too fond of mere and sheer fun, after the abstruse papers of
+the day are read and discussed.&nbsp; And as for harmless amusement,
+and still more for the free exercise of the fancy and the imagination,
+I know few studies to compare with Natural History; with the search
+for the most beautiful and curious productions of Nature amid her loveliest
+scenery, and in her freshest atmosphere.&nbsp; I have known again and
+again working men who in the midst of smoky cities have kept their bodies,
+their minds, and their hearts healthy and pure by going out into the
+country at odd hours, and making collections of fossils, plants, insects,
+birds, or some other objects of natural history; and I doubt not that
+such will be the case with some of my readers.</p>
+<p>Another argument, and a very strong one, in favour of studying some
+branch of Natural Science just now is this&mdash;that without it you
+can hardly keep pace with the thought of the world around you.</p>
+<p>Over and above the solid gain of a scientific habit of mind, of which
+I shall speak presently, the gain of mere facts, the increased knowledge
+of this planet on which we live, is very valuable just now; valuable
+certainly to all who do not wish their children and their younger brothers
+to know more about the universe than they do.</p>
+<p>Natural Science is now occupying a more and more important place
+in education.&nbsp; Oxford, Cambridge, the London University, the public
+schools, one after another, are taking up the subject in earnest; so
+are the middle-class schools; so I trust will all primary schools throughout
+the country; and I hope that my children, at least, if not I myself,
+will see the day, when ignorance of the primary laws and facts of science
+will be looked on as a defect, only second to ignorance of the primary
+laws of religion and morality.</p>
+<p>I speak strongly, but deliberately.&nbsp; It does seem to me strange,
+to use the mildest word, that people whose destiny it is to live, even
+for a few short years, on this planet which we call the earth, and who
+do not at all intend to live on it as hermits, shutting themselves up
+in cells, and looking on death as an escape and a deliverance, but intend
+to live as comfortably and wholesomely as they can, they and their children
+after them&mdash;it seems strange, I say, that such people should in
+general be so careless about the constitution of this same planet, and
+of the laws and facts on which depend, not merely their comfort and
+their wealth, but their health and their very lives, and the health
+and the lives of their children and descendants.</p>
+<p>I know some will say, at least to themselves: &ldquo;What need for
+us to study science?&nbsp; There are plenty to do that already; and
+we shall be sure sooner or later to profit by their discoveries; and
+meanwhile it is not science which is needed to make mankind thrive,
+but simple common sense.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I should reply, that to expect to profit by other men&rsquo;s discoveries
+when you do not pay for them&mdash;to let others labour in the hope
+of entering into their labours, is not a very noble or generous state
+of mind&mdash;comparable somewhat, I should say, to that of the fatting
+ox, who willingly allows the farmer to house him, till for him, feed
+him, provided only he himself may lounge in his stall, and eat, and
+<i>not</i> be thankful.&nbsp; There is one difference in the two cases,
+but only one&mdash;that while the farmer can repay himself by eating
+the ox, the scientific man cannot repay himself by eating you; and so
+never gets paid, in most cases, at all.</p>
+<p>But as for mankind thriving by common sense: they have not thriven
+by common sense, because they have not used their common sense according
+to that regulated method which is called science.&nbsp; In no age, in
+no country, as yet, have the majority of mankind been guided, I will
+not say by the love of God, and by the fear of God, but even by sense
+and reason.&nbsp; Not sense and reason, but nonsense and unreason, prejudice
+and fancy, greed and haste, have led them to such results as were to
+be expected&mdash;to superstitions, persecutions, wars, famines, pestilence,
+hereditary diseases, poverty, waste&mdash;waste incalculable, and now
+too often irremediable&mdash;waste of life, of labour, of capital, of
+raw material, of soil, of manure, of every bounty which God has bestowed
+on man, till, as in the eastern Mediterranean, whole countries, some
+of the finest in the world, seem ruined for ever: and all because men
+will not learn nor obey those physical laws of the universe, which (whether
+we be conscious of them or not) are all around us, like walls of iron
+and of adamant&mdash;say rather, like some vast machine, ruthless though
+beneficent, among the wheels of which if we entangle ourselves in our
+rash ignorance, they will not stop to set us free, but crush us, as
+they have crushed whole nations and whole races ere now, to powder.&nbsp;
+Very terrible, though very calm, is outraged Nature.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Though the mills of God grind slowly,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Yet
+they grind exceeding small;<br />Though He sit, and wait with patience,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;With
+exactness grinds He all.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>It is, I believe, one of the most hopeful among the many hopeful
+signs of the times, that the civilised nations of Europe and America
+are awakening slowly but surely to this truth.&nbsp; The civilised world
+is learning, thank God, more and more of the importance of physical
+science; year by year, thank God, it is learning to live more and more
+according to those laws of physical science, which are, as the great
+Lord Bacon said of old, none other than &ldquo;Vox Dei in rebus revelata&rdquo;&mdash;the
+Word of God revealed in facts; and it is gaining by so doing, year by
+year, more and more of health and wealth; of peaceful and comfortable,
+even of graceful and elevating, means of life for fresh millions.</p>
+<p>If you want to know what the study of physical science has done for
+man, look, as a single instance, at the science of Sanatory Reform;
+the science which does not merely try to cure disease, and shut the
+stable-door after the horse is stolen, but tries to prevent disease;
+and, thank God! is succeeding beyond our highest expectations.&nbsp;
+Or look at the actual fresh amount of employment, of subsistence, which
+science has, during the last century, given to men; and judge for yourselves
+whether the study of it be not one worthy of those who wish to help
+themselves, and, in so doing, to help their fellow-men.&nbsp; Let me
+quote to you a passage from an essay urging the institution of schools
+of physical science for artisans, which says all I wish to say and more:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The discoveries of Voltaic electricity, electromagnetism,
+and magnetic electricity, by Volta, &OElig;rsted, and Faraday, led to
+the invention of electric telegraphy by Wheatstone and others, and to
+the great manufactures of telegraph cables and telegraph wire, and of
+the materials required for them.&nbsp; The value of the cargo of the
+Great Eastern alone in the recent Bombay telegraph expedition was calculated
+at three millions of pounds sterling.&nbsp; It also led to the employment
+of thousands of operators to transmit the telegraphic messages, and
+to a great increase of our commerce in nearly all its branches by the
+more rapid means of communication.&nbsp; The discovery of Voltaic electricity
+further led to the invention of electro-plating, and to the employment
+of a large number of persons in that business.&nbsp; The numerous experimental
+researches on specific heat, latent heat, the tension of vapours, the
+properties of water, the mechanical effect of heat, etc., resulted in
+the development of steam-engines, and railways, and the almost endless
+employments depending upon their construction and use.&nbsp; About a
+quarter of a million of persons are employed on railways alone in Great
+Britain.&nbsp; The various original investigations on the chemical effects
+of light led to the invention of photography, and have given employment
+to thousands of persons who practise that process, or manufacture and
+prepare the various material and articles required in it.&nbsp; The
+discovery of chlorine by Scheele led to the invention of the modern
+processes of bleaching, and to various improvements in the dyeing of
+the textile fabrics, and has given employment to a very large number
+of our Lancashire operatives.&nbsp; The discovery of chlorine has also
+contributed to the employment of thousands of printers, by enabling
+Esparto grass to be bleached and formed into paper for the use of our
+daily press.&nbsp; The numerous experimental investigations in relation
+to coal-gas have been the means of extending the use of that substance,
+and of increasing the employment of workmen and others connected with
+its manufacture.&nbsp; The discovery of the alkaline metals by Davy,
+of cyanide of potassium, of nickel, phosphorus, the common acids, and
+a multitude of other substances, has led to the employment of a whole
+army of workmen in the conversion of those substances into articles
+of utility.&nbsp; The foregoing examples might be greatly enlarged upon,
+and a great many others might be selected from the sciences of physics
+and chemistry: but those mentioned will suffice.&nbsp; There is not
+a force of Nature, nor scarcely a material substance that we employ,
+which has not been the subject of several, and in some cases of numerous,
+original experimental researches, many of which have resulted, in a
+greater or less degree, in increasing the employment for workmen and
+others.&rdquo; <a name="citation1"></a><a href="#footnote1">{1}</a></p>
+<p>&ldquo;All this may be very true.&nbsp; But of what practical use
+will physical science be to me?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Let me ask in return: Are none of you going to emigrate?&nbsp; If
+you have courage and wisdom, emigrate you will, some of you, instead
+of stopping here to scramble over each other&rsquo;s backs for the scraps,
+like black-beetles in a kitchen.&nbsp; And if you emigrate, you will
+soon find out, if you have eyes and common sense, that the vegetable
+wealth of the world is no more exhausted than its mineral wealth.&nbsp;
+Exhausted?&nbsp; Not half of it&mdash;I believe not a tenth of it&mdash;is
+yet known.&nbsp; Could I show you the wealth which I have seen in a
+single Tropic island, not sixty miles square&mdash;precious timbers,
+gums, fruits, what not, enough to give employment and wealth to thousands
+and tens of thousands, wasting for want of being known and worked&mdash;then
+you would see what a man who emigrates may do, by a little sound knowledge
+of botany alone.</p>
+<p>And if not.&nbsp; Suppose that any one of you, learning a little
+sound Natural History, should abide here in Britain to your life&rsquo;s
+end, and observe nothing but the hedgerow plants, he would find that
+there is much more to be seen in those mere hedgerow plants than he
+fancies now.&nbsp; The microscope will reveal to him in the tissues
+of any wood, of any seed, wonders which will first amuse him, then puzzle
+him, and at last (I hope) awe him, as he perceives that smallness of
+size interferes in no way with perfection of development, and that &ldquo;Nature,&rdquo;
+as has been well said, &ldquo;is greatest in that which is least.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+And more.&nbsp; Suppose that he went further still.&nbsp; Suppose that
+he extended his researches somewhat to those minuter vegetable forms,
+the mosses, fungi, lichens; suppose that he went a little further still,
+and tried what the microscope would show him in any stagnant pool, whether
+fresh water or salt, of Desmidi&aelig;, Diatoms, and all those wondrous
+atomies which seem as yet to defy our classification into plants or
+animals.&nbsp; Suppose he learnt something of this, but nothing of aught
+else.&nbsp; Would he have gained no solid wisdom?&nbsp; He would be
+a stupider man than I have a right to believe any of my readers to be,
+if he had not gained thereby somewhat of the most valuable of treasures&mdash;namely,
+that inductive habit of mind, that power of judging fairly of facts,
+without which no good or lasting work will be done, whether in physical
+science, in social science, in politics, in philosophy, in philology,
+or in history.</p>
+<p>But more: let me urge you to study Natural Science, on grounds which
+may be to you new and unexpected&mdash;on social, I had almost said
+on political, grounds.</p>
+<p>We all know, and I trust we all love, the names of Liberty, Equality,
+and Brotherhood.&nbsp; We feel, I trust, that these words are too beautiful
+not to represent true and just ideas; and that therefore they will come
+true, and be fulfilled, somewhen, somewhere, somehow.&nbsp; It may be
+in a shape very different from that which you, or I, or any man expects;
+but still they will be fulfilled.</p>
+<p>But if they are to come true, it is we, the individual men, who must
+help them to come true for the whole world, by practising them ourselves,
+when and where we can.&nbsp; And I tell you&mdash;that in becoming scientific
+men, in studying science and acquiring the scientific habit of mind,
+you will find yourselves enjoying a freedom, an equality, a brotherhood,
+such as you will not find elsewhere just now.</p>
+<p>Freedom: what do we want freedom for?&nbsp; For this, at least; that
+we may be each and all able to think what we choose; and to say what
+we choose also, provided we do not say it rudely or violently, so as
+to provoke a breach of the peace.&nbsp; That last was Mr. Buckle&rsquo;s
+definition of freedom of speech.&nbsp; That was the only limit to it
+which he would allow; and I think that that is Mr. John Stuart Mill&rsquo;s
+limit also.&nbsp; It is mine.&nbsp; And I think we have that kind of
+freedom in these islands as perfectly as any men are likely to have
+it on this earth.</p>
+<p>But what I complain of is, that when men have got the freedom, three
+out of four of them will not use it.&nbsp; What?&mdash;someone will
+answer&mdash;Do you suppose that I will not say what I choose, and that
+I dare not speak my own mind to any man?&nbsp; Doubtless.&nbsp; But
+are you sure first, that you think what you choose, or only what someone
+else chooses for you?&nbsp; Are you sure that you make up your own mind
+before you speak, or let someone else make it up for you?&nbsp; Your
+speech may be free enough, my good friend; and Heaven forbid that it
+should be anything else: but are your thoughts free likewise?&nbsp;
+Are you sure that, though you may hate bigotry in others, you are not
+somewhat of a bigot yourself?&nbsp; That you do not look at only one
+side of a question, and that the one which pleases you?&nbsp; That you
+do not take up your opinions at second hand, from some book or some
+newspaper, which after all only reflects your own feelings, your own
+opinions?&nbsp; You should ask yourselves that question, seriously and
+often: &ldquo;Are my thoughts really free?&rdquo;&nbsp; No one values
+more highly than I do the advantage of a free press.&nbsp; But you must
+remember always that a newspaper editor, however honest or able, is
+no more infallible than the Pope; that he may, just as you may, only
+see one side of a question, while any question is sure to have two sides,
+or perhaps three or four; and if you only see the side which suits you,
+day after day, month after month, you must needs become bigoted to it.&nbsp;
+Your thoughts must needs run in one groove.&nbsp; They cannot (as Mr.
+Matthew Arnold would say) &ldquo;play freely round&rdquo; a question;
+and look it all over, boldly, patiently, rationally, charitably.</p>
+<p>And I tell you that if you, or I, or any man, want to let our thoughts
+play freely round questions, and so escape from the tendency to become
+bigoted and narrow-minded which there is in every human being, then
+we must acquire something of that inductive habit of mind which the
+study of Natural Science gives.&nbsp; It is, after all, as Professor
+Huxley says, only common sense well regulated.&nbsp; But then it is
+well regulated; and how precious it is, if you can but get it.&nbsp;
+The art of seeing, the art of knowing what you see; the art of comparing,
+of perceiving true likenesses and true differences, and so of classifying
+and arranging what you see: the art of connecting facts together in
+your own mind in chains of cause and effect, and that accurately, patiently,
+calmly, without prejudice, vanity, or temper&mdash;this is what is wanted
+for true freedom of mind.&nbsp; But accuracy, patience, freedom from
+prejudice, carelessness for all except the truth, whatever the truth
+may be&mdash;are not these the virtues of a truly free spirit?&nbsp;
+Then, as I said just now, I know no study so able to give that free
+habit of mind as the Study of Natural Science.</p>
+<p>Equality, too: whatever equality may or may not be just, or possible;
+this at least, is just, and I hope possible; that every man, every child,
+of every rank, should have an equal chance of education; an equal chance
+of developing all that is in him by nature; an equal chance of acquiring
+a fair knowledge of those facts of the universe which specially concern
+him; and of having his reason trained to judge of them.&nbsp; I say,
+whatever equal rights men may or may not have, they have this right.&nbsp;
+Let every boy, every girl, have an equal and sound education.&nbsp;
+If I had my way, I would give the same education to the child of the
+collier and to the child of a peer.&nbsp; I would see that they were
+taught the same things, and by the same method.&nbsp; Let them all begin
+alike, say I.&nbsp; They will be handicapped heavily enough as they
+go on in life, without our handicapping them in their first race.&nbsp;
+Whatever stable they come out of, whatever promise they show, let them
+all train alike, and start fair, and let the best colt win.</p>
+<p>Well: but there is a branch of education in which, even now, the
+poor man can compete fairly against the rich; and that is, Natural Science.&nbsp;
+In the first place, the rich, blind to their own interest, have neglected
+it hitherto in their schools; so that they have not the start of the
+poor man on that subject which they have on many.&nbsp; In the next
+place, Natural Science is a subject which a man cannot learn by paying
+for teachers.&nbsp; He must teach it himself, by patient observation,
+by patient common sense.&nbsp; And if the poor man is not the rich man&rsquo;s
+equal in those qualities, it must be his own fault, not his purse&rsquo;s.&nbsp;
+Many shops have I seen about the world, in which fools could buy articles
+more or less helpful to them; but never saw I yet an observation-shop,
+nor a common-sense shop either.&nbsp; And if any man says, &ldquo;We
+must buy books:&rdquo; I answer, a poor man now can obtain better scientific
+books than a duke or a prince could sixty years ago, simply because
+then the books did not exist.&nbsp; When I was a boy I would have given
+much, or rather my father would have given much, if I could have got
+hold of such scientific books as are to be found now in any first-class
+elementary school.&nbsp; And if more expensive books are needed; if
+a microscope or apparatus is needed; can you not get them by the co-operative
+method, which has worked so well in other matters?&nbsp; Can you not
+form yourselves into a Natural Science club, for buying such things
+and lending them round among your members; and for discussion also,
+the reading of scientific papers of your own writing, the comparing
+of your observations, general mutual help and mutual instructions?&nbsp;
+Such societies are becoming numerous now, and gladly should I see one
+in every town.&nbsp; For in science, as in most matters, &ldquo;As iron
+sharpeneth iron, so a man sharpeneth the countenance of his friend.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And Brotherhood: well, if you want that; if you want to mix with
+men, and men, too, eminently worth mixing with, on the simple ground
+that &ldquo;a man&rsquo;s a man for a&rsquo; that;&rdquo; if you want
+to become the acquaintances, and&mdash;if you prove worthy&mdash;the
+friends, of men who will be glad to teach you all they know, and equally
+glad to learn from you anything you can teach them, asking no questions
+about you, save, first&mdash;Is he an honest student of Nature for her
+own sake?&nbsp; And next&mdash;Is he a man who will not quarrel, or
+otherwise behave in an unbrotherly fashion to his fellow-students?&mdash;If
+you want a ground of brotherhood with men, not merely in these islands,
+but in America, on the Continent&mdash;in a word, all over the world&mdash;such
+as rank, wealth, fashion, or other artificial arrangements of the world
+cannot give and cannot take away; if you want to feel yourself as good
+as any man in theory, because you are as good as any man in practice,
+except those who are better than you in the same line, which is open
+to any and every man; if you wish to have the inspiring and ennobling
+feeling of being a brother in a great freemasonry which owns no difference
+of rank, of creed, or of nationality&mdash;the only freemasonry, the
+only International League which is likely to make mankind (as we all
+hope they will be some day) one&mdash;then become men of science.&nbsp;
+Join the freemasonry in which Hugh Miller, the poor Cromarty stonemason,
+in which Michael Faraday, the poor bookbinder&rsquo;s boy, became the
+companions and friends of the noblest and most learned on earth, looked
+up to by them not as equals merely but as teachers and guides, because
+philosophers and discoverers.</p>
+<p>Do you wish to be great?&nbsp; Then be great with true greatness;
+which is,&mdash;knowing the facts of nature, and being able to use them.&nbsp;
+Do you wish to be strong?&nbsp; Then be strong with true strength; which
+is, knowing the facts of nature, and being able to use them.&nbsp; Do
+you wish to be wise?&nbsp; Then be wise with true wisdom; which is,
+knowing the facts of nature, and being able to use them.&nbsp; Do you
+wish to be free?&nbsp; Then be free with true freedom; which is again,
+knowing the facts of nature, and being able to use them.</p>
+<p>I dare say some of my readers, especially the younger ones, will
+demur to that last speech of mine.&nbsp; Well, I hope they will not
+be angry with me for saying it.&nbsp; I, at least, shall certainly not
+he angry with them.&nbsp; For when I was young I was very much of what
+I suspect is their opinion.&nbsp; I used to think one could get perfect
+freedom, and social reform, and all that I wanted, by altering the arrangements
+of society and legislation; by constitutions, and Acts of Parliament;
+by putting society into some sort of freedom-mill, and grinding it all
+down, and regenerating it so.&nbsp; And that something can be done by
+improved arrangements, something can be done by Acts of Parliament,
+I hold still, as every rational man must hold.</p>
+<p>But as I grew older, I began to see that if things were to be got
+right, the freedom-mill would do very little towards grinding them right,
+however well and amazingly it was made.&nbsp; I began to see that what
+sort of flour came out at one end of the mill, depended mainly on what
+sort of grain you had put in at the other; and I began to see that the
+problem was to get good grain, and then good flour would be turned out,
+even by a very clumsy old-fashioned sort of mill.&nbsp; And what do
+I mean by good grain?&nbsp; Good men, honest men, accurate men, righteous
+men, patient men, self-restraining men, fair men, modest men.&nbsp;
+Men who are aware of their own vast ignorance compared with the vast
+amount that there is to be learned in such a universe as this.&nbsp;
+Men who are accustomed to look at both sides of a question; who, instead
+of making up their minds in haste like bigots and fanatics, wait like
+wise men, for more facts, and more thought about the facts.&nbsp; In
+one word, men who had acquired just the habit of mind which the study
+of Natural Science can give, and must give; for without it there is
+no use studying Natural Science; and the man who has not got that habit
+of mind, if he meddles with science, will merely become a quack and
+a charlatan, only fit to get his bread as a spirit-rapper, or an inventor
+of infallible pills.</p>
+<p>And when I saw that, I said to myself&mdash;I will train myself,
+by Natural Science, to the truly rational, and therefore truly able
+and useful, habit of mind; and more, I will, for it is my duty as an
+Englishman, train every Englishman over whom I can get influence in
+the same scientific habit of mind, that I may, if possible, make him,
+too, a rational and an able man.</p>
+<p>And, therefore, knowing that most of you, my readers&mdash;probably
+all of you, as you ought and must if you are Britons, think much of
+social and political questions&mdash;-therefore, I say, I entreat you
+to cultivate the scientific spirit by which alone you can judge justly
+of those questions.&nbsp; I ask you to learn how to &ldquo;conquer nature
+by obeying her,&rdquo; as the great Lord Bacon said two hundred and
+fifty years ago.&nbsp; For so only will you in your theories and your
+movements, draw &ldquo;bills which nature will honour&rdquo;&mdash;to
+use Mr. Carlyle&rsquo;s famous parable&mdash;because they are according
+to her unchanging laws, and not have them returned on your hands, as
+too many theorists&rsquo; are, with &ldquo;no effects&rdquo; written
+across their backs.</p>
+<p>Take my advice for yourselves, dear readers, and for your children
+after you; for, believe me, I am showing you the way to true and useful,
+and, therefore, to just and deserved power.&nbsp; I am showing you the
+way to become members of what I trust will be&mdash;what I am certain
+ought to be&mdash;the aristocracy of the future.</p>
+<p>I say it deliberately, as a student of society and of history.&nbsp;
+Power will pass more and more, if all goes healthily and well, into
+the hands of scientific men; into the hands of those who have made due
+use of that great heirloom which the philosophers of the seventeenth
+century left for the use of future generations, and specially of the
+Teutonic race.</p>
+<p>For the rest, events seem but too likely to repeat themselves again
+and again all over the world, in the same hopeless circle.&nbsp; Aristocracies
+of mere birth decay and die, and give place to aristocracies of mere
+wealth; and they again to &ldquo;aristocracies of genius,&rdquo; which
+are really aristocracies of the noisiest, of mere scribblers and spouters,
+such as France is writhing under at this moment.&nbsp; And when these
+last have blown off their steam, with mighty roar, but without moving
+the engine a single yard, then they are but too likely to give place
+to the worst of all aristocracies, the aristocracy of mere &ldquo;order,&rdquo;
+which means organised brute force and military despotism.&nbsp; And,
+after that, what can come, save anarchy, and decay, and social death?</p>
+<p>What else?&mdash;unless there be left in the nation, in the society,
+as the salt of the land, to keep it all from rotting, a sufficient number
+of wise men to form a true working aristocracy, an aristocracy of sound
+and rational science?&nbsp; If they be strong enough (and they are growing
+stronger day by day over the civilised world), on them will the future
+of that world mainly depend.&nbsp; They will rule, and they will act&mdash;cautiously
+we may hope, and modestly and charitably, because in learning true knowledge
+they will have learnt also their own ignorance, and the vastness, the
+complexity, the mystery of nature.&nbsp; But they will be able to rule,
+they will be able to act, because they have taken the trouble to learn
+the facts and the laws of nature.&nbsp; They will rule; and their rule,
+if they are true to themselves, will be one of health and wealth, and
+peace, of prudence and of justice.&nbsp; For they alone will be able
+to wield for the benefit of man the brute forces of nature; because
+they alone will have stooped, to &ldquo;conquer nature by obeying her.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>So runs my dream.&nbsp; I ask my young readers to help towards making
+that dream a fact, by becoming (as many of them as feel the justice
+of my words) honest and earnest students of Natural Science.</p>
+<p>But now: why should I, as a clergyman, interest myself specially
+in the spread of Natural Science?&nbsp; Am I not going out of my proper
+sphere to meddle with secular matters?&nbsp; Am I not, indeed, going
+into a sphere out of which I had better keep myself, and all over whom
+I may have influence?&nbsp; For is not science antagonistic to religion?
+and, if so, what has a clergyman to do, save to warn the young against
+it, instead of attracting them towards it?</p>
+<p>First, as to meddling with secular matters.&nbsp; I grudge that epithet
+of &ldquo;secular&rdquo; to any matter whatsoever.&nbsp; But I do more;
+I deny it to anything which God has made, even to the tiniest of insects,
+the most insignificant atom of dust.&nbsp; To those who believe in God,
+and try to see all things in God, the most minute natural phenomenon
+cannot be secular.&nbsp; It must be divine; I say, deliberately, divine;
+and I can use no less lofty word.&nbsp; The grain of dust is a thought
+of God; God&rsquo;s power made it; God&rsquo;s wisdom gave it whatsoever
+properties or qualities it may possess; God&rsquo;s providence has put
+it in the place where it is now, and has ordained that it should be
+in that place at that moment, by a train of causes and effects which
+reaches back to the very creation of the universe.&nbsp; The grain of
+dust can no more go from God&rsquo;s presence, or flee from God&rsquo;s
+Spirit, than you or I can.&nbsp; If it go up to the physical heaven,
+and float (as it actually often does) far above the clouds, in those
+higher strata of the atmosphere which the aeronaut has never visited,
+whither the Alpine snow-peaks do not rise, even there it will be obeying
+physical laws which we term hastily laws of Nature, but which are really
+the laws of God: and if it go down into the physical abyss; if it be
+buried fathoms, miles, below the surface, and become an atom of some
+rock still in the process of consolidation, has it escaped from God,
+even in the bowels of the earth?&nbsp; Is it not there still obeying
+physical laws, of pressure, heat, crystallisation, and so forth, which
+are laws of God&mdash;the will and mind of God concerning particles
+of matter?&nbsp; Only look at all created things in this light&mdash;look
+at them as what they are, the expressions of God&rsquo;s mind and will
+concerning this universe in which we live&mdash;&ldquo;the Word of God,&rdquo;
+as Bacon says, &ldquo;revealed in facts&rdquo;&mdash;and then you will
+not fear physical science; for you will be sure that, the more you know
+of physical science, the more you will know of the works and of the
+will of God.&nbsp; At least, you will be in harmony with the teaching
+of the Psalmist: &ldquo;The heavens,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;declare
+the glory of God; and the firmament showeth His handiwork.&nbsp; There
+is neither speech nor language where their voices are not heard among
+them.&rdquo;&nbsp; So held the Psalmist concerning astronomy, the knowledge
+of the heavenly bodies; and what he says of sun and stars is true likewise
+of the flowers around our feet, of which the greatest Christian poet
+of modern times has said&mdash;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>To me the meanest flower that grows may give<br />Thoughts that do
+lie too deep for tears.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>So, again, you will be in harmony with the teaching of St. Paul,
+who told the Romans &ldquo;that the invisible things of God are clearly
+seen from the creation of the-world, being understood by the things
+that are made, even His eternal power and Godhead;&rdquo; and who told
+the savages of Lycaonia that &ldquo;God had not left Himself without
+witness, in that He did good and sent men rain from heaven, and fruitful
+seasons, filling men&rsquo;s hearts with food and gladness.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Rain and fruitful seasons witnessed to all men of a Father in heaven.&nbsp;
+And he who wishes to know how truly St. Paul spoke, let him study the
+laws which produce and regulate rain and fruitful seasons, what we now
+call climatology, meteorology, geography of land and water.&nbsp; Let
+him read that truly noble Christian work, Maury&rsquo;s &ldquo;Physical
+Geography of the Sea;&rdquo; and see, if he be a truly rational man,
+how advanced science, instead of disproving, has only corroborated St.
+Paul&rsquo;s assertion, and how the ocean and the rain-cloud, like the
+sun and stars, declare the glory of God.&nbsp; And if anyone undervalues
+the sciences which teach us concerning stones and plants and animals,
+or thinks that nothing can be learnt from them concerning God&mdash;allow
+one who has been from childhood only a humble, though he trusts a diligent
+student of these sciences&mdash;allow him, I say, to ask in all reverence,
+but in all frankness, who it was who said, &ldquo;Consider the lilies
+of the field, how they grow.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Consider the birds
+of the air&mdash;and how your Heavenly Father feedeth them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Consider them.&nbsp; If He has bid you do so, can you do so too much?</p>
+<p>I know, of course, the special application which our Lord made of
+these words.&nbsp; But I know, too, from experience, that the more you
+study nature, in all her forms the more you will find that the special
+application itself is deeper, wider, more literally true, more wonderful,
+more tender, and if I dare use such a word, more poetic, than the unscientific
+man can guess.</p>
+<p>But let me ask you further&mdash;do you think that our Lord in that
+instance, and in those many instances in which He drew his parables
+and lessons from natural objects, was leading men&rsquo;s minds on to
+dangerous ground, and pointing out to them a subject of contemplation
+in the laws and processes of the natural world, and their analogy with
+those of the spiritual world, the kingdom of God&mdash;a subject of
+contemplation, I say, which it was not safe to contemplate too much?</p>
+<p>I appeal to your common sense.&nbsp; If He who spoke these words
+were (as I believe) none other than the Creator of the universe, by
+whom all things were made, and without whom nothing was made that is
+made, do you suppose that He would have bid you to consider His universe,
+had it been dangerous for you to do so?</p>
+<p>Do you suppose, moreover, that the universe, which He, the Truth,
+the Light, the Love, has made, can be otherwise then infinitely worthy
+to be considered? or that the careful, accurate, and patient consideration
+of it, even to its minutest details, can be otherwise than useful to
+man, and can bear witness of aught, save the mind and character of Him
+who made it?&nbsp; And if so, can it be a work unfit for, unworthy of,
+a clergyman&mdash;whose duty is to preach Him to all, and in all ways,&mdash;to
+call on men to consider that physical world which, like the spiritual
+world, consists, holds together, by Him, and lives and moves and has
+its being in Him?</p>
+<p>And here I must pause to answer an objection which I have heard in
+my youth from many pious and virtuous people&mdash;better people in
+God&rsquo;s sight, than I, I fear, can pretend to be.</p>
+<p>They used to say, &ldquo;This would be all very true if there were
+not a curse upon the earth.&rdquo;&nbsp; And then they seemed to deduce,
+from the fact of that curse, a vague notion (for it was little more)
+that this world was the devil&rsquo;s world, and that therefore physical
+facts could not be trusted, because they were disordered, and deceptive,
+and what not.</p>
+<p>Now, in justice to the Bible, and in justice to the Church of England,
+I am bound to say that such a statement, or anything like it, is contrary
+to the doctrines of both.&nbsp; It is contrary to Scripture.&nbsp; According
+to it, the earth is not cursed.&nbsp; For it is said in Gen. viii. 21,
+&ldquo;And the Lord said, I will not again curse the ground any more
+for man&rsquo;s sake.&nbsp; While the earth remaineth, seed-time and
+harvest, cold and heat, summer and winter, day and night shall not cease.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+According to Scripture, again, physical facts are not disordered.&nbsp;
+The Psalmist says, &ldquo;They continue this day according to their
+ordinance; for all things serve Thee.&rdquo;&nbsp; And again, &ldquo;Thou
+hast made them fast for ever and ever.&nbsp; Thou hast given them a
+law which cannot be broken.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>So does the Bible (not to quote over again the passages which I have
+already given you from St. Paul, and One greater than St. Paul) declare
+the permanence of natural laws, and the trustworthiness of natural phenomena
+as obedient to God.&nbsp; And so does the Church of England.&nbsp; For
+she has incorporated into her services that magnificent hymn, which
+our forefathers called the Song of the Three Children; which is, as
+it were, the very flower and crown of the Old Testament; the summing
+up of all that is true and eternal in the old Jewish faith; as true
+for us as for them: as true millions of years hence as it is now&mdash;which
+cries to all heaven and earth, from the skies above our heads to the
+green herb beneath our feet, &ldquo;O all ye works of the Lord, bless
+ye the Lord; praise Him and magnify Him for ever.&rdquo;&nbsp; On that
+one hymn I take my stand.&nbsp; That is my charter as a student of Natural
+Science.&nbsp; As long as that is sung in an English church, I have
+a right to investigate Nature boldly without stint or stay, and to call
+on all who have the will, to investigate her boldly likewise, and with
+Socrates of old, to follow the Logos whithersoever it leads.</p>
+<p>The Logos.&nbsp; I must pause on that word.&nbsp; It meant at first,
+no doubt, simply speech, argument, reason.&nbsp; In the mind of Socrates
+it had a deeper meaning, at which he only dimly guessed; which was seen
+more clearly by Philo and the Alexandrian Jews; which was revealed in
+all its fulness to the beloved Apostle St. John, till he gathered speech
+to tell men of a Logos, a Word, who was in the beginning with God, and
+was God; by whom all things were made, and without Him was not anything
+made that was made; and how in Him was Life, and the Life was the light
+of men; and that He was none other than Jesus Christ our Lord.</p>
+<p>Yes, that is the truth.&nbsp; And to that truth no man can add, and
+from it no man can take away.&nbsp; And as long as we believe that as
+long as we believe that in His light alone can we see light&mdash;as
+long as we believe that the light around us, whether physical or spiritual,
+is given by Him without whom nothing is made&mdash;so long we shall
+not fear to meet Light, so long we shall not fear to investigate Life;
+for we shall know, however strange or novel, beautiful or awful, the
+discoveries we make may be, we are only following the Word whithersoever
+He may lead us; and that He can never lead us amiss</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>I. THE SOIL OF THE FIELD <a name="citation2"></a><a href="#footnote2">{2}</a></h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>My dear readers, let me, before touching on the special subject of
+this paper, say a few words on that of the whole series.</p>
+<p>It is geology: that is, the science which explains to us the <i>rind</i>
+of the earth; of what it is made; how it has been made.&nbsp; It tells
+us nothing of the mass of the earth.&nbsp; That is, properly speaking,
+an astronomical question.&nbsp; If I may be allowed to liken this earth
+to a fruit, then astronomy will tell us&mdash;when it knows&mdash;how
+the fruit grew, and what is inside the fruit.&nbsp; Geology can only
+tell us at most how its rind, its outer covering, grew, and of what
+it is composed; a very small part, doubtless, of all that is to be known
+about this planet.</p>
+<p>But as it happens, the mere rind of this earth-fruit which has, countless
+ages since, dropped, as it were, from the Bosom of God, the Eternal
+Fount of Life&mdash;the mere rind of this earth-fruit, I say, is so
+beautiful and so complex, that it is well worth our awful and reverent
+study.&nbsp; It has been well said, indeed, that the history of it,
+which we call geology, would be a magnificent epic poem, were there
+only any human interest in it; did it deal with creatures more like
+ourselves than stones, and bones, and the dead relics of plants and
+beasts.&nbsp; Whether there be no human interest in geology; whether
+man did not exist on the earth during ages which have seen enormous
+geological changes, is becoming more and more an open question.</p>
+<p>But meanwhile all must agree that there is matter enough for interest&mdash;nay,
+room enough for the free use of the imagination, in a science which
+tells of the growth and decay of whole mountain-ranges, continents,
+oceans, whole tribes and worlds of plants and animals.</p>
+<p>And yet it is not so much for the vastness and grandeur of those
+scenes of the distant past, to which the science of geology introduces
+us, that I value it as a study, and wish earnestly to awaken you to
+its beauty and importance.&nbsp; It is because it is the science from
+which you will learn most easily a sound scientific habit of thought.&nbsp;
+I say most easily; and for these reasons.&nbsp; The most important facts
+of geology do not require, to discover them, any knowledge of mathematics
+or of chemical analysis; they may be studied in every bank, every grot,
+every quarry, every railway-cutting, by anyone who has eyes and common
+sense, and who chooses to copy the late illustrious Hugh Miller, who
+made himself a great geologist out of a poor stonemason.&nbsp; Next,
+its most important theories are not, or need not be, wrapped up in obscure
+Latin and Greek terms.&nbsp; They may be expressed in the simplest English,
+because they are discovered by simple common sense.&nbsp; And thus geology
+is (or ought to be), in popular parlance, the people&rsquo;s science&mdash;the
+science by studying which, the man ignorant of Latin, Greek, mathematics,
+scientific chemistry, can yet become&mdash;as far as his brain enables
+him&mdash;a truly scientific man.</p>
+<p>But how shall we learn science by mere common sense?</p>
+<p>First.&nbsp; Always try to explain the unknown by the known.&nbsp;
+If you meet something which you have not seen before, then think of
+the thing most like it which you have seen before; and try if that which
+you know explains the one will not explain the other also.&nbsp; Sometimes
+it will; sometimes it will not.&nbsp; But if it will, no one has a right
+to ask you to try any other explanation.</p>
+<p>Suppose, for instance, that you found a dead bird on the top of a
+cathedral tower, and were asked how you thought it had got there.&nbsp;
+You would say, &ldquo;Of course, it died up here.&rdquo;&nbsp; But if
+a friend said, &ldquo;Not so; it dropped from a balloon, or from the
+clouds;&rdquo; and told you the prettiest tale of how the bird came
+to so strange an end, you would answer, &ldquo;No, no; I must reason
+from what I know.&nbsp; I know that birds haunt the cathedral tower;
+I know that birds die; and therefore, let your story be as pretty as
+it may, my common sense bids me take the simplest explanation, and say&mdash;it
+died here.&rdquo;&nbsp; In saying that, you would be talking scientifically.&nbsp;
+You would have made a fair and sufficient induction (as it is called)
+from the facts about birds&rsquo; habits and birds&rsquo; deaths which
+you know.</p>
+<p>But suppose that when you took the bird up you found that it was
+neither a jackdaw, nor a sparrow nor a swallow, as you expected, but
+a humming-bird.&nbsp; Then you would be adrift again.&nbsp; The fact
+of it being a humming-bird would be a new fact which you had not taken
+into account, and for which your old explanation was not sufficient;
+and you would have to try a new induction&mdash;to use your common sense
+afresh&mdash;saying, &ldquo;I have not to explain merely how a dead
+bird got here, but how a dead humming-bird.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And now, if your imaginative friend chimed in triumphantly with:
+&ldquo;Do you not see that I was right after all?&nbsp; Do you not see
+that it fell from the clouds? that it was swept away hither, all the
+way from South America, by some south-westerly storm, and wearied out
+at last, dropped here to find rest, as in a sacred-place?&rdquo; what
+would you answer?&nbsp; &ldquo;My friend, that is a beautiful imagination;
+but I must treat it only as such, as long as I can explain the mystery
+more simply by facts which I do know.&nbsp; I do not know that humming-birds
+can be blown across the Atlantic alive.&nbsp; I do know they are actually
+brought across the Atlantic dead; are stuck in ladies&rsquo; hats.&nbsp;
+I know that ladies visit the cathedral; and odd as the accident is,
+I prefer to believe, till I get a better explanation, that the humming-bird
+has simply dropped out of a lady&rsquo;s hat.&rdquo;&nbsp; There, again,
+you would be speaking common sense; and using, too, sound inductive
+method; trying to explain what you do not know from what you do know
+already.</p>
+<p>Now, I ask of you to employ the same common sense when you read and
+think of Geology.</p>
+<p>It is very necessary to do so.&nbsp; For in past times men have tried
+to explain the making of the world around them, its oceans, rivers,
+mountains, and continents, by I know not what of fancied cataclysms
+and convulsions of nature; explaining the unknown by the still more
+unknown, till some of their geological theories were no more rational,
+because no more founded on known facts, than that of the New Zealand
+Maories, who hold that some god, when fishing, fished up their islands
+out of the bottom of the ocean.&nbsp; But a sounder and wiser school
+of geologists now reigns; the father of whom, in England at least, is
+the venerable Sir Charles Lyell.&nbsp; He was almost the first of Englishmen
+who taught us to see&mdash;what common sense tells us&mdash;that the
+laws which we see at work around us now have been most probably at work
+since the creation of the world; and that whatever changes may seem
+to have taken place in past ages, and in ancient rocks, should be explained,
+if possible, by the changes which are taking place now in the most recent
+deposits&mdash;in the soil of the field.</p>
+<p>And in the last forty years&mdash;since that great and sound idea
+has become rooted in the minds of students, and especially of English
+students, geology has thriven and developed, perhaps more than any other
+science; and has led men on to discoveries far more really astonishing
+and awful than all fancied convulsions and cataclysms.</p>
+<p>I have planned this series of papers, therefore, on Sir Charles Lyell&rsquo;s
+method.&nbsp; I have begun by trying to teach a little about the part
+of the earth&rsquo;s crust which lies nearest us, which we see most
+often; namely, the soil; intending, if my readers do me the honour to
+read the papers which follow, to lead them downward, as it were, into
+the earth; deeper and deeper in each paper, to rocks and minerals which
+are probably less known to them than the soil in the fields.&nbsp; Thus
+you will find I shall lead you, or try to lead you on, throughout the
+series, from the known to the unknown, and show you how to explain the
+latter by the former.&nbsp; Sir Charles Lyell has, I see, in the new
+edition of his &ldquo;Student&rsquo;s Elements of Geology,&rdquo; begun
+his book with the uppermost, that is, newest, strata, or layers; and
+has gone regularly downwards in the course of the book to the lowest
+or earliest strata; and I shall follow his plan.</p>
+<p>I must ask you meanwhile to remember one law or rule, which seems
+to me founded on common sense; namely, that the uppermost strata are
+really almost always the newest; that when two or more layers, whether
+of rock or earth&mdash;or indeed two stones in the street, or two sheets
+on a bed, or two books on a table&mdash;any two or more lifeless things,
+in fact, lie one on the other, then the lower one was most probably
+put there first, and the upper one laid down on the lower.&nbsp; Does
+that seem to you a truism?&nbsp; Do I seem almost impertinent in asking
+you to remember it?&nbsp; So much the better.&nbsp; I shall be saved
+unnecessary trouble hereafter.</p>
+<p>But some one may say, and will have a right to say, &ldquo;Stop&mdash;the
+lower thing may have been thrust under the upper one.&rdquo;&nbsp; Quite
+true: and therefore I said only that the lower one was most probably
+put there first.&nbsp; And I said &ldquo;most probably,&rdquo; because
+it is most probable that in nature we should find things done by the
+method which costs least force, just as you do them.&nbsp; I will warrant
+that when you want to hide a thing, you lay something down on it ten
+times for once that you thrust it under something else.&nbsp; You may
+say, &ldquo;What?&nbsp; When I want to hide a paper, say, under the
+sofa-cover, do I not thrust it under?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>No, you lift up the cover, and slip the paper in, and let the cover
+fall on it again.&nbsp; And so, even in that case, the paper has got
+into its place first.</p>
+<p>Now why is this?&nbsp; Simply because in laying one thing on another
+you only move weight.&nbsp; In thrusting one thing under another, you
+have not only to move weight, but to overcome friction.&nbsp; That is
+why you do it, though you are hardly aware of it: simply because so
+you employ less force, and take less trouble.</p>
+<p>And so do clays and sands and stones.&nbsp; They are laid down on
+each other, and not thrust under each other, because thus less force
+is expended in getting them into place.</p>
+<p>There are exceptions.&nbsp; There are cases in which nature does
+try to thrust one rock under another.&nbsp; But to do that she requires
+a force so enormous, compared with what is employed in laying one rock
+on another, that (so to speak) she continually fails; and instead of
+producing a volcanic eruption, produces only an earthquake.&nbsp; Of
+that I may speak hereafter, and may tell you, in good time, how to distinguish
+rocks which have been thrust in from beneath, from rocks which have
+been laid down from above, as every rock between London and Birmingham
+or Exeter has been laid down.&nbsp; That I only assert now.&nbsp; But
+I do not wish you to take it on trust from me.&nbsp; I wish to prove
+it to you as I go on, or to do what is far better for you: to put you
+in the way of proving it for yourself, by using your common sense.</p>
+<p>At the risk of seeming prolix, I must say a few more words on this
+matter.&nbsp; I have special reasons for it.&nbsp; Until I can get you
+to &ldquo;let your thoughts play freely&rdquo; round this question of
+the superposition of soils and rocks, there will be no use in my going
+on with these papers.</p>
+<p>Suppose then (to argue from the known to the unknown) that you were
+watching men cleaning out a pond.&nbsp; Atop, perhaps, they would come
+to a layer of soft mud, and under that to a layer of sand.&nbsp; Would
+not common sense tell you that the sand was there first, and that the
+water had laid down the mud on the top of it?&nbsp; Then, perhaps, they
+might come to a layer of dead leaves.&nbsp; Would not common sense tell
+you that the leaves were there before the sand above them?&nbsp; Then,
+perhaps, to a layer of mud again.&nbsp; Would not common sense tell
+you that the mud was there before the leaves?&nbsp; And so on down to
+the bottom of the pond, where, lastly, I think common sense would tell
+you that the bottom of the pond was there already, before all the layers
+which were laid down on it.&nbsp; Is not that simple common sense?</p>
+<p>Then apply that reasoning to the soils and rocks in any spot on earth.&nbsp;
+If you made a deep boring, and found, as you would in many parts of
+this kingdom, that the boring, after passing through the soil of the
+field, entered clays or loose sands, you would say the clays were there
+before the soil.&nbsp; If it then went down into sandstone, you would
+say&mdash;would you not?&mdash;that sandstone must have been here before
+the clay; and however thick&mdash;even thousands of feet&mdash;it might
+be, that would make no difference to your judgment.&nbsp; If next the
+boring came into quite different rocks; into a different sort of sandstone
+and shales, and among them beds of coal, would you not say&mdash;These
+coal-beds must have been here before the sandstones?&nbsp; And if you
+found in those coal-beds dead leaves and stems of plants, would you
+not say&mdash;Those plants must have been laid down here before the
+layers above them, just as the dead leaves in the pond were?</p>
+<p>If you then came to a layer of limestone, would you not say the same?&nbsp;
+And if you found that limestone full of shells and corals, dead, but
+many of them quite perfect, some of the corals plainly in the very place
+in which they grew, would you not say&mdash;These creatures must have
+lived down here before the coal was laid on top of them?&nbsp; And if,
+lastly, below the limestone you came to a bottom rock quite different
+again, would you not say&mdash;The bottom rock must have been here before
+the rocks on the top of it?</p>
+<p>And if that bottom rock rose up a few miles off, two thousand feet,
+or any other height, into hills, what would you say then?&nbsp; Would
+you say: &ldquo;Oh, but the rock is not bottom rock; is not under the
+limestone here, but higher than it.&nbsp; So perhaps in this part it
+has made a shift, and the highlands are younger than the lowlands; for
+see, they rise so much higher?&rdquo;&nbsp; Would not that be as wise
+as to say that the bottom of the pond was not there before the pond
+mud, because the banks round the pond rose higher than the mud?</p>
+<p>Now for the soil of the field.</p>
+<p>If we can understand a little about it, what it is made of, and how
+it got there, we shall perhaps be on the right road toward understanding
+what all England&mdash;and, indeed, the crust of this whole planet&mdash;is
+made of; and how its rocks and soils got there.</p>
+<p>But we shall best understand how the soil in the field was made,
+by reasoning, as I have said, from the known to the unknown.&nbsp; What
+do I mean?&nbsp; This: On the uplands are fields in which the soil is
+already made.&nbsp; You do not know how?&nbsp; Then look for a field
+in which the soil is still being made.&nbsp; There are plenty in every
+lowland.&nbsp; Learn how it is being made there; apply the knowledge
+which you learn from them to the upland fields which are already made.</p>
+<p>If there is, as there usually is, a river-meadow, or still better,
+an &aelig;stuary, near your town, you have every advantage for seeing
+soil made.&nbsp; Thousands of square feet of fresh-made soil spread
+between your town and the sea; thousands more are in process of being
+made.</p>
+<p>You will see now why I have begun with the soil in the field; because
+it is the uppermost, and therefore latest, of all the layers; and also
+for this reason, that, if Sir Charles Lyell&rsquo;s theory be true&mdash;as
+it is&mdash;then the soils and rocks below the soil of the field may
+have been made in the very same way in which the soil of the field is
+made.&nbsp; If so, it is well worth our while to examine it.</p>
+<p>You all know from whence the soil comes which has filled up, in the
+course of ages, the great &aelig;stuaries below London, Stirling, Chester,
+or Cambridge.</p>
+<p>It is river mud and sand.&nbsp; The river, helped by tributary brooks
+right and left, has brought down from the inland that enormous mass.&nbsp;
+You know that.&nbsp; You know that every flood and freshet brings a
+fresh load, either of fine mud or of fine sand, or possibly some of
+it peaty matter out of distant hills.&nbsp; Here is one indisputable
+fact from which to start.&nbsp; Let us look for another.</p>
+<p>How does the mud get into the river?&nbsp; The rain carries it thither.</p>
+<p>If you wish to learn the first elements of geology by direct experiment,
+do this: The next rainy day&mdash;the harder it rains the better&mdash;instead
+of sitting at home over the fire, and reading a book about geology,
+put on a macintosh and thick boots, and get away, I care not whither,
+provided you can find there running water.&nbsp; If you have not time
+to get away to a hilly country, then go to the nearest bit of turnpike
+road, or the nearest sloping field, and see in little how whole continents
+are made, and unmade again.&nbsp; Watch the rain raking and sifting
+with its million delicate fingers, separating the finer particles from
+the coarser, dropping the latter as soon as it can, and carrying the
+former downward with it toward the sea.&nbsp; Follow the nearest roadside
+drain where it runs into a pond, and see how it drops the pebbles the
+moment it enters the pond, and then the sand in a fan-shaped heap at
+the nearest end; but carries the fine mud on, and holds it suspended,
+to be gradually deposited at the bottom in the still water; and say
+to yourself: Perhaps the sands which cover so many inland tracts were
+dropped by water, very near the shore of a lake or sea, and by rapid
+currents.&nbsp; Perhaps, again, the brick clays, which are often mingled
+with these sands, were dropped, like the mud in the pond, in deeper
+water farther from the shore, and certainly in stilt water.&nbsp; But
+more.&nbsp; Suppose once more, then, that looking and watching a pond
+being cleared out, under the lowest layer of mud, you found&mdash;as
+you would find in any of those magnificent reservoirs so common in the
+Lancashire hills&mdash;a layer of vegetable soil, with grass and brushwood
+rooted in it.&nbsp; What would you say but: The pond has not been always
+full.&nbsp; It has at some time or other been dry enough to let a whole
+copse grow up inside it?</p>
+<p>And if you found&mdash;as you will actually find along some English
+shores&mdash;under the sand hills, perhaps a bed of earth with shells
+and bones; under that a bed of peat; under that one of blue silt; under
+that a buried forest, with the trees upright and rooted; under that
+another layer of blue silt full of roots and vegetable fibre; perhaps
+under that again another old land surface with trees again growing in
+it; and under all the main bottom clay of the district&mdash;what would
+common sense tell you?&nbsp; I leave you to discover for yourselves.&nbsp;
+It certainly would not tell you that those trees were thrust in there
+by a violent convulsion, or that all those layers were deposited there
+in a few days, or even a few years; and you might safely indulge in
+speculations about the antiquity of the &aelig;stuary, and the changes
+which it has undergone, with which I will not frighten you at present.</p>
+<p>It will be fair reasoning to argue thus.&nbsp; You may not be always
+right in your conclusion, but still you will be trying fairly to explain
+the unknown by the known.</p>
+<p>But have Rain and Rivers alone made the soil?</p>
+<p>How very much they have done toward making it you will be able to
+judge for yourselves, if you will read the sixth chapter of Sir Charles
+Lyell&rsquo;s new &ldquo;Elements of Geology,&rdquo; or the first hundred
+pages of that admirable book, De la B&ecirc;che&rsquo;s &ldquo;Geological
+Observer;&rdquo; and last, but not least, a very clever little book
+called &ldquo;Rain and Rivers,&rdquo; by Colonel George Greenwood.</p>
+<p>But though rain, like rivers, is a carrier of soil, it is more.&nbsp;
+It is a maker of soil, likewise; and by it mainly the soil of an upland
+field is made, whether it be carried down to the sea or not.</p>
+<p>If you will look into any quarry you will see that however compact
+the rock may be a few feet below the surface, it becomes, in almost
+every case, rotten and broken up as it nears the upper soil, till you
+often cannot tell where the rock ends and the soil begins.</p>
+<p>Now this change has been produced by rain.&nbsp; First, mechanically,
+by rain in the shape of ice.&nbsp; The winter rain gets into the ground,
+and does by the rock what it has done by the stones of many an old building.&nbsp;
+It sinks into the porous stone, freezes there, expands in freezing,
+and splits and peels the stone with a force which is slowly but surely
+crumbling the whole of Northern Europe and America to powder.</p>
+<p>Do you doubt me?&nbsp; I say nothing but what you can judge of yourselves.&nbsp;
+The next time you go up any mountain, look at the loose broken stones
+with which the top is coated, just underneath the turf.&nbsp; What has
+broken them up but frost?&nbsp; Look again, as stronger proof, at the
+talus of broken stones&mdash;screes, as they call them in Scotland;
+rattles, as we call them in Devon&mdash;which lie along the base of
+many mountain cliffs.&nbsp; What has brought them down but frost?&nbsp;
+If you ask the country folk they will tell you whether I am right or
+not.&nbsp; If you go thither, not in the summer, but just after the
+winter&rsquo;s frost, you will see for yourselves, by the fresh frost-crop
+of newly-broken bits, that I am right.&nbsp; Possibly you may find me
+to be even more right than is desirable, by having a few angular stones,
+from the size of your head to that of your body, hurled at you by the
+frost-giants up above.&nbsp; If you go to the Alps at certain seasons,
+and hear the thunder of the falling rocks, and see their long lines&mdash;moraines,
+as they are called&mdash;sliding slowly down upon the surface of the
+glacier, then you will be ready to believe the geologist who tells you
+that frost, and probably frost alone, has hewn out such a peak as the
+Matterhorn from some vast table-land; and is hewing it down still, winter
+after winter, till some day, where the snow Alps now stand, there shall
+be rolling uplands of rich cultivable soil.</p>
+<p>So much for the mechanical action of rain, in the shape of ice.&nbsp;
+Now a few words on its chemical action.</p>
+<p>Rain water is seldom pure.&nbsp; It carries in it carbonic acid;
+and that acid, beating in shower after shower against the face of a
+cliff&mdash;especially if it be a limestone cliff&mdash;weathers the
+rock chemically; changing (in case of limestone) the insoluble carbonate
+of lime into a soluble bicarbonate, and carrying that away in water,
+which, however clear, is still hard.&nbsp; Hard water is usually water
+which has invisible lime in it; there are from ten to fifteen grains
+and more of lime in every gallon of limestone water.&nbsp; I leave you
+to calculate the enormous weight of lime which must be so carried down
+to the sea every year by a single limestone or chalk brook.&nbsp; You
+can calculate it, if you like, by ascertaining the weight of lime in
+each gallon, and the average quantity of water which comes down the
+stream in a day; and when your sum is done, you will be astonished to
+find it one not of many pounds, but probably of many tons, of solid
+lime, which you never suspected or missed from the hills around.&nbsp;
+Again, by the time the rain has sunk through the soil, it is still less
+pure.&nbsp; It carries with it not only carbonic acid, but acids produced
+by decaying vegetables&mdash;by the roots of the grasses and trees which
+grow above; and they dissolve the cement of the rock by chemical action,
+especially if the cement be lime or iron.&nbsp; You may see this for
+yourselves, again and again.&nbsp; You may see how the root of a tree,
+penetrating the earth, discolours the soil with which it is in contact.&nbsp;
+You may see how the whole rock, just below the soil, has often changed
+in colour from the compact rock below, if the soil be covered with a
+dense layer of peat or growing vegetables.</p>
+<p>But there is another force at work, and quite as powerful as rain
+and rivers, making the soil of alluvial flats.&nbsp; Perhaps it has
+helped, likewise, to make the soil of all the lowlands in these isles&mdash;and
+that is, the waves of the sea.</p>
+<p>If you ever go to Parkgate, in Cheshire, try if you cannot learn
+there a little geology.</p>
+<p>Walk beyond the town.&nbsp; You find the shore protected for a long
+way by a sea-wall, lest it should be eaten away by the waves.&nbsp;
+What the force of those waves can be, even on that sheltered coast,
+you may judge&mdash;at least you could have judged this time last year&mdash;by
+the masses of masonry torn from their iron clampings during the gale
+of three winters since.&nbsp; Look steadily at those rolled blocks,
+those twisted stanchions, if they are there still; and then ask yourselves&mdash;it
+will be fair reasoning from the known to the unknown&mdash;What effect
+must such wave-power as that have had beating and breaking for thousands
+of years along the western coasts of England, Scotland, Ireland?&nbsp;
+It must have eaten up thousands of acres&mdash;whole shires, may be,
+ere now.&nbsp; Its teeth are strong enough, and it knows neither rest
+nor pity, the cruel hungry sea.&nbsp; Give it but time enough, and what
+would it not eat up?&nbsp; It would eat up, in the course of ages, all
+the dry land of this planet, were it not baffled by another counteracting
+force, of which I shall speak hereafter.</p>
+<p>As you go on beyond the sea-wall, you find what it is eating up.&nbsp;
+The whole low cliff is going visibly.&nbsp; But whither is it going?&nbsp;
+To form new soil in the &aelig;stuary.&nbsp; Now you will not wonder
+how old harbours so often become silted up.&nbsp; The sea has washed
+the land into them.&nbsp; But more, the sea-currents do not allow the
+sands of the &aelig;stuary to escape freely out to sea.&nbsp; They pile
+it up in shifting sand-banks about the mouth of the &aelig;stuary.&nbsp;
+The prevailing sea-winds, from whatever quarter, catch up the sand,
+and roll it up into sand-hills.&nbsp; Those sand-hills are again eaten
+down by the sea, and mixed with the mud of the tide-flats, and so is
+formed a mingled soil, partly of clayey mud, partly of sand; such a
+soil as stretches over the greater part of all our lowlands.</p>
+<p>Now, why should not that soil, whether in England or in Scotland,
+have been made by the same means as that of every &aelig;stuary.</p>
+<p>You find over great tracts of East Scotland, Lancashire, Norfolk,
+etc., pure loose sand just beneath the surface, which looks as if it
+was blown sand from a beach.&nbsp; Is it not reasonable to suppose that
+it is?&nbsp; You find rising out of many lowlands, crags which look
+exactly like old sea-cliffs eaten by the waves, from the base of which
+the waters have gone back.&nbsp; Why should not those crags be old sea-cliffs?&nbsp;
+Why should we not, following our rule of explaining the unknown by the
+known, assume that such they are till someone gives us a sound proof
+that they are not; and say&mdash;These great plains of England and Scotland
+were probably once covered by a shallow sea, and their soils made as
+the soil of any tide-flat is being made now?</p>
+<p>But you may say, and most reasonably &ldquo;The tide-flats are just
+at the sea-level.&nbsp; The whole of the lowland is many feet above
+the sea; it must therefore have been raised out of the sea, according
+to your theory: and what proofs have you of that?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Well, that is a question both grand and deep, on which I shall not
+enter yet; but meanwhile, to satisfy you that I wish to play fair with
+you, I ask you to believe nothing but what you can prove for yourselves.&nbsp;
+Let me ask you this: suppose that you had proof positive that I had
+fallen into the river in the morning; would not your meeting me in the
