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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #67527 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/67527)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Foot-prints of the Creator: or,
-The Asterolepis of Stromness, by Hugh Miller
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: The Foot-prints of the Creator: or, The Asterolepis of Stromness
-
-Author: Hugh Miller
-
-Contributor: Louis Agassiz
-
-Release Date: February 28, 2022 [eBook #67527]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Bryan Ness and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
- https://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from scanned
- images of public domain material from the Google Books
- project.)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE FOOT-PRINTS OF THE
-CREATOR: OR, THE ASTEROLEPIS OF STROMNESS ***
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Engraved by J. Sartain.—From a original Talbotype.
-
-Gould & Lincoln, Boston]
-
-
-
-
- THE
- FOOT-PRINTS OF THE CREATOR:
- OR,
- THE ASTEROLEPIS OF STROMNESS.
-
- BY
- HUGH MILLER,
- AUTHOR OF “THE OLD RED SANDSTONE,” ETC.
-
- “When I asked him how this earth could have been repeopled if
- ever it had undergone the same fate it was threatened with by
- the comet of 1680, he answered,—‘that required the power of a
- Creator.’”—_Conduit’s “Conversation with Sir Isaac Newton”._
-
- FROM THE THIRD LONDON EDITION.
-
- WITH A MEMOIR OF THE AUTHOR
- BY LOUIS AGASSIZ.
-
- BOSTON:
- GOULD AND LINCOLN.
- 69 WASHINGTON STREET.
- NEW YORK: SHELDON AND COMPANY.
- CINCINNATI: GEO. S. BLANCHARD.
- 1868.
-
- Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1850, by
- GOULD, KENDALL AND LINCOLN,
- In the Clerk’s Office of the District Court for the District of
- Massachusetts.
-
-
-
-
-TO SIR PHILIP DE MALPAS GREY EGERTON, BART. M.P., F.R.S. & G.S.
-
-
-To you, Sir, as our highest British authority on fossil fishes, I take
-the liberty of dedicating this little volume. In tracing the history of
-Creation, as illustrated in that ichthyic division of the vertebrata
-which is at once the most ancient and the most extensively preserved, I
-have introduced a considerable amount of fact and observation, for the
-general integrity of which my appeal must lie, not to the writings of my
-friends the geologists, but to the strangely significant record inscribed
-in the rocks, which it is their highest merit justly to interpret and
-faithfully to transcribe. The ingenious and popular author whose views
-on Creation I attempt controverting, virtually carries his appeal from
-science to the want of it. I would fain adopt an opposite course: And
-my use, on this occasion, of your name, may serve to evince the desire
-which I entertain that the collation of my transcripts of hitherto
-uncopied portions of the geologic history with the history itself,
-should be in the hands of men qualified, by original vigor of faculty
-and the patient research of years, either to detect the erroneous or to
-certify the true. Further, I feel peculiar pleasure in availing myself
-of the opportunity furnished me, by the publication of this little work,
-of giving expression to my sincere respect for one who, occupying a
-high place in society, and deriving his descent from names illustrious
-in history, has wisely taken up the true position of birth and rank in
-an enlightened country and age; and who, in asserting, by his modest,
-persevering labors, his proper standing in the scientific world, has
-rendered himself first among his countrymen in an interesting department
-of Natural Science, to which there is no aristocratic or “royal road.”
-
- I have the honor to be, Sir,
-
- With admiration and respect,
-
- Your obedient humble servant,
-
- HUGH MILLER.
-
-
-
-
-TO THE READER.
-
-
-There are chapters in this little volume which will, I am afraid, be
-deemed too prolix by the general reader, and which yet the geologist
-would like less were there any portion of them away. They refer chiefly
-to organisms not hitherto figured nor described, and must owe their
-modicum of value to that very minuteness of detail which, by critics of
-the merely literary type, unacquainted with fossils, and not greatly
-interested in them, may be regarded as a formidable defect, suited
-to overlay the general subject of the work. Perhaps the best mode of
-compromising the matter may be to intimate, as if by beacon, at the
-outset, the more repulsive chapters; somewhat in the way that the
-servants of the Humane Society indicate to the skater who frequents in
-winter the lakes in the neighborhood of Edinburgh, those parts of the
-ice on which he might be in danger of losing himself. I would recommend,
-then, readers not particularly palæontological, to pass but lightly over
-the whole of my fourth and fifth chapters, with the latter half of the
-third, marking, however, as they skim the pages, the conclusions at which
-I arrive regarding the bulk and organization of the extraordinary animal
-described, and