+evening be also proof positive that somehow or other I had in the course
+of the day got out of the river?&nbsp; I think you will accept that
+logic as sound.</p>
+<p>Now if I can give you proof positive, proof which you can see with
+your own eyes, and handle with your own hands, and alas! often feel
+but too keenly with your own feet, that the whole of the lowlands were
+once beneath the sea; then will it not be certain that, somehow or other,
+they must have been raised out of the sea again?</p>
+<p>And that I propose to do in my next paper, when I speak of the pebbles
+in the street.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile I wish you to face fairly the truly grand idea, which all
+I have said tends to prove true&mdash;that all the soil we see is made
+by the destruction of older soils, whether soft as clay, or hard as
+rock; that rain, rivers, and seas are perpetually melting and grinding
+up old land, to compose new land out of it; and that it must have been
+doing so, as long as rain, rivers, and seas have existed.&nbsp; &ldquo;But
+how did the first land of all get made?&rdquo;&nbsp; I can only reply:
+A natural question: but we can only answer that, by working from the
+known to the unknown.&nbsp; While we are finding out how these later
+lands were made and unmade, we may stumble on some hints as to how the
+first primeval continents rose out of the bosom of the sea.</p>
+<p>And thus I end this paper.&nbsp; I trust it has not been intolerably
+dull.&nbsp; But I wanted at starting to show my readers something of
+the right way of finding out truth on this and perhaps on all subjects;
+to make some simple appeals to your common sense; and to get you to
+accept some plain rules founded on common sense, which will be of infinite
+use to both you and me in my future papers.</p>
+<p>I hope, meanwhile, that you will agree with me, that there is plenty
+of geological matter to be seen and thought over in the neighbourhood
+of any town.</p>
+<p>Be sure, that wherever there is a river, even a drain; and a stone
+quarry, or even a roadside bank; much more where there is a sea, or
+a tidal &aelig;stuary, there is geology enough to be learnt, to explain
+the greater part of the making of all the continents on the globe.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>II.&nbsp; THE PEBBLES IN THE STREET</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>If you, dear reader, dwell in any northern town, you will almost
+certainly see paving courts and alleys, and sometimes&mdash;to the discomfort
+of your feet&mdash;whole streets, or set up as bournestones at corners,
+or laid in heaps to be broken up for road-metal, certain round pebbles,
+usually dark brown or speckled gray, and exceedingly tough and hard.&nbsp;
+Some of them will be very large&mdash;boulders of several feet in diameter.&nbsp;
+If you move from town to town, from the north of Scotland as far down
+as Essex on the east, or as far down as Shrewsbury and Wolverhampton
+(at least) on the west, you will still find these pebbles, but fewer
+and smaller as you go south.&nbsp; It matters not what the rocks and
+soils of the country round may be.&nbsp; However much they may differ,
+these pebbles will be, on the whole, the same everywhere.</p>
+<p>But if your town be south of the valley of the Thames, you will find,
+as far as I am aware, no such pebbles there.&nbsp; The gravels round
+you will be made up entirely of rolled chalk flints, and bits of beds
+immediately above or below the chalk.&nbsp; The blocks of &ldquo;Sarsden&rdquo;
+sandstone&mdash;those of which Stonehenge is built&mdash;and the &ldquo;plum-pudding
+stones&rdquo; which are sometimes found with them, have no kindred with
+the northern pebbles.&nbsp; They belong to beds above the chalk.</p>
+<p>Now if, seeing such pebbles about your town, you inquire, like a
+sensible person who wishes to understand something of the spot on which
+he lives, whence they come, you will be shown either a gravel-pit or
+a clay-pit.&nbsp; In the gravel the pebbles and boulders lie mixed with
+sand, as they do in the railway cutting just south of Shrewsbury; or
+in huge mounds of fine sweet earth, as they do in the gorge of the Tay
+about Dunkeld, and all the way up Strathmore, where they form long grassy
+mounds&mdash;<i>tomauns</i> as they call them in some parts of Scotland&mdash;<i>askers</i>
+as they call them in Ireland.&nbsp; These mounds, with their sweet fresh
+turf rising out of heather and bog, were tenanted&mdash;so Scottish
+children used to believe&mdash;by fairies.&nbsp; He that was lucky might
+hear inside them fairy music, and, the jingling of the fairy horses&rsquo;
+trappings.&nbsp; But woe to him if he fell asleep upon the mound, for
+he would be spirited away into fairyland for seven years, which would
+seem to him but one day.&nbsp; A strange fancy; yet not so strange as
+the actual truth as to what these mounds are, and how they came into
+their places.</p>
+<p>Or again, you might find that your town&rsquo;s pebbles and boulders
+came out of a pit of clay, in which they were stuck, without any order
+or bedding, like plums and raisins in a pudding.&nbsp; This clay goes
+usually by the name of boulder-clay.&nbsp; You would see such near any
+town in Cheshire and Lancashire; or along Leith shore, near Edinburgh;
+or, to give one more instance out of hundreds, along the coast at Scarborough.&nbsp;
+If you walk along the shore southward of that town, you will see, in
+the gullies of the cliff, great beds of sticky clay, stuffed full of
+bits of every rock between the Lake mountains and Scarborough, from
+rounded pebbles of most ancient rock down to great angular fragments
+of ironstone and coal.&nbsp; There, as elsewhere, the great majority
+of the pebbles have nothing to do with the rock on which the clay happens
+to lie, but have come, some of them, from places many miles away.</p>
+<p>Now if we find spread over a low land pebbles composed of rocks which
+are only found in certain high lands, is it not an act of common sense
+to say&mdash;These pebbles have come from the highlands?&nbsp; And if
+the pebbles are rounded, while the rocks like them in the highlands
+always break off in angular shapes, is it not, again, an act of mere
+common sense to say&mdash;These pebbles were once angular, and have
+been rubbed round, either in getting hither or before they started hither?</p>
+<p>Does all this seem to you mere truism, my dear reader?&nbsp; If so,
+I am sincerely glad to hear it.&nbsp; It was not so very long ago that
+such arguments would have been considered not only no truisms, but not
+even common sense.</p>
+<p>But to return, let us take, as an example, a sample of these boulder
+clay pebbles from the neighbourhood of Liverpool and Birkenhead, made
+by Mr. De Rance, the government geological surveyor:</p>
+<p>Granite, greenstone, felspar porphyry, felstone, quartz rock (all
+igneous rocks, that is, either formed by, or altered by volcanic heat,
+and almost all found in the Lake mountains), 37 per cent.</p>
+<p>Silurian grits (the common stones of the Lake mountains deposited
+by water), 43 per cent.</p>
+<p>Ironstone, 1 per cent.</p>
+<p>Carboniferous limestone, 5 per cent.</p>
+<p>Permian or Triassic sandstones, <i>i.e</i>. rocks immediately round
+Liverpool, 12 per cent.</p>
+<p>Now, does not this sample show, as far as human common sense can
+be depended on, that the great majority of these stones come from the
+Lake mountains, sixty or seventy miles north of Liverpool?&nbsp; I think
+your common sense will tell you that these pebbles are not mere concretions;
+that is, formed out of the substance of the clay after it was deposited.&nbsp;
+The least knowledge of mineralogy would prove that.&nbsp; But, even
+if you are no mineralogist, common sense will tell you, that if they
+were all concreted out of the same clay, it is most likely that they
+would be all of the same kind, and not of a dozen or more different
+kinds.&nbsp; Common sense will tell you, also, that if they were all
+concreted out of the same clay, it is a most extraordinary coincidence,
+indeed one too strange to be believed, if any less strange explanation
+can be found&mdash;that they should have taken the composition of different
+rocks which are found all together in one group of mountains to the
+northward.&nbsp; You will surely say&mdash;If this be granite, it has
+most probably come from a granite mountain; if this be grit, from a
+grit-stone mountain, and so on with the whole list.&nbsp; Why&mdash;are
+we to go out of our way to seek improbable explanations, when there
+is a probable one staring us in the face?</p>
+<p>Next&mdash;and this is well worth your notice&mdash;if you will examine
+the pebbles carefully, especially the larger ones, you will find that
+they are not only more or less rounded, but often scratched; and often,
+too, in more than one direction, two or even three sets of scratches
+crossing each other; marked, as a cat marks an elder stem when she sharpens
+her claws upon it; and that these scratches have not been made by the
+quarrymen&rsquo;s tools, but are old marks which exist&mdash;as you
+may easily prove for yourself&mdash;while the stone is still lying in
+its bed of clay.&nbsp; Would it not be an act of mere common sense to
+say&mdash;These scratches have been made by the sharp points of other
+stones which have rubbed against the pebbles somewhere, and somewhen,
+with great force?</p>
+<p>So far so good.&nbsp; The next question is&mdash;How did these stones
+get into the clay?&nbsp; If we can discover that, we may also discover
+how they wore rounded and scratched.&nbsp; We must find a theory which
+will answer our question; and one which, as Professor Huxley would say,
+&ldquo;will go on all-fours,&rdquo; that is, will explain all the facts
+of the case, and not only a few of them.</p>
+<p>What, then, brought the stones?</p>
+<p>We cannot, I think, answer that question, as some have tried to answer
+it, by saying that they were brought by Noah&rsquo;s flood.&nbsp; For
+it is clear, that very violent currents of water would be needed to
+carry boulders, some of them weighing many tons, for many miles.&nbsp;
+Now Scripture says nothing of any such violent currents; and we have
+no right to put currents, or any other imagined facts, into Scripture
+out of our own heads, and then argue from them as if not we, but the
+text of Scripture had asserted their existence.</p>
+<p>But still, they may have been rolled hither by water.&nbsp; That
+theory certainly would explain their being rounded; though not their
+being scratched.&nbsp; But it will not explain their being found in
+the clay.</p>
+<p>Recollect what I said in my first paper: that water drops its pebbles
+and coarser particles first, while it carries the fine clayey mud onward
+in solution, and only drops it when the water becomes still.&nbsp; Now
+currents of such tremendous violence as to carry these boulder stones
+onward, would have carried the mud for many miles farther still; and
+we should find the boulders, not in clay, but lying loose together,
+probably on a hard rock bottom, scoured clean by the current.&nbsp;
+That is what we find in the beds of streams; that is just what we do
+not find in this case.</p>
+<p>But the boulders may have been brought by a current, and then the
+water may have become still, and the clay settled quietly round them.&nbsp;
+What?&nbsp; Under them as well as over them?&nbsp; On that theory also
+we should find them only at the bottom of the clay.&nbsp; As it is,
+we find them scattered anywhere and everywhere through it, from top
+to bottom.&nbsp; So that theory will not do.&nbsp; Indeed, no theory
+will do which supposes them to have been brought by water alone.</p>
+<p>Try yourself, dear reader, and make experiments, with running water,
+pebbles, and mud.&nbsp; If you try for seven years, I believe, you will
+never contrive to make your pebbles lie about in your mud, as they lie
+about in every pit in the boulder clay.</p>
+<p>Well then, there we are at fault, it seems.&nbsp; We have no explanation
+drawn from known facts which will do&mdash;unless we are to suppose,
+which I don&rsquo;t think you will do, that stones, clay, and all were
+blown hither along the surface of the ground, by primeval hurricanes,
+ten times worse than those of the West Indies, which certainly will
+roll a cannon a few yards, but cannot, surely, roll a boulder stone
+a hundred miles.</p>
+<p>Now, suppose that there was a force, an agent, known&mdash;luckily
+for you, not to you&mdash;but known too well to sailors and travellers;
+a force which is at work over the vast sheets of land at both the north
+and south poles; at work, too, on every high mountain range in the world,
+and therefore a very common natural force; and suppose that this force
+would explain all the facts, namely&mdash;</p>
+<p>How the stones got here;</p>
+<p>How they were scratched and rounded;</p>
+<p>How they were imbedded in clay;</p>
+<p>because it is notoriously, and before men&rsquo;s eyes now, carrying
+great stones hundreds of miles, and scratching and rounding them also;
+carrying vast deposits of mud, too, and mixing up mud and stones just
+as we see them in the brick-pits,&mdash;Would not our common sense have
+a right to try that explanation?&mdash;to suspect that this force, which
+we do not see at work in Britain now, may have been at work here ages
+since?&nbsp; That would at least be reasoning from the known to the
+unknown.&nbsp; What state of things, then, do we find among the highest
+mountains; and over whole countries which, though not lofty, lie far
+enough north or south to be permanently covered with ice?</p>
+<p>We find, first, an ice-cap or ice-sheet, fed by the winter&rsquo;s
+snows, stretching over the higher land, and crawling downward and outward
+by its own weight, along the valleys, as glaciers.</p>
+<p>We find underneath the glaciers, first a <i>moraine profonde</i>,
+consisting of the boulders and gravel, and earth, which the glacier
+has ground off the hillsides, and is carrying down with it.</p>
+<p>These stones, of course, grind, scratch, and polish each other; and
+in like wise grind, scratch, and polish the rock over which they pass,
+under the enormous weight of the superincumbent ice.</p>
+<p>We find also, issuing from under each glacier a stream, carrying
+the finest mud, the result of the grinding of the boulders against each
+other and the glacier.</p>
+<p>We find, moreover, on the surface of the glaciers, <i>moraines sup&eacute;rieures</i>&mdash;long
+lines of stones and dirt which had fallen from neighbouring cliffs,
+and are now travelling downward with the glaciers.</p>
+<p>Their fate, if the glacier ends on land, is what was to be expected.&nbsp;
+The stones from above the glacier fall over the ice-cliff at its end,
+to mingle with those thrown out from underneath the glacier, and form
+huge banks of boulders, called terminal moraines, while the mud runs
+off, as all who have seen glaciers know, in a turbid torrent.</p>
+<p>Their fate, again, is what was to be expected if the glacier ends,
+as it commonly does in Arctic regions, in the sea.&nbsp; The ice grows
+out to sea-ward for more than a mile sometimes, about one-eighth of
+it being above water, and seven-eighths below, so that an ice-cliff
+one hundred feet high may project into water eight hundred feet deep.&nbsp;
+At last, when it gets out of its depth, the buoyancy of the water breaks
+it off in icebergs, which float away, at the mercy of tides and currents,
+often grounding again in shallower water, and ploughing the sea-bottom
+as they drag along it.&nbsp; These bergs carry stones and dirt, often
+in large quantities; so that, whenever a berg melts or capsizes, it
+strews its burden confusedly about the sea-floor.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile the fine mud which is flowing out from under the ice goes
+out to sea likewise, colouring the water far out, and then subsiding
+as a soft tenacious ooze, in which the stones brought out by the ice
+are imbedded.&nbsp; And this ooze&mdash;so those who have examined it
+assert&mdash;cannot be distinguished from the brick-clay, or fossiliferous
+boulder-clay, so common in the North.&nbsp; A very illustrious Scandinavian
+explorer, visiting Edinburgh, declared, as soon as he saw the sections
+of boulder-clay exhibited near that city, that this was the very substance
+which he saw forming in the Spitzbergen ice-fiords. <a name="citation3"></a><a href="#footnote3">{3}</a></p>
+<p>I have put these facts as simply and baldly as I can, in order that
+the reader may look steadily at them, without having his attention drawn
+off, or his fancy excited, by their real poetry and grandeur.&nbsp;
+Indeed, it would have been an impertinence to have done otherwise; for
+I have never seen a live glacier, by land or sea, though I have seen
+many a dead one.&nbsp; And the public has had the opportunity, lately,
+of reading so many delightful books about &ldquo;peaks, passes, and
+glaciers,&rdquo; that I am bound to suppose that many of my readers
+know as much, or more, about them than I do.</p>
+<p>But let us go a step farther; and, bearing in our minds what live
+glaciers are like, let us imagine what a dead glacier would be like;
+a glacier, that is, which had melted, and left nothing but its skeleton
+of stones and dirt.</p>
+<p>We should find the faces of the rock scored and polished, generally
+in lines pointing down the valleys, or at least outward from the centre
+of the highlands, and polished and scored most in their upland or weather
+sides.&nbsp; We should find blocks of rock left behind, and perched
+about on other rocks of a different kind.&nbsp; We should find in the
+valleys the old moraines left as vast deposits of boulder and shingle,
+which would be in time sawn through and sorted over by the rivers.&nbsp;
+And if the sea-bottom outside were upheaved, and became dry land, we
+should find on it the remains of the mud from under the glacier, stuck
+full of stones and boulders iceberg-dropped.&nbsp; This mud would be
+often very irregularly bedded; for it would have been disturbed by the
+ploughing of the icebergs, and mixed here and there with dirt which
+had fallen from them.&nbsp; Moreover, as the sea became shallower and
+the mud-beds got awash one after the other, they would be torn about,
+re-sifted, and re-shaped by currents and by tides, and mixed with shore-sand
+ground out of shingle-beach, thus making confusion worse confounded.&nbsp;
+A few shells, of an Arctic or northern type, would be found in it here
+and there.&nbsp; Some would have lived near those later beaches, some
+in deeper water in the ancient ooze, wherever the iceberg had left it
+in peace long enough for sea-animals to colonise and breed in it.&nbsp;
+But the general appearance of the dried sea-bottom would be a dreary
+and lifeless waste of sands, gravels, loose boulders, and boulder-bearing
+clays; and wherever a boss of bare rock still stood up, it would be
+found ground down, and probably polished and scored by the ponderous
+icebergs which had lumbered over it in their passage out to sea.</p>
+<p>In a word, it would look exactly as vast tracts of the English, Scotch,
+and Irish lowlands must have looked before returning vegetation coated
+their dreary sands and clays with a layer of brown vegetable soil.</p>
+<p>Thus, and I believe thus only, can we explain the facts connected
+with these boulder pebbles.&nbsp; No agent known on earth can have stuck
+them in the clay, save ice, which is known to do so still elsewhere.</p>
+<p>No known agent can have scratched them as they are scratched, save
+ice, which is known to do so still elsewhere.</p>
+<p>No known agent&mdash;certainly not, in my opinion, the existing rivers&mdash;can
+have accumulated the vast beds of boulders which lie along the course
+of certain northern rivers; notably along the Dee about Aboyne&mdash;save
+ice bearing them slowly down from the distant summits of the Grampians.</p>
+<p>No known agent, save ice, can have produced those rounded, and polished,
+and scored, and fluted <i>rochers moutonn&eacute;s</i> &ldquo;sheep-backed
+rocks&rdquo;&mdash;so common in the Lake district; so common, too, in
+Snowdon, especially between the two lakes of Llanberis; common in Kerry;
+to be seen anywhere, as far as I have ascertained, around the Scotch
+Highlands, where the turf is cleared away from an unweathered surface
+of the rock, in the direction in which a glacier would have pressed
+against it had one been there.&nbsp; Where these polishings and scorings
+are found in narrow glens, it is, no doubt, an open question whether
+some of them may not be the work of water.&nbsp; But nothing but the
+action of ice can have produced what I have seen in land-locked and
+quiet fords in Kerry&mdash;ice-flutings in polished rocks below high-water
+mark, so large that I could lie down in one of them.&nbsp; Nothing but
+the action of ice could produce what may be seen in any of our mountains&mdash;whole
+sheets of rock ground down into rounded flats, irrespective of the lie
+of the beds, not in valleys, but on the brows and summits of mountains,
+often ending abruptly at the edge of some sudden cliff, where the true
+work of water, in the shape of rain and frost, is actually destroying
+the previous work of ice, and fulfilling the rule laid down (I think
+by Professor Geikie in his delightful book on Scotch scenery as influenced
+by its geology), that ice planes down into flats, while water saws out
+into crags and gullies; and that the rain and frost are even now restoring
+Scotch scenery to something of that ruggedness and picturesqueness which
+it must have lost when it lay, like Greenland, under the indiscriminating
+grinding of a heavy sheet of ice.</p>
+<p>Lastly; no known agent, save ice, will explain those perched boulders,
+composed of ancient hard rocks, which may be seen in so many parts of
+these islands and of the Continent.&nbsp; No water power could have
+lifted those stones, and tossed them up high and dry on mountain ridges
+and promontories, upon rocks of a totally different kind.&nbsp; Some
+of my readers surely recollect Wordsworth&rsquo;s noble lines about
+these mysterious wanderers, of which he had seen many a one about his
+native hills:</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>As a huge stone is sometimes seen to lie<br />Couched on the bald
+top of an eminence,<br />Wonder to all who do the same espy<br />By
+what means it could thither come, and whence;<br />So that it seems
+a thing endued with sense:<br />Like a sea-beast crawled forth, that
+on a shelf<br />Of rock or sand reposeth, there to sun itself.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Yes; but the next time you see such a stone, believe that the wonder
+has been solved, and found to be, like most wonders in Nature, more
+wonderful than we guessed it to be.&nbsp; It is not a sea-beast which
+has crawled forth, but an ice-beast which has been left behind; lifted
+up thither by the ice, as surely as the famous Pierre-&agrave;-bot,
+forty feet in diameter, and hundreds of boulders more, almost as large
+as cottages, have been carried by ice from the distant Alps right across
+the lake of Neufch&acirc;tel, and stranded on the slopes of the Jura,
+nine hundred feet above the lake. <a name="citation4"></a><a href="#footnote4">{4}</a></p>
+<p>Thus, I think, we have accounted for facts enough to make it probable
+that Britain was once covered partly by an ice-sheet, as Greenland is
+now, and partly, perhaps, by an icy sea.&nbsp; But, to make assurance
+more sure, let us look for new facts, and try whether our ice-dream
+will account for them also.&nbsp; Let us investigate our case as a good
+medical man does, by &ldquo;verifying his first induction.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He says: At the first glance, I can see symptoms <i>a</i>, <i>b</i>,
+<i>c</i>.&nbsp; It is therefore probable that my patient has got complaint
+A.&nbsp; But if he has he ought to have symptom <i>d</i> also.&nbsp;
+If I find that, my guess will be yet more probable.&nbsp; He ought also
+to have symptom <i>e</i>, and so forth; and as I find successively each
+of these symptoms which are proper to A, my first guess will become
+more and more probable, till it reaches practical certainty.</p>
+<p>Now let us do the same, and say&mdash;If this strange dream be true,
+and the lowlands of the North were once under an icy sea, ought we not
+to find sea-shells in their sands and clays?&nbsp; Not abundantly, of
+course.&nbsp; We can understand that the sea-animals would be too rapidly
+covered up in mud, and too much disturbed by icebergs and boulders,
+to be very abundant.&nbsp; But still, some should surely be found here
+and there.</p>
+<p>Doubtless; and if my northern-town readers will search the boulder-clay
+pits near them, they will most probably find a few shells, if not in
+the clay itself, yet in sand-beds mixed with them, and probably underlying
+them.&nbsp; And this is a notable fact, that the more species of shells
+they find, the more they will find&mdash;if they work out their names
+from any good book of conchology&mdash;of a northern type; of shells
+which notoriously, at this day, inhabit the colder seas.</p>
+<p>It is impossible for me here to enter at length on a subject on which
+a whole literature has been already written.&nbsp; Those who wish to
+study it may find all that they need know, and more, in Lyell&rsquo;s
+&ldquo;Student&rsquo;s Elements of Geology,&rdquo; and in chapter xii.
+of his &ldquo;Antiquity of Man.&rdquo;&nbsp; They will find that if
+the evidence of scientific conchologists be worth anything, the period
+can be pointed out in the strata, though not of course in time, at which
+these seas began to grow colder, and southern and Mediterranean shells
+to disappear, their places being taken by shells of a temperate, and
+at last of an Arctic climate; which last have since retreated either
+toward their native North, or into cold water at great depths.&nbsp;
+From Essex across to Wales, from Wales to the &aelig;stuary of the Clyde,
+this fact has been verified again and again.&nbsp; And in the search
+for these shells, a fresh fact, and a most startling one, was discovered.&nbsp;
+They are to be found not only in the clay of the lowlands, but at considerable
+heights up the hills, showing that, at some time or other, these hills
+have been submerged beneath the sea.</p>
+<p>Let me give one example, which any tourist into Wales may see for
+himself.&nbsp; Moel Tryfaen is a mountain over Carnarvon.&nbsp; Now
+perched on the side of that mountain, fourteen hundred feet above the
+present sea-level, is an ancient sea-beach, five-and-thirty feet thick,
+lying on great ice-scratched boulders, which again lie on the mountain
+slates.&nbsp; It was discovered by the late Mr. Trimmer, now, alas!
+lost to Geology.&nbsp; Out of that beach fifty-seven different species
+of shells have been taken; eleven of them are now exclusively Arctic,
+and not found in our seas; four of them are still common to the Arctic
+seas and to our own; and almost all the rest are northern shells.</p>
+<p>Fourteen hundred feet above the present sea: and that, it must be
+understood, is not the greatest height at which such shells may be found
+hereafter.&nbsp; For, according to Professor Ramsay, drift of the same
+kind as that on Moel Tryfaen is found at a height of two thousand three
+hundred feet.</p>
+<p>Now I ask my readers to use their common sense over this astounding
+fact&mdash;which, after all, is only one among hundreds; to let (as
+Mr. Matthew Arnold would well say) their &ldquo;thought play freely&rdquo;
+about it; and consider for themselves what those shells must mean.&nbsp;
+I say not may, but must, unless we are to believe in a &ldquo;Deus quidam
+deceptor,&rdquo; in a God who puts shells upon mountain-sides only to
+befool honest human beings, and gives men intellects which are worthless
+for even the simplest work.&nbsp; Those shells must mean that that mountain,
+and therefore the mountains round it, must have been once fourteen hundred
+feet at least lower than they are now.&nbsp; That the sea in which they
+were sunk was far colder than now.&nbsp; That icebergs brought and dropped
+boulders round their flanks.&nbsp; That upon those boulders a sea-beach
+formed, and that dead shells were beaten into it from a sea-bottom close
+by.&nbsp; That, and no less, Moel Tryfaen must mean.</p>
+<p>But it must mean, also, a length of time which has been well called
+&ldquo;appalling.&rdquo;&nbsp; A length of time sufficient to let the
+mountain sink into the sea.&nbsp; Then length of time enough to enable
+those Arctic shells to crawl down from the northward, settle, and propagate
+themselves generation after generation; then length of time enough to
+uplift their dead remains, and the beach, and the boulders, and all
+Snowdonia, fourteen hundred feet into the air.&nbsp; And if anyone should
+object that the last upheaval may have been effected suddenly by a few
+tremendous earthquakes, we must answer&mdash;We have no proof of it.&nbsp;
+Earthquakes upheave lands now only by slight and intermittent upward
+pulses; nay, some lands we know to rise without any earthquake pulses,
+but by simple, slow, upward swelling of a few feet in a century; and
+we have no reason, and therefore no right, to suppose that Snowdonia
+was upheaved by any means or at any rate which we do not witness now;
+and therefore we are bound to allow, not only that there was a past
+&ldquo;age of ice,&rdquo; but that that age was one of altogether enormous
+duration.</p>
+<p>But meanwhile some of you, I presume, will be ready to cry&mdash;Stop!&nbsp;
+It may be our own weakness; but you are really going on too fast and
+too far for our small imaginations.&nbsp; Have you not played with us,
+as well as argued with us, till you have inveigled us step by step into
+a conclusion which we cannot and will not believe?&nbsp; That all this
+land should have been sunk beneath an icy sea?&nbsp; That Britain should
+have been as Greenland is now?&nbsp; We can&rsquo;t believe it, and
+we won&rsquo;t.</p>
+<p>If you say so, like stout common-sense Britons, who have a wholesome
+dread of being taken in with fine words and wild speculations, I assure
+you I shall not laugh at you even in private.&nbsp; On the contrary,
+I shall say&mdash;what I am sure every scientific man will say&mdash;So
+much the better.&nbsp; That is the sort of audience which we want, if
+we are teaching natural science.&nbsp; We do not want haste, enthusiasm,
+<i>gobe-moucherie</i>, as the French call it, which is agape to snap
+up any new and vast fancy, just because it is new and vast.&nbsp; We
+want our readers to be slow, suspicious, conservative, ready to &ldquo;gib,&rdquo;
+as we say of a horse, and refuse the collar up a steep place, saying&mdash;I
+must stop and think.&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t like the look of the path ahead
+of me.&nbsp; It seems an ugly place to get up.&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t know
+this road, and I shall not hurry over it.&nbsp; I must go back a few
+steps, and make sure.&nbsp; I must see whether it is the right road;
+whether there are not other roads, a dozen of them perhaps, which would
+do as well and better than this.</p>
+<p>This is the temper which finds out truth, slowly, but once and for
+all; and I shall be glad, not sorry, to see it in my readers.</p>
+<p>And I am bound to say that it has been by that temper that this theory
+has been worked out, and the existence of this past age of ice, or glacial
+epoch, has been discovered, through many mistakes, many corrections,
+and many changes of opinion about details, for nearly forty years of
+hard work, by many men, in many lands.</p>
+<p>As a very humble student of this subject, I may say that I have been
+looking these facts in the face earnestly enough for more than twenty
+years, and that I am about as certain that they can only be explained
+by ice, as I am that my having got home by rail can only be explained
+by steam.</p>
+<p>But I think I know what startles you.&nbsp; It is the being asked
+to believe in such an enormous change in climate, and in the height
+of the land above the sea.&nbsp; Well&mdash;it is very astonishing,
+appalling&mdash;all but incredible, if we had not the facts to prove
+it.&nbsp; But of the facts there can be no doubt.&nbsp; There can be
+no doubt that the climate of this northern hemisphere has changed enormously
+more than once.&nbsp; There can be no doubt that the distribution of
+land and water, the shape and size of its continents and seas, have
+changed again and again.&nbsp; There can be no doubt that, for instance,
+long before the age of ice, the whole North of Europe was much warmer
+than it is now.</p>
+<p>Take Greenland, for instance.&nbsp; Disco Island lies in Baffin&rsquo;s
+Bay, off the west coast of Greenland, in latitude 70&deg;, far within
+the Arctic circle.&nbsp; Now there certain strata of rock, older than
+the ice, have not been destroyed by the grinding of the ice-cap; and
+they are full of fossil plants.&nbsp; But of what kind of plants?&nbsp;
+Of the same families as now grow in the warmer parts of the United States.&nbsp;
+Even a tulip-tree has been found among them.&nbsp; Now how is this to
+be explained?</p>
+<p>Either we must say that the climate of Greenland was then so much
+warmer than now, that it had summers probably as hot as those of New
+York; or we must say that these leaves and stems were floated thither
+from the United States.&nbsp; But if we say the latter, we must allow
+a change in the shape of the land which is enormous.&nbsp; For nothing
+now can float northward from the United States into Baffin&rsquo;s Bay.&nbsp;
+The polar current sets <i>out</i> of Baffin&rsquo;s Bay southward, bringing
+icebergs down, not leaves up, through Davis&rsquo;s Straits.&nbsp; And
+in any case we must allow that the hills of Disco Island were then the
+bottom of a sea: or how would the leaves have been deposited in them
+at all?</p>
+<p>So much for the change of climate and land which can be proved to
+have gone on in Greenland.&nbsp; It has become colder.&nbsp; Why should
+it not some day become warmer again?</p>
+<p>Now for England.&nbsp; It can be proved, as far as common sense can
+prove anything, that England was, before the age of ice, much warmer
+than it is now, and grew gradually cooler and cooler, just as, while
+the age of ice was dying out, it grew warmer again.</p>
+<p>Now what proof is there of that?</p>
+<p>This.&nbsp; Underneath London&mdash;as, I dare say, many of you know&mdash;there
+lies four or five hundred feet of clay.&nbsp; But not ice-clay.&nbsp;
+Anything but that, as you will see.&nbsp; It belongs to a formation
+late (geologically speaking), but somewhat older than those Disco Island
+beds.</p>
+<p>And what sort of fossils do we find in it?</p>
+<p>In the first place, the shells, which are abundant, are tropical&mdash;Nautili,
+Cones, and such like.&nbsp; And more, fruits and seeds are found in
+it, especially at the Isle of Sheppey.&nbsp; And what are they?&nbsp;
+Fruits of Nipa palms, a form only found now at river-mouths in Eastern
+India and the Indian islands; Anona-seeds; gourd-seeds; Acacia fruits&mdash;all
+tropical again; and Proteaceous plants too&mdash;of an Australian type.&nbsp;
+Surely your common sense would hint to you, that this London clay must
+be mud laid down off the mouth of a tropical river.&nbsp; But your common
+sense would be all but certain of that, when you found, as you would
+find, the teeth and bones of crocodiles and turtles, who come to land,
+remember, to lay their eggs; the bones, too, of large mammals, allied
+to the tapir of India and South America, and the water-hog of the Cape.&nbsp;
+If all this does not mean that there was once a tropic climate and a
+tropic river running into some sea or other where London now stands,
+I must give up common sense and reason as deceitful and useless faculties;
+and believe nothing, not even the evidence of my own senses.</p>
+<p>And now, have I, or have I not, fulfilled the promise which I made&mdash;rashly,
+I dare say some of you thought&mdash;in my first paper?&nbsp; Have I,
+or have I not, made you prove to yourself, by your own common sense,
+that the lowlands of Britain were underneath the sea in the days in
+which these pebbles and boulders were laid down over your plains?&nbsp;
+Nay, have we not proved more?&nbsp; Have we not found that that old
+sea was an icy sea?&nbsp; Have we not wandered on, step by step, into
+a whole true fairyland of wonders? to a time when all England, Scotland,
+and Ireland were as Greenland is now? when mud streams have rushed down
+from under glaciers on to a cold sea-bottom, when &ldquo;ice, mast high,
+came floating by, as green as emerald?&rdquo; when Snowdon was sunk
+for at least fourteen hundred feet of its height? when (as I could prove
+to you, had I time) the peaks of the highest Cumberland and Scotch mountains
+alone stood out, as islets in a frozen sea?</p>
+<p>We want to get an answer to one strange question, and we have found
+a group of questions stranger still, and got them answered too.&nbsp;
+But so it is always in science.&nbsp; We know not what we shall discover.&nbsp;
+But this, at least, we know, that it will be far more wonderful than
+we had dreamed.&nbsp; The scientific explorer is always like Saul of
+old, who set out simply to find his father&rsquo;s asses, and found
+them&mdash;and a kingdom besides.</p>
+<p>I should have liked to have told you more about this bygone age of
+ice.&nbsp; I should have liked to say something to you on the curious
+question&mdash;which is still an open one&mdash;whether there were not
+two ages of ice; whether the climate here did not, after perhaps thousands
+of years of Arctic cold, soften somewhat for a while&mdash;a few thousand
+years, perhaps&mdash;and then harden again into a second age of ice,
+somewhat less severe, probably, than the first.&nbsp; I should have
+liked to have hinted at the probable causes of this change&mdash;indeed,
+of the age of ice altogether&mdash;whether it was caused by a change
+in the distribution of land and water, or by change in the height and
+size of these islands, which made them large enough, and high enough,
+to carry a sheet of eternal snow inland; or whether, finally, the age
+of ice was caused by an actual change in the position of the whole planet
+with regard to its orbit round the sun&mdash;shifting at once the poles
+and the tropics; a deep question that latter, on which astronomers,
+whose business it is, are still at work, and on which, ere young folk
+are old, they will have discovered, I expect, some startling facts.&nbsp;
+On that last question, I, being no astronomer, cannot speak.&nbsp; But
+I should have liked to have said somewhat on matters on which I have
+knowledge enough, at least, to teach you how much there is to be learnt.&nbsp;
+I should have liked to tell the student of sea-animals&mdash;how the
+ice-age helps to explain, and is again explained by, the remarkable
+discoveries which Dr. Carpenter and Mr. Wyville Thompson have just made,
+in the deep-sea dredgings in the North Atlantic.&nbsp; I should have
+liked to tell the botanist somewhat of the pro-glacial flora&mdash;the
+plants which lived here before the ice, and lasted, some of them at
+least, through all those ages of fearful cold, and linger still on the
+summits of Snowdon, and the highest peaks of Cumberland and Scotland.&nbsp;
+I should have liked to have told the lovers of zoology about the animals
+which lived before the ice&mdash;of the mammoth, or woolly elephant;
+the woolly rhinoceros, the cave lion and bear, the reindeer, the musk
+oxen, the lemmings and the marmots which inhabited Britain till the
+ice drove them out southward, even into the South of France; and how
+as the ice retreated, and the climate became tolerable once more, some
+of them&mdash;the mammoth and rhinoceros, the bison, the lion, and many
+another mighty beast reoccupied our lowlands, at a time when the hippopotamus,
+at least in summer, ranged freely from Africa and Spain across what
+was then dry land between France and England, and fed by the side of
+animals which have long since retreated to Norway and to Canada.&nbsp;
+I should have liked to tell the arch&aelig;ologist of the human beings&mdash;probably
+from their weapons and their habits&mdash;of the same race as the present
+Laplanders, who passed northward as the ice went back, following the
+wild reindeer herds from the South of France into our islands, which
+were no islands then, to be in their turn driven northward by stronger
+races from the east and south.&nbsp; But space presses, and I fear that
+I have written too much already.</p>
+<p>At least, I have turned over for you a few grand and strange pages
+in the book of nature, and taught you, I hope, a key by which to decipher
+their hieroglyphics.&nbsp; At least, I have, I trust, taught you to
+look, as I do, with something of interest, even of awe, upon the pebbles
+in the street.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>III.&nbsp; THE STONES IN THE WALL</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>This is a large subject.&nbsp; For in the different towns of these
+islands, the walls are built of stones of almost every age, from the
+earliest to the latest; and the town-geologist may find a quite different
+problem to solve in the nearest wall, on moving from one town to another
+twenty miles off.&nbsp; All I can do, therefore, is to take one set
+of towns, in the walls of which one sort of stones is commonly found,
+and talk of them; taking care, of course, to choose a stone which is
+widely distributed.&nbsp; And such, I think, we can find in the so-called
+New Red sandstone, which, with its attendant marls, covers a vast tract&mdash;and
+that a rich and busy one&mdash;of England.&nbsp; From Hartlepool and
+the mouth of the Tees, down through Yorkshire and Nottinghamshire; over
+the manufacturing districts of central England; down the valley of the
+Severn; past Bristol and the Somersetshire flats to Torquay in South
+Devon; up north-westward through Shropshire and Cheshire; past Liverpool
+and northward through Lancashire; reappearing again, north of the Lake
+mountains, about Carlisle and the Scotch side of the Solway Frith, stretches
+the New Red sandstone plain, from under which everywhere the coal-bearing
+rocks rise as from a sea.&nbsp; It contains, in many places, excellent
+quarries of building-stone; the most famous of which, perhaps, are the
+well-known Runcorn quarries, near Liverpool, from which the old Romans
+brought the material for the walls and temples of ancient Chester, and
+from which the stone for the restoration of Chester Cathedral is being
+taken at this day.&nbsp; In some quarters, especially in the north-west
+of England, its soil is poor, because it is masked by that very boulder-clay
+of which I spoke in my last paper.&nbsp; But its rich red marls, wherever
+they come to the surface, are one of God&rsquo;s most precious gifts
+to this favoured land.&nbsp; On them, one finds oneself at once in a
+garden; amid the noblest of timber, wheat, roots, grass which is green
+through the driest summers, and, in the western counties, cider-orchards
+laden with red and golden fruit.&nbsp; I know, throughout northern Europe,
+no such charming scenery, for quiet beauty and solid wealth, as that
+of the New Red marls; and if I wished to show a foreigner what England
+was, I should take him along them, from Yorkshire to South Devon, and
+say&mdash;There.&nbsp; Is not that a country worth living for,&mdash;and
+worth dying for if need be?</p>
+<p>Another reason which I have for dealing with the New Red sandstone
+is this&mdash;that (as I said just now) over great tracts of England,
+especially about the manufacturing districts, the town-geologist will
+find it covered immediately by the boulder clay.</p>
+<p>The townsman, finding this, would have a fair right to suppose that
+the clay was laid down immediately, or at least soon after, the sandstones
+or marls on which it lies; that as soon as the one had settled at the
+bottom of some old sea, the other settled on the top of it, in the same
+sea.</p>
+<p>A fair and reasonable guess, which would in many cases, indeed in
+most, be quite true.&nbsp; But in this case it would be a mistake.&nbsp;
+The sandstone and marls are immensely older than the boulder-clay.&nbsp;
+They are, humanly speaking, some four or five worlds older.</p>
+<p>What do I mean?&nbsp; This&mdash;that between the time when the one,
+and the time when the other, was made, the British Islands, and probably
+the whole continent of Europe, have changed four or five times; in shape;
+in height above the sea, or depth below it; in climate; in the kinds
+of plants and animals which have dwelt on them, or on their sea-bottoms.&nbsp;
+And surely it is not too strong a metaphor, to call such changes a change
+from an old world to a new one.</p>
+<p>Mind.&nbsp; I do not say that these changes were sudden or violent.&nbsp;
+It is far more probable that they are only part and parcel of that vast
+but slow change which is going on everywhere over our whole globe.&nbsp;
+I think that will appear probable in the course of this paper.&nbsp;
+But that these changes have taken place, is my main thesis.&nbsp; The
+fact I assert; and I am bound to try and prove it.&nbsp; And in trying
+to do so, I shall no longer treat my readers, as I did in the first
+two papers, like children.&nbsp; I shall take for granted that they
+now understand something of the method by which geological problems
+are worked out; and can trust it, and me; and shall state boldly the
+conclusions of geologists, only giving proof where proof is specially
+needed.</p>
+<p>Now you must understand that in England there are two great divisions
+of these New Red sandstones, &ldquo;Trias,&rdquo; as geologists call
+them.&nbsp; An upper, called in Germany Keuper, which consists, atop,
+of the rich red marl, below them, of sandstones, and of those vast deposits
+of rock-salt, which have been long worked, and worked to such good purpose,
+that a vast subsidence of land has just taken place near Nantwich in
+Cheshire; and serious fears are entertained lest the town itself may
+subside, to fill up the caverns below, from whence the salt has been
+quarried.&nbsp; Underneath these beds again are those which carry the
+building-stone of Runcorn.&nbsp; Now these beds altogether, in Cheshire,
+at least, are about 3,400 feet thick; and were not laid down in a year,
+or in a century either.</p>
+<p>Below them lies a thousand feet of sandstones, known in Germany by
+the name of &ldquo;Bunter,&rdquo; from its mottled and spotted appearance.&nbsp;
+What lies under them again, does not concern us just now.</p>
+<p>I said that the geologists called these beds the Trias; that is,
+the triple group.&nbsp; But as yet we have heard of only two parts of
+it.&nbsp; Where is the third?</p>
+<p>Not here, but in Germany.&nbsp; There, between the Keuper above and
+the Bunter below, lies a great series of limestone beds, which, from
+the abundance of fossils which they contain, go by the name of Muschelkalk.&nbsp;
+A long epoch must therefore have intervened between the laying down
+of the Bunter and of the Keuper.&nbsp; And we have a trace of that long
+epoch, even in England.&nbsp; The Keuper lies, certainly, immediately
+on the Bunter; but not always &ldquo;conformably&rdquo; on it.&nbsp;
+That is, the beds are not exactly parallel.&nbsp; The Bunter had been
+slightly tilted, and slightly waterworn, before the Keuper was laid
+on it.</p>
+<p>It is reasonable, therefore, to suppose, that the Bunter in England
+was dry land, and therefore safe from fresh deposit, through ages during
+which it was deep enough beneath the sea in Germany, to have the Muschelkalk
+laid down on it.&nbsp; Here again, then, as everywhere, we have evidence
+of time&mdash;time, not only beyond all counting, but beyond all imagining.</p>
+<p>And now, perhaps, the reader will ask&mdash;If I am to believe that
+all new land is made out of old land, and that all rocks and soils are
+derived from the wear and tear of still older rocks, off what land came
+this enormous heap of sands more than 5,000 feet thick in places, stretching
+across England and into Germany?</p>
+<p>It is difficult to answer.&nbsp; The shape and distribution of land
+in those days were so different from what they are now, that the rocks
+which furnished a great deal of our sandstone may be now, for aught
+I know, a mile beneath the sea.</p>
+<p>But over the land which still stands out of the sea near us there
+has been wear and tear enough to account for any quantity of sand deposit.&nbsp;
+As a single instance&mdash;It is a provable and proven fact&mdash;as
+you may see from Mr. Ramsay&rsquo;s survey of North Wales&mdash;that
+over a large tract to the south of Snowdon, between Port Madoc and Barmouth,
+there has been ground off and carried away a mass of solid rock 20,000
+feet thick; thick enough, in fact, if it were there still, to make a
+range of mountains as high as the Andes.&nbsp; It is a provable and
+proven fact that vast tracts of the centre of poor old Ireland were
+once covered with coal-measures, which have been scraped off in likewise,
+deprived of inestimable mineral wealth.&nbsp; The destruction of rocks&mdash;&ldquo;denudation&rdquo;
+as it is called&mdash;in the district round Malvern, is, I am told,
+provably enormous.&nbsp; Indeed, it is so over all Wales, North England,
+and West and North Scotland.&nbsp; So there is enough of rubbish to
+be accounted for to make our New Red sands.&nbsp; The round pebbles
+in it being, I believe, pieces of Old Red sandstone, may have come from
+the great Old Red sandstone region of South East Wales and Herefordshire.&nbsp;
+Some of the rubbish, too, may have come from what is now the Isle of
+Anglesey.</p>
+<p>For you find in the beds, from the top to the bottom (at least in
+Cheshire), particles of mica.&nbsp; Now this mica could not have been
+formed in the sand.&nbsp; It is a definite crystalline mineral, whose
+composition is well known.&nbsp; It is only found in rocks which have
+been subjected to immense pressure, and probably to heat.&nbsp; The
+granites and mica-slates of Anglesey are full of it; and from Anglesey&mdash;as
+likely as from anywhere else&mdash;these thin scales of mica came.&nbsp;
+And that is about all that I can say on the matter.&nbsp; But it is
+certain that most of these sands were deposited in a very shallow water,
+and very near to land.&nbsp; Sand and pebbles, as I said in my first
+paper, could not be carried far out to sea; and some of the beds of
+the Bunter are full of rounded pebbles.&nbsp; Nay, it is certain that
+their surface was often out of water.&nbsp; Of that you may see very
+pretty proofs.&nbsp; You find these sands ripple-marked, as you do shore-sands
+now.&nbsp; You find cracks where the marl mud has dried in the sun:
+and, more, you find the little pits made by rain.&nbsp; Of that I have
+no doubt.&nbsp; I have seen specimens, in which you could not only see
+at a glance that the marks had been made by the large drops of a shower,
+but see also from what direction the shower had come.&nbsp; These delicate
+markings must have been covered up immediately with a fresh layer of
+mud or sand.&nbsp; How long since?&nbsp; How long since that flag had
+seen the light of the sun, when it saw it once again, restored to the
+upper air by the pick of the quarryman?&nbsp; Who can answer that?&nbsp;
+Not I.</p>
+<p>Fossils are very rare in these sands; it is not easy to say why.&nbsp;
+It may be that the red oxide of iron in them has destroyed them.&nbsp;
+Few or none are ever found in beds in which it abounds.&nbsp; It is
+curious, too, that the Keuper, which is all but barren of fossils in
+England, is full of them in W&uuml;rtemberg, reptiles, fish, and remains
+of plants being common.&nbsp; But what will interest the reader are
+the footprints of a strange beast, found alike in England and in Germany&mdash;the
+Cheirotherium, as it was first named, from its hand-like feet; the Labyrinthodon,
+as it is now named, from the extraordinary structure of its teeth.&nbsp;
+There is little doubt now, among anatomists, that the bones and teeth
+of the so-called Labyrinthodon belong to the animal which made the footprints.&nbsp;
+If so, the creature must have been a right loathly monster.&nbsp; Some
+think him to have been akin to lizards; but the usual opinion is that
+he was a cousin of frogs and toads.&nbsp; Looking at his hands and other
+remains, one pictures him to oneself as a short, squat brute, as big
+as a fat hog, with a head very much the shape of a baboon, very large
+hands behind and small ones in front, waddling about on the tide flats
+of a sandy sea, and dragging after him, seemingly, a short tail, which
+has left its mark on the sand.&nbsp; What his odour was, whether he
+was smooth or warty, what he ate, and in general how he got his living,
+we know not.&nbsp; But there must have been something there for him
+to eat; and I dare say that he was about as happy and about as intellectual
+as the toad is now.&nbsp; Remember always that there is nothing alive
+now exactly like him, or, indeed, like any animal found in these sandstones.&nbsp;
+The whole animal world of this planet has changed entirely more than
+once since the Labyrinthodon waddled over the Cheshire flats.&nbsp;
+A lizard, for instance, which has been found in the Keuper, had a skull
+like a bird&rsquo;s, and no teeth&mdash;a type which is now quite extinct.&nbsp;
+But there is a more remarkable animal of which I must say a few words,
+and one which to scientific men is most interesting and significant.</p>
+<p>Both near Warwick, and near Elgin in Scotland, in Central India,
+and in South Africa, fossil remains are found of a family of lizards
+utterly unlike anything now living save one, and that one is crawling
+about, plentifully I believe&mdash;of all places in the world&mdash;in
+New Zealand.&nbsp; How it got there; how so strange a type of creature
+should have died out over the rest of the world, and yet have lasted
+on in that remote island for long ages, ever since the days of the New
+Red sandstone, is one of those questions&mdash;quite awful questions
+I consider them&mdash;with which I will not puzzle my readers.&nbsp;
+I only mention it to show them what serious questions the scientific
+man has to face, and to answer, if he can.&nbsp; Only the next time
+they go to the Zoological Gardens in London, let them go to the reptile-house,
+and ask the very clever and courteous attendant to show them the Sphenodons,
+or Hatterias, as he will probably call them&mdash;and then look, I hope
+with kindly interest, at the oldest Conservatives they ever saw, or
+are like to see; gentlemen of most ancient pedigree, who have remained
+all but unchanged, while the whole surface of the globe has changed
+around them more than once or twice.</p>
+<p>And now, of course, my readers will expect to hear something of the
+deposits of rock-salt, for which Cheshire and its red rocks are famous.&nbsp;
+I have never seen them, and can only say that the salt does not, it
+is said by geologists, lie in the sandstone, but at the bottom of the
+red marl which caps the sandstone.&nbsp; It was formed most probably
+by the gradual drying up of lagoons, such as are depositing salt, it
+is said now, both in the Gulf of Tadjara, on the Abyssinian frontier
+opposite Aden, and in the Runn of Cutch, near the Delta of the Indus.&nbsp;
+If this be so, then these New Red sandstones may be the remains of a
+whole Sahara&mdash;a sheet of sandy and all but lifeless deserts, reaching
+from the west of England into Germany, and rising slowly out of the
+sea; to sink, as we shall find, beneath the sea again.</p>
+<p>And now, as to the vast period of time&mdash;the four or five worlds,
+as I called it&mdash;which elapsed between the laying down of the New
+Red sandstones and the laying down of the boulder-clays.</p>
+<p>I think this fact&mdash;for fact it is&mdash;may be better proved
+by taking readers an imaginary railway journey to London from any spot
+in the manufacturing districts of central England&mdash;begging them,
+meanwhile, to keep their eyes open on the way.</p>
+<p>And here I must say that I wish folks in general would keep their
+eyes a little more open when they travel by rail.&nbsp; When I see young
+people rolling along in a luxurious carriage, their eyes and their brains
+absorbed probably in a trashy shilling novel, and never lifted up to
+look out of the window, unconscious of all that they are passing&mdash;of
+the reverend antiquities, the admirable agriculture, the rich and peaceful
+scenery, the like of which no country upon earth can show; unconscious,
+too, of how much they might learn of botany and zoology, by simply watching
+the flowers along the railway banks and the sections in the cuttings:
+then it grieves me to see what little use people make of the eyes and
+of the understanding which God has given them.&nbsp; They complain of
+a dull journey: but it is not the journey which is dull; it is they
+who are dull.&nbsp; Eyes have they, and see not; ears have they, and
+hear not; mere dolls in smart clothes, too many of them, like the idols
+of the heathen.</p>
+<p>But my readers, I trust, are of a better mind.&nbsp; So the next
+time they find themselves running up southward to London&mdash;or the
+reverse way&mdash;let them keep their eyes open, and verify, with the
+help of a geological map, the sketch which is given in the following
+pages.</p>
+<p>Of the &ldquo;Black Countries&rdquo;&mdash;the actual coal districts
+I shall speak hereafter.&nbsp; They are in England either shores or
+islands yet undestroyed, which stand out of the great sea of New Red
+sandstone, and often carry along their edges layers of far younger rocks,
+called now Permian, from the ancient kingdom of Permia, in Russia, where
+they cover a vast area.&nbsp; With them I will not confuse the reader
+just now, but will only ask him to keep his eye on the rolling plain
+of New Red sands and marls past, say, Birmingham and Warwick.&nbsp;
+After those places, these sands and marls dip to the south-east, and
+other rocks and soils appear above them, one after another, dipping
+likewise towards the south-east&mdash;that is, toward London.</p>
+<p>First appear thin layers of a very hard blue limestone, full of shells,
+and parted by layers of blue mud.&nbsp; That rock runs in a broad belt
+across England, from Whitby in Yorkshire, to Lyme in Dorsetshire, and
+is known as Lias.&nbsp; Famous it is, as some readers may know, for
+holding the bones of extinct monsters&mdash;Ichthyosaurs and Plesiosaurs,
+such as the unlearned may behold in the lake at the Crystal Palace.&nbsp;
+On this rock lie the rich cheese pastures, and the best tracts of the
+famous &ldquo;hunting shires&rdquo; of England.</p>
+<p>Lying on it, as we go south-eastward, appear alternate beds of sandy
+limestone, with vast depths of clay between them.&nbsp; These &ldquo;oolites,&rdquo;
+or freestones, furnish the famous Bath stone, the Oxford stone, and
+the Barnack stone of Northamptonshire, of which some of the finest cathedrals
+are built&mdash;a stone only surpassed, I believe, by the Caen stone,
+which comes from beds of the same age in Normandy.&nbsp; These freestones
+and clays abound in fossils, but of kinds, be it remembered, which differ
+more and more from those of the lias beneath, as the beds are higher
+in the series, and therefore nearer.&nbsp; There, too, are found principally
+the bones of that extraordinary flying lizard, the Pterodactyle, which
+had wings formed out of its fore-legs, on somewhat the same plan as
+those of a bat, but with one exception.&nbsp; In the bat, as any one
+may see, four fingers of the hand are lengthened to carry the wing,
+while the first alone is left free, as a thumb: but in the Pterodactyle,
+the outer or &ldquo;little&rdquo; finger alone is lengthened, and the
+other four fingers left free&mdash;one of those strange instances in
+nature of the same effect being produced in widely different plants
+and animals, and yet by slightly different means, on which a whole chapter
+of natural philosophy&mdash;say, rather, natural theology&mdash;will
+have to be written some day.</p>
+<p>But now consider what this Lias, and the Oolites and clays upon it
+mean.&nbsp; They mean that the New Red sandstone, after it had been
+dry land, or all but dry land (as is proved by the footprints of animals
+and the deposits of salt), was sunk again beneath the sea.&nbsp; Each
+deposit of limestone signifies a long period of time, during which that
+sea was pure enough to allow reefs of coral to grow, and shells to propagate,
+at the bottom.&nbsp; Each great band of clay signifies a long period,
+during which fine mud was brought down from some wasting land in the
+neighbourhood.&nbsp; And that land was not far distant is proved by
+the bones of the Pterodactyle, of Crocodiles, and of Marsupials; by
+the fact that the shells are of shallow-water or shore species; by the
+presence, mixed with them, of fragments of wood, impressions of plants,
+and even wing-shells of beetles; and lastly, if further proof was needed,
+by the fact that in the &ldquo;dirt-bed&rdquo; of the Isle of Portland
+and the neighbouring shores, stumps of trees allied to the modern sago-palms
+are found as they grew in the soil, which, with them, has been covered
+up in layers of freshwater shale and limestone.&nbsp; A tropic forest
+has plainly sunk beneath a lagoon; and that lagoon, again, beneath the
+sea.</p>
+<p>And how long did this period of slow sinking go on?&nbsp; Who can
+tell?&nbsp; The thickness of the Lias and Oolites together cannot be
+less than a thousand feet.&nbsp; Considering, then, the length of time
+required to lay down a thousand feet of strata, and considering the
+vast difference between the animals found in them, and the few found
+in the New Red sandstone, we have a right to call them another world,
+and that one which must have lasted for ages.</p>
+<p>After we pass Oxford, or the Vale of Aylesbury, we enter yet another
+world.&nbsp; We come to a bed of sand, under which the freestones and
+their adjoining clays dip to the south-east.&nbsp; This is called commonly
+the lower Greensand, though it is not green, but rich iron-red.&nbsp;
+Then succeeds a band of stiff blue clay, called the Gault, and then
+another bed of sand, the upper Greensand, which is more worthy of the
+name, for it does carry, in most places, a band of green or &ldquo;glauconite&rdquo;
+sand.&nbsp; But it and the upper layers of the lower Greensand also,
+are worth our attention; for we are all probably eating them from time
+to time in the form of bran.</p>
+<p>It had been long remarked that certain parts of these beds carried
+admirable wheatland; it had been remarked, too, that the finest hop-lands&mdash;those
+of Farnham, for instance, and Tunbridge&mdash;lay upon them: but that
+the fertile band was very narrow; that, as in the Surrey Moors, vast
+sheets of the lower Greensand were not worth cultivation.&nbsp; What
+caused the striking difference?</p>
+<p>My beloved friend and teacher, the late Dr. Henslow, when Professor
+of Botany at Cambridge, had brought to him by a farmer (so the story
+ran) a few fossils.&nbsp; He saw, being somewhat of a geologist and
+chemist, that they were not, as fossils usually are, carbonate of lime,
+but phosphate of lime&mdash;bone-earth.&nbsp; He said at once, as by
+an inspiration, &ldquo;You have found a treasure&mdash;not a gold-mine,
+indeed, but a food-mine.&nbsp; This is bone-earth, which we are at our
+wits&rsquo; end to get for our grain and pulse; which we are importing,
+as expensive bones, all the way from Buenos Ayres.&nbsp; Only find enough
+of them, and you will increase immensely the food supply of England,
+and perhaps make her independent of foreign phosphates in case of war.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>His advice was acted on; for the British farmer is by no means the
+stupid personage which townsfolk are too apt to fancy him.&nbsp; This
+bed of phosphates was found everywhere in the Greensand, underlying
+the Chalk.&nbsp; It may be traced from Dorsetshire through England to
+Cambridge, and thence, I believe, into Yorkshire.&nbsp; It may be traced
+again, I believe, all round the Weald of Kent and Sussex, from Hythe
+to Farnham&mdash;where it is peculiarly rich&mdash;and so to Eastbourne
+and Beachey Head; and it furnishes, in Cambridgeshire, the greater part
+of those so-called &ldquo;coprolites,&rdquo; which are used perpetually
+now for manure, being ground up, and then treated with sulphuric acid,
+till they become a &ldquo;soluble super-phosphate of lime.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>So much for the useless &ldquo;hobby,&rdquo; as some fancy it, of
+poking over old bones and stones, and learning a little of the composition
+of this earth on which God has placed us.</p>
+<p>How to explain the presence of this vast mass of animal matter, in
+one or two thin bands right across England, I know not.&nbsp; That the
+fossils have been rolled on a sea-beach is plain to those who look at
+them.&nbsp; But what caused so vast a destruction of animal life along
+that beach, must remain one of the buried secrets of the past.</p>
+<p>And now we are fast nearing another world, which is far younger than
+that coprolite bed, and has been formed under circumstances the most
+opposite to it.&nbsp; We are nearing, by whatever rail we approach London,
+the escarpment of the chalk downs.</p>
+<p>All readers, surely, know the white chalk, the special feature and
+the special pride of the south of England.&nbsp; All know its softly-rounded
+downs, its vast beech woods, its short and sweet turf, its snowy cliffs,
+which have given&mdash;so some say&mdash;to the whole island the name
+of Albion&mdash;the white land.&nbsp; But all do not, perhaps, know
+that till we get to the chalk no single plant or animal has been found
+which is exactly like any plant or animal now known to be living.&nbsp;
+The plants and animals grow, on the whole, more and more like our living
+forms as we rise in the series of beds.&nbsp; But only above the chalk
+(as far as we yet know) do we begin to find species identical with those
+living now.</p>
+<p>This in itself would prove a vast lapse of time.&nbsp; We shall have
+a further proof of that vast lapse when we examine the chalk itself.&nbsp;
+It is composed&mdash;of this there is now no doubt&mdash;almost entirely
+of the shells of minute animalcules; and animalcules (I use an unscientific
+word for the sake of unscientific readers) like these, and in some cases
+identical with them, are now forming a similar deposit of mud, at vast
+depths, over the greater part of the Atlantic sea-floor.&nbsp; This
+fact has been put out of doubt by recent deep-sea dredgings.&nbsp; A
+whole literature has been written on it of late.&nbsp; Any reader who
+wishes to know it, need only ask the first geologist he meets; and if
+he has the wholesome instinct of wonder in him, fill his imagination
+with true wonders, more grand and strange than he is like to find in
+any fairy tale.&nbsp; All I have to do with the matter here is, to say
+that, arguing from the known to the unknown, from the Atlantic deep-sea
+ooze which we do know about, to the chalk which we do not know about,
+the whole of the chalk must have been laid down at the bottom of a deep
+and still ocean, far out of the reach of winds, tides, and even currents,
+as a great part of the Atlantic sea-floor is at this day.</p>
+<p>Prodigious! says the reader.&nbsp; And so it is.&nbsp; Prodigious
+to think that that shallow Greensand shore, strewed with dead animals,
+should sink to the bottom of an ocean, perhaps a mile, perhaps some
+four miles deep.&nbsp; Prodigious the time during which it must have
+lain as a still ocean-floor.&nbsp; For so minute are the living atomies
+which form the ooze, that an inch, I should say, is as much as we can
+allow for their yearly deposit; and the chalk is at least a thousand
+feet thick.&nbsp; It may have taken, therefore, twelve thousand years
+to form the chalk alone.&nbsp; A rough guess, of course, but one as
+likely to be two or three times too little as two or three times too
+big.&nbsp; Such, or somewhat such, is the fact.&nbsp; It had long been
+suspected, and more than suspected; and the late discoveries of Dr.
+Carpenter and Mr. Wyville Thompson have surely placed it beyond doubt.</p>
+<p>Thus, surely, if we call the Oolitic beds one new world above the
+New Red sandstone, we must call the chalk a second new world in like
+wise.</p>
+<p>I will not trouble the reader here with the reasons why geologists
+connect the chalk with the greensands below it, by regular gradations,
+in spite of the enormous downward leap, from sea-shore to deep ocean,
+which the beds seem (but only seem) to have taken.&nbsp; The change&mdash;like
+all changes in geology&mdash;was probably gradual.&nbsp; Not by spasmodic
+leaps and starts, but slowly and stately, as befits a God of order,
+of patience, and of strength, have these great deeds been done.</p>
+<p>But we have not yet done with new worlds or new prodigies on our
+way to London, as any Londoner may ascertain for himself, if he will
+run out a few miles by rail, and look in any cutting or pit, where the
+surface of the chalk, and the beds which lie on it, are exposed.</p>
+<p>On the chalk lie&mdash;especially in the Blackheath and Woolwich
+district&mdash;sands and clays.&nbsp; And what do they tell us?</p>
+<p>Of another new world, in which the chalk has been lifted up again,
+to form gradually, doubtless, and at different points in succession,
+the shore of a sea.</p>
+<p>But what proof is there of this?</p>
+<p>The surface of the chalk is not flat and smooth, as it must have
+been when at the bottom of the sea.&nbsp; It is eaten out into holes
+and furrows, plainly by the gnawing of the waves; and on it lie, in
+many places, large rolled flints out of chalk which has been destroyed,
+beds of shore-shingle, beds of oysters lying as they grew, fresh or
+brackish water-shells standing as they lived, bits of lignite (fossil
+wood half turned to coal), and (as in Katesgrove pits at Reading) leaves
+of trees.&nbsp; Proof enough, one would say, that the chalk had been
+raised till part of it at least became dry land, and carried vegetation.</p>
+<p>And yet we have not done.&nbsp; There is another world to tell of
+yet.</p>
+<p>For these beds (known as the Woolwich and Reading beds) dip under
+that vast bed of London clay, four hundred and more feet thick, which
+(as I said in my last chapter) was certainly laid down by the estuary
+of some great tropic river, among palm-trees and Anonas, crocodiles
+and turtles.</p>
+<p>Is the reader&rsquo;s power of belief exhausted?</p>
+<p>If not: there are to be seen, capping almost every high land round
+London, the remains of a fifth world.&nbsp; Some of my readers may have
+been to Ascot races, or to Aldershot camp, and may recollect the table-land
+of the sandy moors, perfectly flat atop, dreary enough to those to whom
+they are not (as they have long been to me) a home and a work-field.&nbsp;
+Those sands are several hundred feet thick.&nbsp; They lie on the London
+clay.&nbsp; And they represent&mdash;the reader must take geologists&rsquo;
+word for it&mdash;a series of beds in some places thousands of feet
+thick, in the Isle of Wight, in the Paris basin, in the volcanic country
+of the Auvergne, in Switzerland, in Italy; a period during which the
+land must at first have swarmed with forms of tropic life, and then
+grown&mdash;but very gradually&mdash;more temperate, and then colder
+and colder still; till at last set in that age of ice, which spread
+the boulder pebbles over all rocks and soils indiscriminately, from
+the Lake mountains to within a few miles of London.</p>
+<p>For everywhere about those Ascot moors, the top of the sands has
+been ploughed by shore-ice in winter, as they lay a-wash in the shallow
+sea; and over them, in many places, is spread a thin sheet of ice gravel,
+more ancient, the best geologists think, than the boulder and the boulder-clay.</p>
+<p>If any of my readers ask how long the period was during which those
+sands of Ascot Heath and Aldershot have been laid down, I cannot tell.&nbsp;
+But this we can tell.&nbsp; It was long enough to see such changes in
+land and sea, that maps representing Europe during the greater part
+of that period (as far as we can guess at it) look no more like Europe
+than like America or the South Sea Islands.&nbsp; And this we can tell
+besides: that that period was long enough for the Swiss Alps to be lifted
+up at least 10,000 feet of their present height.&nbsp; And that was
+a work which&mdash;though God could, if He willed it, have done it in
+a single day&mdash;we have proof positive was not done in less than
+ages, beside which the mortal life of man is as the life of the gnat
+which dances in the sun.</p>
+<p>And all this, and more&mdash;as may be proved from the geology of
+foreign countries&mdash;happened between the date of the boulder-clay,
+and that of the New Red sandstone on which it rests.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>IV.&nbsp; THE COAL IN THE FIRE</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>My dear town-dwelling readers, let me tell you now something of a
+geological product well known, happily, to all dwellers in towns, and
+of late years, thanks to railroad extension, to most dwellers in country
+districts: I mean coal.</p>
+<p>Coal, as of course you know, is commonly said to be composed of vegetable
+matter, of the leaves and stems of ancient plants and trees&mdash;a
+startling statement, and one which I do not wish you to take entirely
+on trust.&nbsp; I shall therefore spend a few pages in showing you how
+this fact&mdash;for fact it is&mdash;was discovered.&nbsp; It is a very
+good example of reasoning from the known to the unknown.&nbsp; You will
+have a right to say at first starting, &ldquo;Coal is utterly different
+in look from leaves and stems.&nbsp; The only property which they seem
+to have in common is that they can both burn.&rdquo;&nbsp; True.&nbsp;
+But difference of mere look may be only owing to a transformation, or
+series of transformations.&nbsp; There are plenty in nature quite as
+great, and greater.&nbsp; What can be more different in look, for instance,
+than a green field of wheat and a basket of loaves at the baker&rsquo;s?&nbsp;
+And yet there is, I trust, no doubt whatsoever that the bread has been
+once green wheat, and that the green wheat has been transformed into
+bread&mdash;making due allowance, of course, for the bone-dust, or gypsum,
+or alum with which the worthy baker may have found it profitable to
+adulterate his bread, in order to improve the digestion of Her Majesty&rsquo;s
+subjects.</p>
+<p>But you may say, &ldquo;Yes, but we can see the wheat growing, flowering,
+ripening, reaped, ground, kneaded, baked.&nbsp; We see, in the case
+of bread, the processes of the transformation going on: but in the case
+of coal we do not see the wood and leaves being actually transformed
+into coal, or anything like it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Now suppose we laid out the wheat on a table in a regular series,
+such as you may see in many exhibitions of manufactures; beginning with
+the wheat plant at one end, and ending with the loaf at the other; and
+called in to look at them a savage who knew nothing of agriculture and
+nothing of cookery&mdash;called in, as an extreme case, the man in the
+moon, who certainly can know nothing of either; for as there is neither
+air nor water round the moon, there can be nothing to grow there, and
+therefore nothing to cook&mdash;and suppose we asked him to study the
+series from end to end.&nbsp; Do you not think that the man in the moon,
+if he were half as shrewd as Crofton Croker makes him in his conversation
+with Daniel O&rsquo;Rourke, would answer after due meditation, &ldquo;How
+the wheat plant got changed into the loaf I cannot see from my experience
+in the moon: but that it has been changed, and that the two are the
+same thing I do see, for I see all the different stages of the change.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+And so I think you may say of the wood and the coal.</p>
+<p>The man in the moon would be quite reasonable in his conclusion;
+for it is a law, a rule, and one which you will have to apply again
+and again in the study of natural objects, that however different two
+objects may look in some respects, yet if you can find a regular series
+of gradations between them, with all shades of likeness, first to one
+of them and then to the other, then you have a fair right to suppose
+them to be only varieties of the same species, the same kind of thing,
+and that, therefore, they have a common origin.</p>
+<p>That sounds rather magniloquent.&nbsp; Let me give you a simple example.</p>
+<p>Suppose you had come into Britain with Brute, the grandson of &AElig;neas,
+at that remote epoch when (as all archaeologists know who have duly
+read Geoffrey of Monmouth and the Arthuric legends) Britain was inhabited
+only by a few giants.&nbsp; Now if you had met giants with one head,
+and also giants with seven heads, and no others, you would have had
+a right to say, &ldquo;There are two breeds of giants here, one-headed
+and seven-headed.&rdquo;&nbsp; But if you had found, as Jack the Giant-Killer
+(who belongs to the same old cycle of myths) appears to have found,
+two-headed giants also, and three-headed, and giants, indeed, with any
+reasonable number of heads, would you not have been justified in saying,
+&ldquo;They are all of the same breed, after all; only some are more
+capitate, or heady, than others!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I hope that you agree to that reasoning; for by it I think we arrive
+most surely at a belief in the unity of the human race, and that the
+Negro is actually a man and a brother.</p>
+<p>If the only two types of men in the world were an extreme white type,
+like the Norwegians, and an extreme black type, like the Negros, then
+there would be fair ground for saying, &ldquo;These two types have been
+always distinct; they are different races, who have no common origin.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+But if you found, as you will find, many types of man showing endless
+gradations between the white man and the Negro, and not only that, but
+endless gradations between them both and a third type, whose extreme
+perhaps is the Chinese&mdash;endless gradations, I say, showing every
+conceivable shade of resemblance or difference, till you often cannot
+say to what type a given individual belongs; and all of them, however
+different from each other, more like each other than they are like any
+other creature upon earth; then you are justified in saying, &ldquo;All
+these are mere varieties of one kind.&nbsp; However distinct they are
+now, they were probably like each other at first, and therefore all
+probably had a common origin.&rdquo;&nbsp; That seems to me sound reasoning,
+and advanced natural science is corroborating it more and more daily.</p>
+<p>Now apply the same reasoning to coal.&nbsp; You may find about the
+world&mdash;you may see even in England alone&mdash;every gradation
+between coal and growing forest.&nbsp; You may see the forest growing
+in its bed of vegetable mould; you may see the forest dead and converted
+into peat, with stems and roots in it; that, again, into sunken forests,
+like those to be seen below high-water mark on many coasts of this island.&nbsp;
+You find gradations between them and beds of lignite, or wood coal;
+then gradations between lignite and common or bituminous coal; and then
+gradations between common coal and culm, or anthracite, such as is found
+in South Wales.&nbsp; Have you not a right to say, &ldquo;These are
+all but varieties of the same kind of thing&mdash;namely, vegetable
+matter?&nbsp; They have a common origin&mdash;namely, woody fibre.&nbsp;
+And coal, or rather culm, is the last link in a series of transformations
+from growing vegetation?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This is our first theory.&nbsp; Let us try to verify it, as scientific
+men are in the habit of doing, by saying, If that be true, then something
+else is likely to be true too.</p>
+<p>If coal has all been vegetable soil, then it is likely that some
+of it has not been quite converted into shapeless coal.&nbsp; It is
+likely that there will be vegetable fibre still to be seen here and
+there; perhaps leaves, perhaps even stems of trees, as in a peat bog.&nbsp;
+Let us look for them.</p>
+<p>You will not need to look far.&nbsp; The coal, and the sands and
+shales which accompany the coal, are so full of plant-remains, that
+three hundred species were known to Adolphe Brongniart as early as 1849,
+and that number has largely increased since.</p>
+<p>Now one point is specially noticeable about these plants of the coal;
+namely, that they may at least have grown in swamps.</p>
+<p>First, you will be interested if you study the coal flora, with the
+abundance, beauty, and variety of the ferns.&nbsp; Now ferns in these
+islands grow principally in rocky woods, because there, beside the moisture,
+they get from decaying vegetable or decaying rock, especially limestone,
+the carbonic acid which is their special food, and which they do not
+get on our dry pastures, and still less in our cultivated fields.&nbsp;
+But in these islands there are two noble species, at least, which are
+true swamp-ferns; the Lastr&aelig;a Thelypteris, which of old filled
+the fens, but is now all but extinct; and the Osmunda, or King-fern,
+which, as all know, will grow wherever it is damp enough about the roots.&nbsp;
+In Hampshire, in Devon, and Cornwall, and in the southwest of Ireland,
+the King-fern too is a true swamp fern.&nbsp; But in the Tropics I have
+seen more than once noble tree-ferns growing in wet savannahs at the
+sea-level, as freely as in the mountain-woods; ferns with such a stem
+as some of the coal ferns had, some fifteen feet in height, under which,
+as one rode on horseback, one saw the blazing blue sky, as through a
+parasol of delicate lace, as men might have long ages since have seen
+it, through the plumed fronds of the ferns now buried in the coal, had
+there only been a man then created to enjoy its beauty.</p>
+<p>Next we find plants called by geologists Calamites.&nbsp; There is
+no doubt now that they are of the same family as our Equiseta, or horse-tails,
+a race which has, over most parts of the globe, dwindled down now from
+twenty or thirty feet in height, as they were in the old coal measures,
+to paltry little weeds.&nbsp; The tallest Equisetum in England&mdash;the
+beautiful E. Telmateia&mdash;is seldom five feet high.&nbsp; But they,
+too, are mostly mud and swamp plants; and so may the Calamites have
+been.</p>
+<p>The Lepidodendrons, again, are without doubt the splendid old representatives
+of a family now dwindled down to such creeping things as our club-mosses,
+or Lycopodiums.&nbsp; Now it is a certain fact, which can be proved
+by the microscope, that a very great part of the best coal is actually
+made up of millions of the minute seeds of club-mosses, such as grow&mdash;a
+few of them, and those very small&mdash;on our moors; a proof, surely,
+not only of the vast amount of the vegetation in the coal-making age,
+but also of the vast time during which it lasted.&nbsp; The Lepidodendra
+may have been fifty or sixty feet high.&nbsp; There is not a Lycopodium
+in the world now, I believe, five feet high.&nbsp; But the club-mosses
+are now, in these islands and elsewhere, lovers of wet and peaty soils,
+and so may their huger prototypes have been, in the old forests of the
+coal.</p>
+<p>Of the Sigillari&aelig; we cannot say as much with certainty, for
+botanists are not agreed as to what low order of flowerless plants they
+belong.&nbsp; But that they rooted in clay beds there is proof, as you
+will hear presently.</p>
+<p>And as to the Conifers, or pine-like trees&mdash;the Dadoxylon, of
+which the pith goes by the name of Sternbergia, and the uncertain tree
+which furnishes in some coal-measures bushels of a seed connected with
+that of the yew&mdash;we may suppose that they would find no more difficulty
+in growing in swamps than the cypress, which forms so large a portion
+of the vegetation in the swamps of the Southern United States.</p>
+<p>I have given you these hints, because you will naturally wish to
+know what sort of a world it was in which all these strange plants grew
+and turned into coal.</p>
+<p>My answer is, that it was most probably just like the world in which
+we are living now, with the one exception that the plants and animals
+are different.</p>
+<p>It was the fashion a few years since to explain the coal&mdash;like
+other phenomena of geology&mdash;by some mere hypothesis of a state
+of things quite unlike what we see now.&nbsp; We were brought up to
+believe that in the Carboniferous, or coal-bearing era, the atmosphere
+was intensely moist and hot, and overcharged with carbonic acid, which
+had been poured out from the interior of the planet by volcanic eruptions,
+or by some other convulsion.&nbsp; I forget most of it now: and really
+there is no need to remember; for it is all, I verily believe, a dream&mdash;an
+attempt to explain the unknown not by the known, but by the still more
+unknown.&nbsp; You may find such theories lingering still in sensational
+school-books, if you like to be unscientific.&nbsp; If you like, on
+the other hand, to be scientific you will listen to those who tell you
+that instead of there having been one unique carboniferous epoch, with
+a peculiar coal-making climate, all epochs are carboniferous if they
+get the chance; that coal is of every age, from that of the Scotch and
+English beds, up to the present day.&nbsp; The great coal-beds along
+the Rocky Mountains, for instance, are tertiary&mdash;that is, later
+than the chalk.&nbsp; Coal is forming now, I doubt not, in many places
+on the earth, and would form in many more, if man did not interfere
+with the processes of wild nature, by draining the fens, and embanking
+the rivers.</p>
+<p>Let me by a few words prove this statement.&nbsp; They will give
+you, beside, a fresh proof of Sir Charles Lyell&rsquo;s great geological
+rule&mdash;that the best way to explain what we see in ancient rocks
+is to take for granted, as long as we can do so fairly, that things
+were going on then very much as they are going on now.</p>
+<p>When it was first seen that coal had been once vegetable, the question
+arose&mdash;How did all these huge masses of vegetable matter get there?&nbsp;
+The Yorkshire and Derbyshire coal-fields, I hear, cover 700 or 800 square
+miles; the Lancashire about 200.&nbsp; How large the North Wales and
+the Scotch fields are I cannot say.&nbsp; But doubtless a great deal
+more coal than can be got at lies under the sea, especially in the north
+of Wales.&nbsp; Coal probably exists over vast sheets of England and
+France, buried so deeply under later rocks, that it cannot be reached
+by mining.&nbsp; As an instance, a distinguished geologist has long
+held that there are beds of coal under London itself, which rise, owing
+to a peculiar disturbance of the strata, to within 1,000 or 1,200 feet
+of the surface, and that we or our children may yet see coal-mines in
+the marshes of the Thames.&nbsp; And more, it is a provable fact that
+only a portion of the coal measures is left.&nbsp; A great part of Ireland
+must once have been covered with coal, which is now destroyed.&nbsp;
+Indeed, it is likely that the coal now known of in Europe and America
+is but a remnant of what has existed there in former ages, and has been
+eaten away by the inroads of the sea.</p>
+<p>Now whence did all that enormous mass of vegetable soil come?&nbsp;
+Off some neighbouring land, was the first and most natural answer.&nbsp;
+It was a rational one.&nbsp; It proceeded from the known to the unknown.&nbsp;
+It was clear that these plants had grown on land; for they were land-plants.&nbsp;
+It was clear that there must have been land close by, for between the
+beds of coal, as you all know, the rock is principally coarse sandstone,
+which could only have been laid down (as I have explained to you already)
+in very shallow water.</p>
+<p>It was natural, then, to suppose that these plants and trees had
+been swept down by rivers into the sea, as the sands and muds which
+buried them had been.&nbsp; And it was known that at the mouths of certain
+rivers&mdash;the Mississippi, for instance&mdash;vast rafts of dead
+floating trees accumulated; and that the bottoms of the rivers were
+often full of snags, etc.; trees which had grounded, and stuck in the
+mud; and why should not the coal have been formed in the same way?</p>
+<p>Because&mdash;and this was a serious objection&mdash;then surely
+the coal would be impure&mdash;mixed up with mud and sand, till it was
+not worth burning.&nbsp; Instead of which, the coal is usually pure
+vegetable, parted sharply from the sandstone which lies on it.&nbsp;
+The only other explanation was, that the coal vegetation had grown in
+the very places where it was found.&nbsp; But that seemed too strange
+to be true, till that great geologist, Sir W. Logan&mdash;who has since
+done such good work in Canada&mdash;showed that every bed of coal had
+a bed of clay under it, and that that clay always contained fossils
+called Stigmaria.&nbsp; Then it came out that the Stigmaria in the under
+clay had long filaments attached to them, while when found in the sandstones
+or shales, they had lost their filaments, and seemed more or less rolled&mdash;in
+fact, that the natural place of the Stigmaria was in the under clay.&nbsp;
+Then Mr. Binney discovered a tree&mdash;a Sigillaria, standing upright
+in the coal-measures with its roots attached.&nbsp; Those roots penetrated
+into the under clay of the coal; and those roots were Stigmarias.&nbsp;
+That seems to have settled the question.&nbsp; The Sigillarias, at least,
+had grown where they were found, and the clay beneath the coal-beds
+was the original soil on which they had grown.&nbsp; Just so, if you
+will look at any peat bog you will find it bottomed by clay, which clay
+is pierced everywhere by the roots of the moss forming the peat, or
+of the trees, birches, alders, poplars, and willows, which grow in the
+bog.&nbsp; So the proof seemed complete, that the coal had been formed
+out of vegetation growing where it was buried.&nbsp; If any further
+proof for that theory was needed, it would be found in this fact, most
+ingeniously suggested by Mr. Boyd Dawkins.&nbsp; The resinous spores,
+or seeds of the Lepidodendra make up&mdash;as said above&mdash;a great
+part of the bituminous coal.&nbsp; Now those spores are so light, that
+if the coal had been laid down by water, they would have floated on
+it, and have been carried away; and therefore the bituminous coal must
+have been formed, not under water, but on dry land.</p>
+<p>I have dwelt at length on these further arguments, because they seem
+to me as pretty a specimen as I can give my readers of that regular
+and gradual induction, that common-sense regulated, by which geological
+theories are worked out.</p>
+<p>But how does this theory explain the perfect purity of the coal?&nbsp;
+I think Sir C. Lyell answers that question fully in p. 383 of his &ldquo;Student&rsquo;s
+Elements of Geology.&rdquo;&nbsp; He tells us that the dense growths
+of reeds and herbage which encompass the margins of forest-covered swamps
+in the valley and delta of the Mississippi, in passing through them,
+are filtered and made to clear themselves entirely before they reach
+the areas in which vegetable matter may accumulate for centuries, forming
+coal if the climate be favourable; and that in the cypress-swamps of
+that region no sediment mingles with the vegetable matter accumulated
+from the decay of trees and semi-aquatic plants; so that when, in a
+very dry season, the swamp is set on fire, pits are burnt into the ground
+many feet deep, or as far as the fire can go down without reaching water,
+and scarcely any earthy residuum is left; just as when the soil of the
+English fens catches fire, red-hot holes are eaten down through pure
+peat till the water-bearing clay below is reached.&nbsp; But the purity
+of the water in peaty lagoons is observable elsewhere than in the delta
+of the Mississippi.&nbsp; What can be more transparent than many a pool
+surrounded by quaking bogs, fringed, as they are in Ireland, with a
+ring of white water-lilies, which you dare not stoop to pick, lest the
+peat, bending inward, slide you down into that clear dark gulf some
+twenty feet in depth, bottomed and walled with yielding ooze, from which
+there is no escape?&nbsp; Most transparent, likewise, is the water of
+the West Indian swamps.&nbsp; Though it is of the colour of coffee,
+or rather of dark beer, and so impregnated with gases that it produces
+fever or cholera when drunk, yet it is&mdash;at least when it does not
+mingle with the salt water&mdash;so clear, that one might see every
+marking on a boa-constrictor or alligator, if he glided along the bottom
+under the canoe.</p>
+<p>But now comes the question&mdash;Even if all this be true, how were
+the forests covered up in shale and sandstone, one after another?</p>
+<p>By gradual sinking of the land, one would suppose.</p>
+<p>If we find, as we may find in a hundred coal-pits, trees rooted as
+they grew, with their trunks either standing up through the coal, and
+through the sandstone above the coal; their bark often remaining as
+coal while their inside is filled up with sandstone, has not our common-sense
+a right to say&mdash;The land on which they grew sank below the water-line;
+the trees were killed; and the mud and sand which were brought down
+the streams enveloped their trunks?&nbsp; As for the inside being full
+of sandstone, have we not all seen hollow trees?&nbsp; Do we not all
+know that when a tree dies its wood decays first, its bark last?&nbsp;
+It is so, especially in the Tropics.&nbsp; There one may see huge dead
+trees with their bark seemingly sound, and their inside a mere cavern
+with touchwood at the bottom; into which caverns one used to peep with
+some caution.&nbsp; For though one might have found inside only a pair
+of toucans, or parrots, or a whole party of jolly little monkeys, one
+was quite as likely to find a poisonous snake four or five feet long,
+whose bite would have very certainly prevented me having the pleasure
+of writing this book.</p>
+<p>Now is it not plain that if such trees as that sunk, their bark would
+be turned into lignite, and at last into coal, while their insides would
+be silted up with mud and sand?&nbsp; Thus a core or pillar of hard
+sandstone would be formed, which might do to the collier of the future
+what they are too apt to do now in the Newcastle and Bristol collieries.&nbsp;
+For there, when the coal is worked out below, the sandstone stems&mdash;&ldquo;coal-pipes&rdquo;
+as the colliers call them&mdash;in the roof of the seam, having no branches,
+and nothing to hold them up but their friable bark of coal, are but
+too apt to drop out suddenly, killing or wounding the hapless men below.</p>
+<p>Or again, if we find&mdash;as we very often find&mdash;as was found
+at Parkfield Colliery, near Wolverhampton, in the year 1814&mdash;a
+quarter of an acre of coal-seam filled. with stumps of trees as they
+grew, their trunks broken off and lying in every direction, turned into
+coal, and flattened, as coal-fossils so often are, by the weight of
+the rock above&mdash;should we not have a right to say&mdash;These trees
+were snapped off where they grew by some violent convulsion; by a storm,
+or by a sudden inrush of water owing to a sudden sinking of the land,
+or by the very earthquake shock itself which sank the land?</p>
+<p>But what evidence have we of such sinkings?&nbsp; The plain fact
+that you have coal-seam above coal-seam, each with its bed of under-clay;
+and that therefore the land <i>must</i> have sunk ere the next bed of
+soil could have been deposited, and the next forest have grown on it.</p>
+<p>In one of the Rocky Mountain coal-fields there are more than thirty
+seams of coal, each with its under-clay below it.&nbsp; What can that
+mean but thirty or more subsidences of the land, and the peat of thirty
+or more forests or peat-mosses, one above the other?&nbsp; And now if
+any reader shall say, Subsidence?&nbsp; What is this quite new element
+which you have brought into your argument?&nbsp; You told us that you
+would reason from the known to the unknown.&nbsp; What do we know of
+subsidence?&nbsp; You offered to explain the thing which had gone on
+once by that which is going on now.&nbsp; Where is subsidence going
+on now upon the surface of our planet?&nbsp; And where, too, upheaval,
+such as would bring us these buried forests up again from under the
+sea-level, and make them, like our British coal-field, dry land once
+more?</p>
+<p>The answer is&mdash;Subsidence and elevation of the land are common
+now, probably just as common as they were in any age of this planet&rsquo;s
+history.</p>
+<p>To give two instances, made now notorious by the writings of geologists.&nbsp;
+As lately as 1819 a single earthquake shock in Cutch, at the mouth of
+the Indus, sunk a tract of land larger than the Lake of Geneva in some
+places to a depth of eighteen feet, and converted it into an inland
+sea.&nbsp; The same shock raised, a few miles off, a corresponding sheet
+of land some fifty miles in length, and in some parts sixteen miles
+broad, ten feet above the level of the alluvial plain, and left it to
+be named by the country-people the &ldquo;Ullah Bund,&rdquo; or bank
+of God, to distinguish it from the artificial banks in the neighbourhood.</p>
+<p>Again: in the valley of the Mississippi&mdash;a tract which is now,
+it would seem, in much the same state as central England was while our
+coal-fields were being laid down&mdash;the earthquakes of 1811-12 caused
+large lakes to appear suddenly in many parts of the district, amid the
+dense forests of cypress.&nbsp; One of these, the &ldquo;Sunk Country,&rdquo;
+near New Madrid, is between seventy and eighty miles in length, and
+thirty miles in breadth, and throughout it, as late as 1846, &ldquo;dead
+trees were conspicuous, some erect in the water, others fallen, and
+strewed in dense masses over the bottom, in the shallows, and near the
+shore.&rdquo;&nbsp; I quote these words from Sir Charles Lyell&rsquo;s
+&ldquo;Principles of Geology&rdquo; (11th edit.), vol. i. p. 453.&nbsp;
+And I cannot do better than advise my readers, if they wish to know
+more of the way in which coal was formed, to read what is said in that
+book concerning the Delta of the Mississippi, and its strata of forests
+sunk where they grew, and in some places upraised again, alternating
+with beds of clay and sand, vegetable soil, recent sea-shells, and what
+not, forming, to a depth of several hundred feet, just such a mass of
+beds as exists in our own coal-fields at this day.</p>
+<p>If, therefore, the reader wishes to picture to himself the scenery
+of what is now central England, during the period when our coal was
+being laid down, he has only, I believe, to transport himself in fancy
+to any great alluvial delta, in a moist and warm climate, favourable
+to the growth of vegetation.&nbsp; He has only to conceive wooded marshes,
+at the mouth of great rivers, slowly sinking beneath the sea; the forests
+in them killed by the water, and then covered up by layers of sand,
+brought down from inland, till that new layer became dry land, to carry
+a fresh crop of vegetation.&nbsp; He has thus all that he needs to explain
+how coal-measures were formed.&nbsp; I myself saw once a scene of that
+kind, which I should be sorry to forget; for there was, as I conceived,
+coal, making, or getting ready to be made, before my eyes: a sheet of
+swamp, sinking slowly into the sea; for there stood trees, still rooted
+below high-water mark, and killed by the waves; while inland huge trees
+stood dying, or dead, from the water at their roots.&nbsp; But what
+a scene&mdash;a labyrinth of narrow creeks, so narrow that a canoe could
+not pass up, haunted with alligators and boa-constrictors, parrots and
+white herons, amid an inextricable confusion of vegetable mud, roots
+of the alder-like mangroves, and tangled creepers hanging from tree
+to tree; and overhead huge fan-palms, delighting in the moisture, mingled
+with still huger broad-leaved trees in every stage of decay.&nbsp; The
+drowned vegetable soil of ages beneath me; above my head, for a hundred
+feet, a mass of stems and boughs, and leaves and flowers, compared with
+which the richest hothouse in England was poor and small.&nbsp; But
+if the sinking process which was going on continued a few hundred years,
+all that huge mass of wood and leaf would be sunk beneath the swamp,
+and covered up in mud washed down from the mountains, and sand driven
+in from the sea; to form a bed many feet thick, of what would be first
+peat, then lignite, and last, it may be, coal, with the stems of killed
+trees standing up out of it into the new mud and sand-beds above it,
+just as the Sigillari&aelig; and other stems stand up in the coal-beds
+both of Britain and of Nova Scotia; while over it a fresh forest would
+grow up, to suffer the same fate&mdash;if the sinking process went on&mdash;as
+that which had preceded it.</p>
+<p>That was a sight not easily to be forgotten.&nbsp; But we need not
+have gone so far from home, at least, a few hundred years ago, to see
+an exactly similar one.&nbsp; The fens of Norfolk and Cambridgeshire,
+before the rivers were embanked, the water pumped off, the forests felled,
+and the reed-beds ploughed up, were exactly in the same state.&nbsp;
+The vast deposits of peat between Cambridge and the sea, often filled
+with timber-trees, either fallen or upright as they grew, and often
+mixed with beds of sand or mud, brought down in floods, were formed
+in exactly the same way; and if they had remained undrained, then that
+slow sinking, which geologists say is going on over the whole area of
+the Fens, would have brought them gradually, but surely, below the sea-level,
+to be covered up by new forests, and converted in due time into coal.&nbsp;
+And future geologists would have found&mdash;they may find yet, if,
+which God forbid, England should become barbarous and the trees be thrown
+out of cultivation&mdash;instead of fossil Lepidodendra and Sigillari&aelig;,
+Calamites and ferns, fossil ashes and oaks, alders and poplars, bulrushes
+and reeds.&nbsp; Almost the only fossil fern would have been that tall
+and beautiful Lastr&aelig;a Thelypteris, once so abundant, now all but
+destroyed by drainage and the plough.</p>
+<p>We need not, therefore, fancy any extraordinary state of things on
+this planet while our English coal was being formed.&nbsp; The climate
+of the northern hemisphere&mdash;Britain, at least, and Nova Scotia&mdash;was
+warmer than now, to judge from the abundance of ferns; and especially
+of tree-ferns; but not so warm, to judge from the presence of conifers
+(trees of the pine tribe), as the Tropics.&nbsp; Moreover, there must
+have been, it seems to me, a great scarcity of animal-life.&nbsp; Insects
+are found, beautifully preserved; a few reptiles, too, and land-shells;
+but very few.&nbsp; And where are the traces of such a swarming life
+as would be entombed were a tropic forest now sunk; which is found entombed
+in many parts of our English fens?&nbsp; The only explanation which
+I can offer is this&mdash;that the club-mosses, tree-ferns, pines, and
+other low-ranked vegetation of the coal afforded little or no food for
+animals, as the same families of plants do to this day; and if creatures
+can get nothing to eat, they certainly cannot multiply and replenish
+the earth.&nbsp; But, be that as it may, the fact that coal is buried
+forest is not affected.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile, the shape and arrangements of sea and land must have been
+utterly different from what they are now.&nbsp; Where was that great
+land, off which great rivers ran to deposit our coal-measures in their
+deltas?&nbsp; It has been supposed, for good reasons, that north-western
+France, Belgium, Holland, and Germany were then under the sea; that
+Denmark and Norway were joined to Scotland by a continent, a tongue
+of which ran across the centre of England, and into Ireland, dividing
+the northern and southern coal-fields.&nbsp; But how far to the west
+and north did that old continent stretch?&nbsp; Did it, as it almost
+certainly did long ages afterwards, join Greenland and North America
+with Scotland and Norway?&nbsp; Were the northern fields of Nova Scotia,
+which are of the same geological age as our own, and contain the same
+plants, laid down by rivers which ran off the same continent as ours?&nbsp;
+Who can tell now?&nbsp; That old land, and all record of it, save what
+these fragmentary coal-measures can give, are buried in the dark abyss
+of countless ages; and we can only look back with awe, and comfort ourselves
+with the thought&mdash;Let Time be ever so vast, yet Time is not Eternity.</p>
+<p>One word more.&nbsp; If my readers have granted that all for which
+I have argued is probable, they will still have a right to ask for further
+proof.</p>
+<p>They will be justified in saying: &ldquo;You say that coal is transformed
+vegetable matter; but can you show us how the transformation takes place?&nbsp;
+Is it possible according to known natural laws?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The chemist must answer that.&nbsp; And he tells us that wood can
+become lignite, or wood-coal, by parting with its oxygen, in the shape
+of carbonic acid gas, or choke-damp; and then common or bituminous coal,
+by parting with its hydrogen, chiefly in the form of carburetted hydrogen&mdash;the
+gas with which we light our streets.&nbsp; That is about as much as
+the unscientific reader need know.&nbsp; But it is a fresh corroboration
+of the theory that coal has been once vegetable fibre, for it shows
+how vegetable fibre can, by the laws of nature, become coal.&nbsp; And
+it certainly helps us to believe that a thing has been done, if we are
+shown that it can be done.</p>
+<p>This fact explains, also, why in mines of wood-coal carbonic acid,
+<i>i.e</i>. choke-damp, alone is given off.&nbsp; For in the wood-coal
+a great deal of the hydrogen still remains.&nbsp; In mines of true coal,
+not only is choke-damp given off, but that more terrible pest of the
+miners, fire-damp, or explosive carburetted hydrogen and olefiant gases.&nbsp;
+Now the occurrence of that fire-damp in mines proves that changes are
+still going on in the coal: that it is getting rid of its hydrogen,
+and so progressing toward the state of anthracite or culm&mdash;stone-coal
+as it is sometimes called.&nbsp; In the Pennsylvanian coal-fields some
+of the coal has actually done this, under the disturbing force of earthquakes;
+for the coal, which is bituminous, like our common coal, to the westward
+where the strata are horizontal, becomes gradually anthracite as it
+is tossed and torn by the earthquake faults of the Alleghany and Appalachian
+mountains.</p>
+<p>And is a further transformation possible?&nbsp; Yes; and more than
+one.&nbsp; If we conceive the anthracite cleared of all but its last
+atoms of oxygen, hydrogen, and nitrogen, till it has become all but
+pure carbon, it would become&mdash;as it has become in certain rocks
+of immense antiquity, graphite&mdash;what we miscall black-lead.&nbsp;
+And, after that, it might go through one transformation more, and that
+the most startling of all.&nbsp; It would need only perfect purification
+and crystallisation to become&mdash;a diamond; nothing less.&nbsp; We
+may consider the coal upon the fire as the middle term of a series,
+of which the first is live wood, and the last diamond; and indulge safely
+in the fancy that every diamond in the world has probably, at some remote
+epoch, formed part of a growing plant.</p>
+<p>A strange transformation; which will look to us more strange, more
+truly poetical, the more steadily we consider it.</p>
+<p>The coal on the fire; the table at which I write&mdash;what are they
+made of?&nbsp; Gas and sunbeams; with a small percentage of ash, or
+earthy salts, which need hardly be taken into account.</p>
+<p>Gas and sunbeams.&nbsp; Strange, but true.</p>
+<p>The life of the growing plant&mdash;and what that life is who can
+tell?&mdash;laid hold of the gases in the air and in the soil; of the
+carbonic acid, the atmospheric air, the water&mdash;for that too is
+gas.&nbsp; It drank them in through its rootlets: it breathed them in
+through its leaf-pores, that it might distil them into sap, and bud,
+and leaf, and wood.&nbsp; But it has to take in another element, without
+which the distillation and the shaping could never have taken place.&nbsp;
+It had to drink in the sunbeams&mdash;that mysterious and complex force
+which is for ever pouring from the sun, and making itself partly palpable
+to our senses as heat and light.&nbsp; So the life of the plant seized
+the sunbeams, and absorbed them, buried them in itself&mdash;no longer
+as light and heat, but as invisible chemical force, locked up for ages
+in that woody fibre.</p>
+<p>So it is.&nbsp; Lord Lytton told us long ago, in a beautiful song,
+how</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>The Wind and the Beam loved the Rose.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>But Nature&rsquo;s poetry was more beautiful than man&rsquo;s.&nbsp;
+The wind and the beam loved the rose so well that they made the rose&mdash;or
+rather, the rose took the wind and the beam, and built up out of them,
+by her own inner life, her exquisite texture, hue, and fragrance.</p>
+<p>What next?&nbsp; The rose dies; the timber tree dies; decays down
+into vegetable fibre, is buried, and turned to coal: but the plant cannot
+altogether undo its own work.&nbsp; Even in death and decay it cannot
+set free the sunbeams imprisoned in its tissue.&nbsp; The sun-force
+must stay, shut up age after age, invisible, but strong; working at
+its own prison-cells; transmuting them, or making them capable of being
+transmuted by man, into the manifold products of coal&mdash;coke, petroleum,
+mineral pitch, gases, coal-tar, benzole, delicate aniline dyes, and
+what not, till its day of deliverance comes.</p>
+<p>Man digs it, throws it on the fire, a black, dead-seeming lump.&nbsp;
+A corner, an atom of it, warms till it reaches the igniting point; the
+temperature at which it is able to combine with oxygen.</p>
+<p>And then, like a dormant live thing, awaking after ages to the sense
+of its own powers, its own needs, the whole lump is seized, atom after
+atom, with an infectious hunger for that oxygen which it lost centuries
+since in the bottom of the earth.&nbsp; It drinks the oxygen in at every
+pore; and burns.</p>
+<p>And so the spell of ages is broken.&nbsp; The sun-force bursts its
+prison-cells, and blazes into the free atmosphere, as light and heat
+once more; returning in a moment into the same forms in which it entered
+the growing leaf a thousand centuries since.</p>
+<p>Strange it all is, yet true.&nbsp; But of nature, as of the heart
+of man, the old saying stands&mdash;that truth is stranger than fiction.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>V.&nbsp; THE LIME IN THE MORTAR</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>I shall presume in all my readers some slight knowledge about lime.&nbsp;
+I shall take for granted, for instance, that all are better informed
+than a certain party of Australian black fellows were a few years since.</p>
+<p>In prowling on the track of a party of English settlers, to see what
+they could pick up, they came&mdash;oh joy!&mdash;on a sack of flour,
+dropped and left behind in the bush at a certain creek.&nbsp; The poor
+savages had not had such a prospect of a good meal for many a day.&nbsp;
+With endless jabbering and dancing, the whole tribe gathered round the
+precious flour-bag with all the pannikins, gourds, and other hollow
+articles it could muster, each of course with a due quantity of water
+from the creek therein, and the chief began dealing out the flour by
+handfuls, beginning of course with the boldest warriors.&nbsp; But,
+horror of horrors, each man&rsquo;s porridge swelled before his eyes,
+grew hot, smoked, boiled over.&nbsp; They turned and fled, man, woman,
+and child, from before that supernatural prodigy; and the settlers coming
+back to look for the dropped sack, saw a sight which told the whole
+tale.&nbsp; For the poor creatures, in their terror, had thrown away
+their pans and calabashes, each filled with that which it was likely
+to contain, seeing that the sack itself had contained, not flour, but
+quick-lime.&nbsp; In memory of which comi-tragedy, that creek is called
+to this day, &ldquo;Flour-bag Creek.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Now I take for granted that you are all more learned than these black
+fellows, and know quick-lime from flour.&nbsp; But still you are not
+bound to know what quick-lime is.&nbsp; Let me explain it to you.</p>
+<p>Lime, properly speaking, is a metal, which goes among chemists by
+the name of calcium.&nbsp; But it is formed, as you all know, in the
+earth, not as a metal, but as a stone, as chalk or limestone, which
+is a carbonate of lime; that is, calcium combined with oxygen and carbonic-acid
+gases.</p>
+<p>In that state it will make, if it is crystalline and hard, excellent
+building stone.&nbsp; The finest white marble, like that of Carrara
+in Italy, of which the most delicate statues are carved, is carbonate
+of lime altered and hardened by volcanic heat.&nbsp; But to make mortar
+of it, it must be softened and then brought into a state in which it
+can be hardened again; and ages since, some man or other, who deserves
+to rank as one of the great inventors, one of the great benefactors
+of his race, discovered the art of making lime soft and hard again;
+in fact of making mortar.&nbsp; The discovery was probably very ancient;
+and made, probably like most of the old discoveries, in the East, spreading
+Westward gradually.&nbsp; The earlier Greek buildings are cyclopean,
+that is, of stone fitted together without mortar.&nbsp; The earlier
+Egyptian buildings, though the stones are exquisitely squared and polished,
+are put together likewise without mortar.&nbsp; So, long ages after,
+were the earlier Roman buildings, and even some of the later.&nbsp;
+The famous aqueduct of the Pont du Gard, near Nismes, in the south of
+France, has, if I recollect right, no mortar whatever in it.&nbsp; The
+stones of its noble double tier of circular arches have been dropped
+into their places upon the wooden centres, and stand unmoved to this
+day, simply by the jamming of their own weight; a miracle of art.&nbsp;
+But the fact is puzzling; for these Romans were the best mortar makers
+of the world.&nbsp; We cannot, I believe, surpass them in the art even
+now; and in some of their old castles, the mortar is actually to this
+day harder and tougher than the stones which it holds together.&nbsp;
+And they had plenty of lime at hand if they had chosen to make mortar.&nbsp;
+The Pont du Gard crosses a limestone ravine, and is itself built of
+limestone.&nbsp; But I presume the cunning Romans would not trust mortar
+made from that coarse Nummulite limestone, filled with gritty sand,
+and preferred, with their usual carefulness, no mortar at all to bad.</p>
+<p>But I must return, and tell my readers, in a few words, the chemical
+history of mortar.&nbsp; If limestone be burnt, or rather roasted, in
+a kiln, the carbonic acid is given off&mdash;as you may discover by
+your own nose; as many a poor tramp has discovered too late, when, on
+a cold winter night, he has lain down by the side of the burning kiln
+to keep himself warm, and woke in the other world, stifled to death
+by the poisonous fumes.</p>
+<p>The lime then gives off its carbonic acid, and also its water of
+crystallisation, that is, water which it holds (as do many rocks) locked
+up in it unseen, and only to be discovered by chemical analysis.&nbsp;
+It is then anhydrous&mdash;that is, waterless&mdash;oxide of lime, what
+we call quick-lime; that which figured in the comi-tragedy of &ldquo;Flour-bag
+Creek;&rdquo; and then, as you may find if you get it under your nails
+or into your eyes, will burn and blister like an acid.</p>
+<p>This has to be turned again into a hard and tough artificial limestone,
+in plain words, into mortar; and the first step is to slack it&mdash;that
+is, to give it back the water which it has lost, and for which it is
+as it were thirsting.&nbsp; So it is slacked with water, which it drinks
+in, heating itself and the water till it steams and swells in bulk,
+because it takes the substance of the water into its own substance.&nbsp;
+Slacked lime, as we all know, is not visibly wetter than quick-lime;
+it crumbles to a dry white powder in spite of all the water which it
+contains.</p>
+<p>Then it must be made to set, that is, to return to limestone, to
+carbonate of lime, by drinking in the carbonic acid from water and air,
+which some sorts of lime will do instantly, setting at once, and being
+therefore used as cements.&nbsp; But the lime usually employed must
+be mixed with more or less sand to make it set hard: a mysterious process,
+of which it will be enough to tell the reader that the sand and lime
+are said to unite gradually, not only mechanically, that is, by sticking
+together; but also in part chemically&mdash;that is, by forming out
+of themselves a new substance, which is called silicate of lime.</p>
+<p>Be that as it may, the mortar paste has now to do two things; first
+to dry, and next to take up carbonic acid from the air and water, enough
+to harden it again into limestone: and that it will take some time in
+doing.&nbsp; A thick wall, I am informed, requires several years before
+it is set throughout, and has acquired its full hardness, or rather
+toughness; and good mortar, as is well known, will acquire extreme hardness
+with age, probably from the very same cause that it did when it was
+limestone in the earth.&nbsp; For, as a general rule, the more ancient
+the strata is in which the limestone is found, the harder the limestone
+is; except in cases where volcanic action and earthquake pressure have
+hardened limestone in more recent strata, as in the case of the white
+marbles of Carrara in Italy, which are of the age of our Oolites, that
+is, of the freestone of Bath, etc., hardened by the heat of intruded
+volcanic rocks.</p>
+<p>But now: what is the limestone? and how did it get where it is&mdash;not
+into the mortar, I mean, but into the limestone quarry?&nbsp; Let me
+tell you, or rather, help you to tell yourselves, by leading you, as
+before, from the known to the unknown.&nbsp; Let me lead you to places
+unknown indeed to most; but there may be sailors or soldiers among my
+readers who know them far better than I do.&nbsp; Let me lead you, in
+fancy, to some island in the Tropic seas.&nbsp; After all, I am not
+leading you as far away as you fancy by several thousand miles, as you
+will see, I trust, ere I have done.</p>
+<p>Let me take you to some island: what shall it be like?&nbsp; Shall
+it be a high island, with cliff piled on cliff, and peak on peak, all
+rich with mighty forests, like a furred mantle of green velvet, mounting
+up and up till it is lost among white clouds above?&nbsp; Or shall it
+be a mere low reef, which you do not see till you are close upon it;
+on which nothing rises above the water, but here and there a knot of
+cocoa-nut palms or a block of stone, or a few bushes, swarming with
+innumerable sea-fowl and their eggs?&nbsp; Let it be which you will:
+both are strange enough; both beautiful; both will tell us a story.</p>
+<p>The ship will have to lie-to, and anchor if she can; it may be a
+mile, it may be only a few yards, from the land.&nbsp; For between it
+and the land will be a line of breakers, raging in before the warm trade-wind.&nbsp;
+And this, you will be told, marks the edge of the coral reef.</p>
+<p>You will have to go ashore in a boat, over a sea which looks unfathomable,
+and which may be a mile or more in depth, and search for an opening
+in the reef, through which the boat can pass without being knocked to
+pieces.</p>
+<p>You find one: and in a moment, what a change!&nbsp; The deep has
+suddenly become shallow; the blue white, from the gleam of the white
+coral at the bottom.&nbsp; But the coral is not all white, only indeed
+a little of it; for as you look down through the clear water, you find
+that the coral is starred with innumerable live flowers, blue, crimson,
+grey, every conceivable hue; and that these are the coral polypes, each
+with its ring of arms thrust out of its cell, who are building up their
+common habitations of lime.&nbsp; If you want to understand, by a rough
+but correct description, what a coral polype is: all who have been to
+the sea-side know, or at least have heard of, sea-anemones.&nbsp; Now
+coral polypes are sea-anemones, which make each a shell of lime, growing
+with its growth.&nbsp; As for their shapes, the variety of them, the
+beauty of them, no tongue can describe them.&nbsp; If you want to see
+them, go to the Coral Rooms of the British or Liverpool Museums, and
+judge for yourselves.&nbsp; Only remember that you must re-clothe each
+of those exquisite forms with a coating of live jelly of some delicate
+hue, and put back into every one of the thousand cells its living flower;
+and into the beds, or rather banks, of the salt-water flower garden,
+the gaudiest of shell-less sea-anemones, such as we have on our coasts,
+rooted in the cracks, and live shells and sea-slugs, as gaudy as they,
+crawling about, with fifty other forms of fantastic and exuberant life.&nbsp;
+You must not overlook, too, the fish, especially the parrot-fish, some
+of them of the gaudiest colours, who spend their lives in browsing on
+the live coral, with strong clipping and grinding teeth, just as a cow
+browses the grass, keeping the animal matter, and throwing away the
+lime in the form of an impalpable white mud, which fills up the interstices
+in the coral beds.</p>
+<p>The bottom, just outside the reef, is covered with that mud, mixed
+with more lime-mud, which the surge wears off the reef; and if you have,
+as you should have, a dredge on board, and try a haul of that mud as
+you row home, you may find, but not always, animal forms rooted in it,
+which will delight the soul of a scientific man.&nbsp; One, I hope,
+would be some sort of Terebratula, or shell akin to it.&nbsp; You would
+probably think it a cockle: but you would be wrong.&nbsp; The animal
+which dwells in it has about the same relationship to a cockle as a
+dog has to a bird.&nbsp; It is a Brachiopod; a family with which the
+ancient seas once swarmed, but which is rare now, all over the world,
+having been supplanted and driven out of the seas by newer and stronger
+forms of shelled animals.&nbsp; The nearest spot at which you are likely
+to dredge a live Brachiopod will be in the deep water of Loch Fyne,
+in Argyleshire, where two species still linger, fastened, strangely
+enough, to the smooth pebbles of a submerged glacier, formed in the
+open air during the age of ice, but sunk now to a depth of eighty fathoms.&nbsp;
+The first time I saw those shells come up in the dredge out of the dark
+and motionless abyss, I could sympathise with the feelings of mingled
+delight and awe which, so my companion told me, the great Professor
+Owen had in the same spot first beheld the same lingering remnants of
+a prim&aelig;val world.</p>
+<p>The other might be (but I cannot promise you even a chance of dredging
+that, unless you were off the coast of Portugal, or the windward side
+of some of the West India Islands) a live Crinoid; an exquisite starfish,
+with long and branching arms, but rooted in the mud by a long stalk,
+and that stalk throwing out barren side branches; the whole a living
+plant of stone.&nbsp; You may see in museums specimens of this family,
+now so rare, all but extinct.&nbsp; And yet fifty or a hundred different
+forms of the same type swarmed in the ancient seas: whole masses of
+limestone are made up of little else but the fragments of such animals.</p>
+<p>But we have not landed yet on the dry part of the reef.&nbsp; Let
+us make for it, taking care meanwhile that we do not get our feet cut
+by the coral, or stung as by nettles by the coral insects.&nbsp; We
+shall see that the dry land is made up entirely of coral, ground and
+broken by the waves, and hurled inland by the storm, sometimes in huge
+boulders, mostly as fine mud; and that, under the influence of the sun
+and of the rain, which filters through it, charged with lime from the
+rotting coral, the whole is setting, as cement sets, into rock.&nbsp;
+And what is this?&nbsp; A long bank of stone standing up as a low cliff,
+ten or twelve feet above high-water mark.&nbsp; It is full of fragments
+of shell, of fragments of coral, of all sorts of animal remains; and
+the lower part of it is quite hard rock.&nbsp; Moreover, it is bedded
+in regular layers, just such as you see in a quarry.&nbsp; But how did
+it get there?&nbsp; It must have been formed at the sea-level, some
+of it, indeed, under the sea; for here are great masses of madrepore
+and limestone corals imbedded just as they grew.&nbsp; What lifted it
+up?&nbsp; Your companions, if you have any who know the island, have
+no difficulty in telling you.&nbsp; It was hove up, they say, in the
+earthquake in such and such a year; and they will tell you, perhaps,
+that if you will go on shore to the main island which rises inside the
+reef, you may see dead coral beds just like these lying on the old rocks,
+and sloping up along the flanks of the mountains to several hundred
+feet above the sea.&nbsp; I have seen such many a time.</p>
+<p>Thus you find the coral being converted gradually into a limestone
+rock, either fine and homogeneous, composed of coral grown into pulp,
+or filled with corals and shells, or with angular fragments of older
+coral rock.&nbsp; Did you never see that last?&nbsp; No?&nbsp; Yes,
+you have a hundred times.&nbsp; You have but to look at the marbles
+commonly used about these islands, with angular fragments imbedded in
+the mass, and here and there a shell, the whole cemented together by
+water holding in solution carbonate of lime, and there see the very
+same phenomenon perpetuated to this day.</p>
+<p>Thus, I think, we have got first from the known to the unknown; from
+a tropic coral island back here to the limestone hills of Great Britain;
+and I did not speak at random when I said that I was not leading you
+away as far as you fancied by several thousand miles.</p>
+<p>Examine any average limestone quarry from Bristol to Berwick, and
+you will see there all that I have been describing; that is, all of
+it which is not soft animal matter, certain to decay.&nbsp; You will
+see the lime-mud hardened into rock beds; you will see the shells embedded
+in it; you will see the corals in every stage of destruction; you will
+see whole layers made up of innumerable fragments of Crinoids&mdash;no
+wonder they are innumerable, for, it has been calculated, there are
+in a single animal of some of the species 140,000 joints&mdash;140,000
+bits of lime to fall apart when its soft parts decay.&nbsp; But is it
+not all there?&nbsp; And why should it not have got there by the same
+process by which similar old coral beds get up the mountain sides in
+the West Indies and elsewhere; namely, by the upheaving force of earthquakes?&nbsp;
+When you see similar effects, you have a right to presume similar causes.&nbsp;
+If you see a man fall off a house here, and break his neck; and some
+years after, in London or New York, or anywhere else, find another man
+lying at the foot of another house, with his neck broken in the same
+way, is it not a very fair presumption that he has fallen off a house
+likewise?</p>
+<p>You may be wrong.&nbsp; He may have come to his end by a dozen other
+means: but you must have proof of that.&nbsp; You will have a full right,
+in science and in common sense, to say&mdash;That man fell off the house,
+till some one proves to you that he did not.</p>
+<p>In fact, there is nothing which you see in the limestones of these
+isles&mdash;save and except the difference in every shell and coral&mdash;which
+you would not see in the coral-beds of the West Indies, if such earthquakes
+as that famous one at St. Thomas&rsquo;s, in 1866, became common and
+periodic, upheaving the land (they needs upheave it a very little, only
+two hundred and fifty feet), till St. Thomas&rsquo;s, and all the Virgin
+Isles, and the mighty mountain of Porto Rico, which looms up dim and
+purple to the west, were all joined into dry land once more, and the
+lonely coral-shoal of Anegada were raised, as it would be raised then,
+into a limestone table-land, like that of Central Ireland, of Galway,
+or of County Clare.</p>
+<p>But you must clearly understand, that however much these coralline
+limestones have been upheaved since they were formed, yet the sea-bottom,
+while they were being formed, was sinking and not rising.&nbsp; This
+is a fact which was first pointed out by Mr. Darwin, from the observations
+which he made in the world-famous <i>Voyage of the Beagle</i>; and the
+observations of subsequent great naturalists have all gone to corroborate
+his theory.</p>
+<p>It was supposed at first, you must understand, that when a coral
+island rose steeply to the surface of the sea out of blue water, perhaps
+a thousand fathoms or more, that fact was plain proof that the little
+coral polypes had begun at the bottom of the sea, and, in the course
+of ages, built up the whole island an enormous depth.</p>
+<p>But it soon came out that that theory was not correct; for the coral
+polypes cannot live and build save in shallow water&mdash;say in thirty
+to forty fathoms.&nbsp; Indeed, some of the strongest and largest species
+work best at the very surface, and in the cut of the fiercest surf.&nbsp;
+And so arose a puzzle as to how coral rock is often found of vast thickness,
+which Mr. Darwin explained.&nbsp; His theory was, and there is no doubt
+now that it is correct, that in these cases the sea-bottom is sinking;
+that as it sinks, carrying the coral beds down with it, the coral dies,
+and a fresh live crop of polypes builds on the top of the houses of
+their dead ancestors: so that, as the depression goes on, generation
+after generation builds upwards, the living on the dead, keeping the
+upper surface of the reef at the same level, while its base is sinking
+downward into the abyss.</p>
+<p>Applying this theory to the coral reef of the Pacific Ocean, the
+following interesting facts were made out:</p>
+<p>That where you find an Island rising out of deep water, with a ring
+of coral round it, a little way from the shore&mdash;or, as in Eastern
+Australia, a coast with a fringing reef (the Flinders reef of Australia
+is eleven thousand miles long)&mdash;that is a pretty sure sign that
+that shore, or mountain, is sinking slowly beneath the sea.&nbsp; That
+where you find, as you often do in the Pacific, a mere atoll, or circular
+reef of coral, with a shallow pond of smooth water in the centre, and
+deep sea round, that is a pretty sure sign that the mountain-top has
+sunk completely into the sea, and that the corals are going on building
+where its peak once was.</p>
+<p>And more.&nbsp; On working out the geography of the South Sea Islands
+by the light of this theory of Mr. Darwin&rsquo;s, the following extraordinary
+fact has been discovered:</p>
+<p>That over a great part of the Pacific Ocean sinking is going on,
+and has been going on for ages; and that the greater number of the beautiful
+and precious South Sea Islands are only the remnants of a vast continent
+or archipelago, which once stretched for thousands of miles between
+Australia and South America.</p>
+<p>Now, applying the same theory to limestone beds, which are, as you
+know, only fossil coral reefs, we have a right to say, when we see in
+England, Scotland, Ireland, limestones several thousand feet thick,
+that while they were being laid down as coral reef, the sea-bottom,
+and probably the neighbouring land, must have been sinking to the amount
+of their thickness&mdash;to several thousand feet&mdash;before that
+later sinking which enabled several hundred feet of millstone grit to
+be laid down on the top of the limestone.</p>
+<p>This millstone grit is a new and a very remarkable element in our
+strange story.&nbsp; From Derby to Northumberland it forms vast and
+lofty moors, capping, as at Whernside and Penygent, the highest limestone
+hills with its hard, rough, barren, and unfossiliferous strata.&nbsp;
+Wherever it is found, it lies on the top of the &ldquo;mountain,&rdquo;
+or carboniferous limestone.&nbsp; Almost everywhere, where coal is found
+in England, it lies on the millstone grit.&nbsp; I speak roughly, for
+fear of confusing my readers with details.&nbsp; The three deposits
+pass more or less, in many places, into each other: but always in the
+order of mountain limestone below, millstone grit on it, and coal on
+that again.</p>
+<p>Now what does its presence prove?&nbsp; What but this?&nbsp; That
+after the great coral reefs which spread over Somersetshire and South
+Wales, around the present estuary of the Severn,&mdash;and those, once
+perhaps joined to them, which spread from Derby to Berwick, with a western
+branch through North-east Wales,&mdash;were laid down&mdash;after all
+this, I say, some change took place in the sea-bottom, and brought down
+on the reefs of coral sheets of sand, which killed the corals and buried
+them in grit.&nbsp; Does any reader wish for proof of this?&nbsp; Let
+him examine the &ldquo;cherty,&rdquo; or flinty, beds which so often
+appear where the bottom of the millstone grit is passing into the top
+of the mountain limestone&mdash;the beds, to give an instance, which
+are now quarried on the top of the Halkin Mountain in Flintshire, for
+chert, which is sent to Staffordshire to be ground down for the manufacture
+of china.&nbsp; He will find layers in those beds, of several feet in
+thickness, as hard as flint, but as porous as sponge.&nbsp; On examining
+their cavities he will find them to be simply hollow casts of innumerable
+joints of Crinoids, so exquisitely preserved, even to their most delicate
+markings, that it is plain they were never washed about upon a beach,
+but have grown where, or nearly where, they lie.&nbsp; What then, has
+happened to them?&nbsp; They have been killed by the sand.&nbsp; The
+soft parts of the animals have decayed, letting the 140,000 joints (more
+or less) belonging to each animal fall into a heap, and be imbedded
+in the growing sand-rock; and then, it may be long years after, water
+filtering through the porous sand has removed the lime of which the
+joints were made, and left their perfect casts behind.</p>
+<p>So much for the millstone grits.&nbsp; How long the deposition of
+sand went on, how long after it that second deposition of sands took
+place, which goes by the name of the &ldquo;gannister,&rdquo; or lower
+coal-measures, we cannot tell.&nbsp; But it is clear, at least, that
+parts of that ancient sea were filling up and becoming dry land.&nbsp;
+For coal, or fossilised vegetable matter, becomes more and more common
+as we ascend in the series of beds; till at last, in the upper coal-measures,
+the enormous wealth of vegetation which grew, much of it, where it is
+now found, prove the existence of some such sheets of fertile and forest-clad
+lowland as I described in my last paper.</p>
+<p>Thousands of feet of rich coral reef; thousands of feet of barren
+sands; then thousands of feet of rich alluvial forest&mdash;and all
+these sliding into each other, if not in one place, then in another,
+without violent break or change; this is the story which the lime in
+the mortar and the coal on the fire, between the two, reveal.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>VI.&nbsp; THE SLATES ON THE ROOF</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>The slates on the roof should be, when rightly understood, a pleasant
+subject for contemplation to the dweller in a town.&nbsp; I do not ask
+him to imitate the boy who, cliff-bred from his youth, used to spend
+stolen hours on the house-top, with his back against a chimney-stalk,
+transfiguring in his imagination the roof-slopes into mountain-sides,
+the slates into sheets of rock, the cats into lions, and the sparrows
+into eagles.&nbsp; I only wish that he should&mdash;at least after reading
+this paper&mdash;let the slates on the roof carry him back in fancy
+to the mountains whence they came; perhaps to pleasant trips to the
+lakes and hills of Cumberland, Westmoreland, and North Wales; and to
+recognise&mdash;as he will do if he have intellect as well as fancy&mdash;how
+beautiful and how curious an object is a common slate.</p>
+<p>Beautiful, not only for the compactness and delicacy of its texture,
+and for the regularity and smoothness of its surface, but still more
+for its colour.&nbsp; Whether merely warm grey, as when dry, or bright
+purple, as when wet, the colour of the English slate well justifies
+Mr. Ruskin&rsquo;s saying, that wherever there is a brick wall and a
+slate roof there need be no want of rich colour in an English landscape.&nbsp;
+But most beautiful is the hue of slate, when, shining wet in the sunshine
+after a summer shower, its blue is brought out in rich contrast by golden
+spots of circular lichen, whose spores, I presume, have travelled with
+it off its native mountains.&nbsp; Then, indeed, it reminds the voyager
+of a sight which it almost rivals in brilliancy&mdash;of the sapphire
+of the deep ocean, brought out into blazing intensity by the contrast
+of the golden patches of floating gulf-weed beneath the tropic sun.</p>
+<p>Beautiful, I say, is the slate; and curious likewise, nay, venerable;
+a most ancient and elaborate work of God, which has lasted long enough,
+and endured enough likewise, to bring out in it whatsoever latent capabilities
+of strength and usefulness might lie hid in it; which has literally
+been&mdash;as far as such words can apply to a thing inanimate&mdash;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Heated hot with burning fears,<br />And bathed in baths of hissing
+tears,<br />And battered by the strokes of doom<br />To shape and use.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>And yet it was at first naught but an ugly lump of soft and shapeless
+ooze.</p>
+<p>Therefore, the slates to me are as a parable, on which I will not
+enlarge, but will leave each reader to interpret it for himself.&nbsp;
+I shall confine myself now to proofs that slate is hardened mud, and
+to hints as to how it assumed its present form.</p>
+<p>That slate may have been once mud, is made probable by the simple
+fact that it can be turned into mud again.&nbsp; If you grind tip slate,
+and then analyse it, you will find its mineral constituents to be exactly
+those of a fine, rich, and tenacious clay.&nbsp; The slate districts
+(at least in Snowdon) carry such a rich clay on them, wherever it is
+not masked by the ruins of other rocks.&nbsp; At Ilfracombe, in North
+Devon, the passage from slate below to clay above, may be clearly seen.&nbsp;
+Wherever the top of the slate beds, and the soil upon it, is laid bare,
+the black layers of slate may be seen gradually melting&mdash;if I may
+use the word&mdash;under the influence of rain and frost, into a rich
+tenacious clay, which is now not black, like its parent slate, but red,
+from the oxidation of the iron which it contains.</p>
+<p>But, granting this, how did the first change take place?</p>
+<p>It must be allowed, at starting, that time enough has elapsed, and
+events enough have happened, since our supposed mud began first to become
+slate, to allow of many and strange transformations.&nbsp; For these
+slates are found in the oldest beds of rocks, save one series, in the
+known world; and it is notorious that the older and lower the beds in
+which the slates are found, the better, that is, the more perfectly
+elaborate, is the slate.&nbsp; The best slates of Snowdon&mdash;I must
+confine myself to the district which I know personally&mdash;are found
+in the so-called &ldquo;Cambrian&rdquo; beds.&nbsp; Below these beds
+but one series of beds is as yet known in the world, called the &ldquo;Laurentian.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+They occur, to a thickness of some eighty thousand feet, in Labrador,
+Canada, and the Adirondack mountains of New York: but their representatives
+in Europe are, as far as is known only to be found in the north-west
+highlands of Scotland, and in the island of Lewis, which consists entirely
+of them.&nbsp; And it is to be remembered, as a proof of their inconceivable
+antiquity, that they have been upheaved and shifted long before the
+Cambrian rocks were laid down &ldquo;unconformably&rdquo; on their worn
+and broken edges.</p>
+<p>Above the &ldquo;Cambrian&rdquo; slates&mdash;whether the lower and
+older ones of Penrhyn and Llanberris, which are the same&mdash;one slate
+mountain being worked at both sides in two opposite valleys&mdash;or
+the upper and newer slates of Tremadoc, lie other and newer slate-bearing
+beds of inferior quality, and belonging to a yet newer world, the &ldquo;Silurian.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+To them belong the Llandeilo flags and slates of Wales, and the Skiddaw
+slates of Cumberland, amid beds abounding in extinct fossil forms.&nbsp;
+Fossil shells are found, it is true, in the upper Cambrian beds.&nbsp;
+In the lower they have all but disappeared.&nbsp; Whether their traces
+have been obliterated by heat and pressure, and chemical action, during
+long ages; or whether, in these lower beds, we are actually reaching
+that &ldquo;Primordial Zone&rdquo; conceived of by M. Barrande, namely,
+rocks which existed before living things had begun to people this planet,
+is a question not yet answered.&nbsp; I believe the former theory to
+be the true one.&nbsp; That there was life, in the sea at least, even
+before the oldest Cambrian rocks were laid down, is proved by the discovery
+of the now famous fossil, the Eozoon, in the Laurentian limestones,
+which seems to have grown layer after layer, and to have formed reefs
+of limestone as do the living coral-building polypes.&nbsp; We know
+no more as yet.&nbsp; But all that we do know points downwards, downwards
+still, warning us that we must dig deeper than we have dug as yet, before
+we reach the graves of the first living things.</p>
+<p>Let this suffice at present for the Cambrian and Laurentian rocks.</p>
+<p>The Silurian rocks, lower and upper, which in these islands have
+their chief development in Wales, and which are nearly thirty-eight
+thousand feet thick; and the Devonian or Old Red sandstone beds, which
+in the Fans of Brecon and Carmarthenshire attain a thickness of ten
+thousand feet, must be passed through in an upward direction before
+we reach the bottom of that Carboniferous Limestone of which I spoke
+in my last paper.&nbsp; We thus find on the Cambrian rocks forty-five
+thousand feet at least of newer rocks, in several cases lying unconformably
+on each other, showing thereby that the lower beds had been upheaved,
+and their edges worn off on a sea-shore, ere the upper were laid down
+on them; and throughout this vast thickness of rocks, the remains of
+hundreds of forms of animals, corals, shells, fish, older forms dying
+out in the newer rocks, and new ones taking their places in a steady
+succession of ever-varying forms, till those in the upper beds have
+become unlike those in the lower, and all are from the beginning more
+or less unlike any existing now on earth.&nbsp; Whole families, indeed,
+disappear entirely, like the Trilobites, which seem to have swarmed
+in the Silurian seas, holding the same place there as crabs and shrimps
+do in our modern seas.&nbsp; They vanish after the period of the coal,
+and their place is taken by an allied family of Crustaceans, of which
+only one form (as far as I am aware) lingers now on earth, namely, the
+&ldquo;King Crab,&rdquo; or Limulus, of the Indian Seas, a well-known
+animal, of which specimens may sometimes be seen alive in English aquaria.&nbsp;
+So perished in the lapse of those same ages, the armour-plated or &ldquo;Ganoid&rdquo;
+fish which Hugh Miller made so justly famous&mdash;and which made him
+so justly famous in return&mdash;appearing first in the upper Silurian
+beds, and abounding in vast variety of strange forms in the old Red
+Sandstone, but gradually disappearing from the waters of the world,
+till their only representatives, as far as known, are the Lepidostei,
+or &ldquo;Bony Pikes,&rdquo; of North America; the Polypteri of the
+Nile and Senegal; the Lepidosirens of the African lakes and Western
+rivers; the Ceratodus or Barramundi of Queensland (the two latter of
+which approach Amphibians), and one or two more fantastic forms, either
+rudimentary or degraded, which have lasted on here and there in isolated
+stations through long ages, comparatively unchanged while all the world
+is changed around them, and their own kindred, buried like the fossil
+Ceratodus of the Trias beneath thousands of feet of ancient rock, among
+creatures the likes whereof are not to be found now on earth.&nbsp;
+And these are but two examples out of hundreds of the vast changes which
+have taken place in the animal life of the globe, between the laying
+down of the Cambrian slates and the present time.</p>
+<p>Surely&mdash;and it is to this conclusion I have been tending throughout
+a seemingly wandering paragraph&mdash;surely there has been time enough
+during all those ages for clay to change into slate.</p>
+<p>And how were they changed?</p>
+<p>I think I cannot teach my readers this more simply than by asking
+them first to buy Sheet No. LXXVIII. S.E. (Bangor) of the Snowdon district
+of the Government Geological Survey, which may be ordered at any good
+stationer&rsquo;s, price 3s.; and study it with me.&nbsp; He will see
+down the right-hand margin interpretations of the different colours
+which mark the different beds, beginning with the youngest (alluvium)
+atop, and going down through Carboniferous Limestone and Sandstone,
+Upper Silurian, Lower Silurian, Cambrian, and below them certain rocks
+marked of different shades of red, which signify rocks either altered
+by heat, or poured out of old volcanic vents.&nbsp; He will next see
+that the map is covered with a labyrinth of red patches and curved lines,
+signifying the outcrop or appearance at the surface of these volcanic
+beds.&nbsp; They lie at every conceivable slope; and the hills and valleys
+have been scooped out by rain and ice into every conceivable slope likewise.&nbsp;
+Wherefore we see, here a broad patch of red, where the back of a sheet
+of Lava, Porphyry, Greenstone, or what not is exposed; there a narrow
+line curving often with the curve of the hill-side, where only the edge
+of a similar sheet is exposed; and every possible variety of shape and
+attitude between these two.&nbsp; He will see also large spaces covered
+with little coloured dots, which signify (as he will find at the margin)
+beds of volcanic ash.&nbsp; If he look below the little coloured squares
+on the margin, he will see figures marking the strike, or direction
+of the inclination of the beds&mdash;inclined, vertical, horizontal,
+contorted; that the white lines in the map signify faults, <i>i.e</i>.
+shifts in the strata; the gold lines, lodes of metal&mdash;the latter
+of which I should advise him strongly, in this district at least, not
+to meddle with: but to button up his pockets, and to put into the fire,
+in wholesome fear of his own weakness and ignorance, any puffs of mining
+companies which may be sent him&mdash;as one or two have probably been
+sent him already.</p>
+<p>Furnished with which keys to the map, let him begin to con it over,
+sure that there is if not an order, still a grand meaning in all its
+seeming confusion; and let him, if he be a courteous and grateful person,
+return due thanks to Professor Ramsay for having found it all out; not
+without wondering, as I have often wondered, how even Professor Ramsay&rsquo;s
+acuteness and industry could find it all out.</p>
+<p>When my reader has studied awhile the confusion&mdash;for it is a
+true confusion&mdash;of the different beds, he will ask, or at least
+have a right to ask, what known process of nature can have produced
+it?&nbsp; How have these various volcanic rocks, which he sees marked
+as Felspathic Traps, Quartz Porphyries, Greenstones, and so forth, got
+intermingled with beds which he is told to believe are volcanic ashes,
+and those again with fossil-bearing Silurian beds and Cambrian slates,
+which he is told to believe were deposited under water?&nbsp; And his
+puzzle will not be lessened when he is told that, in some cases, as
+in that of the summit of Snowdon, these very volcanic ashes contain
+fossil shells.</p>
+<p>The best answer I can give is to ask him to use his imagination,
+or his common sense; and to picture to himself what must go on in the
+case of a submarine eruption, such as broke out off the coast of Iceland
+in 1783 and 1830, off the Azores in 1811, and in our day in more than
+one spot in the Pacific Ocean.</p>
+<p>A main bore or vent&mdash;or more than one&mdash;opens itself between
+the bottom of the sea and the nether fires.&nbsp; From each rushes an
+enormous jet of high-pressure steam and other gases, which boils up
+through the sea, and forms a cloud above; that cloud descends again
+in heavy rain, and gives out often true lightning from its under side.</p>
+<p>But it does more.&nbsp; It acts as a true steam-gun, hurling into
+the air fragments of cold rock rasped off from the sides of the bore,
+and fragments also of melted lava, and clouds of dust, which fall again
+into the sea, and form there beds either of fine mud or of breccia&mdash;that
+is, fragments of stone embedded in paste.&nbsp; This, the reader will
+understand, is no fancy sketch, as far as I am concerned.&nbsp; I have
+steamed into craters sawn through by the sea, and showing sections of
+beds of ash dipping outwards and under the sea, and in them boulders
+and pebbles of every size, which had been hurled out of the crater;
+and in them also veins of hardened lava, which had burrowed out through
+the soft ashes of the cone.&nbsp; Of those lava veins I will speak presently.&nbsp;
+What I want the reader to think of now is the immense quantity of ash
+which the steam-mitrailleuse hurls to so vast a height into the air,
+that it is often drifted many miles down to leeward.&nbsp; To give two
+instances: The jet of steam from Vesuvius, in the eruption of 1822,
+rose more than four miles into the air; the jet from the Souffri&egrave;re
+of St. Vincent in the West Indies, in 1812, probably rose higher; certainly
+it met the N.E. trade-wind, for it poured down a layer of ashes, several
+inches thick, not only on St. Vincent itself, but on Barbadoes, eighty
+miles to windward, and therefore on all the sea between.&nbsp; Now let
+us consider what that represents&mdash;a layer of fine mud, laid down
+at the bottom of the ocean, several inches thick, eighty miles at least
+long, and twenty miles perhaps broad, by a single eruption.&nbsp; Suppose
+that hardened in long ages (as it would be under pressure) into a bed
+of fine grained Felstone, or volcanic ash; and we can understand how
+the ash-beds of Snowdonia&mdash;which may be traced some of them for
+many square miles&mdash;were laid down at the bottom of an ancient sea.</p>
+<p>But now about the lavas or true volcanic rocks, which are painted
+(as is usual in geological maps) red.&nbsp; Let us go down to the bottom
+of the sea, and build up our volcano towards the surface.</p>
+<p>First, as I said, the subterranean steam would blast a bore.&nbsp;
+The dust and stones, rasped and blasted out of that hole would be spread
+about the sea-bottom as an ash-bed sloping away round the hole; then
+the molten lava would rise in the bore, and flow out over the ashes
+and the sea-bottom&mdash;perhaps in one direction, perhaps all round.&nbsp;
+Then, usually, the volcano, having vented itself, would be quieter for
+a time, till the heat accumulated below, and more ash was blasted out,
+making a second ash-bed; and then would follow a second lava flow.&nbsp;
+Thus are produced the alternate beds of lava and ash which are so common.</p>
+<p>Now suppose that at this point the volcano was exhausted, and lay
+quiet for a few hundred years, or more.&nbsp; If there was any land
+near, from which mud and sand were washed down, we might have layers
+on layers of sediment deposited, with live shells, etc., living in them,
+which would be converted into fossils when they died; and so we should
+have fossiliferous beds over the ashes and lavas.&nbsp; Indeed, shells
+might live and thrive in the ash-mud itself, when it cooled, and the
+sea grew quiet, as they have lived and thriven in Snowdonia.</p>
+<p>Now suppose that after these sedimentary beds are laid down by water,
+the volcano breaks out again&mdash;what would happen?</p>
+<p>Many things: specially this, which has often happened already.</p>
+<p>The lava, kept down by the weight of these new rocks, searches for
+the point of least resistance, and finds it in a more horizontal direction.&nbsp;
+It burrows out through the softer ash-beds, and between the sedimentary
+beds, spreading itself along horizontally.&nbsp; This process accounts
+for the very puzzling, though very common case in Snowdon and elsewhere,
+in which we find lavas interstratified with rocks which are plainly
+older than those lavas.&nbsp; Perhaps when that is done the volcano
+has got rid of all its lava, and is quiet.&nbsp; But if not, sooner
+or later, it bores up through the new sedimentary rocks, faulting them
+by earthquake shocks till it gets free vent, and begins its layers of
+alternate ash and lava once more.</p>
+<p>And consider this fact also: If near the first (as often happens)
+there is another volcano, the lava from one may run over the lava from
+the other, and we may have two lavas of different materials overlying
+each other, which have come from different directions.&nbsp; The ashes
+blown out of the two craters may mingle also, and so, in the course
+of ages, the result may be such a confusion of ashes, lavas, and sedimentary
+rocks as we find throughout most mountain ranges in Snowdon, in the
+Lake mountains, in the Auvergne in France, in Sicily round Etna, in
+Italy round Vesuvius, and in so many West Indian Islands; the last confusion
+of which is very likely to be this:</p>
+<p>That when the volcano has succeeded&mdash;as it did in the case of
+Sabrina Island off the Azores in 1811, and as it did, perhaps often,
+in Snowdonia&mdash;in piling up an ash cone some hundred feet out of
+the sea; that&mdash;as has happened to Sabrina Island&mdash;the cone
+is sunk again by earthquakes, and gnawn down at the same time by the
+sea-waves, till nothing is left but a shoal under water.&nbsp; But where
+have all its vast heaps of ashes gone?&nbsp; To be spread about over
+the bottom of the sea, to mingle with the mud already there, and so
+make beds of which, like many in Snowdon, we cannot say whether they
+are of volcanic or of marine origin, because they are of both.</p>
+<p>But what has all this to do with the slates?</p>
+<p>I shall not be surprised if my readers ask that question two or three
+times during this paper.&nbsp; But they must be kind enough to let me
+tell my story my own way.&nbsp; The slates were not made in a day, and
+I fear they cannot be explained in an hour: unless we begin carefully
+at the beginning in order to end at the end.&nbsp; Let me first make
+my readers clearly understand that all our slate-bearing mountains,
+and most also of the non-slate-bearing ones likewise, are formed after
+the fashion which I have described, namely, beneath the sea.&nbsp; I
+do not say that there may not have been, again, and again, ash-cones
+rising above the surface of the waves.&nbsp; But if so, they were washed
+away, again and again, ages before the land assumed anything of its
+present shape; ages before the beds were twisted and upheaved as they
+are now.</p>
+<p>And therefore I beg my readers to put out of their minds once and
+for all the fancy that in any known part of these islands craters are
+to be still seen, such as exist in Etna, or Vesuvius, or other volcanoes
+now at work in the open air.</p>
+<p>It is necessary to insist on this, because many people hearing that
+certain mountains are volcanic, conclude&mdash;and very naturally and
+harmlessly&mdash;that the circular lakes about their tops are true craters.&nbsp;
+I have been told, for instance, that that wonderful little blue Glas
+Llyn, under the highest cliff of Snowdon, is the old crater of the mountain;
+and I have heard people insist that a similar lake, of almost equal
+grandeur, in the south side of Cader Idris, is a crater likewise.</p>
+<p>But the fact is not so.&nbsp; Any one acquainted with recent craters
+would see at once that Glas Llyn is not an ancient one; and I am not
+surprised to find the Government geologists declaring that the Llyn
+on Cader Idris is not one either.&nbsp; The fact is, that the crater,
+or rather the place where the crater has been, in ancient volcanoes
+of this kind, is probably now covered by one of the innumerable bosses
+of lava.</p>
+<p>For, as an eruption ceases, the melted lava cools in the vents, and
+hardens; usually into lava infinitely harder than the ash-cone round
+it; and this, when the ash-cone is washed off, remains as the highest
+part of the hill, as in the Mont Dore and the Cantal in France, and
+in several extinct volcanoes in the Antilles.&nbsp; Of course the lava
+must have been poured out, and the ashes blown out from some vents or
+other, connected with the nether world of fire; probably from many successive
+vents.&nbsp; For in volcanoes, when one vent is choked, another is wont
+to open at some fresh point of least resistance among the overlying
+rocks.&nbsp; But where are these vents?&nbsp; Buried deep under successive
+eruptions, shifted probably from their places by successive upheavings
+and dislocations; and if we wanted to find them we should have to quarry
+the mountain range all over, a mile deep, before we hit upon here and
+there a tap-root of ancient lava, connecting the upper and the nether
+worlds.&nbsp; There are such tap-roots, probably, under each of our
+British mountain ranges.&nbsp; But Snowdon, certainly, does not owe
+its shape to the fact of one of these old fire vents being under it.&nbsp;
+It owes its shape simply to the accident of some of the beds toward
+the summit being especially hard, and thus able to stand the wear and
+tear of sea-wave, ice, and rain.&nbsp; Its lakes have been formed quite
+regardless of the lie of the rocks, though not regardless of their relative
+hardness.&nbsp; But what forces scooped them out&mdash;whether they
+were originally holes left in the ground by earthquakes, and deepened
+since by rain and rivers, or whether they were scooped out by ice, or
+by any other means, is a question on which the best geologists are yet
+undecided&mdash;decided only on this&mdash;that craters they are not.</p>
+<p>As for the enormous changes which have taken place in the outline
+of the whole of the mountains, since first their strata were laid down
+at the bottom of the sea: I shall give facts enough, before this paper
+is done, to enable readers to judge of them for themselves.</p>
+<p>The reader will now ask, naturally enough, how such a heap of beds
+as I have described can take the shape of mountains like Snowdon.</p>
+<p>Look at any sea cliff in which the strata are twisted and set on
+slope.&nbsp; There are hundreds of such in these isles.&nbsp; The beds
+must have been at one time straight and horizontal.&nbsp; But it is
+equally clear that they have been folded by being squeezed laterally.&nbsp;
+At least, that is the simplest explanation, as may be proved by experiment.&nbsp;
+Take a number of pieces of cloth, or any such stuff; lay them on each
+other and then squeeze them together at each end.&nbsp; They will arrange
+themselves in folds, just as the beds of the cliff have done.&nbsp;
+And if, instead of cloth, you take some more brittle matter, you will
+find that, as you squeeze on, these folds will tend to snap at the points
+of greatest tension or stretching, which will be of course at the anticlinal
+and synclinal lines&mdash;in plain English, the tops and bottoms of
+the folds.&nbsp; Thus cracks will be formed; and if the pressure goes
+on, the ends of the layers will shift against each other in the line
+of those cracks, forming faults like those so common in rocks.</p>
+<p>But again, suppose that instead of squeezing these broken and folded
+lines together any more, you took off the pressure right and left, and
+pressed them upwards from below, by a mimic earthquake.&nbsp; They would
+rise; and as they rose leave open space between them.&nbsp; Now if you
+could contrive to squeeze into them from below a paste, which would
+harden in the cracks and between the layers, and so keep them permanently
+apart, you would make them into a fair likeness of an average mountain
+range&mdash;a mess&mdash;if I may make use of a plain old word&mdash;of
+rocks which have, by alternate contraction and expansion, helped in
+the latter case by the injection of molten lava, been thrust about as
+they are in most mountain ranges.</p>
+<p>That such a contraction and expansion goes on in the crust of the
+earth is evident; for here are the palpable effects of it.&nbsp; And
+the simplest general cause which I can give for it is this: That things
+expand as they are heated, and contract as they are cooled.</p>
+<p>Now I am not learned enough&mdash;and were I, I have not time&mdash;to
+enter into the various theories which philosophers have put forward,
+to account for these grand phenomena.</p>
+<p>The most remarkable, perhaps, and the most probable, is the theory
+of M. Elie de Beaumont, which is, in a few words, this:</p>
+<p>That this earth, like all the planets, must have been once in a state
+of intense heat throughout, as its mass inside is probably now.</p>
+<p>That it must be cooling, and giving off its heat into space.</p>
+<p>That, therefore, as it cools, its crust must contract.</p>
+<p>That, therefore, in contracting, wrinkles (for the loftiest mountain
+chains are nothing but tiny wrinkles, compared with the whole mass of
+the earth), wrinkles, I say, must form on its surface from time to time.&nbsp;
+And that the mountain chains are these wrinkles.</p>
+<p>Be that as it may, we may safely say this.&nbsp; That wherever the
+internal heat of the earth tends (as in the case of volcanoes) towards
+a particular spot, that spot must expand, and swell up, bulging the
+rocks out, and probably cracking them, and inserting melting lava into
+those cracks from below.&nbsp; On the other hand, if the internal heat
+leaves that spot again, and it cools, then it must contract more or
+less, in falling inward toward the centre of the earth; and so the beds
+must be crumpled, and crushed, and shifted against each other still
+more, as those of our mountains have been.</p>
+<p>But here may arise, in some of my readers&rsquo; minds, a reasonable
+question&mdash;If these upheaved beds were once horizontal, should we
+not be likely to find them, in some places, horizontal still?</p>
+<p>A reasonable question, and one which admits of a full answer.</p>
+<p>They know, of course, that there has been a gradual, but steady,
+change in the animals of this planet; and that the relative age of beds
+can, on the strength of that known change, be determined generally by
+the fossils, usually shells, peculiar to them: so that if we find the
+same fashion of shells, and still more the same species of shells, in
+two beds in different quarters of the world, then we have a right to
+say&mdash;These beds were laid down at least about the same time.&nbsp;
+That is a general rule among all geologists, and not to be gainsaid.</p>
+<p>Now I think I may say, that, granting that we can recognise a bed
+by its fossils, there are few or no beds which are found in one place
+upheaved, broken, and altered by heat, which are not found in some other
+place still horizontal, unbroken, unaltered, and more or less as they
+were at first.</p>
+<p>From the most recent beds; from the upheaved coral-rocks of the West
+Indies, and the upheaved and faulted boulder clay and chalk of the Isle
+of Moen in Denmark&mdash;downwards through all the strata, down to that
+very ancient one in which the best slates are found, this rule, I believe,
+stands true.</p>
+<p>It stands true, certainly, of the ancient Silurian rocks of Wales,
+Cumberland, Ireland, and Scotland.</p>
+<p>For, throughout great tracts of Russia, and in parts of Norway and
+Sweden, Sir Roderick Murchison discovered our own Silurian beds, recognisable
+from their peculiar fossils.&nbsp; But in what state?&nbsp; Not contracted,
+upheaved, and hardened to slates and grits, as they are in Wales and
+elsewhere: but horizontal, unbroken, and still soft, because undisturbed
+by volcanic rooks and earthquakes.&nbsp; At the bottom of them all,
+near Petersburg, Sir Roderick found a shale of dried mud (to quote his
+own words), &ldquo;so soft and incoherent that it is even used by sculptors
+for modelling, although it underlies the great mass of fossil-bearing
+Silurian rocks, and is, therefore, of the same age as the lower crystalline
+hard slates of North Wales.&nbsp; So entirely have most of these eldest
+rocks in Russia been exempted from the influence of change, throughout
+those enormous periods which have passed away since their accumulation.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Among the many discoveries which science owes to that illustrious
+veteran, I know none more valuable for its bearing on the whole question
+of the making of the earth-crust, than this one magnificent fact.</p>
+<p>But what a contrast between these Scandinavian and Russian rocks
+and those of Britain!&nbsp; Never exceeding, in Scandinavia, a thousand
+feet in thickness, and lying usually horizontal, as they were first
+laid down, they are swelled in Britain to a thickness of thirty thousand
+feet, by intruded lavas and ashes; snapt, turned, set on end at every
+conceivable angle; shifted against each other to such an extent, that,
+to give a single instance, in the Vale of Gwynnant, under Snowdon, an
+immense wedge of porphyry has been thrust up, in what is now the bottom
+of the valley, between rocks far newer than it, on one side to a height
+of eight hundred, on the other to a height of eighteen hundred feet&mdash;half
+the present height of Snowdon.&nbsp; Nay, the very slate beds of Snowdonia
+have not forced their way up from under the mountain&mdash;without long
+and fearful struggles.&nbsp; They are set in places upright on end,
+then horizontal again, then sunk in an opposite direction, then curled
+like sea-waves, then set nearly upright once more, and faulted through
+and through, six times, I believe, in the distance of a mile or two;
+they carry here and there on their backs patches of newer beds, the
+rest of which has long vanished; and in their rise they have hurled
+back to the eastward, and set upright, what is now the whole western
+flank of Snowdon, a mass of rock which was then several times as thick
+as it is now.</p>
+<p>The force which thus tortured them was probably exerted by the great
+mass of volcanic Quartz-porphyry, which rises from under them to the
+north-west, crossing the end of the lower lake of the Llanberris; and
+indeed the shifts and convulsions which have taken place between them
+and the Menai Straits are so vast that they can only be estimated by
+looking at them on the section which may be found at the end of Professor
+Ramsay&rsquo;s &ldquo;Geological Survey of North Wales.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+But anyone who will study that section, and use (as with the map) a
+little imagination and common sense, will see that between the heat
+of that Porphyry, which must have been poured out as a fluid mass as
+hot, probably, as melted iron, and the pressure of it below, and of
+the Silurian beds above, the Cambrian mud-strata of Llanberris and Penrhyn
+quarries must have suffered enough to change them into something very
+different from mud, and, therefore, probably, into what they are now&mdash;namely,
+slate.</p>
+<p>And now, at last, we have got to the slates on the roof, and may
+disport ourselves over them&mdash;like the cats.</p>
+<p>Look at any piece of slate.&nbsp; All know that slate splits or cleaves
+freely, in one direction only, into flat layers.&nbsp; Now any one would
+suppose at first sight, and fairly enough, that the flat surface&mdash;the
+&ldquo;plane of cleavage&rdquo;&mdash;was also the plane of bedding.&nbsp;
+In simpler English we should say&mdash;The mud which has hardened into
+the slate was laid down horizontally; and therefore each slate is one
+of the little horizontal beds of it, perhaps just what was laid down
+in a single tide.&nbsp; We should have a right to do so, because that
+would be true of most sedimentary rocks.&nbsp; But it would not be true
+of slate.&nbsp; The plane of bedding in slate has nothing to do with
+the plane of cleavage.&nbsp; Or, more plainly, the mud of which the
+slate is made may have been deposited at the sea-bottom at any angle
+to the plane of cleavage.&nbsp; We may sometimes see the lines of the
+true bedding&mdash;the lines which were actually horizontal when the
+mud was laid down&mdash;in bits of slate, and find them sometimes perpendicular
+to, sometimes inclined to, and sometimes again coinciding with the plane
+of cleavage, which they have evidently acquired long after.</p>
+<p>Nay, more.&nbsp; These parallel planes of cleavage, at each of which
+the slate splits freely, will run through a whole mountain at the same
+angle, though the beds through which they run may be tilted at different
+angles, and twisted into curves.</p>
+<p>Now what has made this change in the rook?&nbsp; We do not exactly
+know.&nbsp; One thing is clear, that the particles of the now solid
+rock have actually moved on themselves.&nbsp; And this is proved by
+a very curious fact&mdash;which the reader, if he geologises about slate
+quarries much, may see with his own eyes.&nbsp; The fossils in the slate
+are often distorted into quaint shapes, pulled out long if they lie
+along the plane of cleavage, or squeezed together, or doubled down on
+both sides, if they lie across the plane.&nbsp; So that some force has
+been at work which could actually change the shape of hard shells, very
+slowly, no doubt, else it would have snapped and crumbled them.</p>
+<p>If I am asked what that force was, I do not know.&nbsp; I should
+advise young geologists to read what Sir Henry de la B&ecirc;che has
+said on it in his admirable &ldquo;Geological Observer,&rdquo; pp. 706-725.&nbsp;
+He will find there, too, some remarks on that equally mysterious phenomena
+of jointing, which you may see in almost all the older rocks; it is
+common in limestones.&nbsp; All we can say is, that some force has gone
+on, or may be even now going on, in the more ancient rocks, which is
+similar to that which produces single crystals; and similar, too, to
+that which produced the jointed crystals of basalt, <i>i.e</i>. lava,
+at the Giant&rsquo;s Causeway, in Ireland, and Staffa, in the Hebrides.&nbsp;
+Two philosophers&mdash;Mr. Robert Were Fox and Mr. Robert Hunt&mdash;are
+of opinion that the force which has determined the cleavage of slates
+may be that of the electric currents, which (as is well known) run through
+the crust of the earth.&nbsp; Mr. Sharpe, I believe, attributes the
+cleavage to the mere mechanical pressure of enormous weights of rock,
+especially where crushed by earthquakes.&nbsp; Professor Rogers, again,
+points out that as these slates may have been highly heated, thermal
+electricity (<i>i.e</i>. electricity brought out by heat) may have acted
+on them.</p>
+<p>One thing at least is clear.&nbsp; That the best slates are found
+among ancient lavas, and also in rocks which are faulted and tilted
+enormously, all which could not have happened without a proportionately
+enormous pressure, and therefore heat; and next, that the best slates
+are invariably found in the oldest beds&mdash;that is, in the beds which
+have had most time to endure the changes, whether mechanical or chemical,
+which have made the earth&rsquo;s surface what we see it now.</p>
+<p>Another startling fact the section of Snowdonia, and I believe of
+most mountain chains in these islands, would prove&mdash;namely, that
+the contour of the earth&rsquo;s surface, as we see it now, depends
+very little, certainly in mountains composed of these elder rocks upon
+the lie of the strata, or beds, but has been carved out by great forces,
+long after those beds were not only laid down and hardened, but faulted
+and tilted on end.&nbsp; Snowdon itself is so remarkable an instance
+of this fact that, as it is a mountain which every one in these happy
+days of excursion-trains and steamers either has seen or can see, I
+must say a few more words about it.</p>
+<p>Any one who saw that noble peak leaping high into the air, dominating
+all the country round, at least upon three sides, and was told that
+its summit consisted of beds much newer, not much older, than the slate-beds
+fifteen hundred feet down on its north-western flank&mdash;any one,
+I say, would have the right at first sight, on hearing of earthquake
+faults and upheavals, to say&mdash;The peak of Snowdon has been upheaved
+to its present height above and out of the lower lands around.&nbsp;
+But when he came to examine sections, he would find his reasonable guess
+utterly wrong.&nbsp; Snowdon is no swelling up of the earth&rsquo;s
+crust.&nbsp; The beds do not, as they would in that case, slope up to
+it.&nbsp; They slope up from it, to the north-west in one direction,
+and the south-south-west in the other; and Snowdon is a mere insignificant
+boss, left hanging on one slope of what was once an enormous trough,
+or valley, of strata far older than itself.&nbsp; By restoring these
+strata, in the direction of the angles, in which they crop out, and
+vanish at the surface, it is found that to the north-west&mdash;the
+direction of the Menai Straits&mdash;they must once have risen to a
+height of at least six or seven thousand feet; and more, by restoring
+them, specially the ash-bed of Snowdon, towards the south-east&mdash;which
+can be done by the guidance of certain patches of it left on other hills&mdash;it
+is found that south of Ffestiniog, where the Cambrian rocks rise again
+to the surface, the south side of the trough must have sloped upwards
+to a height of from fifteen to twenty thousand feet, whether at the
+bottom of the sea, or in the upper air, we cannot tell.&nbsp; But the
+fact is certain, that off the surface of Wales, south of Ffestiniog
+a mass of solid rock as high as the Andes has been worn down and carried
+bodily away; and that a few miles south again, the peak of Arran Mowddy,
+which is now not two thousand feet high, was once&mdash;either under
+the sea or above it&mdash;nearer ten thousand feet.</p>
+<p>If I am asked whither is all that enormous mass of rock&mdash;millions
+of tons&mdash;gone?&nbsp; Where is it now?&nbsp; I know not.&nbsp; But
+if I dared to hazard a guess, I should say it went to make the New Red
+sandstones of England.</p>
+<p>The New Red sandstones must have come from somewhere.&nbsp; The most
+likely region for them to have come from is from North Wales, where,
+as we know, vast masses of gritty rock have been ground off, such as
+would make fine sandstones if they had the chance.&nbsp; So that many
+a grain of sand in Chester walls was probably once blasted out of the
+bowels of the earth into the old Silurian sea, and after a few hundreds
+of thousands of years&rsquo; repose in a Snowdonian ash-bed, was sent
+eastward to build the good old city and many a good town more.</p>
+<p>And the red marl&mdash;the great deposit of red marl which covers
+a wide region of England&mdash;why should not it have come from the
+same quarter?&nbsp; Why should it not be simply the remains of the Snowdon
+Slate?&nbsp; Mud the slate was, and into mud it has returned.&nbsp;
+Why not?&nbsp; Some of the richest red marl land I know, is, as I have
+said, actually being made now, out of the black slates of Ilfracombe,
+wherever they are weathered by rain and air.&nbsp; The chemical composition
+is the same.&nbsp; The difference in colour between black slate and
+red marl is caused simply by the oxidation of the iron in the slate.</p>
+<p>And if my readers want a probable cause why the sandstones lie undermost,
+and the red marl uppermost&mdash;can they not find one for themselves?&nbsp;
+I do not say that it is the cause, but it is at least a causa vera,
+one which would fully explain the fact, though it may be explicable
+in other ways.&nbsp; Think, then, or shall I think for my readers?</p>
+<p>Then do they not see that when the Welsh mountains were ground down,
+the Silurian strata, being uppermost, would be ground down first, and
+would go to make the lower strata of the great New Red Sandstone Lowland;
+and that being sandy, they would make the sandstones?&nbsp; But wherever
+they were ground through, the Lower Cambrian slates would be laid bare;
+and their remains, being washed away by the sea the last, would be washed
+on to the top of the remains of the Silurians; and so (as in most cases)
+the remains of the older rock, when redeposited by water, would lie
+on the remains of the younger rock.&nbsp; And do they not see that (if
+what I just said is true) these slates would grind up into red marl,
+such as is seen over the west and south of Cheshire and Staffordshire
+and far away into Nottinghamshire?&nbsp; The red marl must almost certainly
+have been black slate somewhere, somewhen.&nbsp; Why should it not have
+been such in Snowdon?&nbsp; And why should not the slates in the roof
+be the remnants of the very beds which are now the marl in the fields?</p>
+<p>And thus I end my story of the slates in the roof, and these papers
+on Town Geology.&nbsp; I do so, well knowing how imperfect they are:
+though not, I believe, inaccurate.&nbsp; They are, after all, merely
+suggestive of the great amount that there is to be learnt about the
+face of the earth and how it got made, even by the townsman, who can
+escape into the country and exchange the world of man for the world
+of God, only, perhaps, on Sundays&mdash;if, alas! even then&mdash;or
+only once a year by a trip in a steamer or an excursion train.&nbsp;
+Little, indeed, can he learn of the planet on which he lives.&nbsp;
+Little in that direction is given to him, and of him little shall be
+required.&nbsp; But to him, for that very reason, all that can be given
+should be given; he should have every facility for learning what he
+can about this earth, its composition, its capabilities; lest his intellect,
+crushed and fettered by that artificial drudgery which we for a time
+miscall civilisation, should begin to fancy, as too many do already,
+that the world is composed mainly of bricks and deal, and governed by
+acts of parliament.&nbsp; If I shall have awakened any townsmen here
+and there to think seriously of the complexity, the antiquity, the grandeur,
+the true poetry, of the commonest objects around them, even the stones
+beneath their feet; if I shall have suggested to them the solemn thought
+that all these things, and they themselves still more, are ordered by
+laws, utterly independent of man&rsquo;s will about them, man&rsquo;s
+belief in them; if I shall at all have helped to open their eyes that
+they may see, and their ears that they may hear, the great book which
+is free to all alike, to peasant as to peer, to men of business as to
+men of science, even that great book of nature, which is, as Lord Bacon
+said of old, the Word of God revealed in facts&mdash;then I shall have
+a fresh reason for loving that science of geology, which has been my
+favourite study since I was a boy.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>Footnotes:</p>
+<p><a name="footnote1"></a><a href="#citation1">{1}</a>&nbsp; See &ldquo;Nature,&rdquo;
+No.&nbsp; XXV.&nbsp; (Macmillan &amp; Co.)</p>
+<p><a name="footnote2"></a><a href="#citation2">{2}</a>&nbsp; These
+Lectures were delivered to the members of the Natural Science Class
+at Chester in 1871.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote3"></a><a href="#citation3">{3}</a>&nbsp; See a
+most charming paper on &ldquo;The Physics of Arctic Ice,&rdquo; by Dr.
+Robert Brown of Campster, published in the <i>Quarterly Journal of the
+Geological Society</i>, June, 1870.&nbsp; This article is so remarkable,
+not only for its sound scientific matter, but for the vividness and
+poetic beauty of its descriptions, that I must express a hope that the
+learned author will some day enlarge it, and publish it in a separate
+form.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote4"></a><a href="#citation4">{4}</a>&nbsp; See Lyell,
+&ldquo;Antiquity of Man,&rdquo; p. 294 <i>et seq.</i></p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines3"><br /><br /><br /></div>
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TOWN GEOLOGY***</p>
+<pre>
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+</html>
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Town Geology, by Charles Kingsley
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: Town Geology
+
+Author: Charles Kingsley
+
+Release Date: November 24, 2003 [eBook #10251]
+
+Language: English
+
+Chatacter set encoding: US-ASCII
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TOWN GEOLOGY***
+
+
+Transcribed by David Price, email ccx074@coventry.ac.uk
+
+
+
+
+TOWN GEOLOGY
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+
+This little book, including the greater part of this Preface, has
+shaped itself out of lectures given to the young men of the city of
+Chester. But it does not deal, in its present form, with the geology
+of the neighbourhood of Chester only. I have tried so to recast it,
+that any townsman, at least in the manufacturing districts of England
+and Scotland, may learn from it to judge, roughly perhaps, but on the
+whole accurately, of the rocks and soils of his own neighbourhood.
+He will find, it is true, in these pages, little or nothing about
+those "Old Red Sandstones," so interesting to a Scotchman; and he
+will have to bear in mind, if he belong to the coal districts of
+Scotland, that the "stones in the wall" there belong to much older
+rocks than those "New Red Sandstones" of which this book treats; and
+that the coal measures of Scotland, with the volcanic rocks which
+have disturbed them, are often very different in appearance to the
+English coal measures. But he will soon learn to distinguish the
+relative age of rocks by the fossils found in them, which he can now,
+happily, study in many local museums; and he may be certain, for the
+rest, that all rocks and soils whatsoever which he may meet have been
+laid down by the agents, and according to the laws, which I have
+tried to set forth in this book; and these only require, for the
+learning of them, the exercise of his own observation and common
+sense. I have not tried to make this a handbook of geological facts.
+Such a guide (and none better) the young man will find in Sir Charles
+Lyell's "Student's Elements of Geology." I have tried rather to
+teach the method of geology, than its facts; to furnish the student
+with a key to all geology, rough indeed and rudimentary, but sure and
+sound enough, I trust, to help him to unlock most geological problems
+which he may meet, in any quarter of the globe. But young men must
+remember always, that neither this book, nor all the books in the
+world, will make them geologists. No amount of book learning will
+make a man a scientific man; nothing but patient observation, and
+quiet and fair thought over what he has observed. He must go out for
+himself, see for himself, compare and judge for himself, in the
+field, the quarry, the cutting. He must study rocks, ores, fossils,
+in the nearest museum; and thus store his head, not with words, but
+with facts. He must verify--as far as he can--what he reads in
+books, by his own observation; and be slow to believe anything, even
+on the highest scientific authority, till he has either seen it, or
+something like enough to it to make it seem to him probable, or at
+least possible. So, and so only, will he become a scientific man,
+and a good geologist; and acquire that habit of mind by which alone
+he can judge fairly and wisely of facts of any kind whatsoever.
+
+I say--facts of any kind whatsoever. If any of my readers should be
+inclined to say to themselves: Geology may be a very pleasant study,
+but I have no special fancy for it. I had rather learn something of
+botany, astronomy, chemistry, or what not--I shall answer: By all
+means. Learn any branch of Natural Science you will. It matters
+little to me which you learn, provided you learn one at least. But
+bear in mind, and settle it in your hearts, that you will learn no
+branch of science soundly, so as to master it, and be able to make
+use of it, unless you acquire that habit and method of mind which I
+am trying to teach you in this book. I have tried to teach it you by
+geology, because geology is, perhaps, the simplest and the easiest of
+all physical sciences. It appeals more than any to mere common
+sense. It requires fewer difficult experiments, and expensive
+apparatus. It requires less previous knowledge of other sciences,
+whether pure or mixed; at least in its rudimentary stages. It is
+more free from long and puzzling Greek and Latin words. It is
+specially, the poor man's science. But if you do not like it, study
+something else. Only study that as you must study geology;
+proceeding from the known to the unknown by observation and
+experiment.
+
+But here some of my readers may ask, as they have a perfect right to
+ask, why I wish young men to learn Natural Science at all? What good
+will the right understanding of geology, or of astronomy, or of
+chemistry, or of the plants or animals which they meet--what good, I
+say, will that do them?
+
+In the first place, they need, I presume, occupation after their
+hours of work. If any of them answer: "We do not want occupation,
+we want amusement. Work is very dull, and we want something which
+will excite our fancy, imagination, sense of humour. We want poetry,
+fiction, even a good laugh or a game of play"--I shall most fully
+agree with them. There is often no better medicine for a hard-worked
+body and mind than a good laugh; and the man who can play most
+heartily when he has a chance of playing is generally the man who can
+work most heartily when he must work. But there is certainly nothing
+in the study of physical science to interfere with genial hilarity;
+though, indeed, some solemn persons have been wont to reprove the
+members of the British Association, and specially that Red Lion Club,
+where all the philosophers are expected to lash their tails and roar,
+of being somewhat too fond of mere and sheer fun, after the abstruse
+papers of the day are read and discussed. And as for harmless
+amusement, and still more for the free exercise of the fancy and the
+imagination, I know few studies to compare with Natural History; with
+the search for the most beautiful and curious productions of Nature
+amid her loveliest scenery, and in her freshest atmosphere. I have
+known again and again working men who in the midst of smoky cities
+have kept their bodies, their minds, and their hearts healthy and
+pure by going out into the country at odd hours, and making
+collections of fossils, plants, insects, birds, or some other objects
+of natural history; and I doubt not that such will be the case with
+some of my readers.
+
+Another argument, and a very strong one, in favour of studying some
+branch of Natural Science just now is this--that without it you can
+hardly keep pace with the thought of the world around you.
+
+Over and above the solid gain of a scientific habit of mind, of which
+I shall speak presently, the gain of mere facts, the increased
+knowledge of this planet on which we live, is very valuable just now;
+valuable certainly to all who do not wish their children and their
+younger brothers to know more about the universe than they do.
+
+Natural Science is now occupying a more and more important place in
+education. Oxford, Cambridge, the London University, the public
+schools, one after another, are taking up the subject in earnest; so
+are the middle-class schools; so I trust will all primary schools
+throughout the country; and I hope that my children, at least, if not
+I myself, will see the day, when ignorance of the primary laws and
+facts of science will be looked on as a defect, only second to
+ignorance of the primary laws of religion and morality.
+
+I speak strongly, but deliberately. It does seem to me strange, to
+use the mildest word, that people whose destiny it is to live, even
+for a few short years, on this planet which we call the earth, and
+who do not at all intend to live on it as hermits, shutting
+themselves up in cells, and looking on death as an escape and a
+deliverance, but intend to live as comfortably and wholesomely as
+they can, they and their children after them--it seems strange, I
+say, that such people should in general be so careless about the
+constitution of this same planet, and of the laws and facts on which
+depend, not merely their comfort and their wealth, but their health
+and their very lives, and the health and the lives of their children
+and descendants.
+
+I know some will say, at least to themselves: "What need for us to
+study science? There are plenty to do that already; and we shall be
+sure sooner or later to profit by their discoveries; and meanwhile it
+is not science which is needed to make mankind thrive, but simple
+common sense."
+
+I should reply, that to expect to profit by other men's discoveries
+when you do not pay for them--to let others labour in the hope of
+entering into their labours, is not a very noble or generous state of
+mind--comparable somewhat, I should say, to that of the fatting ox,
+who willingly allows the farmer to house him, till for him, feed him,
+provided only he himself may lounge in his stall, and eat, and NOT be
+thankful. There is one difference in the two cases, but only one--
+that while the farmer can repay himself by eating the ox, the
+scientific man cannot repay himself by eating you; and so never gets
+paid, in most cases, at all.
+
+But as for mankind thriving by common sense: they have not thriven
+by common sense, because they have not used their common sense
+according to that regulated method which is called science. In no
+age, in no country, as yet, have the majority of mankind been guided,
+I will not say by the love of God, and by the fear of God, but even
+by sense and reason. Not sense and reason, but nonsense and
+unreason, prejudice and fancy, greed and haste, have led them to such
+results as were to be expected--to superstitions, persecutions, wars,
+famines, pestilence, hereditary diseases, poverty, waste--waste
+incalculable, and now too often irremediable--waste of life, of
+labour, of capital, of raw material, of soil, of manure, of every
+bounty which God has bestowed on man, till, as in the eastern
+Mediterranean, whole countries, some of the finest in the world, seem
+ruined for ever: and all because men will not learn nor obey those
+physical laws of the universe, which (whether we be conscious of them
+or not) are all around us, like walls of iron and of adamant--say
+rather, like some vast machine, ruthless though beneficent, among the
+wheels of which if we entangle ourselves in our rash ignorance, they
+will not stop to set us free, but crush us, as they have crushed
+whole nations and whole races ere now, to powder. Very terrible,
+though very calm, is outraged Nature.
+
+
+Though the mills of God grind slowly,
+ Yet they grind exceeding small;
+Though He sit, and wait with patience,
+ With exactness grinds He all.
+
+
+It is, I believe, one of the most hopeful among the many hopeful
+signs of the times, that the civilised nations of Europe and America
+are awakening slowly but surely to this truth. The civilised world
+is learning, thank God, more and more of the importance of physical
+science; year by year, thank God, it is learning to live more and
+more according to those laws of physical science, which are, as the
+great Lord Bacon said of old, none other than "Vox Dei in rebus
+revelata"--the Word of God revealed in facts; and it is gaining by so
+doing, year by year, more and more of health and wealth; of peaceful
+and comfortable, even of graceful and elevating, means of life for
+fresh millions.
+
+If you want to know what the study of physical science has done for
+man, look, as a single instance, at the science of Sanatory Reform;
+the science which does not merely try to cure disease, and shut the
+stable-door after the horse is stolen, but tries to prevent disease;
+and, thank God! is succeeding beyond our highest expectations. Or
+look at the actual fresh amount of employment, of subsistence, which
+science has, during the last century, given to men; and judge for
+yourselves whether the study of it be not one worthy of those who
+wish to help themselves, and, in so doing, to help their fellow-men.
+Let me quote to you a passage from an essay urging the institution of
+schools of physical science for artisans, which says all I wish to
+say and more:
+
+"The discoveries of Voltaic electricity, electromagnetism, and
+magnetic electricity, by Volta, OErsted, and Faraday, led to the
+invention of electric telegraphy by Wheatstone and others, and to the
+great manufactures of telegraph cables and telegraph wire, and of the
+materials required for them. The value of the cargo of the Great
+Eastern alone in the recent Bombay telegraph expedition was
+calculated at three millions of pounds sterling. It also led to the
+employment of thousands of operators to transmit the telegraphic
+messages, and to a great increase of our commerce in nearly all its
+branches by the more rapid means of communication. The discovery of
+Voltaic electricity further led to the invention of electro-plating,
+and to the employment of a large number of persons in that business.
+The numerous experimental researches on specific heat, latent heat,
+the tension of vapours, the properties of water, the mechanical
+effect of heat, etc., resulted in the development of steam-engines,
+and railways, and the almost endless employments depending upon their
+construction and use. About a quarter of a million of persons are
+employed on railways alone in Great Britain. The various original
+investigations on the chemical effects of light led to the invention
+of photography, and have given employment to thousands of persons who
+practise that process, or manufacture and prepare the various
+material and articles required in it. The discovery of chlorine by
+Scheele led to the invention of the modern processes of bleaching,
+and to various improvements in the dyeing of the textile fabrics, and
+has given employment to a very large number of our Lancashire
+operatives. The discovery of chlorine has also contributed to the
+employment of thousands of printers, by enabling Esparto grass to be
+bleached and formed into paper for the use of our daily press. The
+numerous experimental investigations in relation to coal-gas have
+been the means of extending the use of that substance, and of
+increasing the employment of workmen and others connected with its
+manufacture. The discovery of the alkaline metals by Davy, of
+cyanide of potassium, of nickel, phosphorus, the common acids, and a
+multitude of other substances, has led to the employment of a whole
+army of workmen in the conversion of those substances into articles
+of utility. The foregoing examples might be greatly enlarged upon,
+and a great many others might be selected from the sciences of
+physics and chemistry: but those mentioned will suffice. There is
+not a force of Nature, nor scarcely a material substance that we
+employ, which has not been the subject of several, and in some cases
+of numerous, original experimental researches, many of which have
+resulted, in a greater or less degree, in increasing the employment
+for workmen and others." {1}
+
+"All this may be very true. But of what practical use will physical
+science be to me?"
+
+Let me ask in return: Are none of you going to emigrate? If you
+have courage and wisdom, emigrate you will, some of you, instead of
+stopping here to scramble over each other's backs for the scraps,
+like black-beetles in a kitchen. And if you emigrate, you will soon
+find out, if you have eyes and common sense, that the vegetable
+wealth of the world is no more exhausted than its mineral wealth.
+Exhausted? Not half of it--I believe not a tenth of it--is yet
+known. Could I show you the wealth which I have seen in a single
+Tropic island, not sixty miles square--precious timbers, gums,
+fruits, what not, enough to give employment and wealth to thousands
+and tens of thousands, wasting for want of being known and worked--
+then you would see what a man who emigrates may do, by a little sound
+knowledge of botany alone.
+
+And if not. Suppose that any one of you, learning a little sound
+Natural History, should abide here in Britain to your life's end, and
+observe nothing but the hedgerow plants, he would find that there is
+much more to be seen in those mere hedgerow plants than he fancies
+now. The microscope will reveal to him in the tissues of any wood,
+of any seed, wonders which will first amuse him, then puzzle him, and
+at last (I hope) awe him, as he perceives that smallness of size
+interferes in no way with perfection of development, and that
+"Nature," as has been well said, "is greatest in that which is
+least." And more. Suppose that he went further still. Suppose that
+he extended his researches somewhat to those minuter vegetable forms,
+the mosses, fungi, lichens; suppose that he went a little further
+still, and tried what the microscope would show him in any stagnant
+pool, whether fresh water or salt, of Desmidiae, Diatoms, and all
+those wondrous atomies which seem as yet to defy our classification
+into plants or animals. Suppose he learnt something of this, but
+nothing of aught else. Would he have gained no solid wisdom? He
+would be a stupider man than I have a right to believe any of my
+readers to be, if he had not gained thereby somewhat of the most
+valuable of treasures--namely, that inductive habit of mind, that
+power of judging fairly of facts, without which no good or lasting
+work will be done, whether in physical science, in social science, in
+politics, in philosophy, in philology, or in history.
+
+But more: let me urge you to study Natural Science, on grounds which
+may be to you new and unexpected--on social, I had almost said on
+political, grounds.
+
+We all know, and I trust we all love, the names of Liberty, Equality,
+and Brotherhood. We feel, I trust, that these words are too
+beautiful not to represent true and just ideas; and that therefore
+they will come true, and be fulfilled, somewhen, somewhere, somehow.
+It may be in a shape very different from that which you, or I, or any
+man expects; but still they will be fulfilled.
+
+But if they are to come true, it is we, the individual men, who must
+help them to come true for the whole world, by practising them
+ourselves, when and where we can. And I tell you--that in becoming
+scientific men, in studying science and acquiring the scientific
+habit of mind, you will find yourselves enjoying a freedom, an
+equality, a brotherhood, such as you will not find elsewhere just
+now.
+
+Freedom: what do we want freedom for? For this, at least; that we
+may be each and all able to think what we choose; and to say what we
+choose also, provided we do not say it rudely or violently, so as to
+provoke a breach of the peace. That last was Mr. Buckle's definition
+of freedom of speech. That was the only limit to it which he would
+allow; and I think that that is Mr. John Stuart Mill's limit also.
+It is mine. And I think we have that kind of freedom in these
+islands as perfectly as any men are likely to have it on this earth.
+
+But what I complain of is, that when men have got the freedom, three
+out of four of them will not use it. What?--someone will answer--Do
+you suppose that I will not say what I choose, and that I dare not
+speak my own mind to any man? Doubtless. But are you sure first,
+that you think what you choose, or only what someone else chooses for
+you? Are you sure that you make up your own mind before you speak,
+or let someone else make it up for you? Your speech may be free
+enough, my good friend; and Heaven forbid that it should be anything
+else: but are your thoughts free likewise? Are you sure that,
+though you may hate bigotry in others, you are not somewhat of a
+bigot yourself? That you do not look at only one side of a question,
+and that the one which pleases you? That you do not take up your
+opinions at second hand, from some book or some newspaper, which
+after all only reflects your own feelings, your own opinions? You
+should ask yourselves that question, seriously and often: "Are my
+thoughts really free?" No one values more highly than I do the
+advantage of a free press. But you must remember always that a
+newspaper editor, however honest or able, is no more infallible than
+the Pope; that he may, just as you may, only see one side of a
+question, while any question is sure to have two sides, or perhaps
+three or four; and if you only see the side which suits you, day
+after day, month after month, you must needs become bigoted to it.
+Your thoughts must needs run in one groove. They cannot (as Mr.
+Matthew Arnold would say) "play freely round" a question; and look it
+all over, boldly, patiently, rationally, charitably.
+
+And I tell you that if you, or I, or any man, want to let our
+thoughts play freely round questions, and so escape from the tendency
+to become bigoted and narrow-minded which there is in every human
+being, then we must acquire something of that inductive habit of mind
+which the study of Natural Science gives. It is, after all, as
+Professor Huxley says, only common sense well regulated. But then it
+is well regulated; and how precious it is, if you can but get it.
+The art of seeing, the art of knowing what you see; the art of
+comparing, of perceiving true likenesses and true differences, and so
+of classifying and arranging what you see: the art of connecting
+facts together in your own mind in chains of cause and effect, and
+that accurately, patiently, calmly, without prejudice, vanity, or
+temper--this is what is wanted for true freedom of mind. But
+accuracy, patience, freedom from prejudice, carelessness for all
+except the truth, whatever the truth may be--are not these the
+virtues of a truly free spirit? Then, as I said just now, I know no
+study so able to give that free habit of mind as the Study of Natural
+Science.
+
+Equality, too: whatever equality may or may not be just, or
+possible; this at least, is just, and I hope possible; that every
+man, every child, of every rank, should have an equal chance of
+education; an equal chance of developing all that is in him by
+nature; an equal chance of acquiring a fair knowledge of those facts
+of the universe which specially concern him; and of having his reason
+trained to judge of them. I say, whatever equal rights men may or
+may not have, they have this right. Let every boy, every girl, have
+an equal and sound education. If I had my way, I would give the same
+education to the child of the collier and to the child of a peer. I
+would see that they were taught the same things, and by the same
+method. Let them all begin alike, say I. They will be handicapped
+heavily enough as they go on in life, without our handicapping them
+in their first race. Whatever stable they come out of, whatever
+promise they show, let them all train alike, and start fair, and let
+the best colt win.
+
+Well: but there is a branch of education in which, even now, the
+poor man can compete fairly against the rich; and that is, Natural
+Science. In the first place, the rich, blind to their own interest,
+have neglected it hitherto in their schools; so that they have not
+the start of the poor man on that subject which they have on many.
+In the next place, Natural Science is a subject which a man cannot
+learn by paying for teachers. He must teach it himself, by patient
+observation, by patient common sense. And if the poor man is not the
+rich man's equal in those qualities, it must be his own fault, not
+his purse's. Many shops have I seen about the world, in which fools
+could buy articles more or less helpful to them; but never saw I yet
+an observation-shop, nor a common-sense shop either. And if any man
+says, "We must buy books:" I answer, a poor man now can obtain better
+scientific books than a duke or a prince could sixty years ago,
+simply because then the books did not exist. When I was a boy I
+would have given much, or rather my father would have given much, if
+I could have got hold of such scientific books as are to be found now
+in any first-class elementary school. And if more expensive books
+are needed; if a microscope or apparatus is needed; can you not get
+them by the co-operative method, which has worked so well in other
+matters? Can you not form yourselves into a Natural Science club,
+for buying such things and lending them round among your members; and
+for discussion also, the reading of scientific papers of your own
+writing, the comparing of your observations, general mutual help and
+mutual instructions? Such societies are becoming numerous now, and
+gladly should I see one in every town. For in science, as in most
+matters, "As iron sharpeneth iron, so a man sharpeneth the
+countenance of his friend."
+
+And Brotherhood: well, if you want that; if you want to mix with
+men, and men, too, eminently worth mixing with, on the simple ground
+that "a man's a man for a' that;" if you want to become the
+acquaintances, and--if you prove worthy--the friends, of men who will
+be glad to teach you all they know, and equally glad to learn from
+you anything you can teach them, asking no questions about you, save,
+first--Is he an honest student of Nature for her own sake? And next-
+-Is he a man who will not quarrel, or otherwise behave in an
+unbrotherly fashion to his fellow-students?--If you want a ground of
+brotherhood with men, not merely in these islands, but in America, on
+the Continent--in a word, all over the world--such as rank, wealth,
+fashion, or other artificial arrangements of the world cannot give
+and cannot take away; if you want to feel yourself as good as any man
+in theory, because you are as good as any man in practice, except
+those who are better than you in the same line, which is open to any
+and every man; if you wish to have the inspiring and ennobling
+feeling of being a brother in a great freemasonry which owns no
+difference of rank, of creed, or of nationality--the only
+freemasonry, the only International League which is likely to make
+mankind (as we all hope they will be some day) one--then become men
+of science. Join the freemasonry in which Hugh Miller, the poor
+Cromarty stonemason, in which Michael Faraday, the poor bookbinder's
+boy, became the companions and friends of the noblest and most
+learned on earth, looked up to by them not as equals merely but as
+teachers and guides, because philosophers and discoverers.
+
+Do you wish to be great? Then be great with true greatness; which
+is,--knowing the facts of nature, and being able to use them. Do you
+wish to be strong? Then be strong with true strength; which is,
+knowing the facts of nature, and being able to use them. Do you wish
+to be wise? Then be wise with true wisdom; which is, knowing the
+facts of nature, and being able to use them. Do you wish to be free?
+Then be free with true freedom; which is again, knowing the facts of
+nature, and being able to use them.
+
+I dare say some of my readers, especially the younger ones, will
+demur to that last speech of mine. Well, I hope they will not be
+angry with me for saying it. I, at least, shall certainly not he
+angry with them. For when I was young I was very much of what I
+suspect is their opinion. I used to think one could get perfect
+freedom, and social reform, and all that I wanted, by altering the
+arrangements of society and legislation; by constitutions, and Acts
+of Parliament; by putting society into some sort of freedom-mill, and
+grinding it all down, and regenerating it so. And that something can
+be done by improved arrangements, something can be done by Acts of
+Parliament, I hold still, as every rational man must hold.
+
+But as I grew older, I began to see that if things were to be got
+right, the freedom-mill would do very little towards grinding them
+right, however well and amazingly it was made. I began to see that
+what sort of flour came out at one end of the mill, depended mainly
+on what sort of grain you had put in at the other; and I began to see
+that the problem was to get good grain, and then good flour would be
+turned out, even by a very clumsy old-fashioned sort of mill. And
+what do I mean by good grain? Good men, honest men, accurate men,
+righteous men, patient men, self-restraining men, fair men, modest
+men. Men who are aware of their own vast ignorance compared with the
+vast amount that there is to be learned in such a universe as this.
+Men who are accustomed to look at both sides of a question; who,
+instead of making up their minds in haste like bigots and fanatics,
+wait like wise men, for more facts, and more thought about the facts.
+In one word, men who had acquired just the habit of mind which the
+study of Natural Science can give, and must give; for without it
+there is no use studying Natural Science; and the man who has not got
+that habit of mind, if he meddles with science, will merely become a
+quack and a charlatan, only fit to get his bread as a spirit-rapper,
+or an inventor of infallible pills.
+
+And when I saw that, I said to myself--I will train myself, by
+Natural Science, to the truly rational, and therefore truly able and
+useful, habit of mind; and more, I will, for it is my duty as an
+Englishman, train every Englishman over whom I can get influence in
+the same scientific habit of mind, that I may, if possible, make him,
+too, a rational and an able man.
+
+And, therefore, knowing that most of you, my readers--probably all of
+you, as you ought and must if you are Britons, think much of social
+and political questions---therefore, I say, I entreat you to
+cultivate the scientific spirit by which alone you can judge justly
+of those questions. I ask you to learn how to "conquer nature by
+obeying her," as the great Lord Bacon said two hundred and fifty
+years ago. For so only will you in your theories and your movements,
+draw "bills which nature will honour"--to use Mr. Carlyle's famous
+parable--because they are according to her unchanging laws, and not
+have them returned on your hands, as too many theorists' are, with
+"no effects" written across their backs.
+
+Take my advice for yourselves, dear readers, and for your children
+after you; for, believe me, I am showing you the way to true and
+useful, and, therefore, to just and deserved power. I am showing you
+the way to become members of what I trust will be--what I am certain
+ought to be--the aristocracy of the future.
+
+I say it deliberately, as a student of society and of history. Power
+will pass more and more, if all goes healthily and well, into the
+hands of scientific men; into the hands of those who have made due
+use of that great heirloom which the philosophers of the seventeenth
+century left for the use of future generations, and specially of the
+Teutonic race.
+
+For the rest, events seem but too likely to repeat themselves again
+and again all over the world, in the same hopeless circle.
+Aristocracies of mere birth decay and die, and give place to
+aristocracies of mere wealth; and they again to "aristocracies of
+genius," which are really aristocracies of the noisiest, of mere
+scribblers and spouters, such as France is writhing under at this
+moment. And when these last have blown off their steam, with mighty
+roar, but without moving the engine a single yard, then they are but
+too likely to give place to the worst of all aristocracies, the
+aristocracy of mere "order," which means organised brute force and
+military despotism. And, after that, what can come, save anarchy,
+and decay, and social death?
+
+What else?--unless there be left in the nation, in the society, as
+the salt of the land, to keep it all from rotting, a sufficient
+number of wise men to form a true working aristocracy, an aristocracy
+of sound and rational science? If they be strong enough (and they
+are growing stronger day by day over the civilised world), on them
+will the future of that world mainly depend. They will rule, and
+they will act--cautiously we may hope, and modestly and charitably,
+because in learning true knowledge they will have learnt also their
+own ignorance, and the vastness, the complexity, the mystery of
+nature. But they will be able to rule, they will be able to act,
+because they have taken the trouble to learn the facts and the laws
+of nature. They will rule; and their rule, if they are true to
+themselves, will be one of health and wealth, and peace, of prudence
+and of justice. For they alone will be able to wield for the benefit
+of man the brute forces of nature; because they alone will have
+stooped, to "conquer nature by obeying her."
+
+So runs my dream. I ask my young readers to help towards making that
+dream a fact, by becoming (as many of them as feel the justice of my
+words) honest and earnest students of Natural Science.
+
+But now: why should I, as a clergyman, interest myself specially in
+the spread of Natural Science? Am I not going out of my proper
+sphere to meddle with secular matters? Am I not, indeed, going into
+a sphere out of which I had better keep myself, and all over whom I
+may have influence? For is not science antagonistic to religion?
+and, if so, what has a clergyman to do, save to warn the young
+against it, instead of attracting them towards it?
+
+First, as to meddling with secular matters. I grudge that epithet of
+"secular" to any matter whatsoever. But I do more; I deny it to
+anything which God has made, even to the tiniest of insects, the most
+insignificant atom of dust. To those who believe in God, and try to
+see all things in God, the most minute natural phenomenon cannot be
+secular. It must be divine; I say, deliberately, divine; and I can
+use no less lofty word. The grain of dust is a thought of God; God's
+power made it; God's wisdom gave it whatsoever properties or
+qualities it may possess; God's providence has put it in the place
+where it is now, and has ordained that it should be in that place at
+that moment, by a train of causes and effects which reaches back to
+the very creation of the universe. The grain of dust can no more go
+from God's presence, or flee from God's Spirit, than you or I can.
+If it go up to the physical heaven, and float (as it actually often
+does) far above the clouds, in those higher strata of the atmosphere
+which the aeronaut has never visited, whither the Alpine snow-peaks
+do not rise, even there it will be obeying physical laws which we
+term hastily laws of Nature, but which are really the laws of God:
+and if it go down into the physical abyss; if it be buried fathoms,
+miles, below the surface, and become an atom of some rock still in
+the process of consolidation, has it escaped from God, even in the
+bowels of the earth? Is it not there still obeying physical laws, of
+pressure, heat, crystallisation, and so forth, which are laws of God-
+-the will and mind of God concerning particles of matter? Only look
+at all created things in this light--look at them as what they are,
+the expressions of God's mind and will concerning this universe in
+which we live--"the Word of God," as Bacon says, "revealed in facts"-
+-and then you will not fear physical science; for you will be sure
+that, the more you know of physical science, the more you will know
+of the works and of the will of God. At least, you will be in
+harmony with the teaching of the Psalmist: "The heavens," says he,
+"declare the glory of God; and the firmament showeth His handiwork.
+There is neither speech nor language where their voices are not heard
+among them." So held the Psalmist concerning astronomy, the
+knowledge of the heavenly bodies; and what he says of sun and stars
+is true likewise of the flowers around our feet, of which the
+greatest Christian poet of modern times has said--
+
+
+To me the meanest flower that grows may give
+Thoughts that do lie too deep for tears.
+
+
+So, again, you will be in harmony with the teaching of St. Paul, who
+told the Romans "that the invisible things of God are clearly seen
+from the creation of the-world, being understood by the things that
+are made, even His eternal power and Godhead;" and who told the
+savages of Lycaonia that "God had not left Himself without witness,
+in that He did good and sent men rain from heaven, and fruitful
+seasons, filling men's hearts with food and gladness." Rain and
+fruitful seasons witnessed to all men of a Father in heaven. And he
+who wishes to know how truly St. Paul spoke, let him study the laws
+which produce and regulate rain and fruitful seasons, what we now
+call climatology, meteorology, geography of land and water. Let him
+read that truly noble Christian work, Maury's "Physical Geography of
+the Sea;" and see, if he be a truly rational man, how advanced
+science, instead of disproving, has only corroborated St. Paul's
+assertion, and how the ocean and the rain-cloud, like the sun and
+stars, declare the glory of God. And if anyone undervalues the
+sciences which teach us concerning stones and plants and animals, or
+thinks that nothing can be learnt from them concerning God--allow one
+who has been from childhood only a humble, though he trusts a
+diligent student of these sciences--allow him, I say, to ask in all
+reverence, but in all frankness, who it was who said, "Consider the
+lilies of the field, how they grow." "Consider the birds of the air-
+-and how your Heavenly Father feedeth them."
+
+Consider them. If He has bid you do so, can you do so too much?
+
+I know, of course, the special application which our Lord made of
+these words. But I know, too, from experience, that the more you
+study nature, in all her forms the more you will find that the
+special application itself is deeper, wider, more literally true,
+more wonderful, more tender, and if I dare use such a word, more
+poetic, than the unscientific man can guess.
+
+But let me ask you further--do you think that our Lord in that
+instance, and in those many instances in which He drew his parables
+and lessons from natural objects, was leading men's minds on to
+dangerous ground, and pointing out to them a subject of contemplation
+in the laws and processes of the natural world, and their analogy
+with those of the spiritual world, the kingdom of God--a subject of
+contemplation, I say, which it was not safe to contemplate too much?
+
+I appeal to your common sense. If He who spoke these words were (as
+I believe) none other than the Creator of the universe, by whom all
+things were made, and without whom nothing was made that is made, do
+you suppose that He would have bid you to consider His universe, had
+it been dangerous for you to do so?
+
+Do you suppose, moreover, that the universe, which He, the Truth, the
+Light, the Love, has made, can be otherwise then infinitely worthy to
+be considered? or that the careful, accurate, and patient
+consideration of it, even to its minutest details, can be otherwise
+than useful to man, and can bear witness of aught, save the mind and
+character of Him who made it? And if so, can it be a work unfit for,
+unworthy of, a clergyman--whose duty is to preach Him to all, and in
+all ways,--to call on men to consider that physical world which, like
+the spiritual world, consists, holds together, by Him, and lives and
+moves and has its being in Him?
+
+And here I must pause to answer an objection which I have heard in my
+youth from many pious and virtuous people--better people in God's
+sight, than I, I fear, can pretend to be.
+
+They used to say, "This would be all very true if there were not a
+curse upon the earth." And then they seemed to deduce, from the fact
+of that curse, a vague notion (for it was little more) that this
+world was the devil's world, and that therefore physical facts could
+not be trusted, because they were disordered, and deceptive, and what
+not.
+
+Now, in justice to the Bible, and in justice to the Church of
+England, I am bound to say that such a statement, or anything like
+it, is contrary to the doctrines of both. It is contrary to
+Scripture. According to it, the earth is not cursed. For it is said
+in Gen. viii. 21, "And the Lord said, I will not again curse the
+ground any more for man's sake. While the earth remaineth, seed-time
+and harvest, cold and heat, summer and winter, day and night shall
+not cease." According to Scripture, again, physical facts are not
+disordered. The Psalmist says, "They continue this day according to
+their ordinance; for all things serve Thee." And again, "Thou hast
+made them fast for ever and ever. Thou hast given them a law which
+cannot be broken."
+
+So does the Bible (not to quote over again the passages which I have
+already given you from St. Paul, and One greater than St. Paul)
+declare the permanence of natural laws, and the trustworthiness of
+natural phenomena as obedient to God. And so does the Church of
+England. For she has incorporated into her services that magnificent
+hymn, which our forefathers called the Song of the Three Children;
+which is, as it were, the very flower and crown of the Old Testament;
+the summing up of all that is true and eternal in the old Jewish
+faith; as true for us as for them: as true millions of years hence
+as it is now--which cries to all heaven and earth, from the skies
+above our heads to the green herb beneath our feet, "O all ye works
+of the Lord, bless ye the Lord; praise Him and magnify Him for ever."
+On that one hymn I take my stand. That is my charter as a student of
+Natural Science. As long as that is sung in an English church, I
+have a right to investigate Nature boldly without stint or stay, and
+to call on all who have the will, to investigate her boldly likewise,
+and with Socrates of old, to follow the Logos whithersoever it leads.
+
+The Logos. I must pause on that word. It meant at first, no doubt,
+simply speech, argument, reason. In the mind of Socrates it had a
+deeper meaning, at which he only dimly guessed; which was seen more
+clearly by Philo and the Alexandrian Jews; which was revealed in all
+its fulness to the beloved Apostle St. John, till he gathered speech
+to tell men of a Logos, a Word, who was in the beginning with God,
+and was God; by whom all things were made, and without Him was not
+anything made that was made; and how in Him was Life, and the Life
+was the light of men; and that He was none other than Jesus Christ
+our Lord.
+
+Yes, that is the truth. And to that truth no man can add, and from
+it no man can take away. And as long as we believe that as long as
+we believe that in His light alone can we see light--as long as we
+believe that the light around us, whether physical or spiritual, is
+given by Him without whom nothing is made--so long we shall not fear
+to meet Light, so long we shall not fear to investigate Life; for we
+shall know, however strange or novel, beautiful or awful, the
+discoveries we make may be, we are only following the Word
+whithersoever He may lead us; and that He can never lead us amiss
+
+
+
+I. THE SOIL OF THE FIELD {2}
+
+
+
+My dear readers, let me, before touching on the special subject of
+this paper, say a few words on that of the whole series.
+
+It is geology: that is, the science which explains to us the RIND of
+the earth; of what it is made; how it has been made. It tells us
+nothing of the mass of the earth. That is, properly speaking, an
+astronomical question. If I may be allowed to liken this earth to a
+fruit, then astronomy will tell us--when it knows--how the fruit
+grew, and what is inside the fruit. Geology can only tell us at most
+how its rind, its outer covering, grew, and of what it is composed; a
+very small part, doubtless, of all that is to be known about this
+planet.
+
+But as it happens, the mere rind of this earth-fruit which has,
+countless ages since, dropped, as it were, from the Bosom of God, the
+Eternal Fount of Life--the mere rind of this earth-fruit, I say, is
+so beautiful and so complex, that it is well worth our awful and
+reverent study. It has been well said, indeed, that the history of
+it, which we call geology, would be a magnificent epic poem, were
+there only any human interest in it; did it deal with creatures more
+like ourselves than stones, and bones, and the dead relics of plants
+and beasts. Whether there be no human interest in geology; whether
+man did not exist on the earth during ages which have seen enormous
+geological changes, is becoming more and more an open question.
+
+But meanwhile all must agree that there is matter enough for
+interest--nay, room enough for the free use of the imagination, in a
+science which tells of the growth and decay of whole mountain-ranges,
+continents, oceans, whole tribes and worlds of plants and animals.
+
+And yet it is not so much for the vastness and grandeur of those
+scenes of the distant past, to which the science of geology
+introduces us, that I value it as a study, and wish earnestly to
+awaken you to its beauty and importance. It is because it is the
+science from which you will learn most easily a sound scientific
+habit of thought. I say most easily; and for these reasons. The
+most important facts of geology do not require, to discover them, any
+knowledge of mathematics or of chemical analysis; they may be studied
+in every bank, every grot, every quarry, every railway-cutting, by
+anyone who has eyes and common sense, and who chooses to copy the
+late illustrious Hugh Miller, who made himself a great geologist out
+of a poor stonemason. Next, its most important theories are not, or
+need not be, wrapped up in obscure Latin and Greek terms. They may
+be expressed in the simplest English, because they are discovered by
+simple common sense. And thus geology is (or ought to be), in
+popular parlance, the people's science--the science by studying
+which, the man ignorant of Latin, Greek, mathematics, scientific
+chemistry, can yet become--as far as his brain enables him--a truly
+scientific man.
+
+But how shall we learn science by mere common sense?
+
+First. Always try to explain the unknown by the known. If you meet
+something which you have not seen before, then think of the thing
+most like it which you have seen before; and try if that which you
+know explains the one will not explain the other also. Sometimes it
+will; sometimes it will not. But if it will, no one has a right to
+ask you to try any other explanation.
+
+Suppose, for instance, that you found a dead bird on the top of a
+cathedral tower, and were asked how you thought it had got there.
+You would say, "Of course, it died up here." But if a friend said,
+"Not so; it dropped from a balloon, or from the clouds;" and told you
+the prettiest tale of how the bird came to so strange an end, you
+would answer, "No, no; I must reason from what I know. I know that
+birds haunt the cathedral tower; I know that birds die; and
+therefore, let your story be as pretty as it may, my common sense
+bids me take the simplest explanation, and say--it died here." In
+saying that, you would be talking scientifically. You would have
+made a fair and sufficient induction (as it is called) from the facts
+about birds' habits and birds' deaths which you know.
+
+But suppose that when you took the bird up you found that it was
+neither a jackdaw, nor a sparrow nor a swallow, as you expected, but
+a humming-bird. Then you would be adrift again. The fact of it
+being a humming-bird would be a new fact which you had not taken into
+account, and for which your old explanation was not sufficient; and
+you would have to try a new induction--to use your common sense
+afresh--saying, "I have not to explain merely how a dead bird got
+here, but how a dead humming-bird."
+
+And now, if your imaginative friend chimed in triumphantly with: "Do
+you not see that I was right after all? Do you not see that it fell
+from the clouds? that it was swept away hither, all the way from
+South America, by some south-westerly storm, and wearied out at last,
+dropped here to find rest, as in a sacred-place?" what would you
+answer? "My friend, that is a beautiful imagination; but I must
+treat it only as such, as long as I can explain the mystery more
+simply by facts which I do know. I do not know that humming-birds
+can be blown across the Atlantic alive. I do know they are actually
+brought across the Atlantic dead; are stuck in ladies' hats. I know
+that ladies visit the cathedral; and odd as the accident is, I prefer
+to believe, till I get a better explanation, that the humming-bird
+has simply dropped out of a lady's hat." There, again, you would be
+speaking common sense; and using, too, sound inductive method; trying
+to explain what you do not know from what you do know already.
+
+Now, I ask of you to employ the same common sense when you read and
+think of Geology.
+
+It is very necessary to do so. For in past times men have tried to
+explain the making of the world around them, its oceans, rivers,
+mountains, and continents, by I know not what of fancied cataclysms
+and convulsions of nature; explaining the unknown by the still more
+unknown, till some of their geological theories were no more
+rational, because no more founded on known facts, than that of the
+New Zealand Maories, who hold that some god, when fishing, fished up
+their islands out of the bottom of the ocean. But a sounder and
+wiser school of geologists now reigns; the father of whom, in England
+at least, is the venerable Sir Charles Lyell. He was almost the
+first of Englishmen who taught us to see--what common sense tells us-
+-that the laws which we see at work around us now have been most
+probably at work since the creation of the world; and that whatever
+changes may seem to have taken place in past ages, and in ancient
+rocks, should be explained, if possible, by the changes which are
+taking place now in the most recent deposits--in the soil of the
+field.
+
+And in the last forty years--since that great and sound idea has
+become rooted in the minds of students, and especially of English
+students, geology has thriven and developed, perhaps more than any
+other science; and has led men on to discoveries far more really
+astonishing and awful than all fancied convulsions and cataclysms.
+
+I have planned this series of papers, therefore, on Sir Charles
+Lyell's method. I have begun by trying to teach a little about the
+part of the earth's crust which lies nearest us, which we see most
+often; namely, the soil; intending, if my readers do me the honour to
+read the papers which follow, to lead them downward, as it were, into
+the earth; deeper and deeper in each paper, to rocks and minerals
+which are probably less known to them than the soil in the fields.
+Thus you will find I shall lead you, or try to lead you on,
+throughout the series, from the known to the unknown, and show you
+how to explain the latter by the former. Sir Charles Lyell has, I
+see, in the new edition of his "Student's Elements of Geology," begun
+his book with the uppermost, that is, newest, strata, or layers; and
+has gone regularly downwards in the course of the book to the lowest
+or earliest strata; and I shall follow his plan.
+
+I must ask you meanwhile to remember one law or rule, which seems to
+me founded on common sense; namely, that the uppermost strata are
+really almost always the newest; that when two or more layers,
+whether of rock or earth--or indeed two stones in the street, or two
+sheets on a bed, or two books on a table--any two or more lifeless
+things, in fact, lie one on the other, then the lower one was most
+probably put there first, and the upper one laid down on the lower.
+Does that seem to you a truism? Do I seem almost impertinent in
+asking you to remember it? So much the better. I shall be saved
+unnecessary trouble hereafter.
+
+But some one may say, and will have a right to say, "Stop--the lower
+thing may have been thrust under the upper one." Quite true: and
+therefore I said only that the lower one was most probably put there
+first. And I said "most probably," because it is most probable that
+in nature we should find things done by the method which costs least
+force, just as you do them. I will warrant that when you want to
+hide a thing, you lay something down on it ten times for once that
+you thrust it under something else. You may say, "What? When I want
+to hide a paper, say, under the sofa-cover, do I not thrust it
+under?"
+
+No, you lift up the cover, and slip the paper in, and let the cover
+fall on it again. And so, even in that case, the paper has got into
+its place first.
+
+Now why is this? Simply because in laying one thing on another you
+only move weight. In thrusting one thing under another, you have not
+only to move weight, but to overcome friction. That is why you do
+it, though you are hardly aware of it: simply because so you employ
+less force, and take less trouble.
+
+And so do clays and sands and stones. They are laid down on each
+other, and not thrust under each other, because thus less force is
+expended in getting them into place.
+
+There are exceptions. There are cases in which nature does try to
+thrust one rock under another. But to do that she requires a force
+so enormous, compared with what is employed in laying one rock on
+another, that (so to speak) she continually fails; and instead of
+producing a volcanic eruption, produces only an earthquake. Of that
+I may speak hereafter, and may tell you, in good time, how to
+distinguish rocks which have been thrust in from beneath, from rocks
+which have been laid down from above, as every rock between London
+and Birmingham or Exeter has been laid down. That I only assert now.
+But I do not wish you to take it on trust from me. I wish to prove
+it to you as I go on, or to do what is far better for you: to put
+you in the way of proving it for yourself, by using your common
+sense.
+
+At the risk of seeming prolix, I must say a few more words on this
+matter. I have special reasons for it. Until I can get you to "let
+your thoughts play freely" round this question of the superposition
+of soils and rocks, there will be no use in my going on with these
+papers.
+
+Suppose then (to argue from the known to the unknown) that you were
+watching men cleaning out a pond. Atop, perhaps, they would come to
+a layer of soft mud, and under that to a layer of sand. Would not
+common sense tell you that the sand was there first, and that the
+water had laid down the mud on the top of it? Then, perhaps, they
+might come to a layer of dead leaves. Would not common sense tell
+you that the leaves were there before the sand above them? Then,
+perhaps, to a layer of mud again. Would not common sense tell you
+that the mud was there before the leaves? And so on down to the
+bottom of the pond, where, lastly, I think common sense would tell
+you that the bottom of the pond was there already, before all the
+layers which were laid down on it. Is not that simple common sense?
+
+Then apply that reasoning to the soils and rocks in any spot on
+earth. If you made a deep boring, and found, as you would in many
+parts of this kingdom, that the boring, after passing through the
+soil of the field, entered clays or loose sands, you would say the
+clays were there before the soil. If it then went down into
+sandstone, you would say--would you not?--that sandstone must have
+been here before the clay; and however thick--even thousands of feet-
+-it might be, that would make no difference to your judgment. If
+next the boring came into quite different rocks; into a different
+sort of sandstone and shales, and among them beds of coal, would you
+not say--These coal-beds must have been here before the sandstones?
+And if you found in those coal-beds dead leaves and stems of plants,
+would you not say--Those plants must have been laid down here before
+the layers above them, just as the dead leaves in the pond were?
+
+If you then came to a layer of limestone, would you not say the same?
+And if you found that limestone full of shells and corals, dead, but
+many of them quite perfect, some of the corals plainly in the very
+place in which they grew, would you not say--These creatures must
+have lived down here before the coal was laid on top of them? And
+if, lastly, below the limestone you came to a bottom rock quite
+different again, would you not say--The bottom rock must have been
+here before the rocks on the top of it?
+
+And if that bottom rock rose up a few miles off, two thousand feet,
+or any other height, into hills, what would you say then? Would you
+say: "Oh, but the rock is not bottom rock; is not under the
+limestone here, but higher than it. So perhaps in this part it has
+made a shift, and the highlands are younger than the lowlands; for
+see, they rise so much higher?" Would not that be as wise as to say
+that the bottom of the pond was not there before the pond mud,
+because the banks round the pond rose higher than the mud?
+
+Now for the soil of the field.
+
+If we can understand a little about it, what it is made of, and how
+it got there, we shall perhaps be on the right road toward
+understanding what all England--and, indeed, the crust of this whole
+planet--is made of; and how its rocks and soils got there.
+
+But we shall best understand how the soil in the field was made, by
+reasoning, as I have said, from the known to the unknown. What do I
+mean? This: On the uplands are fields in which the soil is already
+made. You do not know how? Then look for a field in which the soil
+is still being made. There are plenty in every lowland. Learn how
+it is being made there; apply the knowledge which you learn from them
+to the upland fields which are already made.
+
+If there is, as there usually is, a river-meadow, or still better, an
+aestuary, near your town, you have every advantage for seeing soil
+made. Thousands of square feet of fresh-made soil spread between
+your town and the sea; thousands more are in process of being made.
+
+You will see now why I have begun with the soil in the field; because
+it is the uppermost, and therefore latest, of all the layers; and
+also for this reason, that, if Sir Charles Lyell's theory be true--as
+it is--then the soils and rocks below the soil of the field may have
+been made in the very same way in which the soil of the field is
+made. If so, it is well worth our while to examine it.
+
+You all know from whence the soil comes which has filled up, in the
+course of ages, the great aestuaries below London, Stirling, Chester,
+or Cambridge.
+
+It is river mud and sand. The river, helped by tributary brooks
+right and left, has brought down from the inland that enormous mass.
+You know that. You know that every flood and freshet brings a fresh
+load, either of fine mud or of fine sand, or possibly some of it
+peaty matter out of distant hills. Here is one indisputable fact
+from which to start. Let us look for another.
+
+How does the mud get into the river? The rain carries it thither.
+
+If you wish to learn the first elements of geology by direct
+experiment, do this: The next rainy day--the harder it rains the
+better--instead of sitting at home over the fire, and reading a book
+about geology, put on a macintosh and thick boots, and get away, I
+care not whither, provided you can find there running water. If you
+have not time to get away to a hilly country, then go to the nearest
+bit of turnpike road, or the nearest sloping field, and see in little
+how whole continents are made, and unmade again. Watch the rain
+raking and sifting with its million delicate fingers, separating the
+finer particles from the coarser, dropping the latter as soon as it
+can, and carrying the former downward with it toward the sea. Follow
+the nearest roadside drain where it runs into a pond, and see how it
+drops the pebbles the moment it enters the pond, and then the sand in
+a fan-shaped heap at the nearest end; but carries the fine mud on,
+and holds it suspended, to be gradually deposited at the bottom in
+the still water; and say to yourself: Perhaps the sands which cover
+so many inland tracts were dropped by water, very near the shore of a
+lake or sea, and by rapid currents. Perhaps, again, the brick clays,
+which are often mingled with these sands, were dropped, like the mud
+in the pond, in deeper water farther from the shore, and certainly in
+stilt water. But more. Suppose once more, then, that looking and
+watching a pond being cleared out, under the lowest layer of mud, you
+found--as you would find in any of those magnificent reservoirs so
+common in the Lancashire hills--a layer of vegetable soil, with grass
+and brushwood rooted in it. What would you say but: The pond has
+not been always full. It has at some time or other been dry enough
+to let a whole copse grow up inside it?
+
+And if you found--as you will actually find along some English
+shores--under the sand hills, perhaps a bed of earth with shells and
+bones; under that a bed of peat; under that one of blue silt; under
+that a buried forest, with the trees upright and rooted; under that
+another layer of blue silt full of roots and vegetable fibre; perhaps
+under that again another old land surface with trees again growing in
+it; and under all the main bottom clay of the district--what would
+common sense tell you? I leave you to discover for yourselves. It
+certainly would not tell you that those trees were thrust in there by
+a violent convulsion, or that all those layers were deposited there
+in a few days, or even a few years; and you might safely indulge in
+speculations about the antiquity of the aestuary, and the changes
+which it has undergone, with which I will not frighten you at
+present.
+
+It will be fair reasoning to argue thus. You may not be always right
+in your conclusion, but still you will be trying fairly to explain
+the unknown by the known.
+
+But have Rain and Rivers alone made the soil?
+
+How very much they have done toward making it you will be able to
+judge for yourselves, if you will read the sixth chapter of Sir
+Charles Lyell's new "Elements of Geology," or the first hundred pages
+of that admirable book, De la Beche's "Geological Observer;" and
+last, but not least, a very clever little book called "Rain and
+Rivers," by Colonel George Greenwood.
+
+But though rain, like rivers, is a carrier of soil, it is more. It
+is a maker of soil, likewise; and by it mainly the soil of an upland
+field is made, whether it be carried down to the sea or not.
+
+If you will look into any quarry you will see that however compact
+the rock may be a few feet below the surface, it becomes, in almost
+every case, rotten and broken up as it nears the upper soil, till you
+often cannot tell where the rock ends and the soil begins.
+
+Now this change has been produced by rain. First, mechanically, by
+rain in the shape of ice. The winter rain gets into the ground, and
+does by the rock what it has done by the stones of many an old
+building. It sinks into the porous stone, freezes there, expands in
+freezing, and splits and peels the stone with a force which is slowly
+but surely crumbling the whole of Northern Europe and America to
+powder.
+
+Do you doubt me? I say nothing but what you can judge of yourselves.
+The next time you go up any mountain, look at the loose broken stones
+with which the top is coated, just underneath the turf. What has
+broken them up but frost? Look again, as stronger proof, at the
+talus of broken stones--screes, as they call them in Scotland;
+rattles, as we call them in Devon--which lie along the base of many
+mountain cliffs. What has brought them down but frost? If you ask
+the country folk they will tell you whether I am right or not. If
+you go thither, not in the summer, but just after the winter's frost,
+you will see for yourselves, by the fresh frost-crop of newly-broken
+bits, that I am right. Possibly you may find me to be even more
+right than is desirable, by having a few angular stones, from the
+size of your head to that of your body, hurled at you by the frost-
+giants up above. If you go to the Alps at certain seasons, and hear
+the thunder of the falling rocks, and see their long lines--moraines,
+as they are called--sliding slowly down upon the surface of the
+glacier, then you will be ready to believe the geologist who tells
+you that frost, and probably frost alone, has hewn out such a peak as
+the Matterhorn from some vast table-land; and is hewing it down
+still, winter after winter, till some day, where the snow Alps now
+stand, there shall be rolling uplands of rich cultivable soil.
+
+So much for the mechanical action of rain, in the shape of ice. Now
+a few words on its chemical action.
+
+Rain water is seldom pure. It carries in it carbonic acid; and that
+acid, beating in shower after shower against the face of a cliff--
+especially if it be a limestone cliff--weathers the rock chemically;
+changing (in case of limestone) the insoluble carbonate of lime into
+a soluble bicarbonate, and carrying that away in water, which,
+however clear, is still hard. Hard water is usually water which has
+invisible lime in it; there are from ten to fifteen grains and more
+of lime in every gallon of limestone water. I leave you to calculate
+the enormous weight of lime which must be so carried down to the sea
+every year by a single limestone or chalk brook. You can calculate
+it, if you like, by ascertaining the weight of lime in each gallon,
+and the average quantity of water which comes down the stream in a
+day; and when your sum is done, you will be astonished to find it one
+not of many pounds, but probably of many tons, of solid lime, which
+you never suspected or missed from the hills around. Again, by the
+time the rain has sunk through the soil, it is still less pure. It
+carries with it not only carbonic acid, but acids produced by
+decaying vegetables--by the roots of the grasses and trees which grow
+above; and they dissolve the cement of the rock by chemical action,
+especially if the cement be lime or iron. You may see this for
+yourselves, again and again. You may see how the root of a tree,
+penetrating the earth, discolours the soil with which it is in
+contact. You may see how the whole rock, just below the soil, has
+often changed in colour from the compact rock below, if the soil be
+covered with a dense layer of peat or growing vegetables.
+
+But there is another force at work, and quite as powerful as rain and
+rivers, making the soil of alluvial flats. Perhaps it has helped,
+likewise, to make the soil of all the lowlands in these isles--and
+that is, the waves of the sea.
+
+If you ever go to Parkgate, in Cheshire, try if you cannot learn
+there a little geology.
+
+Walk beyond the town. You find the shore protected for a long way by
+a sea-wall, lest it should be eaten away by the waves. What the
+force of those waves can be, even on that sheltered coast, you may
+judge--at least you could have judged this time last year--by the
+masses of masonry torn from their iron clampings during the gale of
+three winters since. Look steadily at those rolled blocks, those
+twisted stanchions, if they are there still; and then ask yourselves-
+-it will be fair reasoning from the known to the unknown--What effect
+must such wave-power as that have had beating and breaking for
+thousands of years along the western coasts of England, Scotland,
+Ireland? It must have eaten up thousands of acres--whole shires, may
+be, ere now. Its teeth are strong enough, and it knows neither rest
+nor pity, the cruel hungry sea. Give it but time enough, and what
+would it not eat up? It would eat up, in the course of ages, all the
+dry land of this planet, were it not baffled by another counteracting
+force, of which I shall speak hereafter.
+
+As you go on beyond the sea-wall, you find what it is eating up. The
+whole low cliff is going visibly. But whither is it going? To form
+new soil in the aestuary. Now you will not wonder how old harbours
+so often become silted up. The sea has washed the land into them.
+But more, the sea-currents do not allow the sands of the aestuary to
+escape freely out to sea. They pile it up in shifting sand-banks
+about the mouth of the aestuary. The prevailing sea-winds, from
+whatever quarter, catch up the sand, and roll it up into sand-hills.
+Those sand-hills are again eaten down by the sea, and mixed with the
+mud of the tide-flats, and so is formed a mingled soil, partly of
+clayey mud, partly of sand; such a soil as stretches over the greater
+part of all our lowlands.
+
+Now, why should not that soil, whether in England or in Scotland,
+have been made by the same means as that of every aestuary.
+
+You find over great tracts of East Scotland, Lancashire, Norfolk,
+etc., pure loose sand just beneath the surface, which looks as if it
+was blown sand from a beach. Is it not reasonable to suppose that it
+is? You find rising out of many lowlands, crags which look exactly
+like old sea-cliffs eaten by the waves, from the base of which the
+waters have gone back. Why should not those crags be old sea-cliffs?
+Why should we not, following our rule of explaining the unknown by
+the known, assume that such they are till someone gives us a sound
+proof that they are not; and say--These great plains of England and
+Scotland were probably once covered by a shallow sea, and their soils
+made as the soil of any tide-flat is being made now?
+
+But you may say, and most reasonably "The tide-flats are just at the
+sea-level. The whole of the lowland is many feet above the sea; it
+must therefore have been raised out of the sea, according to your
+theory: and what proofs have you of that?"
+
+Well, that is a question both grand and deep, on which I shall not
+enter yet; but meanwhile, to satisfy you that I wish to play fair
+with you, I ask you to believe nothing but what you can prove for
+yourselves. Let me ask you this: suppose that you had proof
+positive that I had fallen into the river in the morning; would not
+your meeting me in the evening be also proof positive that somehow or
+other I had in the course of the day got out of the river? I think
+you will accept that logic as sound.
+
+Now if I can give you proof positive, proof which you can see with
+your own eyes, and handle with your own hands, and alas! often feel
+but too keenly with your own feet, that the whole of the lowlands
+were once beneath the sea; then will it not be certain that, somehow
+or other, they must have been raised out of the sea again?
+
+And that I propose to do in my next paper, when I speak of the
+pebbles in the street.
+
+Meanwhile I wish you to face fairly the truly grand idea, which all I
+have said tends to prove true--that all the soil we see is made by
+the destruction of older soils, whether soft as clay, or hard as
+rock; that rain, rivers, and seas are perpetually melting and
+grinding up old land, to compose new land out of it; and that it must
+have been doing so, as long as rain, rivers, and seas have existed.
+"But how did the first land of all get made?" I can only reply: A
+natural question: but we can only answer that, by working from the
+known to the unknown. While we are finding out how these later lands
+were made and unmade, we may stumble on some hints as to how the
+first primeval continents rose out of the bosom of the sea.
+
+And thus I end this paper. I trust it has not been intolerably dull.
+But I wanted at starting to show my readers something of the right
+way of finding out truth on this and perhaps on all subjects; to make
+some simple appeals to your common sense; and to get you to accept
+some plain rules founded on common sense, which will be of infinite
+use to both you and me in my future papers.
+
+I hope, meanwhile, that you will agree with me, that there is plenty
+of geological matter to be seen and thought over in the neighbourhood
+of any town.
+
+Be sure, that wherever there is a river, even a drain; and a stone
+quarry, or even a roadside bank; much more where there is a sea, or a
+tidal aestuary, there is geology enough to be learnt, to explain the
+greater part of the making of all the continents on the globe.
+
+
+
+II. THE PEBBLES IN THE STREET
+
+
+
+If you, dear reader, dwell in any northern town, you will almost
+certainly see paving courts and alleys, and sometimes--to the
+discomfort of your feet--whole streets, or set up as bournestones at
+corners, or laid in heaps to be broken up for road-metal, certain
+round pebbles, usually dark brown or speckled gray, and exceedingly
+tough and hard. Some of them will be very large--boulders of several
+feet in diameter. If you move from town to town, from the north of
+Scotland as far down as Essex on the east, or as far down as
+Shrewsbury and Wolverhampton (at least) on the west, you will still
+find these pebbles, but fewer and smaller as you go south. It
+matters not what the rocks and soils of the country round may be.
+However much they may differ, these pebbles will be, on the whole,
+the same everywhere.
+
+But if your town be south of the valley of the Thames, you will find,
+as far as I am aware, no such pebbles there. The gravels round you
+will be made up entirely of rolled chalk flints, and bits of beds
+immediately above or below the chalk. The blocks of "Sarsden"
+sandstone--those of which Stonehenge is built--and the "plum-pudding
+stones" which are sometimes found with them, have no kindred with the
+northern pebbles. They belong to beds above the chalk.
+
+Now if, seeing such pebbles about your town, you inquire, like a
+sensible person who wishes to understand something of the spot on
+which he lives, whence they come, you will be shown either a gravel-
+pit or a clay-pit. In the gravel the pebbles and boulders lie mixed
+with sand, as they do in the railway cutting just south of
+Shrewsbury; or in huge mounds of fine sweet earth, as they do in the
+gorge of the Tay about Dunkeld, and all the way up Strathmore, where
+they form long grassy mounds--tomauns as they call them in some parts
+of Scotland--askers as they call them in Ireland. These mounds, with
+their sweet fresh turf rising out of heather and bog, were tenanted--
+so Scottish children used to believe--by fairies. He that was lucky
+might hear inside them fairy music, and, the jingling of the fairy
+horses' trappings. But woe to him if he fell asleep upon the mound,
+for he would be spirited away into fairyland for seven years, which
+would seem to him but one day. A strange fancy; yet not so strange
+as the actual truth as to what these mounds are, and how they came
+into their places.
+
+Or again, you might find that your town's pebbles and boulders came
+out of a pit of clay, in which they were stuck, without any order or
+bedding, like plums and raisins in a pudding. This clay goes usually
+by the name of boulder-clay. You would see such near any town in
+Cheshire and Lancashire; or along Leith shore, near Edinburgh; or, to
+give one more instance out of hundreds, along the coast at
+Scarborough. If you walk along the shore southward of that town, you
+will see, in the gullies of the cliff, great beds of sticky clay,
+stuffed full of bits of every rock between the Lake mountains and
+Scarborough, from rounded pebbles of most ancient rock down to great
+angular fragments of ironstone and coal. There, as elsewhere, the
+great majority of the pebbles have nothing to do with the rock on
+which the clay happens to lie, but have come, some of them, from
+places many miles away.
+
+Now if we find spread over a low land pebbles composed of rocks which
+are only found in certain high lands, is it not an act of common
+sense to say--These pebbles have come from the highlands? And if the
+pebbles are rounded, while the rocks like them in the highlands
+always break off in angular shapes, is it not, again, an act of mere
+common sense to say--These pebbles were once angular, and have been
+rubbed round, either in getting hither or before they started hither?
+
+Does all this seem to you mere truism, my dear reader? If so, I am
+sincerely glad to hear it. It was not so very long ago that such
+arguments would have been considered not only no truisms, but not
+even common sense.
+
+But to return, let us take, as an example, a sample of these boulder
+clay pebbles from the neighbourhood of Liverpool and Birkenhead, made
+by Mr. De Rance, the government geological surveyor:
+
+Granite, greenstone, felspar porphyry, felstone, quartz rock (all
+igneous rocks, that is, either formed by, or altered by volcanic
+heat, and almost all found in the Lake mountains), 37 per cent.
+
+Silurian grits (the common stones of the Lake mountains deposited by
+water), 43 per cent.
+
+Ironstone, 1 per cent.
+
+Carboniferous limestone, 5 per cent.
+
+Permian or Triassic sandstones, i.e. rocks immediately round
+Liverpool, 12 per cent.
+
+Now, does not this sample show, as far as human common sense can be
+depended on, that the great majority of these stones come from the
+Lake mountains, sixty or seventy miles north of Liverpool? I think
+your common sense will tell you that these pebbles are not mere
+concretions; that is, formed out of the substance of the clay after
+it was deposited. The least knowledge of mineralogy would prove
+that. But, even if you are no mineralogist, common sense will tell
+you, that if they were all concreted out of the same clay, it is most
+likely that they would be all of the same kind, and not of a dozen or
+more different kinds. Common sense will tell you, also, that if they
+were all concreted out of the same clay, it is a most extraordinary
+coincidence, indeed one too strange to be believed, if any less
+strange explanation can be found--that they should have taken the
+composition of different rocks which are found all together in one
+group of mountains to the northward. You will surely say--If this be
+granite, it has most probably come from a granite mountain; if this
+be grit, from a grit-stone mountain, and so on with the whole list.
+Why--are we to go out of our way to seek improbable explanations,
+when there is a probable one staring us in the face?
+
+Next--and this is well worth your notice--if you will examine the
+pebbles carefully, especially the larger ones, you will find that
+they are not only more or less rounded, but often scratched; and
+often, too, in more than one direction, two or even three sets of
+scratches crossing each other; marked, as a cat marks an elder stem
+when she sharpens her claws upon it; and that these scratches have
+not been made by the quarrymen's tools, but are old marks which
+exist--as you may easily prove for yourself--while the stone is still
+lying in its bed of clay. Would it not be an act of mere common
+sense to say--These scratches have been made by the sharp points of
+other stones which have rubbed against the pebbles somewhere, and
+somewhen, with great force?
+
+So far so good. The next question is--How did these stones get into
+the clay? If we can discover that, we may also discover how they
+wore rounded and scratched. We must find a theory which will answer
+our question; and one which, as Professor Huxley would say, "will go
+on all-fours," that is, will explain all the facts of the case, and
+not only a few of them.
+
+What, then, brought the stones?
+
+We cannot, I think, answer that question, as some have tried to
+answer it, by saying that they were brought by Noah's flood. For it
+is clear, that very violent currents of water would be needed to
+carry boulders, some of them weighing many tons, for many miles. Now
+Scripture says nothing of any such violent currents; and we have no
+right to put currents, or any other imagined facts, into Scripture
+out of our own heads, and then argue from them as if not we, but the
+text of Scripture had asserted their existence.
+
+But still, they may have been rolled hither by water. That theory
+certainly would explain their being rounded; though not their being
+scratched. But it will not explain their being found in the clay.
+
+Recollect what I said in my first paper: that water drops its
+pebbles and coarser particles first, while it carries the fine clayey
+mud onward in solution, and only drops it when the water becomes
+still. Now currents of such tremendous violence as to carry these
+boulder stones onward, would have carried the mud for many miles
+farther still; and we should find the boulders, not in clay, but
+lying loose together, probably on a hard rock bottom, scoured clean
+by the current. That is what we find in the beds of streams; that is
+just what we do not find in this case.
+
+But the boulders may have been brought by a current, and then the
+water may have become still, and the clay settled quietly round them.
+What? Under them as well as over them? On that theory also we
+should find them only at the bottom of the clay. As it is, we find
+them scattered anywhere and everywhere through it, from top to
+bottom. So that theory will not do. Indeed, no theory will do which
+supposes them to have been brought by water alone.
+
+Try yourself, dear reader, and make experiments, with running water,
+pebbles, and mud. If you try for seven years, I believe, you will
+never contrive to make your pebbles lie about in your mud, as they
+lie about in every pit in the boulder clay.
+
+Well then, there we are at fault, it seems. We have no explanation
+drawn from known facts which will do--unless we are to suppose, which
+I don't think you will do, that stones, clay, and all were blown
+hither along the surface of the ground, by primeval hurricanes, ten
+times worse than those of the West Indies, which certainly will roll
+a cannon a few yards, but cannot, surely, roll a boulder stone a
+hundred miles.
+
+Now, suppose that there was a force, an agent, known--luckily for
+you, not to you--but known too well to sailors and travellers; a
+force which is at work over the vast sheets of land at both the north
+and south poles; at work, too, on every high mountain range in the
+world, and therefore a very common natural force; and suppose that
+this force would explain all the facts, namely--
+
+How the stones got here;
+
+How they were scratched and rounded;
+
+How they were imbedded in clay;
+
+because it is notoriously, and before men's eyes now, carrying great
+stones hundreds of miles, and scratching and rounding them also;
+carrying vast deposits of mud, too, and mixing up mud and stones just
+as we see them in the brick-pits,--Would not our common sense have a
+right to try that explanation?--to suspect that this force, which we
+do not see at work in Britain now, may have been at work here ages
+since? That would at least be reasoning from the known to the
+unknown. What state of things, then, do we find among the highest
+mountains; and over whole countries which, though not lofty, lie far
+enough north or south to be permanently covered with ice?
+
+We find, first, an ice-cap or ice-sheet, fed by the winter's snows,
+stretching over the higher land, and crawling downward and outward by
+its own weight, along the valleys, as glaciers.
+
+We find underneath the glaciers, first a moraine profonde, consisting
+of the boulders and gravel, and earth, which the glacier has ground
+off the hillsides, and is carrying down with it.
+
+These stones, of course, grind, scratch, and polish each other; and
+in like wise grind, scratch, and polish the rock over which they
+pass, under the enormous weight of the superincumbent ice.
+
+We find also, issuing from under each glacier a stream, carrying the
+finest mud, the result of the grinding of the boulders against each
+other and the glacier.
+
+We find, moreover, on the surface of the glaciers, moraines
+superieures--long lines of stones and dirt which had fallen from
+neighbouring cliffs, and are now travelling downward with the
+glaciers.
+
+Their fate, if the glacier ends on land, is what was to be expected.
+The stones from above the glacier fall over the ice-cliff at its end,
+to mingle with those thrown out from underneath the glacier, and form
+huge banks of boulders, called terminal moraines, while the mud runs
+off, as all who have seen glaciers know, in a turbid torrent.
+
+Their fate, again, is what was to be expected if the glacier ends, as
+it commonly does in Arctic regions, in the sea. The ice grows out to
+sea-ward for more than a mile sometimes, about one-eighth of it being
+above water, and seven-eighths below, so that an ice-cliff one
+hundred feet high may project into water eight hundred feet deep. At
+last, when it gets out of its depth, the buoyancy of the water breaks
+it off in icebergs, which float away, at the mercy of tides and
+currents, often grounding again in shallower water, and ploughing the
+sea-bottom as they drag along it. These bergs carry stones and dirt,
+often in large quantities; so that, whenever a berg melts or
+capsizes, it strews its burden confusedly about the sea-floor.
+
+Meanwhile the fine mud which is flowing out from under the ice goes
+out to sea likewise, colouring the water far out, and then subsiding
+as a soft tenacious ooze, in which the stones brought out by the ice
+are imbedded. And this ooze--so those who have examined it assert--
+cannot be distinguished from the brick-clay, or fossiliferous
+boulder-clay, so common in the North. A very illustrious
+Scandinavian explorer, visiting Edinburgh, declared, as soon as he
+saw the sections of boulder-clay exhibited near that city, that this
+was the very substance which he saw forming in the Spitzbergen ice-
+fiords. {3}
+
+I have put these facts as simply and baldly as I can, in order that
+the reader may look steadily at them, without having his attention
+drawn off, or his fancy excited, by their real poetry and grandeur.
+Indeed, it would have been an impertinence to have done otherwise;
+for I have never seen a live glacier, by land or sea, though I have
+seen many a dead one. And the public has had the opportunity,
+lately, of reading so many delightful books about "peaks, passes, and
+glaciers," that I am bound to suppose that many of my readers know as
+much, or more, about them than I do.
+
+But let us go a step farther; and, bearing in our minds what live
+glaciers are like, let us imagine what a dead glacier would be like;
+a glacier, that is, which had melted, and left nothing but its
+skeleton of stones and dirt.
+
+We should find the faces of the rock scored and polished, generally
+in lines pointing down the valleys, or at least outward from the
+centre of the highlands, and polished and scored most in their upland
+or weather sides. We should find blocks of rock left behind, and
+perched about on other rocks of a different kind. We should find in
+the valleys the old moraines left as vast deposits of boulder and
+shingle, which would be in time sawn through and sorted over by the
+rivers. And if the sea-bottom outside were upheaved, and became dry
+land, we should find on it the remains of the mud from under the
+glacier, stuck full of stones and boulders iceberg-dropped. This mud
+would be often very irregularly bedded; for it would have been
+disturbed by the ploughing of the icebergs, and mixed here and there
+with dirt which had fallen from them. Moreover, as the sea became
+shallower and the mud-beds got awash one after the other, they would
+be torn about, re-sifted, and re-shaped by currents and by tides, and
+mixed with shore-sand ground out of shingle-beach, thus making
+confusion worse confounded. A few shells, of an Arctic or northern
+type, would be found in it here and there. Some would have lived
+near those later beaches, some in deeper water in the ancient ooze,
+wherever the iceberg had left it in peace long enough for sea-animals
+to colonise and breed in it. But the general appearance of the dried
+sea-bottom would be a dreary and lifeless waste of sands, gravels,
+loose boulders, and boulder-bearing clays; and wherever a boss of
+bare rock still stood up, it would be found ground down, and probably
+polished and scored by the ponderous icebergs which had lumbered over
+it in their passage out to sea.
+
+In a word, it would look exactly as vast tracts of the English,
+Scotch, and Irish lowlands must have looked before returning
+vegetation coated their dreary sands and clays with a layer of brown
+vegetable soil.
+
+Thus, and I believe thus only, can we explain the facts connected
+with these boulder pebbles. No agent known on earth can have stuck
+them in the clay, save ice, which is known to do so still elsewhere.
+
+No known agent can have scratched them as they are scratched, save
+ice, which is known to do so still elsewhere.
+
+No known agent--certainly not, in my opinion, the existing rivers--
+can have accumulated the vast beds of boulders which lie along the
+course of certain northern rivers; notably along the Dee about
+Aboyne--save ice bearing them slowly down from the distant summits of
+the Grampians.
+
+No known agent, save ice, can have produced those rounded, and
+polished, and scored, and fluted rochers moutonnes "sheep-backed
+rocks"--so common in the Lake district; so common, too, in Snowdon,
+especially between the two lakes of Llanberis; common in Kerry; to be
+seen anywhere, as far as I have ascertained, around the Scotch
+Highlands, where the turf is cleared away from an unweathered surface
+of the rock, in the direction in which a glacier would have pressed
+against it had one been there. Where these polishings and scorings
+are found in narrow glens, it is, no doubt, an open question whether
+some of them may not be the work of water. But nothing but the
+action of ice can have produced what I have seen in land-locked and
+quiet fords in Kerry--ice-flutings in polished rocks below high-water
+mark, so large that I could lie down in one of them. Nothing but the
+action of ice could produce what may be seen in any of our mountains-
+-whole sheets of rock ground down into rounded flats, irrespective of
+the lie of the beds, not in valleys, but on the brows and summits of
+mountains, often ending abruptly at the edge of some sudden cliff,
+where the true work of water, in the shape of rain and frost, is
+actually destroying the previous work of ice, and fulfilling the rule
+laid down (I think by Professor Geikie in his delightful book on
+Scotch scenery as influenced by its geology), that ice planes down
+into flats, while water saws out into crags and gullies; and that the
+rain and frost are even now restoring Scotch scenery to something of
+that ruggedness and picturesqueness which it must have lost when it
+lay, like Greenland, under the indiscriminating grinding of a heavy
+sheet of ice.
+
+Lastly; no known agent, save ice, will explain those perched
+boulders, composed of ancient hard rocks, which may be seen in so
+many parts of these islands and of the Continent. No water power
+could have lifted those stones, and tossed them up high and dry on
+mountain ridges and promontories, upon rocks of a totally different
+kind. Some of my readers surely recollect Wordsworth's noble lines
+about these mysterious wanderers, of which he had seen many a one
+about his native hills:
+
+
+As a huge stone is sometimes seen to lie
+Couched on the bald top of an eminence,
+Wonder to all who do the same espy
+By what means it could thither come, and whence;
+So that it seems a thing endued with sense:
+Like a sea-beast crawled forth, that on a shelf
+Of rock or sand reposeth, there to sun itself.
+
+
+Yes; but the next time you see such a stone, believe that the wonder
+has been solved, and found to be, like most wonders in Nature, more
+wonderful than we guessed it to be. It is not a sea-beast which has
+crawled forth, but an ice-beast which has been left behind; lifted up
+thither by the ice, as surely as the famous Pierre-a-bot, forty feet
+in diameter, and hundreds of boulders more, almost as large as
+cottages, have been carried by ice from the distant Alps right across
+the lake of Neufchatel, and stranded on the slopes of the Jura, nine
+hundred feet above the lake. {4}
+
+Thus, I think, we have accounted for facts enough to make it probable
+that Britain was once covered partly by an ice-sheet, as Greenland is
+now, and partly, perhaps, by an icy sea. But, to make assurance more
+sure, let us look for new facts, and try whether our ice-dream will
+account for them also. Let us investigate our case as a good medical
+man does, by "verifying his first induction."
+
+He says: At the first glance, I can see symptoms a, b, c. It is
+therefore probable that my patient has got complaint A. But if he
+has he ought to have symptom d also. If I find that, my guess will
+be yet more probable. He ought also to have symptom e, and so forth;
+and as I find successively each of these symptoms which are proper to
+A, my first guess will become more and more probable, till it reaches
+practical certainty.
+
+Now let us do the same, and say--If this strange dream be true, and
+the lowlands of the North were once under an icy sea, ought we not to
+find sea-shells in their sands and clays? Not abundantly, of course.
+We can understand that the sea-animals would be too rapidly covered
+up in mud, and too much disturbed by icebergs and boulders, to be
+very abundant. But still, some should surely be found here and
+there.
+
+Doubtless; and if my northern-town readers will search the boulder-
+clay pits near them, they will most probably find a few shells, if
+not in the clay itself, yet in sand-beds mixed with them, and
+probably underlying them. And this is a notable fact, that the more
+species of shells they find, the more they will find--if they work
+out their names from any good book of conchology--of a northern type;
+of shells which notoriously, at this day, inhabit the colder seas.
+
+It is impossible for me here to enter at length on a subject on which
+a whole literature has been already written. Those who wish to study
+it may find all that they need know, and more, in Lyell's "Student's
+Elements of Geology," and in chapter xii. of his "Antiquity of Man."
+They will find that if the evidence of scientific conchologists be
+worth anything, the period can be pointed out in the strata, though
+not of course in time, at which these seas began to grow colder, and
+southern and Mediterranean shells to disappear, their places being
+taken by shells of a temperate, and at last of an Arctic climate;
+which last have since retreated either toward their native North, or
+into cold water at great depths. From Essex across to Wales, from
+Wales to the aestuary of the Clyde, this fact has been verified again
+and again. And in the search for these shells, a fresh fact, and a
+most startling one, was discovered. They are to be found not only in
+the clay of the lowlands, but at considerable heights up the hills,
+showing that, at some time or other, these hills have been submerged
+beneath the sea.
+
+Let me give one example, which any tourist into Wales may see for
+himself. Moel Tryfaen is a mountain over Carnarvon. Now perched on
+the side of that mountain, fourteen hundred feet above the present
+sea-level, is an ancient sea-beach, five-and-thirty feet thick, lying
+on great ice-scratched boulders, which again lie on the mountain
+slates. It was discovered by the late Mr. Trimmer, now, alas! lost
+to Geology. Out of that beach fifty-seven different species of
+shells have been taken; eleven of them are now exclusively Arctic,
+and not found in our seas; four of them are still common to the
+Arctic seas and to our own; and almost all the rest are northern
+shells.
+
+Fourteen hundred feet above the present sea: and that, it must be
+understood, is not the greatest height at which such shells may be
+found hereafter. For, according to Professor Ramsay, drift of the
+same kind as that on Moel Tryfaen is found at a height of two
+thousand three hundred feet.
+
+Now I ask my readers to use their common sense over this astounding
+fact--which, after all, is only one among hundreds; to let (as Mr.
+Matthew Arnold would well say) their "thought play freely" about it;
+and consider for themselves what those shells must mean. I say not
+may, but must, unless we are to believe in a "Deus quidam deceptor,"
+in a God who puts shells upon mountain-sides only to befool honest
+human beings, and gives men intellects which are worthless for even
+the simplest work. Those shells must mean that that mountain, and
+therefore the mountains round it, must have been once fourteen
+hundred feet at least lower than they are now. That the sea in which
+they were sunk was far colder than now. That icebergs brought and
+dropped boulders round their flanks. That upon those boulders a sea-
+beach formed, and that dead shells were beaten into it from a sea-
+bottom close by. That, and no less, Moel Tryfaen must mean.
+
+But it must mean, also, a length of time which has been well called
+"appalling." A length of time sufficient to let the mountain sink
+into the sea. Then length of time enough to enable those Arctic
+shells to crawl down from the northward, settle, and propagate
+themselves generation after generation; then length of time enough to
+uplift their dead remains, and the beach, and the boulders, and all
+Snowdonia, fourteen hundred feet into the air. And if anyone should
+object that the last upheaval may have been effected suddenly by a
+few tremendous earthquakes, we must answer--We have no proof of it.
+Earthquakes upheave lands now only by slight and intermittent upward
+pulses; nay, some lands we know to rise without any earthquake
+pulses, but by simple, slow, upward swelling of a few feet in a
+century; and we have no reason, and therefore no right, to suppose
+that Snowdonia was upheaved by any means or at any rate which we do
+not witness now; and therefore we are bound to allow, not only that
+there was a past "age of ice," but that that age was one of
+altogether enormous duration.
+
+But meanwhile some of you, I presume, will be ready to cry--Stop! It
+may be our own weakness; but you are really going on too fast and too
+far for our small imaginations. Have you not played with us, as well
+as argued with us, till you have inveigled us step by step into a
+conclusion which we cannot and will not believe? That all this land
+should have been sunk beneath an icy sea? That Britain should have
+been as Greenland is now? We can't believe it, and we won't.
+
+If you say so, like stout common-sense Britons, who have a wholesome
+dread of being taken in with fine words and wild speculations, I
+assure you I shall not laugh at you even in private. On the
+contrary, I shall say--what I am sure every scientific man will say--
+So much the better. That is the sort of audience which we want, if
+we are teaching natural science. We do not want haste, enthusiasm,
+gobe-moucherie, as the French call it, which is agape to snap up any
+new and vast fancy, just because it is new and vast. We want our
+readers to be slow, suspicious, conservative, ready to "gib," as we
+say of a horse, and refuse the collar up a steep place, saying--I
+must stop and think. I don't like the look of the path ahead of me.
+It seems an ugly place to get up. I don't know this road, and I
+shall not hurry over it. I must go back a few steps, and make sure.
+I must see whether it is the right road; whether there are not other
+roads, a dozen of them perhaps, which would do as well and better
+than this.
+
+This is the temper which finds out truth, slowly, but once and for
+all; and I shall be glad, not sorry, to see it in my readers.
+
+And I am bound to say that it has been by that temper that this
+theory has been worked out, and the existence of this past age of
+ice, or glacial epoch, has been discovered, through many mistakes,
+many corrections, and many changes of opinion about details, for
+nearly forty years of hard work, by many men, in many lands.
+
+As a very humble student of this subject, I may say that I have been
+looking these facts in the face earnestly enough for more than twenty
+years, and that I am about as certain that they can only be explained
+by ice, as I am that my having got home by rail can only be explained
+by steam.
+
+But I think I know what startles you. It is the being asked to
+believe in such an enormous change in climate, and in the height of
+the land above the sea. Well--it is very astonishing, appalling--all
+but incredible, if we had not the facts to prove it. But of the
+facts there can be no doubt. There can be no doubt that the climate
+of this northern hemisphere has changed enormously more than once.
+There can be no doubt that the distribution of land and water, the
+shape and size of its continents and seas, have changed again and
+again. There can be no doubt that, for instance, long before the age
+of ice, the whole North of Europe was much warmer than it is now.
+
+Take Greenland, for instance. Disco Island lies in Baffin's Bay, off
+the west coast of Greenland, in latitude 70 degrees, far within the
+Arctic circle. Now there certain strata of rock, older than the ice,
+have not been destroyed by the grinding of the ice-cap; and they are
+full of fossil plants. But of what kind of plants? Of the same
+families as now grow in the warmer parts of the United States. Even
+a tulip-tree has been found among them. Now how is this to be
+explained?
+
+Either we must say that the climate of Greenland was then so much
+warmer than now, that it had summers probably as hot as those of New
+York; or we must say that these leaves and stems were floated thither
+from the United States. But if we say the latter, we must allow a
+change in the shape of the land which is enormous. For nothing now
+can float northward from the United States into Baffin's Bay. The
+polar current sets OUT of Baffin's Bay southward, bringing icebergs
+down, not leaves up, through Davis's Straits. And in any case we
+must allow that the hills of Disco Island were then the bottom of a
+sea: or how would the leaves have been deposited in them at all?
+
+So much for the change of climate and land which can be proved to
+have gone on in Greenland. It has become colder. Why should it not
+some day become warmer again?
+
+Now for England. It can be proved, as far as common sense can prove
+anything, that England was, before the age of ice, much warmer than
+it is now, and grew gradually cooler and cooler, just as, while the
+age of ice was dying out, it grew warmer again.
+
+Now what proof is there of that?
+
+This. Underneath London--as, I dare say, many of you know--there
+lies four or five hundred feet of clay. But not ice-clay. Anything
+but that, as you will see. It belongs to a formation late
+(geologically speaking), but somewhat older than those Disco Island
+beds.
+
+And what sort of fossils do we find in it?
+
+In the first place, the shells, which are abundant, are tropical--
+Nautili, Cones, and such like. And more, fruits and seeds are found
+in it, especially at the Isle of Sheppey. And what are they? Fruits
+of Nipa palms, a form only found now at river-mouths in Eastern India
+and the Indian islands; Anona-seeds; gourd-seeds; Acacia fruits--all
+tropical again; and Proteaceous plants too--of an Australian type.
+Surely your common sense would hint to you, that this London clay
+must be mud laid down off the mouth of a tropical river. But your
+common sense would be all but certain of that, when you found, as you
+would find, the teeth and bones of crocodiles and turtles, who come
+to land, remember, to lay their eggs; the bones, too, of large
+mammals, allied to the tapir of India and South America, and the
+water-hog of the Cape. If all this does not mean that there was once
+a tropic climate and a tropic river running into some sea or other
+where London now stands, I must give up common sense and reason as
+deceitful and useless faculties; and believe nothing, not even the
+evidence of my own senses.
+
+And now, have I, or have I not, fulfilled the promise which I made--
+rashly, I dare say some of you thought--in my first paper? Have I,
+or have I not, made you prove to yourself, by your own common sense,
+that the lowlands of Britain were underneath the sea in the days in
+which these pebbles and boulders were laid down over your plains?
+Nay, have we not proved more? Have we not found that that old sea
+was an icy sea? Have we not wandered on, step by step, into a whole
+true fairyland of wonders? to a time when all England, Scotland, and
+Ireland were as Greenland is now? when mud streams have rushed down
+from under glaciers on to a cold sea-bottom, when "ice, mast high,
+came floating by, as green as emerald?" when Snowdon was sunk for at
+least fourteen hundred feet of its height? when (as I could prove to
+you, had I time) the peaks of the highest Cumberland and Scotch
+mountains alone stood out, as islets in a frozen sea?
+
+We want to get an answer to one strange question, and we have found a
+group of questions stranger still, and got them answered too. But so
+it is always in science. We know not what we shall discover. But
+this, at least, we know, that it will be far more wonderful than we
+had dreamed. The scientific explorer is always like Saul of old, who
+set out simply to find his father's asses, and found them--and a
+kingdom besides.
+
+I should have liked to have told you more about this bygone age of
+ice. I should have liked to say something to you on the curious
+question--which is still an open one--whether there were not two ages
+of ice; whether the climate here did not, after perhaps thousands of
+years of Arctic cold, soften somewhat for a while--a few thousand
+years, perhaps--and then harden again into a second age of ice,
+somewhat less severe, probably, than the first. I should have liked
+to have hinted at the probable causes of this change--indeed, of the
+age of ice altogether--whether it was caused by a change in the
+distribution of land and water, or by change in the height and size
+of these islands, which made them large enough, and high enough, to
+carry a sheet of eternal snow inland; or whether, finally, the age of
+ice was caused by an actual change in the position of the whole
+planet with regard to its orbit round the sun--shifting at once the
+poles and the tropics; a deep question that latter, on which
+astronomers, whose business it is, are still at work, and on which,
+ere young folk are old, they will have discovered, I expect, some
+startling facts. On that last question, I, being no astronomer,
+cannot speak. But I should have liked to have said somewhat on
+matters on which I have knowledge enough, at least, to teach you how
+much there is to be learnt. I should have liked to tell the student
+of sea-animals--how the ice-age helps to explain, and is again
+explained by, the remarkable discoveries which Dr. Carpenter and Mr.
+Wyville Thompson have just made, in the deep-sea dredgings in the
+North Atlantic. I should have liked to tell the botanist somewhat of
+the pro-glacial flora--the plants which lived here before the ice,
+and lasted, some of them at least, through all those ages of fearful
+cold, and linger still on the summits of Snowdon, and the highest
+peaks of Cumberland and Scotland. I should have liked to have told
+the lovers of zoology about the animals which lived before the ice--
+of the mammoth, or woolly elephant; the woolly rhinoceros, the cave
+lion and bear, the reindeer, the musk oxen, the lemmings and the
+marmots which inhabited Britain till the ice drove them out
+southward, even into the South of France; and how as the ice
+retreated, and the climate became tolerable once more, some of them--
+the mammoth and rhinoceros, the bison, the lion, and many another
+mighty beast reoccupied our lowlands, at a time when the
+hippopotamus, at least in summer, ranged freely from Africa and Spain
+across what was then dry land between France and England, and fed by
+the side of animals which have long since retreated to Norway and to
+Canada. I should have liked to tell the archaeologist of the human
+beings--probably from their weapons and their habits--of the same
+race as the present Laplanders, who passed northward as the ice went
+back, following the wild reindeer herds from the South of France into
+our islands, which were no islands then, to be in their turn driven
+northward by stronger races from the east and south. But space
+presses, and I fear that I have written too much already.
+
+At least, I have turned over for you a few grand and strange pages in
+the book of nature, and taught you, I hope, a key by which to
+decipher their hieroglyphics. At least, I have, I trust, taught you
+to look, as I do, with something of interest, even of awe, upon the
+pebbles in the street.
+
+
+
+III. THE STONES IN THE WALL
+
+
+
+This is a large subject. For in the different towns of these
+islands, the walls are built of stones of almost every age, from the
+earliest to the latest; and the town-geologist may find a quite
+different problem to solve in the nearest wall, on moving from one
+town to another twenty miles off. All I can do, therefore, is to
+take one set of towns, in the walls of which one sort of stones is
+commonly found, and talk of them; taking care, of course, to choose a
+stone which is widely distributed. And such, I think, we can find in
+the so-called New Red sandstone, which, with its attendant marls,
+covers a vast tract--and that a rich and busy one--of England. From
+Hartlepool and the mouth of the Tees, down through Yorkshire and
+Nottinghamshire; over the manufacturing districts of central England;
+down the valley of the Severn; past Bristol and the Somersetshire
+flats to Torquay in South Devon; up north-westward through Shropshire
+and Cheshire; past Liverpool and northward through Lancashire;
+reappearing again, north of the Lake mountains, about Carlisle and
+the Scotch side of the Solway Frith, stretches the New Red sandstone
+plain, from under which everywhere the coal-bearing rocks rise as
+from a sea. It contains, in many places, excellent quarries of
+building-stone; the most famous of which, perhaps, are the well-known
+Runcorn quarries, near Liverpool, from which the old Romans brought
+the material for the walls and temples of ancient Chester, and from
+which the stone for the restoration of Chester Cathedral is being
+taken at this day. In some quarters, especially in the north-west of
+England, its soil is poor, because it is masked by that very boulder-
+clay of which I spoke in my last paper. But its rich red marls,
+wherever they come to the surface, are one of God's most precious
+gifts to this favoured land. On them, one finds oneself at once in a
+garden; amid the noblest of timber, wheat, roots, grass which is
+green through the driest summers, and, in the western counties,
+cider-orchards laden with red and golden fruit. I know, throughout
+northern Europe, no such charming scenery, for quiet beauty and solid
+wealth, as that of the New Red marls; and if I wished to show a
+foreigner what England was, I should take him along them, from
+Yorkshire to South Devon, and say--There. Is not that a country
+worth living for,--and worth dying for if need be?
+
+Another reason which I have for dealing with the New Red sandstone is
+this--that (as I said just now) over great tracts of England,
+especially about the manufacturing districts, the town-geologist will
+find it covered immediately by the boulder clay.
+
+The townsman, finding this, would have a fair right to suppose that
+the clay was laid down immediately, or at least soon after, the
+sandstones or marls on which it lies; that as soon as the one had
+settled at the bottom of some old sea, the other settled on the top
+of it, in the same sea.
+
+A fair and reasonable guess, which would in many cases, indeed in
+most, be quite true. But in this case it would be a mistake. The
+sandstone and marls are immensely older than the boulder-clay. They
+are, humanly speaking, some four or five worlds older.
+
+What do I mean? This--that between the time when the one, and the
+time when the other, was made, the British Islands, and probably the
+whole continent of Europe, have changed four or five times; in shape;
+in height above the sea, or depth below it; in climate; in the kinds
+of plants and animals which have dwelt on them, or on their sea-
+bottoms. And surely it is not too strong a metaphor, to call such
+changes a change from an old world to a new one.
+
+Mind. I do not say that these changes were sudden or violent. It is
+far more probable that they are only part and parcel of that vast but
+slow change which is going on everywhere over our whole globe. I
+think that will appear probable in the course of this paper. But
+that these changes have taken place, is my main thesis. The fact I
+assert; and I am bound to try and prove it. And in trying to do so,
+I shall no longer treat my readers, as I did in the first two papers,
+like children. I shall take for granted that they now understand
+something of the method by which geological problems are worked out;
+and can trust it, and me; and shall state boldly the conclusions of
+geologists, only giving proof where proof is specially needed.
+
+Now you must understand that in England there are two great divisions
+of these New Red sandstones, "Trias," as geologists call them. An
+upper, called in Germany Keuper, which consists, atop, of the rich
+red marl, below them, of sandstones, and of those vast deposits of
+rock-salt, which have been long worked, and worked to such good
+purpose, that a vast subsidence of land has just taken place near
+Nantwich in Cheshire; and serious fears are entertained lest the town
+itself may subside, to fill up the caverns below, from whence the
+salt has been quarried. Underneath these beds again are those which
+carry the building-stone of Runcorn. Now these beds altogether, in
+Cheshire, at least, are about 3,400 feet thick; and were not laid
+down in a year, or in a century either.
+
+Below them lies a thousand feet of sandstones, known in Germany by
+the name of "Bunter," from its mottled and spotted appearance. What
+lies under them again, does not concern us just now.
+
+I said that the geologists called these beds the Trias; that is, the
+triple group. But as yet we have heard of only two parts of it.
+Where is the third?
+
+Not here, but in Germany. There, between the Keuper above and the
+Bunter below, lies a great series of limestone beds, which, from the
+abundance of fossils which they contain, go by the name of
+Muschelkalk. A long epoch must therefore have intervened between the
+laying down of the Bunter and of the Keuper. And we have a trace of
+that long epoch, even in England. The Keuper lies, certainly,
+immediately on the Bunter; but not always "conformably" on it. That
+is, the beds are not exactly parallel. The Bunter had been slightly
+tilted, and slightly waterworn, before the Keuper was laid on it.
+
+It is reasonable, therefore, to suppose, that the Bunter in England
+was dry land, and therefore safe from fresh deposit, through ages
+during which it was deep enough beneath the sea in Germany, to have
+the Muschelkalk laid down on it. Here again, then, as everywhere, we
+have evidence of time--time, not only beyond all counting, but beyond
+all imagining.
+
+And now, perhaps, the reader will ask--If I am to believe that all
+new land is made out of old land, and that all rocks and soils are
+derived from the wear and tear of still older rocks, off what land
+came this enormous heap of sands more than 5,000 feet thick in
+places, stretching across England and into Germany?
+
+It is difficult to answer. The shape and distribution of land in
+those days were so different from what they are now, that the rocks
+which furnished a great deal of our sandstone may be now, for aught I
+know, a mile beneath the sea.
+
+But over the land which still stands out of the sea near us there has
+been wear and tear enough to account for any quantity of sand
+deposit. As a single instance--It is a provable and proven fact--as
+you may see from Mr. Ramsay's survey of North Wales--that over a
+large tract to the south of Snowdon, between Port Madoc and Barmouth,
+there has been ground off and carried away a mass of solid rock
+20,000 feet thick; thick enough, in fact, if it were there still, to
+make a range of mountains as high as the Andes. It is a provable and
+proven fact that vast tracts of the centre of poor old Ireland were
+once covered with coal-measures, which have been scraped off in
+likewise, deprived of inestimable mineral wealth. The destruction of
+rocks--"denudation" as it is called--in the district round Malvern,
+is, I am told, provably enormous. Indeed, it is so over all Wales,
+North England, and West and North Scotland. So there is enough of
+rubbish to be accounted for to make our New Red sands. The round
+pebbles in it being, I believe, pieces of Old Red sandstone, may have
+come from the great Old Red sandstone region of South East Wales and
+Herefordshire. Some of the rubbish, too, may have come from what is
+now the Isle of Anglesey.
+
+For you find in the beds, from the top to the bottom (at least in
+Cheshire), particles of mica. Now this mica could not have been
+formed in the sand. It is a definite crystalline mineral, whose
+composition is well known. It is only found in rocks which have been
+subjected to immense pressure, and probably to heat. The granites
+and mica-slates of Anglesey are full of it; and from Anglesey--as
+likely as from anywhere else--these thin scales of mica came. And
+that is about all that I can say on the matter. But it is certain
+that most of these sands were deposited in a very shallow water, and
+very near to land. Sand and pebbles, as I said in my first paper,
+could not be carried far out to sea; and some of the beds of the
+Bunter are full of rounded pebbles. Nay, it is certain that their
+surface was often out of water. Of that you may see very pretty
+proofs. You find these sands ripple-marked, as you do shore-sands
+now. You find cracks where the marl mud has dried in the sun: and,
+more, you find the little pits made by rain. Of that I have no
+doubt. I have seen specimens, in which you could not only see at a
+glance that the marks had been made by the large drops of a shower,
+but see also from what direction the shower had come. These delicate
+markings must have been covered up immediately with a fresh layer of
+mud or sand. How long since? How long since that flag had seen the
+light of the sun, when it saw it once again, restored to the upper
+air by the pick of the quarryman? Who can answer that? Not I.
+
+Fossils are very rare in these sands; it is not easy to say why. It
+may be that the red oxide of iron in them has destroyed them. Few or
+none are ever found in beds in which it abounds. It is curious, too,
+that the Keuper, which is all but barren of fossils in England, is
+full of them in Wurtemberg, reptiles, fish, and remains of plants
+being common. But what will interest the reader are the footprints
+of a strange beast, found alike in England and in Germany--the
+Cheirotherium, as it was first named, from its hand-like feet; the
+Labyrinthodon, as it is now named, from the extraordinary structure
+of its teeth. There is little doubt now, among anatomists, that the
+bones and teeth of the so-called Labyrinthodon belong to the animal
+which made the footprints. If so, the creature must have been a
+right loathly monster. Some think him to have been akin to lizards;
+but the usual opinion is that he was a cousin of frogs and toads.
+Looking at his hands and other remains, one pictures him to oneself
+as a short, squat brute, as big as a fat hog, with a head very much
+the shape of a baboon, very large hands behind and small ones in
+front, waddling about on the tide flats of a sandy sea, and dragging
+after him, seemingly, a short tail, which has left its mark on the
+sand. What his odour was, whether he was smooth or warty, what he
+ate, and in general how he got his living, we know not. But there
+must have been something there for him to eat; and I dare say that he
+was about as happy and about as intellectual as the toad is now.
+Remember always that there is nothing alive now exactly like him, or,
+indeed, like any animal found in these sandstones. The whole animal
+world of this planet has changed entirely more than once since the
+Labyrinthodon waddled over the Cheshire flats. A lizard, for
+instance, which has been found in the Keuper, had a skull like a
+bird's, and no teeth--a type which is now quite extinct. But there
+is a more remarkable animal of which I must say a few words, and one
+which to scientific men is most interesting and significant.
+
+Both near Warwick, and near Elgin in Scotland, in Central India, and
+in South Africa, fossil remains are found of a family of lizards
+utterly unlike anything now living save one, and that one is crawling
+about, plentifully I believe--of all places in the world--in New
+Zealand. How it got there; how so strange a type of creature should
+have died out over the rest of the world, and yet have lasted on in
+that remote island for long ages, ever since the days of the New Red
+sandstone, is one of those questions--quite awful questions I
+consider them--with which I will not puzzle my readers. I only
+mention it to show them what serious questions the scientific man has
+to face, and to answer, if he can. Only the next time they go to the
+Zoological Gardens in London, let them go to the reptile-house, and
+ask the very clever and courteous attendant to show them the
+Sphenodons, or Hatterias, as he will probably call them--and then
+look, I hope with kindly interest, at the oldest Conservatives they
+ever saw, or are like to see; gentlemen of most ancient pedigree, who
+have remained all but unchanged, while the whole surface of the globe
+has changed around them more than once or twice.
+
+And now, of course, my readers will expect to hear something of the
+deposits of rock-salt, for which Cheshire and its red rocks are
+famous. I have never seen them, and can only say that the salt does
+not, it is said by geologists, lie in the sandstone, but at the
+bottom of the red marl which caps the sandstone. It was formed most
+probably by the gradual drying up of lagoons, such as are depositing
+salt, it is said now, both in the Gulf of Tadjara, on the Abyssinian
+frontier opposite Aden, and in the Runn of Cutch, near the Delta of
+the Indus. If this be so, then these New Red sandstones may be the
+remains of a whole Sahara--a sheet of sandy and all but lifeless
+deserts, reaching from the west of England into Germany, and rising
+slowly out of the sea; to sink, as we shall find, beneath the sea
+again.
+
+And now, as to the vast period of time--the four or five worlds, as I
+called it--which elapsed between the laying down of the New Red
+sandstones and the laying down of the boulder-clays.
+
+I think this fact--for fact it is--may be better proved by taking
+readers an imaginary railway journey to London from any spot in the
+manufacturing districts of central England--begging them, meanwhile,
+to keep their eyes open on the way.
+
+And here I must say that I wish folks in general would keep their
+eyes a little more open when they travel by rail. When I see young
+people rolling along in a luxurious carriage, their eyes and their
+brains absorbed probably in a trashy shilling novel, and never lifted
+up to look out of the window, unconscious of all that they are
+passing--of the reverend antiquities, the admirable agriculture, the
+rich and peaceful scenery, the like of which no country upon earth
+can show; unconscious, too, of how much they might learn of botany
+and zoology, by simply watching the flowers along the railway banks
+and the sections in the cuttings: then it grieves me to see what
+little use people make of the eyes and of the understanding which God
+has given them. They complain of a dull journey: but it is not the
+journey which is dull; it is they who are dull. Eyes have they, and
+see not; ears have they, and hear not; mere dolls in smart clothes,
+too many of them, like the idols of the heathen.
+
+But my readers, I trust, are of a better mind. So the next time they
+find themselves running up southward to London--or the reverse way--
+let them keep their eyes open, and verify, with the help of a
+geological map, the sketch which is given in the following pages.
+
+Of the "Black Countries"--the actual coal districts I shall speak
+hereafter. They are in England either shores or islands yet
+undestroyed, which stand out of the great sea of New Red sandstone,
+and often carry along their edges layers of far younger rocks, called
+now Permian, from the ancient kingdom of Permia, in Russia, where
+they cover a vast area. With them I will not confuse the reader just
+now, but will only ask him to keep his eye on the rolling plain of
+New Red sands and marls past, say, Birmingham and Warwick. After
+those places, these sands and marls dip to the south-east, and other
+rocks and soils appear above them, one after another, dipping
+likewise towards the south-east--that is, toward London.
+
+First appear thin layers of a very hard blue limestone, full of
+shells, and parted by layers of blue mud. That rock runs in a broad
+belt across England, from Whitby in Yorkshire, to Lyme in
+Dorsetshire, and is known as Lias. Famous it is, as some readers may
+know, for holding the bones of extinct monsters--Ichthyosaurs and
+Plesiosaurs, such as the unlearned may behold in the lake at the
+Crystal Palace. On this rock lie the rich cheese pastures, and the
+best tracts of the famous "hunting shires" of England.
+
+Lying on it, as we go south-eastward, appear alternate beds of sandy
+limestone, with vast depths of clay between them. These "oolites,"
+or freestones, furnish the famous Bath stone, the Oxford stone, and
+the Barnack stone of Northamptonshire, of which some of the finest
+cathedrals are built--a stone only surpassed, I believe, by the Caen
+stone, which comes from beds of the same age in Normandy. These
+freestones and clays abound in fossils, but of kinds, be it
+remembered, which differ more and more from those of the lias
+beneath, as the beds are higher in the series, and therefore nearer.
+There, too, are found principally the bones of that extraordinary
+flying lizard, the Pterodactyle, which had wings formed out of its
+fore-legs, on somewhat the same plan as those of a bat, but with one
+exception. In the bat, as any one may see, four fingers of the hand
+are lengthened to carry the wing, while the first alone is left free,
+as a thumb: but in the Pterodactyle, the outer or "little" finger
+alone is lengthened, and the other four fingers left free--one of
+those strange instances in nature of the same effect being produced
+in widely different plants and animals, and yet by slightly different
+means, on which a whole chapter of natural philosophy--say, rather,
+natural theology--will have to be written some day.
+
+But now consider what this Lias, and the Oolites and clays upon it
+mean. They mean that the New Red sandstone, after it had been dry
+land, or all but dry land (as is proved by the footprints of animals
+and the deposits of salt), was sunk again beneath the sea. Each
+deposit of limestone signifies a long period of time, during which
+that sea was pure enough to allow reefs of coral to grow, and shells
+to propagate, at the bottom. Each great band of clay signifies a
+long period, during which fine mud was brought down from some wasting
+land in the neighbourhood. And that land was not far distant is
+proved by the bones of the Pterodactyle, of Crocodiles, and of
+Marsupials; by the fact that the shells are of shallow-water or shore
+species; by the presence, mixed with them, of fragments of wood,
+impressions of plants, and even wing-shells of beetles; and lastly,
+if further proof was needed, by the fact that in the "dirt-bed" of
+the Isle of Portland and the neighbouring shores, stumps of trees
+allied to the modern sago-palms are found as they grew in the soil,
+which, with them, has been covered up in layers of freshwater shale
+and limestone. A tropic forest has plainly sunk beneath a lagoon;
+and that lagoon, again, beneath the sea.
+
+And how long did this period of slow sinking go on? Who can tell?
+The thickness of the Lias and Oolites together cannot be less than a
+thousand feet. Considering, then, the length of time required to lay
+down a thousand feet of strata, and considering the vast difference
+between the animals found in them, and the few found in the New Red
+sandstone, we have a right to call them another world, and that one
+which must have lasted for ages.
+
+After we pass Oxford, or the Vale of Aylesbury, we enter yet another
+world. We come to a bed of sand, under which the freestones and
+their adjoining clays dip to the south-east. This is called commonly
+the lower Greensand, though it is not green, but rich iron-red. Then
+succeeds a band of stiff blue clay, called the Gault, and then
+another bed of sand, the upper Greensand, which is more worthy of the
+name, for it does carry, in most places, a band of green or
+"glauconite" sand. But it and the upper layers of the lower
+Greensand also, are worth our attention; for we are all probably
+eating them from time to time in the form of bran.
+
+It had been long remarked that certain parts of these beds carried
+admirable wheatland; it had been remarked, too, that the finest hop-
+lands--those of Farnham, for instance, and Tunbridge--lay upon them:
+but that the fertile band was very narrow; that, as in the Surrey
+Moors, vast sheets of the lower Greensand were not worth cultivation.
+What caused the striking difference?
+
+My beloved friend and teacher, the late Dr. Henslow, when Professor
+of Botany at Cambridge, had brought to him by a farmer (so the story
+ran) a few fossils. He saw, being somewhat of a geologist and
+chemist, that they were not, as fossils usually are, carbonate of
+lime, but phosphate of lime--bone-earth. He said at once, as by an
+inspiration, "You have found a treasure--not a gold-mine, indeed, but
+a food-mine. This is bone-earth, which we are at our wits' end to
+get for our grain and pulse; which we are importing, as expensive
+bones, all the way from Buenos Ayres. Only find enough of them, and
+you will increase immensely the food supply of England, and perhaps
+make her independent of foreign phosphates in case of war."
+
+His advice was acted on; for the British farmer is by no means the
+stupid personage which townsfolk are too apt to fancy him. This bed
+of phosphates was found everywhere in the Greensand, underlying the
+Chalk. It may be traced from Dorsetshire through England to
+Cambridge, and thence, I believe, into Yorkshire. It may be traced
+again, I believe, all round the Weald of Kent and Sussex, from Hythe
+to Farnham--where it is peculiarly rich--and so to Eastbourne and
+Beachey Head; and it furnishes, in Cambridgeshire, the greater part
+of those so-called "coprolites," which are used perpetually now for
+manure, being ground up, and then treated with sulphuric acid, till
+they become a "soluble super-phosphate of lime."
+
+So much for the useless "hobby," as some fancy it, of poking over old
+bones and stones, and learning a little of the composition of this
+earth on which God has placed us.
+
+How to explain the presence of this vast mass of animal matter, in
+one or two thin bands right across England, I know not. That the
+fossils have been rolled on a sea-beach is plain to those who look at
+them. But what caused so vast a destruction of animal life along
+that beach, must remain one of the buried secrets of the past.
+
+And now we are fast nearing another world, which is far younger than
+that coprolite bed, and has been formed under circumstances the most
+opposite to it. We are nearing, by whatever rail we approach London,
+the escarpment of the chalk downs.
+
+All readers, surely, know the white chalk, the special feature and
+the special pride of the south of England. All know its softly-
+rounded downs, its vast beech woods, its short and sweet turf, its
+snowy cliffs, which have given--so some say--to the whole island the
+name of Albion--the white land. But all do not, perhaps, know that
+till we get to the chalk no single plant or animal has been found
+which is exactly like any plant or animal now known to be living.
+The plants and animals grow, on the whole, more and more like our
+living forms as we rise in the series of beds. But only above the
+chalk (as far as we yet know) do we begin to find species identical
+with those living now.
+
+This in itself would prove a vast lapse of time. We shall have a
+further proof of that vast lapse when we examine the chalk itself.
+It is composed--of this there is now no doubt--almost entirely of the
+shells of minute animalcules; and animalcules (I use an unscientific
+word for the sake of unscientific readers) like these, and in some
+cases identical with them, are now forming a similar deposit of mud,
+at vast depths, over the greater part of the Atlantic sea-floor.
+This fact has been put out of doubt by recent deep-sea dredgings. A
+whole literature has been written on it of late. Any reader who
+wishes to know it, need only ask the first geologist he meets; and if
+he has the wholesome instinct of wonder in him, fill his imagination
+with true wonders, more grand and strange than he is like to find in
+any fairy tale. All I have to do with the matter here is, to say
+that, arguing from the known to the unknown, from the Atlantic deep-
+sea ooze which we do know about, to the chalk which we do not know
+about, the whole of the chalk must have been laid down at the bottom
+of a deep and still ocean, far out of the reach of winds, tides, and
+even currents, as a great part of the Atlantic sea-floor is at this
+day.
+
+Prodigious! says the reader. And so it is. Prodigious to think that
+that shallow Greensand shore, strewed with dead animals, should sink
+to the bottom of an ocean, perhaps a mile, perhaps some four miles
+deep. Prodigious the time during which it must have lain as a still
+ocean-floor. For so minute are the living atomies which form the
+ooze, that an inch, I should say, is as much as we can allow for
+their yearly deposit; and the chalk is at least a thousand feet
+thick. It may have taken, therefore, twelve thousand years to form
+the chalk alone. A rough guess, of course, but one as likely to be
+two or three times too little as two or three times too big. Such,
+or somewhat such, is the fact. It had long been suspected, and more
+than suspected; and the late discoveries of Dr. Carpenter and Mr.
+Wyville Thompson have surely placed it beyond doubt.
+
+Thus, surely, if we call the Oolitic beds one new world above the New
+Red sandstone, we must call the chalk a second new world in like
+wise.
+
+I will not trouble the reader here with the reasons why geologists
+connect the chalk with the greensands below it, by regular
+gradations, in spite of the enormous downward leap, from sea-shore to
+deep ocean, which the beds seem (but only seem) to have taken. The
+change--like all changes in geology--was probably gradual. Not by
+spasmodic leaps and starts, but slowly and stately, as befits a God
+of order, of patience, and of strength, have these great deeds been
+done.
+
+But we have not yet done with new worlds or new prodigies on our way
+to London, as any Londoner may ascertain for himself, if he will run
+out a few miles by rail, and look in any cutting or pit, where the
+surface of the chalk, and the beds which lie on it, are exposed.
+
+On the chalk lie--especially in the Blackheath and Woolwich district-
+-sands and clays. And what do they tell us?
+
+Of another new world, in which the chalk has been lifted up again, to
+form gradually, doubtless, and at different points in succession, the
+shore of a sea.
+
+But what proof is there of this?
+
+The surface of the chalk is not flat and smooth, as it must have been
+when at the bottom of the sea. It is eaten out into holes and
+furrows, plainly by the gnawing of the waves; and on it lie, in many
+places, large rolled flints out of chalk which has been destroyed,
+beds of shore-shingle, beds of oysters lying as they grew, fresh or
+brackish water-shells standing as they lived, bits of lignite (fossil
+wood half turned to coal), and (as in Katesgrove pits at Reading)
+leaves of trees. Proof enough, one would say, that the chalk had
+been raised till part of it at least became dry land, and carried
+vegetation.
+
+And yet we have not done. There is another world to tell of yet.
+
+For these beds (known as the Woolwich and Reading beds) dip under
+that vast bed of London clay, four hundred and more feet thick, which
+(as I said in my last chapter) was certainly laid down by the estuary
+of some great tropic river, among palm-trees and Anonas, crocodiles
+and turtles.
+
+Is the reader's power of belief exhausted?
+
+If not: there are to be seen, capping almost every high land round
+London, the remains of a fifth world. Some of my readers may have
+been to Ascot races, or to Aldershot camp, and may recollect the
+table-land of the sandy moors, perfectly flat atop, dreary enough to
+those to whom they are not (as they have long been to me) a home and
+a work-field. Those sands are several hundred feet thick. They lie
+on the London clay. And they represent--the reader must take
+geologists' word for it--a series of beds in some places thousands of
+feet thick, in the Isle of Wight, in the Paris basin, in the volcanic
+country of the Auvergne, in Switzerland, in Italy; a period during
+which the land must at first have swarmed with forms of tropic life,
+and then grown--but very gradually--more temperate, and then colder
+and colder still; till at last set in that age of ice, which spread
+the boulder pebbles over all rocks and soils indiscriminately, from
+the Lake mountains to within a few miles of London.
+
+For everywhere about those Ascot moors, the top of the sands has been
+ploughed by shore-ice in winter, as they lay a-wash in the shallow
+sea; and over them, in many places, is spread a thin sheet of ice
+gravel, more ancient, the best geologists think, than the boulder and
+the boulder-clay.
+
+If any of my readers ask how long the period was during which those
+sands of Ascot Heath and Aldershot have been laid down, I cannot
+tell. But this we can tell. It was long enough to see such changes
+in land and sea, that maps representing Europe during the greater
+part of that period (as far as we can guess at it) look no more like
+Europe than like America or the South Sea Islands. And this we can
+tell besides: that that period was long enough for the Swiss Alps to
+be lifted up at least 10,000 feet of their present height. And that
+was a work which--though God could, if He willed it, have done it in
+a single day--we have proof positive was not done in less than ages,
+beside which the mortal life of man is as the life of the gnat which
+dances in the sun.
+
+And all this, and more--as may be proved from the geology of foreign
+countries--happened between the date of the boulder-clay, and that of
+the New Red sandstone on which it rests.
+
+
+
+IV. THE COAL IN THE FIRE
+
+
+
+My dear town-dwelling readers, let me tell you now something of a
+geological product well known, happily, to all dwellers in towns, and
+of late years, thanks to railroad extension, to most dwellers in
+country districts: I mean coal.
+
+Coal, as of course you know, is commonly said to be composed of
+vegetable matter, of the leaves and stems of ancient plants and
+trees--a startling statement, and one which I do not wish you to take
+entirely on trust. I shall therefore spend a few pages in showing
+you how this fact--for fact it is--was discovered. It is a very good
+example of reasoning from the known to the unknown. You will have a
+right to say at first starting, "Coal is utterly different in look
+from leaves and stems. The only property which they seem to have in
+common is that they can both burn." True. But difference of mere
+look may be only owing to a transformation, or series of
+transformations. There are plenty in nature quite as great, and
+greater. What can be more different in look, for instance, than a
+green field of wheat and a basket of loaves at the baker's? And yet
+there is, I trust, no doubt whatsoever that the bread has been once
+green wheat, and that the green wheat has been transformed into
+bread--making due allowance, of course, for the bone-dust, or gypsum,
+or alum with which the worthy baker may have found it profitable to
+adulterate his bread, in order to improve the digestion of Her
+Majesty's subjects.
+
+But you may say, "Yes, but we can see the wheat growing, flowering,
+ripening, reaped, ground, kneaded, baked. We see, in the case of
+bread, the processes of the transformation going on: but in the case
+of coal we do not see the wood and leaves being actually transformed
+into coal, or anything like it."
+
+Now suppose we laid out the wheat on a table in a regular series,
+such as you may see in many exhibitions of manufactures; beginning
+with the wheat plant at one end, and ending with the loaf at the
+other; and called in to look at them a savage who knew nothing of
+agriculture and nothing of cookery--called in, as an extreme case,
+the man in the moon, who certainly can know nothing of either; for as
+there is neither air nor water round the moon, there can be nothing
+to grow there, and therefore nothing to cook--and suppose we asked
+him to study the series from end to end. Do you not think that the
+man in the moon, if he were half as shrewd as Crofton Croker makes
+him in his conversation with Daniel O'Rourke, would answer after due
+meditation, "How the wheat plant got changed into the loaf I cannot
+see from my experience in the moon: but that it has been changed,
+and that the two are the same thing I do see, for I see all the
+different stages of the change." And so I think you may say of the
+wood and the coal.
+
+The man in the moon would be quite reasonable in his conclusion; for
+it is a law, a rule, and one which you will have to apply again and
+again in the study of natural objects, that however different two
+objects may look in some respects, yet if you can find a regular
+series of gradations between them, with all shades of likeness, first
+to one of them and then to the other, then you have a fair right to
+suppose them to be only varieties of the same species, the same kind
+of thing, and that, therefore, they have a common origin.
+
+That sounds rather magniloquent. Let me give you a simple example.
+
+Suppose you had come into Britain with Brute, the grandson of AEneas,
+at that remote epoch when (as all archaeologists know who have duly
+read Geoffrey of Monmouth and the Arthuric legends) Britain was
+inhabited only by a few giants. Now if you had met giants with one
+head, and also giants with seven heads, and no others, you would have
+had a right to say, "There are two breeds of giants here, one-headed
+and seven-headed." But if you had found, as Jack the Giant-Killer
+(who belongs to the same old cycle of myths) appears to have found,
+two-headed giants also, and three-headed, and giants, indeed, with
+any reasonable number of heads, would you not have been justified in
+saying, "They are all of the same breed, after all; only some are
+more capitate, or heady, than others!"
+
+I hope that you agree to that reasoning; for by it I think we arrive
+most surely at a belief in the unity of the human race, and that the
+Negro is actually a man and a brother.
+
+If the only two types of men in the world were an extreme white type,
+like the Norwegians, and an extreme black type, like the Negros, then
+there would be fair ground for saying, "These two types have been
+always distinct; they are different races, who have no common
+origin." But if you found, as you will find, many types of man
+showing endless gradations between the white man and the Negro, and
+not only that, but endless gradations between them both and a third
+type, whose extreme perhaps is the Chinese--endless gradations, I
+say, showing every conceivable shade of resemblance or difference,
+till you often cannot say to what type a given individual belongs;
+and all of them, however different from each other, more like each
+other than they are like any other creature upon earth; then you are
+justified in saying, "All these are mere varieties of one kind.
+However distinct they are now, they were probably like each other at
+first, and therefore all probably had a common origin." That seems
+to me sound reasoning, and advanced natural science is corroborating
+it more and more daily.
+
+Now apply the same reasoning to coal. You may find about the world--
+you may see even in England alone--every gradation between coal and
+growing forest. You may see the forest growing in its bed of
+vegetable mould; you may see the forest dead and converted into peat,
+with stems and roots in it; that, again, into sunken forests, like
+those to be seen below high-water mark on many coasts of this island.
+You find gradations between them and beds of lignite, or wood coal;
+then gradations between lignite and common or bituminous coal; and
+then gradations between common coal and culm, or anthracite, such as
+is found in South Wales. Have you not a right to say, "These are all
+but varieties of the same kind of thing--namely, vegetable matter?
+They have a common origin--namely, woody fibre. And coal, or rather
+culm, is the last link in a series of transformations from growing
+vegetation?"
+
+This is our first theory. Let us try to verify it, as scientific men
+are in the habit of doing, by saying, If that be true, then something
+else is likely to be true too.
+
+If coal has all been vegetable soil, then it is likely that some of
+it has not been quite converted into shapeless coal. It is likely
+that there will be vegetable fibre still to be seen here and there;
+perhaps leaves, perhaps even stems of trees, as in a peat bog. Let
+us look for them.
+
+You will not need to look far. The coal, and the sands and shales
+which accompany the coal, are so full of plant-remains, that three
+hundred species were known to Adolphe Brongniart as early as 1849,
+and that number has largely increased since.
+
+Now one point is specially noticeable about these plants of the coal;
+namely, that they may at least have grown in swamps.
+
+First, you will be interested if you study the coal flora, with the
+abundance, beauty, and variety of the ferns. Now ferns in these
+islands grow principally in rocky woods, because there, beside the
+moisture, they get from decaying vegetable or decaying rock,
+especially limestone, the carbonic acid which is their special food,
+and which they do not get on our dry pastures, and still less in our
+cultivated fields. But in these islands there are two noble species,
+at least, which are true swamp-ferns; the Lastraea Thelypteris, which
+of old filled the fens, but is now all but extinct; and the Osmunda,
+or King-fern, which, as all know, will grow wherever it is damp
+enough about the roots. In Hampshire, in Devon, and Cornwall, and in
+the southwest of Ireland, the King-fern too is a true swamp fern.
+But in the Tropics I have seen more than once noble tree-ferns
+growing in wet savannahs at the sea-level, as freely as in the
+mountain-woods; ferns with such a stem as some of the coal ferns had,
+some fifteen feet in height, under which, as one rode on horseback,
+one saw the blazing blue sky, as through a parasol of delicate lace,
+as men might have long ages since have seen it, through the plumed
+fronds of the ferns now buried in the coal, had there only been a man
+then created to enjoy its beauty.
+
+Next we find plants called by geologists Calamites. There is no
+doubt now that they are of the same family as our Equiseta, or horse-
+tails, a race which has, over most parts of the globe, dwindled down
+now from twenty or thirty feet in height, as they were in the old
+coal measures, to paltry little weeds. The tallest Equisetum in
+England--the beautiful E. Telmateia--is seldom five feet high. But
+they, too, are mostly mud and swamp plants; and so may the Calamites
+have been.
+
+The Lepidodendrons, again, are without doubt the splendid old
+representatives of a family now dwindled down to such creeping things
+as our club-mosses, or Lycopodiums. Now it is a certain fact, which
+can be proved by the microscope, that a very great part of the best
+coal is actually made up of millions of the minute seeds of club-
+mosses, such as grow--a few of them, and those very small--on our
+moors; a proof, surely, not only of the vast amount of the vegetation
+in the coal-making age, but also of the vast time during which it
+lasted. The Lepidodendra may have been fifty or sixty feet high.
+There is not a Lycopodium in the world now, I believe, five feet
+high. But the club-mosses are now, in these islands and elsewhere,
+lovers of wet and peaty soils, and so may their huger prototypes have
+been, in the old forests of the coal.
+
+Of the Sigillariae we cannot say as much with certainty, for
+botanists are not agreed as to what low order of flowerless plants
+they belong. But that they rooted in clay beds there is proof, as
+you will hear presently.
+
+And as to the Conifers, or pine-like trees--the Dadoxylon, of which
+the pith goes by the name of Sternbergia, and the uncertain tree
+which furnishes in some coal-measures bushels of a seed connected
+with that of the yew--we may suppose that they would find no more
+difficulty in growing in swamps than the cypress, which forms so
+large a portion of the vegetation in the swamps of the Southern
+United States.
+
+I have given you these hints, because you will naturally wish to know
+what sort of a world it was in which all these strange plants grew
+and turned into coal.
+
+My answer is, that it was most probably just like the world in which
+we are living now, with the one exception that the plants and animals
+are different.
+
+It was the fashion a few years since to explain the coal--like other
+phenomena of geology--by some mere hypothesis of a state of things
+quite unlike what we see now. We were brought up to believe that in
+the Carboniferous, or coal-bearing era, the atmosphere was intensely
+moist and hot, and overcharged with carbonic acid, which had been
+poured out from the interior of the planet by volcanic eruptions, or
+by some other convulsion. I forget most of it now: and really there
+is no need to remember; for it is all, I verily believe, a dream--an
+attempt to explain the unknown not by the known, but by the still
+more unknown. You may find such theories lingering still in
+sensational school-books, if you like to be unscientific. If you
+like, on the other hand, to be scientific you will listen to those
+who tell you that instead of there having been one unique
+carboniferous epoch, with a peculiar coal-making climate, all epochs
+are carboniferous if they get the chance; that coal is of every age,
+from that of the Scotch and English beds, up to the present day. The
+great coal-beds along the Rocky Mountains, for instance, are
+tertiary--that is, later than the chalk. Coal is forming now, I
+doubt not, in many places on the earth, and would form in many more,
+if man did not interfere with the processes of wild nature, by
+draining the fens, and embanking the rivers.
+
+Let me by a few words prove this statement. They will give you,
+beside, a fresh proof of Sir Charles Lyell's great geological rule--
+that the best way to explain what we see in ancient rocks is to take
+for granted, as long as we can do so fairly, that things were going
+on then very much as they are going on now.
+
+When it was first seen that coal had been once vegetable, the
+question arose--How did all these huge masses of vegetable matter get
+there? The Yorkshire and Derbyshire coal-fields, I hear, cover 700
+or 800 square miles; the Lancashire about 200. How large the North
+Wales and the Scotch fields are I cannot say. But doubtless a great
+deal more coal than can be got at lies under the sea, especially in
+the north of Wales. Coal probably exists over vast sheets of England
+and France, buried so deeply under later rocks, that it cannot be
+reached by mining. As an instance, a distinguished geologist has
+long held that there are beds of coal under London itself, which
+rise, owing to a peculiar disturbance of the strata, to within 1,000
+or 1,200 feet of the surface, and that we or our children may yet see
+coal-mines in the marshes of the Thames. And more, it is a provable
+fact that only a portion of the coal measures is left. A great part
+of Ireland must once have been covered with coal, which is now
+destroyed. Indeed, it is likely that the coal now known of in Europe
+and America is but a remnant of what has existed there in former
+ages, and has been eaten away by the inroads of the sea.
+
+Now whence did all that enormous mass of vegetable soil come? Off
+some neighbouring land, was the first and most natural answer. It
+was a rational one. It proceeded from the known to the unknown. It
+was clear that these plants had grown on land; for they were land-
+plants. It was clear that there must have been land close by, for
+between the beds of coal, as you all know, the rock is principally
+coarse sandstone, which could only have been laid down (as I have
+explained to you already) in very shallow water.
+
+It was natural, then, to suppose that these plants and trees had been
+swept down by rivers into the sea, as the sands and muds which buried
+them had been. And it was known that at the mouths of certain
+rivers--the Mississippi, for instance--vast rafts of dead floating
+trees accumulated; and that the bottoms of the rivers were often full
+of snags, etc.; trees which had grounded, and stuck in the mud; and
+why should not the coal have been formed in the same way?
+
+Because--and this was a serious objection--then surely the coal would
+be impure--mixed up with mud and sand, till it was not worth burning.
+Instead of which, the coal is usually pure vegetable, parted sharply
+from the sandstone which lies on it. The only other explanation was,
+that the coal vegetation had grown in the very places where it was
+found. But that seemed too strange to be true, till that great
+geologist, Sir W. Logan--who has since done such good work in Canada-
+-showed that every bed of coal had a bed of clay under it, and that
+that clay always contained fossils called Stigmaria. Then it came
+out that the Stigmaria in the under clay had long filaments attached
+to them, while when found in the sandstones or shales, they had lost
+their filaments, and seemed more or less rolled--in fact, that the
+natural place of the Stigmaria was in the under clay. Then Mr.
+Binney discovered a tree--a Sigillaria, standing upright in the coal-
+measures with its roots attached. Those roots penetrated into the
+under clay of the coal; and those roots were Stigmarias. That seems
+to have settled the question. The Sigillarias, at least, had grown
+where they were found, and the clay beneath the coal-beds was the
+original soil on which they had grown. Just so, if you will look at
+any peat bog you will find it bottomed by clay, which clay is pierced
+everywhere by the roots of the moss forming the peat, or of the
+trees, birches, alders, poplars, and willows, which grow in the bog.
+So the proof seemed complete, that the coal had been formed out of
+vegetation growing where it was buried. If any further proof for
+that theory was needed, it would be found in this fact, most
+ingeniously suggested by Mr. Boyd Dawkins. The resinous spores, or
+seeds of the Lepidodendra make up--as said above--a great part of the
+bituminous coal. Now those spores are so light, that if the coal had
+been laid down by water, they would have floated on it, and have been
+carried away; and therefore the bituminous coal must have been
+formed, not under water, but on dry land.
+
+I have dwelt at length on these further arguments, because they seem
+to me as pretty a specimen as I can give my readers of that regular
+and gradual induction, that common-sense regulated, by which
+geological theories are worked out.
+
+But how does this theory explain the perfect purity of the coal? I
+think Sir C. Lyell answers that question fully in p. 383 of his
+"Student's Elements of Geology." He tells us that the dense growths
+of reeds and herbage which encompass the margins of forest-covered
+swamps in the valley and delta of the Mississippi, in passing through
+them, are filtered and made to clear themselves entirely before they
+reach the areas in which vegetable matter may accumulate for
+centuries, forming coal if the climate be favourable; and that in the
+cypress-swamps of that region no sediment mingles with the vegetable
+matter accumulated from the decay of trees and semi-aquatic plants;
+so that when, in a very dry season, the swamp is set on fire, pits
+are burnt into the ground many feet deep, or as far as the fire can
+go down without reaching water, and scarcely any earthy residuum is
+left; just as when the soil of the English fens catches fire, red-hot
+holes are eaten down through pure peat till the water-bearing clay
+below is reached. But the purity of the water in peaty lagoons is
+observable elsewhere than in the delta of the Mississippi. What can
+be more transparent than many a pool surrounded by quaking bogs,
+fringed, as they are in Ireland, with a ring of white water-lilies,
+which you dare not stoop to pick, lest the peat, bending inward,
+slide you down into that clear dark gulf some twenty feet in depth,
+bottomed and walled with yielding ooze, from which there is no
+escape? Most transparent, likewise, is the water of the West Indian
+swamps. Though it is of the colour of coffee, or rather of dark
+beer, and so impregnated with gases that it produces fever or cholera
+when drunk, yet it is--at least when it does not mingle with the salt
+water--so clear, that one might see every marking on a boa-
+constrictor or alligator, if he glided along the bottom under the
+canoe.
+
+But now comes the question--Even if all this be true, how were the
+forests covered up in shale and sandstone, one after another?
+
+By gradual sinking of the land, one would suppose.
+
+If we find, as we may find in a hundred coal-pits, trees rooted as
+they grew, with their trunks either standing up through the coal, and
+through the sandstone above the coal; their bark often remaining as
+coal while their inside is filled up with sandstone, has not our
+common-sense a right to say--The land on which they grew sank below
+the water-line; the trees were killed; and the mud and sand which
+were brought down the streams enveloped their trunks? As for the
+inside being full of sandstone, have we not all seen hollow trees?
+Do we not all know that when a tree dies its wood decays first, its
+bark last? It is so, especially in the Tropics. There one may see
+huge dead trees with their bark seemingly sound, and their inside a
+mere cavern with touchwood at the bottom; into which caverns one used
+to peep with some caution. For though one might have found inside
+only a pair of toucans, or parrots, or a whole party of jolly little
+monkeys, one was quite as likely to find a poisonous snake four or
+five feet long, whose bite would have very certainly prevented me
+having the pleasure of writing this book.
+
+Now is it not plain that if such trees as that sunk, their bark would
+be turned into lignite, and at last into coal, while their insides
+would be silted up with mud and sand? Thus a core or pillar of hard
+sandstone would be formed, which might do to the collier of the
+future what they are too apt to do now in the Newcastle and Bristol
+collieries. For there, when the coal is worked out below, the
+sandstone stems--"coal-pipes" as the colliers call them--in the roof
+of the seam, having no branches, and nothing to hold them up but
+their friable bark of coal, are but too apt to drop out suddenly,
+killing or wounding the hapless men below.
+
+Or again, if we find--as we very often find--as was found at
+Parkfield Colliery, near Wolverhampton, in the year 1814--a quarter
+of an acre of coal-seam filled. with stumps of trees as they grew,
+their trunks broken off and lying in every direction, turned into
+coal, and flattened, as coal-fossils so often are, by the weight of
+the rock above--should we not have a right to say--These trees were
+snapped off where they grew by some violent convulsion; by a storm,
+or by a sudden inrush of water owing to a sudden sinking of the land,
+or by the very earthquake shock itself which sank the land?
+
+But what evidence have we of such sinkings? The plain fact that you
+have coal-seam above coal-seam, each with its bed of under-clay; and
+that therefore the land MUST have sunk ere the next bed of soil could
+have been deposited, and the next forest have grown on it.
+
+In one of the Rocky Mountain coal-fields there are more than thirty
+seams of coal, each with its under-clay below it. What can that mean
+but thirty or more subsidences of the land, and the peat of thirty or
+more forests or peat-mosses, one above the other? And now if any
+reader shall say, Subsidence? What is this quite new element which
+you have brought into your argument? You told us that you would
+reason from the known to the unknown. What do we know of subsidence?
+You offered to explain the thing which had gone on once by that which
+is going on now. Where is subsidence going on now upon the surface
+of our planet? And where, too, upheaval, such as would bring us
+these buried forests up again from under the sea-level, and make
+them, like our British coal-field, dry land once more?
+
+The answer is--Subsidence and elevation of the land are common now,
+probably just as common as they were in any age of this planet's
+history.
+
+To give two instances, made now notorious by the writings of
+geologists. As lately as 1819 a single earthquake shock in Cutch, at
+the mouth of the Indus, sunk a tract of land larger than the Lake of
+Geneva in some places to a depth of eighteen feet, and converted it
+into an inland sea. The same shock raised, a few miles off, a
+corresponding sheet of land some fifty miles in length, and in some
+parts sixteen miles broad, ten feet above the level of the alluvial
+plain, and left it to be named by the country-people the "Ullah
+Bund," or bank of God, to distinguish it from the artificial banks in
+the neighbourhood.
+
+Again: in the valley of the Mississippi--a tract which is now, it
+would seem, in much the same state as central England was while our
+coal-fields were being laid down--the earthquakes of 1811-12 caused
+large lakes to appear suddenly in many parts of the district, amid
+the dense forests of cypress. One of these, the "Sunk Country," near
+New Madrid, is between seventy and eighty miles in length, and thirty
+miles in breadth, and throughout it, as late as 1846, "dead trees
+were conspicuous, some erect in the water, others fallen, and strewed
+in dense masses over the bottom, in the shallows, and near the
+shore." I quote these words from Sir Charles Lyell's "Principles of
+Geology" (11th edit.), vol. i. p. 453. And I cannot do better than
+advise my readers, if they wish to know more of the way in which coal
+was formed, to read what is said in that book concerning the Delta of
+the Mississippi, and its strata of forests sunk where they grew, and
+in some places upraised again, alternating with beds of clay and
+sand, vegetable soil, recent sea-shells, and what not, forming, to a
+depth of several hundred feet, just such a mass of beds as exists in
+our own coal-fields at this day.
+
+If, therefore, the reader wishes to picture to himself the scenery of
+what is now central England, during the period when our coal was
+being laid down, he has only, I believe, to transport himself in
+fancy to any great alluvial delta, in a moist and warm climate,
+favourable to the growth of vegetation. He has only to conceive
+wooded marshes, at the mouth of great rivers, slowly sinking beneath
+the sea; the forests in them killed by the water, and then covered up
+by layers of sand, brought down from inland, till that new layer
+became dry land, to carry a fresh crop of vegetation. He has thus
+all that he needs to explain how coal-measures were formed. I myself
+saw once a scene of that kind, which I should be sorry to forget; for
+there was, as I conceived, coal, making, or getting ready to be made,
+before my eyes: a sheet of swamp, sinking slowly into the sea; for
+there stood trees, still rooted below high-water mark, and killed by
+the waves; while inland huge trees stood dying, or dead, from the
+water at their roots. But what a scene--a labyrinth of narrow
+creeks, so narrow that a canoe could not pass up, haunted with
+alligators and boa-constrictors, parrots and white herons, amid an
+inextricable confusion of vegetable mud, roots of the alder-like
+mangroves, and tangled creepers hanging from tree to tree; and
+overhead huge fan-palms, delighting in the moisture, mingled with
+still huger broad-leaved trees in every stage of decay. The drowned
+vegetable soil of ages beneath me; above my head, for a hundred feet,
+a mass of stems and boughs, and leaves and flowers, compared with
+which the richest hothouse in England was poor and small. But if the
+sinking process which was going on continued a few hundred years, all
+that huge mass of wood and leaf would be sunk beneath the swamp, and
+covered up in mud washed down from the mountains, and sand driven in
+from the sea; to form a bed many feet thick, of what would be first
+peat, then lignite, and last, it may be, coal, with the stems of
+killed trees standing up out of it into the new mud and sand-beds
+above it, just as the Sigillariae and other stems stand up in the
+coal-beds both of Britain and of Nova Scotia; while over it a fresh
+forest would grow up, to suffer the same fate--if the sinking process
+went on--as that which had preceded it.
+
+That was a sight not easily to be forgotten. But we need not have
+gone so far from home, at least, a few hundred years ago, to see an
+exactly similar one. The fens of Norfolk and Cambridgeshire, before
+the rivers were embanked, the water pumped off, the forests felled,
+and the reed-beds ploughed up, were exactly in the same state. The
+vast deposits of peat between Cambridge and the sea, often filled
+with timber-trees, either fallen or upright as they grew, and often
+mixed with beds of sand or mud, brought down in floods, were formed
+in exactly the same way; and if they had remained undrained, then
+that slow sinking, which geologists say is going on over the whole
+area of the Fens, would have brought them gradually, but surely,
+below the sea-level, to be covered up by new forests, and converted
+in due time into coal. And future geologists would have found--they
+may find yet, if, which God forbid, England should become barbarous
+and the trees be thrown out of cultivation--instead of fossil
+Lepidodendra and Sigillariae, Calamites and ferns, fossil ashes and
+oaks, alders and poplars, bulrushes and reeds. Almost the only
+fossil fern would have been that tall and beautiful Lastraea
+Thelypteris, once so abundant, now all but destroyed by drainage and
+the plough.
+
+We need not, therefore, fancy any extraordinary state of things on
+this planet while our English coal was being formed. The climate of
+the northern hemisphere--Britain, at least, and Nova Scotia--was
+warmer than now, to judge from the abundance of ferns; and especially
+of tree-ferns; but not so warm, to judge from the presence of
+conifers (trees of the pine tribe), as the Tropics. Moreover, there
+must have been, it seems to me, a great scarcity of animal-life.
+Insects are found, beautifully preserved; a few reptiles, too, and
+land-shells; but very few. And where are the traces of such a
+swarming life as would be entombed were a tropic forest now sunk;
+which is found entombed in many parts of our English fens? The only
+explanation which I can offer is this--that the club-mosses, tree-
+ferns, pines, and other low-ranked vegetation of the coal afforded
+little or no food for animals, as the same families of plants do to
+this day; and if creatures can get nothing to eat, they certainly
+cannot multiply and replenish the earth. But, be that as it may, the
+fact that coal is buried forest is not affected.
+
+Meanwhile, the shape and arrangements of sea and land must have been
+utterly different from what they are now. Where was that great land,
+off which great rivers ran to deposit our coal-measures in their
+deltas? It has been supposed, for good reasons, that north-western
+France, Belgium, Holland, and Germany were then under the sea; that
+Denmark and Norway were joined to Scotland by a continent, a tongue
+of which ran across the centre of England, and into Ireland, dividing
+the northern and southern coal-fields. But how far to the west and
+north did that old continent stretch? Did it, as it almost certainly
+did long ages afterwards, join Greenland and North America with
+Scotland and Norway? Were the northern fields of Nova Scotia, which
+are of the same geological age as our own, and contain the same
+plants, laid down by rivers which ran off the same continent as ours?
+Who can tell now? That old land, and all record of it, save what
+these fragmentary coal-measures can give, are buried in the dark
+abyss of countless ages; and we can only look back with awe, and
+comfort ourselves with the thought--Let Time be ever so vast, yet
+Time is not Eternity.
+
+One word more. If my readers have granted that all for which I have
+argued is probable, they will still have a right to ask for further
+proof.
+
+They will be justified in saying: "You say that coal is transformed
+vegetable matter; but can you show us how the transformation takes
+place? Is it possible according to known natural laws?"
+
+The chemist must answer that. And he tells us that wood can become
+lignite, or wood-coal, by parting with its oxygen, in the shape of
+carbonic acid gas, or choke-damp; and then common or bituminous coal,
+by parting with its hydrogen, chiefly in the form of carburetted
+hydrogen--the gas with which we light our streets. That is about as
+much as the unscientific reader need know. But it is a fresh
+corroboration of the theory that coal has been once vegetable fibre,
+for it shows how vegetable fibre can, by the laws of nature, become
+coal. And it certainly helps us to believe that a thing has been
+done, if we are shown that it can be done.
+
+This fact explains, also, why in mines of wood-coal carbonic acid,
+i.e. choke-damp, alone is given off. For in the wood-coal a great
+deal of the hydrogen still remains. In mines of true coal, not only
+is choke-damp given off, but that more terrible pest of the miners,
+fire-damp, or explosive carburetted hydrogen and olefiant gases. Now
+the occurrence of that fire-damp in mines proves that changes are
+still going on in the coal: that it is getting rid of its hydrogen,
+and so progressing toward the state of anthracite or culm--stone-coal
+as it is sometimes called. In the Pennsylvanian coal-fields some of
+the coal has actually done this, under the disturbing force of
+earthquakes; for the coal, which is bituminous, like our common coal,
+to the westward where the strata are horizontal, becomes gradually
+anthracite as it is tossed and torn by the earthquake faults of the
+Alleghany and Appalachian mountains.
+
+And is a further transformation possible? Yes; and more than one.
+If we conceive the anthracite cleared of all but its last atoms of
+oxygen, hydrogen, and nitrogen, till it has become all but pure
+carbon, it would become--as it has become in certain rocks of immense
+antiquity, graphite--what we miscall black-lead. And, after that, it
+might go through one transformation more, and that the most startling
+of all. It would need only perfect purification and crystallisation
+to become--a diamond; nothing less. We may consider the coal upon
+the fire as the middle term of a series, of which the first is live
+wood, and the last diamond; and indulge safely in the fancy that
+every diamond in the world has probably, at some remote epoch, formed
+part of a growing plant.
+
+A strange transformation; which will look to us more strange, more
+truly poetical, the more steadily we consider it.
+
+The coal on the fire; the table at which I write--what are they made
+of? Gas and sunbeams; with a small percentage of ash, or earthy
+salts, which need hardly be taken into account.
+
+Gas and sunbeams. Strange, but true.
+
+The life of the growing plant--and what that life is who can tell?--
+laid hold of the gases in the air and in the soil; of the carbonic
+acid, the atmospheric air, the water--for that too is gas. It drank
+them in through its rootlets: it breathed them in through its leaf-
+pores, that it might distil them into sap, and bud, and leaf, and
+wood. But it has to take in another element, without which the
+distillation and the shaping could never have taken place. It had to
+drink in the sunbeams--that mysterious and complex force which is for
+ever pouring from the sun, and making itself partly palpable to our
+senses as heat and light. So the life of the plant seized the
+sunbeams, and absorbed them, buried them in itself--no longer as
+light and heat, but as invisible chemical force, locked up for ages
+in that woody fibre.
+
+So it is. Lord Lytton told us long ago, in a beautiful song, how
+
+
+The Wind and the Beam loved the Rose.
+
+
+But Nature's poetry was more beautiful than man's. The wind and the
+beam loved the rose so well that they made the rose--or rather, the
+rose took the wind and the beam, and built up out of them, by her own
+inner life, her exquisite texture, hue, and fragrance.
+
+What next? The rose dies; the timber tree dies; decays down into
+vegetable fibre, is buried, and turned to coal: but the plant cannot
+altogether undo its own work. Even in death and decay it cannot set
+free the sunbeams imprisoned in its tissue. The sun-force must stay,
+shut up age after age, invisible, but strong; working at its own
+prison-cells; transmuting them, or making them capable of being
+transmuted by man, into the manifold products of coal--coke,
+petroleum, mineral pitch, gases, coal-tar, benzole, delicate aniline
+dyes, and what not, till its day of deliverance comes.
+
+Man digs it, throws it on the fire, a black, dead-seeming lump. A
+corner, an atom of it, warms till it reaches the igniting point; the
+temperature at which it is able to combine with oxygen.
+
+And then, like a dormant live thing, awaking after ages to the sense
+of its own powers, its own needs, the whole lump is seized, atom
+after atom, with an infectious hunger for that oxygen which it lost
+centuries since in the bottom of the earth. It drinks the oxygen in
+at every pore; and burns.
+
+And so the spell of ages is broken. The sun-force bursts its prison-
+cells, and blazes into the free atmosphere, as light and heat once
+more; returning in a moment into the same forms in which it entered
+the growing leaf a thousand centuries since.
+
+Strange it all is, yet true. But of nature, as of the heart of man,
+the old saying stands--that truth is stranger than fiction.
+
+
+
+V. THE LIME IN THE MORTAR
+
+
+
+I shall presume in all my readers some slight knowledge about lime.
+I shall take for granted, for instance, that all are better informed
+than a certain party of Australian black fellows were a few years
+since.
+
+In prowling on the track of a party of English settlers, to see what
+they could pick up, they came--oh joy!--on a sack of flour, dropped
+and left behind in the bush at a certain creek. The poor savages had
+not had such a prospect of a good meal for many a day. With endless
+jabbering and dancing, the whole tribe gathered round the precious
+flour-bag with all the pannikins, gourds, and other hollow articles
+it could muster, each of course with a due quantity of water from the
+creek therein, and the chief began dealing out the flour by handfuls,
+beginning of course with the boldest warriors. But, horror of
+horrors, each man's porridge swelled before his eyes, grew hot,
+smoked, boiled over. They turned and fled, man, woman, and child,
+from before that supernatural prodigy; and the settlers coming back
+to look for the dropped sack, saw a sight which told the whole tale.
+For the poor creatures, in their terror, had thrown away their pans
+and calabashes, each filled with that which it was likely to contain,
+seeing that the sack itself had contained, not flour, but quick-lime.
+In memory of which comi-tragedy, that creek is called to this day,
+"Flour-bag Creek."
+
+Now I take for granted that you are all more learned than these black
+fellows, and know quick-lime from flour. But still you are not bound
+to know what quick-lime is. Let me explain it to you.
+
+Lime, properly speaking, is a metal, which goes among chemists by the
+name of calcium. But it is formed, as you all know, in the earth,
+not as a metal, but as a stone, as chalk or limestone, which is a
+carbonate of lime; that is, calcium combined with oxygen and
+carbonic-acid gases.
+
+In that state it will make, if it is crystalline and hard, excellent
+building stone. The finest white marble, like that of Carrara in
+Italy, of which the most delicate statues are carved, is carbonate of
+lime altered and hardened by volcanic heat. But to make mortar of
+it, it must be softened and then brought into a state in which it can
+be hardened again; and ages since, some man or other, who deserves to
+rank as one of the great inventors, one of the great benefactors of
+his race, discovered the art of making lime soft and hard again; in
+fact of making mortar. The discovery was probably very ancient; and
+made, probably like most of the old discoveries, in the East,
+spreading Westward gradually. The earlier Greek buildings are
+cyclopean, that is, of stone fitted together without mortar. The
+earlier Egyptian buildings, though the stones are exquisitely squared
+and polished, are put together likewise without mortar. So, long
+ages after, were the earlier Roman buildings, and even some of the
+later. The famous aqueduct of the Pont du Gard, near Nismes, in the
+south of France, has, if I recollect right, no mortar whatever in it.
+The stones of its noble double tier of circular arches have been
+dropped into their places upon the wooden centres, and stand unmoved
+to this day, simply by the jamming of their own weight; a miracle of
+art. But the fact is puzzling; for these Romans were the best mortar
+makers of the world. We cannot, I believe, surpass them in the art
+even now; and in some of their old castles, the mortar is actually to
+this day harder and tougher than the stones which it holds together.
+And they had plenty of lime at hand if they had chosen to make
+mortar. The Pont du Gard crosses a limestone ravine, and is itself
+built of limestone. But I presume the cunning Romans would not trust
+mortar made from that coarse Nummulite limestone, filled with gritty
+sand, and preferred, with their usual carefulness, no mortar at all
+to bad.
+
+But I must return, and tell my readers, in a few words, the chemical
+history of mortar. If limestone be burnt, or rather roasted, in a
+kiln, the carbonic acid is given off--as you may discover by your own
+nose; as many a poor tramp has discovered too late, when, on a cold
+winter night, he has lain down by the side of the burning kiln to
+keep himself warm, and woke in the other world, stifled to death by
+the poisonous fumes.
+
+The lime then gives off its carbonic acid, and also its water of
+crystallisation, that is, water which it holds (as do many rocks)
+locked up in it unseen, and only to be discovered by chemical
+analysis. It is then anhydrous--that is, waterless--oxide of lime,
+what we call quick-lime; that which figured in the comi-tragedy of
+"Flour-bag Creek;" and then, as you may find if you get it under your
+nails or into your eyes, will burn and blister like an acid.
+
+This has to be turned again into a hard and tough artificial
+limestone, in plain words, into mortar; and the first step is to
+slack it--that is, to give it back the water which it has lost, and
+for which it is as it were thirsting. So it is slacked with water,
+which it drinks in, heating itself and the water till it steams and
+swells in bulk, because it takes the substance of the water into its
+own substance. Slacked lime, as we all know, is not visibly wetter
+than quick-lime; it crumbles to a dry white powder in spite of all
+the water which it contains.
+
+Then it must be made to set, that is, to return to limestone, to
+carbonate of lime, by drinking in the carbonic acid from water and
+air, which some sorts of lime will do instantly, setting at once, and
+being therefore used as cements. But the lime usually employed must
+be mixed with more or less sand to make it set hard: a mysterious
+process, of which it will be enough to tell the reader that the sand
+and lime are said to unite gradually, not only mechanically, that is,
+by sticking together; but also in part chemically--that is, by
+forming out of themselves a new substance, which is called silicate
+of lime.
+
+Be that as it may, the mortar paste has now to do two things; first
+to dry, and next to take up carbonic acid from the air and water,
+enough to harden it again into limestone: and that it will take some
+time in doing. A thick wall, I am informed, requires several years
+before it is set throughout, and has acquired its full hardness, or
+rather toughness; and good mortar, as is well known, will acquire
+extreme hardness with age, probably from the very same cause that it
+did when it was limestone in the earth. For, as a general rule, the
+more ancient the strata is in which the limestone is found, the
+harder the limestone is; except in cases where volcanic action and
+earthquake pressure have hardened limestone in more recent strata, as
+in the case of the white marbles of Carrara in Italy, which are of
+the age of our Oolites, that is, of the freestone of Bath, etc.,
+hardened by the heat of intruded volcanic rocks.
+
+But now: what is the limestone? and how did it get where it is--not
+into the mortar, I mean, but into the limestone quarry? Let me tell
+you, or rather, help you to tell yourselves, by leading you, as
+before, from the known to the unknown. Let me lead you to places
+unknown indeed to most; but there may be sailors or soldiers among my
+readers who know them far better than I do. Let me lead you, in
+fancy, to some island in the Tropic seas. After all, I am not
+leading you as far away as you fancy by several thousand miles, as
+you will see, I trust, ere I have done.
+
+Let me take you to some island: what shall it be like? Shall it be
+a high island, with cliff piled on cliff, and peak on peak, all rich
+with mighty forests, like a furred mantle of green velvet, mounting
+up and up till it is lost among white clouds above? Or shall it be a
+mere low reef, which you do not see till you are close upon it; on
+which nothing rises above the water, but here and there a knot of
+cocoa-nut palms or a block of stone, or a few bushes, swarming with
+innumerable sea-fowl and their eggs? Let it be which you will: both
+are strange enough; both beautiful; both will tell us a story.
+
+The ship will have to lie-to, and anchor if she can; it may be a
+mile, it may be only a few yards, from the land. For between it and
+the land will be a line of breakers, raging in before the warm trade-
+wind. And this, you will be told, marks the edge of the coral reef.
+
+You will have to go ashore in a boat, over a sea which looks
+unfathomable, and which may be a mile or more in depth, and search
+for an opening in the reef, through which the boat can pass without
+being knocked to pieces.
+
+You find one: and in a moment, what a change! The deep has suddenly
+become shallow; the blue white, from the gleam of the white coral at
+the bottom. But the coral is not all white, only indeed a little of
+it; for as you look down through the clear water, you find that the
+coral is starred with innumerable live flowers, blue, crimson, grey,
+every conceivable hue; and that these are the coral polypes, each
+with its ring of arms thrust out of its cell, who are building up
+their common habitations of lime. If you want to understand, by a
+rough but correct description, what a coral polype is: all who have
+been to the sea-side know, or at least have heard of, sea-anemones.
+Now coral polypes are sea-anemones, which make each a shell of lime,
+growing with its growth. As for their shapes, the variety of them,
+the beauty of them, no tongue can describe them. If you want to see
+them, go to the Coral Rooms of the British or Liverpool Museums, and
+judge for yourselves. Only remember that you must re-clothe each of
+those exquisite forms with a coating of live jelly of some delicate
+hue, and put back into every one of the thousand cells its living
+flower; and into the beds, or rather banks, of the salt-water flower
+garden, the gaudiest of shell-less sea-anemones, such as we have on
+our coasts, rooted in the cracks, and live shells and sea-slugs, as
+gaudy as they, crawling about, with fifty other forms of fantastic
+and exuberant life. You must not overlook, too, the fish, especially
+the parrot-fish, some of them of the gaudiest colours, who spend
+their lives in browsing on the live coral, with strong clipping and
+grinding teeth, just as a cow browses the grass, keeping the animal
+matter, and throwing away the lime in the form of an impalpable white
+mud, which fills up the interstices in the coral beds.
+
+The bottom, just outside the reef, is covered with that mud, mixed
+with more lime-mud, which the surge wears off the reef; and if you
+have, as you should have, a dredge on board, and try a haul of that
+mud as you row home, you may find, but not always, animal forms
+rooted in it, which will delight the soul of a scientific man. One,
+I hope, would be some sort of Terebratula, or shell akin to it. You
+would probably think it a cockle: but you would be wrong. The
+animal which dwells in it has about the same relationship to a cockle
+as a dog has to a bird. It is a Brachiopod; a family with which the
+ancient seas once swarmed, but which is rare now, all over the world,
+having been supplanted and driven out of the seas by newer and
+stronger forms of shelled animals. The nearest spot at which you are
+likely to dredge a live Brachiopod will be in the deep water of Loch
+Fyne, in Argyleshire, where two species still linger, fastened,
+strangely enough, to the smooth pebbles of a submerged glacier,
+formed in the open air during the age of ice, but sunk now to a depth
+of eighty fathoms. The first time I saw those shells come up in the
+dredge out of the dark and motionless abyss, I could sympathise with
+the feelings of mingled delight and awe which, so my companion told
+me, the great Professor Owen had in the same spot first beheld the
+same lingering remnants of a primaeval world.
+
+The other might be (but I cannot promise you even a chance of
+dredging that, unless you were off the coast of Portugal, or the
+windward side of some of the West India Islands) a live Crinoid; an
+exquisite starfish, with long and branching arms, but rooted in the
+mud by a long stalk, and that stalk throwing out barren side
+branches; the whole a living plant of stone. You may see in museums
+specimens of this family, now so rare, all but extinct. And yet
+fifty or a hundred different forms of the same type swarmed in the
+ancient seas: whole masses of limestone are made up of little else
+but the fragments of such animals.
+
+But we have not landed yet on the dry part of the reef. Let us make
+for it, taking care meanwhile that we do not get our feet cut by the
+coral, or stung as by nettles by the coral insects. We shall see
+that the dry land is made up entirely of coral, ground and broken by
+the waves, and hurled inland by the storm, sometimes in huge
+boulders, mostly as fine mud; and that, under the influence of the
+sun and of the rain, which filters through it, charged with lime from
+the rotting coral, the whole is setting, as cement sets, into rock.
+And what is this? A long bank of stone standing up as a low cliff,
+ten or twelve feet above high-water mark. It is full of fragments of
+shell, of fragments of coral, of all sorts of animal remains; and the
+lower part of it is quite hard rock. Moreover, it is bedded in
+regular layers, just such as you see in a quarry. But how did it get
+there? It must have been formed at the sea-level, some of it,
+indeed, under the sea; for here are great masses of madrepore and
+limestone corals imbedded just as they grew. What lifted it up?
+Your companions, if you have any who know the island, have no
+difficulty in telling you. It was hove up, they say, in the
+earthquake in such and such a year; and they will tell you, perhaps,
+that if you will go on shore to the main island which rises inside
+the reef, you may see dead coral beds just like these lying on the
+old rocks, and sloping up along the flanks of the mountains to
+several hundred feet above the sea. I have seen such many a time.
+
+Thus you find the coral being converted gradually into a limestone
+rock, either fine and homogeneous, composed of coral grown into pulp,
+or filled with corals and shells, or with angular fragments of older
+coral rock. Did you never see that last? No? Yes, you have a
+hundred times. You have but to look at the marbles commonly used
+about these islands, with angular fragments imbedded in the mass, and
+here and there a shell, the whole cemented together by water holding
+in solution carbonate of lime, and there see the very same phenomenon
+perpetuated to this day.
+
+Thus, I think, we have got first from the known to the unknown; from
+a tropic coral island back here to the limestone hills of Great
+Britain; and I did not speak at random when I said that I was not
+leading you away as far as you fancied by several thousand miles.
+
+Examine any average limestone quarry from Bristol to Berwick, and you
+will see there all that I have been describing; that is, all of it
+which is not soft animal matter, certain to decay. You will see the
+lime-mud hardened into rock beds; you will see the shells embedded in
+it; you will see the corals in every stage of destruction; you will
+see whole layers made up of innumerable fragments of Crinoids--no
+wonder they are innumerable, for, it has been calculated, there are
+in a single animal of some of the species 140,000 joints--140,000
+bits of lime to fall apart when its soft parts decay. But is it not
+all there? And why should it not have got there by the same process
+by which similar old coral beds get up the mountain sides in the West
+Indies and elsewhere; namely, by the upheaving force of earthquakes?
+When you see similar effects, you have a right to presume similar
+causes. If you see a man fall off a house here, and break his neck;
+and some years after, in London or New York, or anywhere else, find
+another man lying at the foot of another house, with his neck broken
+in the same way, is it not a very fair presumption that he has fallen
+off a house likewise?
+
+You may be wrong. He may have come to his end by a dozen other
+means: but you must have proof of that. You will have a full right,
+in science and in common sense, to say--That man fell off the house,
+till some one proves to you that he did not.
+
+In fact, there is nothing which you see in the limestones of these
+isles--save and except the difference in every shell and coral--which
+you would not see in the coral-beds of the West Indies, if such
+earthquakes as that famous one at St. Thomas's, in 1866, became
+common and periodic, upheaving the land (they needs upheave it a very
+little, only two hundred and fifty feet), till St. Thomas's, and all
+the Virgin Isles, and the mighty mountain of Porto Rico, which looms
+up dim and purple to the west, were all joined into dry land once
+more, and the lonely coral-shoal of Anegada were raised, as it would
+be raised then, into a limestone table-land, like that of Central
+Ireland, of Galway, or of County Clare.
+
+But you must clearly understand, that however much these coralline
+limestones have been upheaved since they were formed, yet the sea-
+bottom, while they were being formed, was sinking and not rising.
+This is a fact which was first pointed out by Mr. Darwin, from the
+observations which he made in the world-famous Voyage of the Beagle;
+and the observations of subsequent great naturalists have all gone to
+corroborate his theory.
+
+It was supposed at first, you must understand, that when a coral
+island rose steeply to the surface of the sea out of blue water,
+perhaps a thousand fathoms or more, that fact was plain proof that
+the little coral polypes had begun at the bottom of the sea, and, in
+the course of ages, built up the whole island an enormous depth.
+
+But it soon came out that that theory was not correct; for the coral
+polypes cannot live and build save in shallow water--say in thirty to
+forty fathoms. Indeed, some of the strongest and largest species
+work best at the very surface, and in the cut of the fiercest surf.
+And so arose a puzzle as to how coral rock is often found of vast
+thickness, which Mr. Darwin explained. His theory was, and there is
+no doubt now that it is correct, that in these cases the sea-bottom
+is sinking; that as it sinks, carrying the coral beds down with it,
+the coral dies, and a fresh live crop of polypes builds on the top of
+the houses of their dead ancestors: so that, as the depression goes
+on, generation after generation builds upwards, the living on the
+dead, keeping the upper surface of the reef at the same level, while
+its base is sinking downward into the abyss.
+
+Applying this theory to the coral reef of the Pacific Ocean, the
+following interesting facts were made out:
+
+That where you find an Island rising out of deep water, with a ring
+of coral round it, a little way from the shore--or, as in Eastern
+Australia, a coast with a fringing reef (the Flinders reef of
+Australia is eleven thousand miles long)--that is a pretty sure sign
+that that shore, or mountain, is sinking slowly beneath the sea.
+That where you find, as you often do in the Pacific, a mere atoll, or
+circular reef of coral, with a shallow pond of smooth water in the
+centre, and deep sea round, that is a pretty sure sign that the
+mountain-top has sunk completely into the sea, and that the corals
+are going on building where its peak once was.
+
+And more. On working out the geography of the South Sea Islands by
+the light of this theory of Mr. Darwin's, the following extraordinary
+fact has been discovered:
+
+That over a great part of the Pacific Ocean sinking is going on, and
+has been going on for ages; and that the greater number of the
+beautiful and precious South Sea Islands are only the remnants of a
+vast continent or archipelago, which once stretched for thousands of
+miles between Australia and South America.
+
+Now, applying the same theory to limestone beds, which are, as you
+know, only fossil coral reefs, we have a right to say, when we see in
+England, Scotland, Ireland, limestones several thousand feet thick,
+that while they were being laid down as coral reef, the sea-bottom,
+and probably the neighbouring land, must have been sinking to the
+amount of their thickness--to several thousand feet--before that
+later sinking which enabled several hundred feet of millstone grit to
+be laid down on the top of the limestone.
+
+This millstone grit is a new and a very remarkable element in our
+strange story. From Derby to Northumberland it forms vast and lofty
+moors, capping, as at Whernside and Penygent, the highest limestone
+hills with its hard, rough, barren, and unfossiliferous strata.
+Wherever it is found, it lies on the top of the "mountain," or
+carboniferous limestone. Almost everywhere, where coal is found in
+England, it lies on the millstone grit. I speak roughly, for fear of
+confusing my readers with details. The three deposits pass more or
+less, in many places, into each other: but always in the order of
+mountain limestone below, millstone grit on it, and coal on that
+again.
+
+Now what does its presence prove? What but this? That after the
+great coral reefs which spread over Somersetshire and South Wales,
+around the present estuary of the Severn,--and those, once perhaps
+joined to them, which spread from Derby to Berwick, with a western
+branch through North-east Wales,--were laid down--after all this, I
+say, some change took place in the sea-bottom, and brought down on
+the reefs of coral sheets of sand, which killed the corals and buried
+them in grit. Does any reader wish for proof of this? Let him
+examine the "cherty," or flinty, beds which so often appear where the
+bottom of the millstone grit is passing into the top of the mountain
+limestone--the beds, to give an instance, which are now quarried on
+the top of the Halkin Mountain in Flintshire, for chert, which is
+sent to Staffordshire to be ground down for the manufacture of china.
+He will find layers in those beds, of several feet in thickness, as
+hard as flint, but as porous as sponge. On examining their cavities
+he will find them to be simply hollow casts of innumerable joints of
+Crinoids, so exquisitely preserved, even to their most delicate
+markings, that it is plain they were never washed about upon a beach,
+but have grown where, or nearly where, they lie. What then, has
+happened to them? They have been killed by the sand. The soft parts
+of the animals have decayed, letting the 140,000 joints (more or
+less) belonging to each animal fall into a heap, and be imbedded in
+the growing sand-rock; and then, it may be long years after, water
+filtering through the porous sand has removed the lime of which the
+joints were made, and left their perfect casts behind.
+
+So much for the millstone grits. How long the deposition of sand
+went on, how long after it that second deposition of sands took
+place, which goes by the name of the "gannister," or lower coal-
+measures, we cannot tell. But it is clear, at least, that parts of
+that ancient sea were filling up and becoming dry land. For coal, or
+fossilised vegetable matter, becomes more and more common as we
+ascend in the series of beds; till at last, in the upper coal-
+measures, the enormous wealth of vegetation which grew, much of it,
+where it is now found, prove the existence of some such sheets of
+fertile and forest-clad lowland as I described in my last paper.
+
+Thousands of feet of rich coral reef; thousands of feet of barren
+sands; then thousands of feet of rich alluvial forest--and all these
+sliding into each other, if not in one place, then in another,
+without violent break or change; this is the story which the lime in
+the mortar and the coal on the fire, between the two, reveal.
+
+
+
+VI. THE SLATES ON THE ROOF
+
+
+
+The slates on the roof should be, when rightly understood, a pleasant
+subject for contemplation to the dweller in a town. I do not ask him
+to imitate the boy who, cliff-bred from his youth, used to spend
+stolen hours on the house-top, with his back against a chimney-stalk,
+transfiguring in his imagination the roof-slopes into mountain-sides,
+the slates into sheets of rock, the cats into lions, and the sparrows
+into eagles. I only wish that he should--at least after reading this
+paper--let the slates on the roof carry him back in fancy to the
+mountains whence they came; perhaps to pleasant trips to the lakes
+and hills of Cumberland, Westmoreland, and North Wales; and to
+recognise--as he will do if he have intellect as well as fancy--how
+beautiful and how curious an object is a common slate.
+
+Beautiful, not only for the compactness and delicacy of its texture,
+and for the regularity and smoothness of its surface, but still more
+for its colour. Whether merely warm grey, as when dry, or bright
+purple, as when wet, the colour of the English slate well justifies
+Mr. Ruskin's saying, that wherever there is a brick wall and a slate
+roof there need be no want of rich colour in an English landscape.
+But most beautiful is the hue of slate, when, shining wet in the
+sunshine after a summer shower, its blue is brought out in rich
+contrast by golden spots of circular lichen, whose spores, I presume,
+have travelled with it off its native mountains. Then, indeed, it
+reminds the voyager of a sight which it almost rivals in brilliancy--
+of the sapphire of the deep ocean, brought out into blazing intensity
+by the contrast of the golden patches of floating gulf-weed beneath
+the tropic sun.
+
+Beautiful, I say, is the slate; and curious likewise, nay, venerable;
+a most ancient and elaborate work of God, which has lasted long
+enough, and endured enough likewise, to bring out in it whatsoever
+latent capabilities of strength and usefulness might lie hid in it;
+which has literally been--as far as such words can apply to a thing
+inanimate--
+
+
+Heated hot with burning fears,
+And bathed in baths of hissing tears,
+And battered by the strokes of doom
+To shape and use.
+
+
+And yet it was at first naught but an ugly lump of soft and shapeless
+ooze.
+
+Therefore, the slates to me are as a parable, on which I will not
+enlarge, but will leave each reader to interpret it for himself. I
+shall confine myself now to proofs that slate is hardened mud, and to
+hints as to how it assumed its present form.
+
+That slate may have been once mud, is made probable by the simple
+fact that it can be turned into mud again. If you grind tip slate,
+and then analyse it, you will find its mineral constituents to be
+exactly those of a fine, rich, and tenacious clay. The slate
+districts (at least in Snowdon) carry such a rich clay on them,
+wherever it is not masked by the ruins of other rocks. At
+Ilfracombe, in North Devon, the passage from slate below to clay
+above, may be clearly seen. Wherever the top of the slate beds, and
+the soil upon it, is laid bare, the black layers of slate may be seen
+gradually melting--if I may use the word--under the influence of rain
+and frost, into a rich tenacious clay, which is now not black, like
+its parent slate, but red, from the oxidation of the iron which it
+contains.
+
+But, granting this, how did the first change take place?
+
+It must be allowed, at starting, that time enough has elapsed, and
+events enough have happened, since our supposed mud began first to
+become slate, to allow of many and strange transformations. For
+these slates are found in the oldest beds of rocks, save one series,
+in the known world; and it is notorious that the older and lower the
+beds in which the slates are found, the better, that is, the more
+perfectly elaborate, is the slate. The best slates of Snowdon--I
+must confine myself to the district which I know personally--are
+found in the so-called "Cambrian" beds. Below these beds but one
+series of beds is as yet known in the world, called the "Laurentian."
+They occur, to a thickness of some eighty thousand feet, in Labrador,
+Canada, and the Adirondack mountains of New York: but their
+representatives in Europe are, as far as is known only to be found in
+the north-west highlands of Scotland, and in the island of Lewis,
+which consists entirely of them. And it is to be remembered, as a
+proof of their inconceivable antiquity, that they have been upheaved
+and shifted long before the Cambrian rocks were laid down
+"unconformably" on their worn and broken edges.
+
+Above the "Cambrian" slates--whether the lower and older ones of
+Penrhyn and Llanberris, which are the same--one slate mountain being
+worked at both sides in two opposite valleys--or the upper and newer
+slates of Tremadoc, lie other and newer slate-bearing beds of
+inferior quality, and belonging to a yet newer world, the "Silurian."
+To them belong the Llandeilo flags and slates of Wales, and the
+Skiddaw slates of Cumberland, amid beds abounding in extinct fossil
+forms. Fossil shells are found, it is true, in the upper Cambrian
+beds. In the lower they have all but disappeared. Whether their
+traces have been obliterated by heat and pressure, and chemical
+action, during long ages; or whether, in these lower beds, we are
+actually reaching that "Primordial Zone" conceived of by M. Barrande,
+namely, rocks which existed before living things had begun to people
+this planet, is a question not yet answered. I believe the former
+theory to be the true one. That there was life, in the sea at least,
+even before the oldest Cambrian rocks were laid down, is proved by
+the discovery of the now famous fossil, the Eozoon, in the Laurentian
+limestones, which seems to have grown layer after layer, and to have
+formed reefs of limestone as do the living coral-building polypes.
+We know no more as yet. But all that we do know points downwards,
+downwards still, warning us that we must dig deeper than we have dug
+as yet, before we reach the graves of the first living things.
+
+Let this suffice at present for the Cambrian and Laurentian rocks.
+
+The Silurian rocks, lower and upper, which in these islands have
+their chief development in Wales, and which are nearly thirty-eight
+thousand feet thick; and the Devonian or Old Red sandstone beds,
+which in the Fans of Brecon and Carmarthenshire attain a thickness of
+ten thousand feet, must be passed through in an upward direction
+before we reach the bottom of that Carboniferous Limestone of which I
+spoke in my last paper. We thus find on the Cambrian rocks forty-
+five thousand feet at least of newer rocks, in several cases lying
+unconformably on each other, showing thereby that the lower beds had
+been upheaved, and their edges worn off on a sea-shore, ere the upper
+were laid down on them; and throughout this vast thickness of rocks,
+the remains of hundreds of forms of animals, corals, shells, fish,
+older forms dying out in the newer rocks, and new ones taking their
+places in a steady succession of ever-varying forms, till those in
+the upper beds have become unlike those in the lower, and all are
+from the beginning more or less unlike any existing now on earth.
+Whole families, indeed, disappear entirely, like the Trilobites,
+which seem to have swarmed in the Silurian seas, holding the same
+place there as crabs and shrimps do in our modern seas. They vanish
+after the period of the coal, and their place is taken by an allied
+family of Crustaceans, of which only one form (as far as I am aware)
+lingers now on earth, namely, the "King Crab," or Limulus, of the
+Indian Seas, a well-known animal, of which specimens may sometimes be
+seen alive in English aquaria. So perished in the lapse of those
+same ages, the armour-plated or "Ganoid" fish which Hugh Miller made
+so justly famous--and which made him so justly famous in return--
+appearing first in the upper Silurian beds, and abounding in vast
+variety of strange forms in the old Red Sandstone, but gradually
+disappearing from the waters of the world, till their only
+representatives, as far as known, are the Lepidostei, or "Bony
+Pikes," of North America; the Polypteri of the Nile and Senegal; the
+Lepidosirens of the African lakes and Western rivers; the Ceratodus
+or Barramundi of Queensland (the two latter of which approach
+Amphibians), and one or two more fantastic forms, either rudimentary
+or degraded, which have lasted on here and there in isolated stations
+through long ages, comparatively unchanged while all the world is
+changed around them, and their own kindred, buried like the fossil
+Ceratodus of the Trias beneath thousands of feet of ancient rock,
+among creatures the likes whereof are not to be found now on earth.
+And these are but two examples out of hundreds of the vast changes
+which have taken place in the animal life of the globe, between the
+laying down of the Cambrian slates and the present time.
+
+Surely--and it is to this conclusion I have been tending throughout a
+seemingly wandering paragraph--surely there has been time enough
+during all those ages for clay to change into slate.
+
+And how were they changed?
+
+I think I cannot teach my readers this more simply than by asking
+them first to buy Sheet No. LXXVIII. S.E. (Bangor) of the Snowdon
+district of the Government Geological Survey, which may be ordered at
+any good stationer's, price 3s.; and study it with me. He will see
+down the right-hand margin interpretations of the different colours
+which mark the different beds, beginning with the youngest (alluvium)
+atop, and going down through Carboniferous Limestone and Sandstone,
+Upper Silurian, Lower Silurian, Cambrian, and below them certain
+rocks marked of different shades of red, which signify rocks either
+altered by heat, or poured out of old volcanic vents. He will next
+see that the map is covered with a labyrinth of red patches and
+curved lines, signifying the outcrop or appearance at the surface of
+these volcanic beds. They lie at every conceivable slope; and the
+hills and valleys have been scooped out by rain and ice into every
+conceivable slope likewise. Wherefore we see, here a broad patch of
+red, where the back of a sheet of Lava, Porphyry, Greenstone, or what
+not is exposed; there a narrow line curving often with the curve of
+the hill-side, where only the edge of a similar sheet is exposed; and
+every possible variety of shape and attitude between these two. He
+will see also large spaces covered with little coloured dots, which
+signify (as he will find at the margin) beds of volcanic ash. If he
+look below the little coloured squares on the margin, he will see
+figures marking the strike, or direction of the inclination of the
+beds--inclined, vertical, horizontal, contorted; that the white lines
+in the map signify faults, i.e. shifts in the strata; the gold lines,
+lodes of metal--the latter of which I should advise him strongly, in
+this district at least, not to meddle with: but to button up his
+pockets, and to put into the fire, in wholesome fear of his own
+weakness and ignorance, any puffs of mining companies which may be
+sent him--as one or two have probably been sent him already.
+
+Furnished with which keys to the map, let him begin to con it over,
+sure that there is if not an order, still a grand meaning in all its
+seeming confusion; and let him, if he be a courteous and grateful
+person, return due thanks to Professor Ramsay for having found it all
+out; not without wondering, as I have often wondered, how even
+Professor Ramsay's acuteness and industry could find it all out.
+
+When my reader has studied awhile the confusion--for it is a true
+confusion--of the different beds, he will ask, or at least have a
+right to ask, what known process of nature can have produced it? How
+have these various volcanic rocks, which he sees marked as Felspathic
+Traps, Quartz Porphyries, Greenstones, and so forth, got intermingled
+with beds which he is told to believe are volcanic ashes, and those
+again with fossil-bearing Silurian beds and Cambrian slates, which he
+is told to believe were deposited under water? And his puzzle will
+not be lessened when he is told that, in some cases, as in that of
+the summit of Snowdon, these very volcanic ashes contain fossil
+shells.
+
+The best answer I can give is to ask him to use his imagination, or
+his common sense; and to picture to himself what must go on in the
+case of a submarine eruption, such as broke out off the coast of
+Iceland in 1783 and 1830, off the Azores in 1811, and in our day in
+more than one spot in the Pacific Ocean.
+
+A main bore or vent--or more than one--opens itself between the
+bottom of the sea and the nether fires. From each rushes an enormous
+jet of high-pressure steam and other gases, which boils up through
+the sea, and forms a cloud above; that cloud descends again in heavy
+rain, and gives out often true lightning from its under side.
+
+But it does more. It acts as a true steam-gun, hurling into the air
+fragments of cold rock rasped off from the sides of the bore, and
+fragments also of melted lava, and clouds of dust, which fall again
+into the sea, and form there beds either of fine mud or of breccia--
+that is, fragments of stone embedded in paste. This, the reader will
+understand, is no fancy sketch, as far as I am concerned. I have
+steamed into craters sawn through by the sea, and showing sections of
+beds of ash dipping outwards and under the sea, and in them boulders
+and pebbles of every size, which had been hurled out of the crater;
+and in them also veins of hardened lava, which had burrowed out
+through the soft ashes of the cone. Of those lava veins I will speak
+presently. What I want the reader to think of now is the immense
+quantity of ash which the steam-mitrailleuse hurls to so vast a
+height into the air, that it is often drifted many miles down to
+leeward. To give two instances: The jet of steam from Vesuvius, in
+the eruption of 1822, rose more than four miles into the air; the jet
+from the Souffriere of St. Vincent in the West Indies, in 1812,
+probably rose higher; certainly it met the N.E. trade-wind, for it
+poured down a layer of ashes, several inches thick, not only on St.
+Vincent itself, but on Barbadoes, eighty miles to windward, and
+therefore on all the sea between. Now let us consider what that
+represents--a layer of fine mud, laid down at the bottom of the
+ocean, several inches thick, eighty miles at least long, and twenty
+miles perhaps broad, by a single eruption. Suppose that hardened in
+long ages (as it would be under pressure) into a bed of fine grained
+Felstone, or volcanic ash; and we can understand how the ash-beds of
+Snowdonia--which may be traced some of them for many square miles--
+were laid down at the bottom of an ancient sea.
+
+But now about the lavas or true volcanic rocks, which are painted (as
+is usual in geological maps) red. Let us go down to the bottom of
+the sea, and build up our volcano towards the surface.
+
+First, as I said, the subterranean steam would blast a bore. The
+dust and stones, rasped and blasted out of that hole would be spread
+about the sea-bottom as an ash-bed sloping away round the hole; then
+the molten lava would rise in the bore, and flow out over the ashes
+and the sea-bottom--perhaps in one direction, perhaps all round.
+Then, usually, the volcano, having vented itself, would be quieter
+for a time, till the heat accumulated below, and more ash was blasted
+out, making a second ash-bed; and then would follow a second lava
+flow. Thus are produced the alternate beds of lava and ash which are
+so common.
+
+Now suppose that at this point the volcano was exhausted, and lay
+quiet for a few hundred years, or more. If there was any land near,
+from which mud and sand were washed down, we might have layers on
+layers of sediment deposited, with live shells, etc., living in them,
+which would be converted into fossils when they died; and so we
+should have fossiliferous beds over the ashes and lavas. Indeed,
+shells might live and thrive in the ash-mud itself, when it cooled,
+and the sea grew quiet, as they have lived and thriven in Snowdonia.
+
+Now suppose that after these sedimentary beds are laid down by water,
+the volcano breaks out again--what would happen?
+
+Many things: specially this, which has often happened already.
+
+The lava, kept down by the weight of these new rocks, searches for
+the point of least resistance, and finds it in a more horizontal
+direction. It burrows out through the softer ash-beds, and between
+the sedimentary beds, spreading itself along horizontally. This
+process accounts for the very puzzling, though very common case in
+Snowdon and elsewhere, in which we find lavas interstratified with
+rocks which are plainly older than those lavas. Perhaps when that is
+done the volcano has got rid of all its lava, and is quiet. But if
+not, sooner or later, it bores up through the new sedimentary rocks,
+faulting them by earthquake shocks till it gets free vent, and begins
+its layers of alternate ash and lava once more.
+
+And consider this fact also: If near the first (as often happens)
+there is another volcano, the lava from one may run over the lava
+from the other, and we may have two lavas of different materials
+overlying each other, which have come from different directions. The
+ashes blown out of the two craters may mingle also, and so, in the
+course of ages, the result may be such a confusion of ashes, lavas,
+and sedimentary rocks as we find throughout most mountain ranges in
+Snowdon, in the Lake mountains, in the Auvergne in France, in Sicily
+round Etna, in Italy round Vesuvius, and in so many West Indian
+Islands; the last confusion of which is very likely to be this:
+
+That when the volcano has succeeded--as it did in the case of Sabrina
+Island off the Azores in 1811, and as it did, perhaps often, in
+Snowdonia--in piling up an ash cone some hundred feet out of the sea;
+that--as has happened to Sabrina Island--the cone is sunk again by
+earthquakes, and gnawn down at the same time by the sea-waves, till
+nothing is left but a shoal under water. But where have all its vast
+heaps of ashes gone? To be spread about over the bottom of the sea,
+to mingle with the mud already there, and so make beds of which, like
+many in Snowdon, we cannot say whether they are of volcanic or of
+marine origin, because they are of both.
+
+But what has all this to do with the slates?
+
+I shall not be surprised if my readers ask that question two or three
+times during this paper. But they must be kind enough to let me tell
+my story my own way. The slates were not made in a day, and I fear
+they cannot be explained in an hour: unless we begin carefully at
+the beginning in order to end at the end. Let me first make my
+readers clearly understand that all our slate-bearing mountains, and
+most also of the non-slate-bearing ones likewise, are formed after
+the fashion which I have described, namely, beneath the sea. I do
+not say that there may not have been, again, and again, ash-cones
+rising above the surface of the waves. But if so, they were washed
+away, again and again, ages before the land assumed anything of its
+present shape; ages before the beds were twisted and upheaved as they
+are now.
+
+And therefore I beg my readers to put out of their minds once and for
+all the fancy that in any known part of these islands craters are to
+be still seen, such as exist in Etna, or Vesuvius, or other volcanoes
+now at work in the open air.
+
+It is necessary to insist on this, because many people hearing that
+certain mountains are volcanic, conclude--and very naturally and
+harmlessly--that the circular lakes about their tops are true
+craters. I have been told, for instance, that that wonderful little
+blue Glas Llyn, under the highest cliff of Snowdon, is the old crater
+of the mountain; and I have heard people insist that a similar lake,
+of almost equal grandeur, in the south side of Cader Idris, is a
+crater likewise.
+
+But the fact is not so. Any one acquainted with recent craters would
+see at once that Glas Llyn is not an ancient one; and I am not
+surprised to find the Government geologists declaring that the Llyn
+on Cader Idris is not one either. The fact is, that the crater, or
+rather the place where the crater has been, in ancient volcanoes of
+this kind, is probably now covered by one of the innumerable bosses
+of lava.
+
+For, as an eruption ceases, the melted lava cools in the vents, and
+hardens; usually into lava infinitely harder than the ash-cone round
+it; and this, when the ash-cone is washed off, remains as the highest
+part of the hill, as in the Mont Dore and the Cantal in France, and
+in several extinct volcanoes in the Antilles. Of course the lava
+must have been poured out, and the ashes blown out from some vents or
+other, connected with the nether world of fire; probably from many
+successive vents. For in volcanoes, when one vent is choked, another
+is wont to open at some fresh point of least resistance among the
+overlying rocks. But where are these vents? Buried deep under
+successive eruptions, shifted probably from their places by
+successive upheavings and dislocations; and if we wanted to find them
+we should have to quarry the mountain range all over, a mile deep,
+before we hit upon here and there a tap-root of ancient lava,
+connecting the upper and the nether worlds. There are such tap-
+roots, probably, under each of our British mountain ranges. But
+Snowdon, certainly, does not owe its shape to the fact of one of
+these old fire vents being under it. It owes its shape simply to the
+accident of some of the beds toward the summit being especially hard,
+and thus able to stand the wear and tear of sea-wave, ice, and rain.
+Its lakes have been formed quite regardless of the lie of the rocks,
+though not regardless of their relative hardness. But what forces
+scooped them out--whether they were originally holes left in the
+ground by earthquakes, and deepened since by rain and rivers, or
+whether they were scooped out by ice, or by any other means, is a
+question on which the best geologists are yet undecided--decided only
+on this--that craters they are not.
+
+As for the enormous changes which have taken place in the outline of
+the whole of the mountains, since first their strata were laid down
+at the bottom of the sea: I shall give facts enough, before this
+paper is done, to enable readers to judge of them for themselves.
+
+The reader will now ask, naturally enough, how such a heap of beds as
+I have described can take the shape of mountains like Snowdon.
+
+Look at any sea cliff in which the strata are twisted and set on
+slope. There are hundreds of such in these isles. The beds must
+have been at one time straight and horizontal. But it is equally
+clear that they have been folded by being squeezed laterally. At
+least, that is the simplest explanation, as may be proved by
+experiment. Take a number of pieces of cloth, or any such stuff; lay
+them on each other and then squeeze them together at each end. They
+will arrange themselves in folds, just as the beds of the cliff have
+done. And if, instead of cloth, you take some more brittle matter,
+you will find that, as you squeeze on, these folds will tend to snap
+at the points of greatest tension or stretching, which will be of
+course at the anticlinal and synclinal lines--in plain English, the
+tops and bottoms of the folds. Thus cracks will be formed; and if
+the pressure goes on, the ends of the layers will shift against each
+other in the line of those cracks, forming faults like those so
+common in rocks.
+
+But again, suppose that instead of squeezing these broken and folded
+lines together any more, you took off the pressure right and left,
+and pressed them upwards from below, by a mimic earthquake. They
+would rise; and as they rose leave open space between them. Now if
+you could contrive to squeeze into them from below a paste, which
+would harden in the cracks and between the layers, and so keep them
+permanently apart, you would make them into a fair likeness of an
+average mountain range--a mess--if I may make use of a plain old
+word--of rocks which have, by alternate contraction and expansion,
+helped in the latter case by the injection of molten lava, been
+thrust about as they are in most mountain ranges.
+
+That such a contraction and expansion goes on in the crust of the
+earth is evident; for here are the palpable effects of it. And the
+simplest general cause which I can give for it is this: That things
+expand as they are heated, and contract as they are cooled.
+
+Now I am not learned enough--and were I, I have not time--to enter
+into the various theories which philosophers have put forward, to
+account for these grand phenomena.
+
+The most remarkable, perhaps, and the most probable, is the theory of
+M. Elie de Beaumont, which is, in a few words, this:
+
+That this earth, like all the planets, must have been once in a state
+of intense heat throughout, as its mass inside is probably now.
+
+That it must be cooling, and giving off its heat into space.
+
+That, therefore, as it cools, its crust must contract.
+
+That, therefore, in contracting, wrinkles (for the loftiest mountain
+chains are nothing but tiny wrinkles, compared with the whole mass of
+the earth), wrinkles, I say, must form on its surface from time to
+time. And that the mountain chains are these wrinkles.
+
+Be that as it may, we may safely say this. That wherever the
+internal heat of the earth tends (as in the case of volcanoes)
+towards a particular spot, that spot must expand, and swell up,
+bulging the rocks out, and probably cracking them, and inserting
+melting lava into those cracks from below. On the other hand, if the
+internal heat leaves that spot again, and it cools, then it must
+contract more or less, in falling inward toward the centre of the
+earth; and so the beds must be crumpled, and crushed, and shifted
+against each other still more, as those of our mountains have been.
+
+But here may arise, in some of my readers' minds, a reasonable
+question--If these upheaved beds were once horizontal, should we not
+be likely to find them, in some places, horizontal still?
+
+A reasonable question, and one which admits of a full answer.
+
+They know, of course, that there has been a gradual, but steady,
+change in the animals of this planet; and that the relative age of
+beds can, on the strength of that known change, be determined
+generally by the fossils, usually shells, peculiar to them: so that
+if we find the same fashion of shells, and still more the same
+species of shells, in two beds in different quarters of the world,
+then we have a right to say--These beds were laid down at least about
+the same time. That is a general rule among all geologists, and not
+to be gainsaid.
+
+Now I think I may say, that, granting that we can recognise a bed by
+its fossils, there are few or no beds which are found in one place
+upheaved, broken, and altered by heat, which are not found in some
+other place still horizontal, unbroken, unaltered, and more or less
+as they were at first.
+
+From the most recent beds; from the upheaved coral-rocks of the West
+Indies, and the upheaved and faulted boulder clay and chalk of the
+Isle of Moen in Denmark--downwards through all the strata, down to
+that very ancient one in which the best slates are found, this rule,
+I believe, stands true.
+
+It stands true, certainly, of the ancient Silurian rocks of Wales,
+Cumberland, Ireland, and Scotland.
+
+For, throughout great tracts of Russia, and in parts of Norway and
+Sweden, Sir Roderick Murchison discovered our own Silurian beds,
+recognisable from their peculiar fossils. But in what state? Not
+contracted, upheaved, and hardened to slates and grits, as they are
+in Wales and elsewhere: but horizontal, unbroken, and still soft,
+because undisturbed by volcanic rooks and earthquakes. At the bottom
+of them all, near Petersburg, Sir Roderick found a shale of dried mud
+(to quote his own words), "so soft and incoherent that it is even
+used by sculptors for modelling, although it underlies the great mass
+of fossil-bearing Silurian rocks, and is, therefore, of the same age
+as the lower crystalline hard slates of North Wales. So entirely
+have most of these eldest rocks in Russia been exempted from the
+influence of change, throughout those enormous periods which have
+passed away since their accumulation."
+
+Among the many discoveries which science owes to that illustrious
+veteran, I know none more valuable for its bearing on the whole
+question of the making of the earth-crust, than this one magnificent
+fact.
+
+But what a contrast between these Scandinavian and Russian rocks and
+those of Britain! Never exceeding, in Scandinavia, a thousand feet
+in thickness, and lying usually horizontal, as they were first laid
+down, they are swelled in Britain to a thickness of thirty thousand
+feet, by intruded lavas and ashes; snapt, turned, set on end at every
+conceivable angle; shifted against each other to such an extent,
+that, to give a single instance, in the Vale of Gwynnant, under
+Snowdon, an immense wedge of porphyry has been thrust up, in what is
+now the bottom of the valley, between rocks far newer than it, on one
+side to a height of eight hundred, on the other to a height of
+eighteen hundred feet--half the present height of Snowdon. Nay, the
+very slate beds of Snowdonia have not forced their way up from under
+the mountain--without long and fearful struggles. They are set in
+places upright on end, then horizontal again, then sunk in an
+opposite direction, then curled like sea-waves, then set nearly
+upright once more, and faulted through and through, six times, I
+believe, in the distance of a mile or two; they carry here and there
+on their backs patches of newer beds, the rest of which has long
+vanished; and in their rise they have hurled back to the eastward,
+and set upright, what is now the whole western flank of Snowdon, a
+mass of rock which was then several times as thick as it is now.
+
+The force which thus tortured them was probably exerted by the great
+mass of volcanic Quartz-porphyry, which rises from under them to the
+north-west, crossing the end of the lower lake of the Llanberris; and
+indeed the shifts and convulsions which have taken place between them
+and the Menai Straits are so vast that they can only be estimated by
+looking at them on the section which may be found at the end of
+Professor Ramsay's "Geological Survey of North Wales." But anyone
+who will study that section, and use (as with the map) a little
+imagination and common sense, will see that between the heat of that
+Porphyry, which must have been poured out as a fluid mass as hot,
+probably, as melted iron, and the pressure of it below, and of the
+Silurian beds above, the Cambrian mud-strata of Llanberris and
+Penrhyn quarries must have suffered enough to change them into
+something very different from mud, and, therefore, probably, into
+what they are now--namely, slate.
+
+And now, at last, we have got to the slates on the roof, and may
+disport ourselves over them--like the cats.
+
+Look at any piece of slate. All know that slate splits or cleaves
+freely, in one direction only, into flat layers. Now any one would
+suppose at first sight, and fairly enough, that the flat surface--the
+"plane of cleavage"--was also the plane of bedding. In simpler
+English we should say--The mud which has hardened into the slate was
+laid down horizontally; and therefore each slate is one of the little
+horizontal beds of it, perhaps just what was laid down in a single
+tide. We should have a right to do so, because that would be true of
+most sedimentary rocks. But it would not be true of slate. The
+plane of bedding in slate has nothing to do with the plane of
+cleavage. Or, more plainly, the mud of which the slate is made may
+have been deposited at the sea-bottom at any angle to the plane of
+cleavage. We may sometimes see the lines of the true bedding--the
+lines which were actually horizontal when the mud was laid down--in
+bits of slate, and find them sometimes perpendicular to, sometimes
+inclined to, and sometimes again coinciding with the plane of
+cleavage, which they have evidently acquired long after.
+
+Nay, more. These parallel planes of cleavage, at each of which the
+slate splits freely, will run through a whole mountain at the same
+angle, though the beds through which they run may be tilted at
+different angles, and twisted into curves.
+
+Now what has made this change in the rook? We do not exactly know.
+One thing is clear, that the particles of the now solid rock have
+actually moved on themselves. And this is proved by a very curious
+fact--which the reader, if he geologises about slate quarries much,
+may see with his own eyes. The fossils in the slate are often
+distorted into quaint shapes, pulled out long if they lie along the
+plane of cleavage, or squeezed together, or doubled down on both
+sides, if they lie across the plane. So that some force has been at
+work which could actually change the shape of hard shells, very
+slowly, no doubt, else it would have snapped and crumbled them.
+
+If I am asked what that force was, I do not know. I should advise
+young geologists to read what Sir Henry de la Beche has said on it in
+his admirable "Geological Observer," pp. 706-725. He will find
+there, too, some remarks on that equally mysterious phenomena of
+jointing, which you may see in almost all the older rocks; it is
+common in limestones. All we can say is, that some force has gone
+on, or may be even now going on, in the more ancient rocks, which is
+similar to that which produces single crystals; and similar, too, to
+that which produced the jointed crystals of basalt, i.e. lava, at the
+Giant's Causeway, in Ireland, and Staffa, in the Hebrides. Two
+philosophers--Mr. Robert Were Fox and Mr. Robert Hunt--are of opinion
+that the force which has determined the cleavage of slates may be
+that of the electric currents, which (as is well known) run through
+the crust of the earth. Mr. Sharpe, I believe, attributes the
+cleavage to the mere mechanical pressure of enormous weights of rock,
+especially where crushed by earthquakes. Professor Rogers, again,
+points out that as these slates may have been highly heated, thermal
+electricity (i.e. electricity brought out by heat) may have acted on
+them.
+
+One thing at least is clear. That the best slates are found among
+ancient lavas, and also in rocks which are faulted and tilted
+enormously, all which could not have happened without a
+proportionately enormous pressure, and therefore heat; and next, that
+the best slates are invariably found in the oldest beds--that is, in
+the beds which have had most time to endure the changes, whether
+mechanical or chemical, which have made the earth's surface what we
+see it now.
+
+Another startling fact the section of Snowdonia, and I believe of
+most mountain chains in these islands, would prove--namely, that the
+contour of the earth's surface, as we see it now, depends very
+little, certainly in mountains composed of these elder rocks upon the
+lie of the strata, or beds, but has been carved out by great forces,
+long after those beds were not only laid down and hardened, but
+faulted and tilted on end. Snowdon itself is so remarkable an
+instance of this fact that, as it is a mountain which every one in
+these happy days of excursion-trains and steamers either has seen or
+can see, I must say a few more words about it.
+
+Any one who saw that noble peak leaping high into the air, dominating
+all the country round, at least upon three sides, and was told that
+its summit consisted of beds much newer, not much older, than the
+slate-beds fifteen hundred feet down on its north-western flank--any
+one, I say, would have the right at first sight, on hearing of
+earthquake faults and upheavals, to say--The peak of Snowdon has been
+upheaved to its present height above and out of the lower lands
+around. But when he came to examine sections, he would find his
+reasonable guess utterly wrong. Snowdon is no swelling up of the
+earth's crust. The beds do not, as they would in that case, slope up
+to it. They slope up from it, to the north-west in one direction,
+and the south-south-west in the other; and Snowdon is a mere
+insignificant boss, left hanging on one slope of what was once an
+enormous trough, or valley, of strata far older than itself. By
+restoring these strata, in the direction of the angles, in which they
+crop out, and vanish at the surface, it is found that to the north-
+west--the direction of the Menai Straits--they must once have risen
+to a height of at least six or seven thousand feet; and more, by
+restoring them, specially the ash-bed of Snowdon, towards the south-
+east--which can be done by the guidance of certain patches of it left
+on other hills--it is found that south of Ffestiniog, where the
+Cambrian rocks rise again to the surface, the south side of the
+trough must have sloped upwards to a height of from fifteen to twenty
+thousand feet, whether at the bottom of the sea, or in the upper air,
+we cannot tell. But the fact is certain, that off the surface of
+Wales, south of Ffestiniog a mass of solid rock as high as the Andes
+has been worn down and carried bodily away; and that a few miles
+south again, the peak of Arran Mowddy, which is now not two thousand
+feet high, was once--either under the sea or above it--nearer ten
+thousand feet.
+
+If I am asked whither is all that enormous mass of rock--millions of
+tons--gone? Where is it now? I know not. But if I dared to hazard
+a guess, I should say it went to make the New Red sandstones of
+England.
+
+The New Red sandstones must have come from somewhere. The most
+likely region for them to have come from is from North Wales, where,
+as we know, vast masses of gritty rock have been ground off, such as
+would make fine sandstones if they had the chance. So that many a
+grain of sand in Chester walls was probably once blasted out of the
+bowels of the earth into the old Silurian sea, and after a few
+hundreds of thousands of years' repose in a Snowdonian ash-bed, was
+sent eastward to build the good old city and many a good town more.
+
+And the red marl--the great deposit of red marl which covers a wide
+region of England--why should not it have come from the same quarter?
+Why should it not be simply the remains of the Snowdon Slate? Mud
+the slate was, and into mud it has returned. Why not? Some of the
+richest red marl land I know, is, as I have said, actually being made
+now, out of the black slates of Ilfracombe, wherever they are
+weathered by rain and air. The chemical composition is the same.
+The difference in colour between black slate and red marl is caused
+simply by the oxidation of the iron in the slate.
+
+And if my readers want a probable cause why the sandstones lie
+undermost, and the red marl uppermost--can they not find one for
+themselves? I do not say that it is the cause, but it is at least a
+causa vera, one which would fully explain the fact, though it may be
+explicable in other ways. Think, then, or shall I think for my
+readers?
+
+Then do they not see that when the Welsh mountains were ground down,
+the Silurian strata, being uppermost, would be ground down first, and
+would go to make the lower strata of the great New Red Sandstone
+Lowland; and that being sandy, they would make the sandstones? But
+wherever they were ground through, the Lower Cambrian slates would be
+laid bare; and their remains, being washed away by the sea the last,
+would be washed on to the top of the remains of the Silurians; and so
+(as in most cases) the remains of the older rock, when redeposited by
+water, would lie on the remains of the younger rock. And do they not
+see that (if what I just said is true) these slates would grind up
+into red marl, such as is seen over the west and south of Cheshire
+and Staffordshire and far away into Nottinghamshire? The red marl
+must almost certainly have been black slate somewhere, somewhen. Why
+should it not have been such in Snowdon? And why should not the
+slates in the roof be the remnants of the very beds which are now the
+marl in the fields?
+
+And thus I end my story of the slates in the roof, and these papers
+on Town Geology. I do so, well knowing how imperfect they are:
+though not, I believe, inaccurate. They are, after all, merely
+suggestive of the great amount that there is to be learnt about the
+face of the earth and how it got made, even by the townsman, who can
+escape into the country and exchange the world of man for the world
+of God, only, perhaps, on Sundays--if, alas! even then--or only once
+a year by a trip in a steamer or an excursion train. Little, indeed,
+can he learn of the planet on which he lives. Little in that
+direction is given to him, and of him little shall be required. But
+to him, for that very reason, all that can be given should be given;
+he should have every facility for learning what he can about this
+earth, its composition, its capabilities; lest his intellect, crushed
+and fettered by that artificial drudgery which we for a time miscall
+civilisation, should begin to fancy, as too many do already, that the
+world is composed mainly of bricks and deal, and governed by acts of
+parliament. If I shall have awakened any townsmen here and there to
+think seriously of the complexity, the antiquity, the grandeur, the
+true poetry, of the commonest objects around them, even the stones
+beneath their feet; if I shall have suggested to them the solemn
+thought that all these things, and they themselves still more, are
+ordered by laws, utterly independent of man's will about them, man's
+belief in them; if I shall at all have helped to open their eyes that
+they may see, and their ears that they may hear, the great book which
+is free to all alike, to peasant as to peer, to men of business as to
+men of science, even that great book of nature, which is, as Lord
+Bacon said of old, the Word of God revealed in facts--then I shall
+have a fresh reason for loving that science of geology, which has
+been my favourite study since I was a boy.
+
+
+
+Footnotes:
+
+{1} See "Nature," No. XXV. (Macmillan & Co.)
+
+{2} These Lectures were delivered to the members of the Natural
+Science Class at Chester in 1871.
+
+{3} See a most charming paper on "The Physics of Arctic Ice," by Dr.
+Robert Brown of Campster, published in the Quarterly Journal of the
+Geological Society, June, 1870. This article is so remarkable, not
+only for its sound scientific matter, but for the vividness and
+poetic beauty of its descriptions, that I must express a hope that
+the learned author will some day enlarge it, and publish it in a
+separate form.
+
+{4} See Lyell, "Antiquity of Man," p. 294 et seq.
+
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TOWN GEOLOGY***
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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #10251 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/10251)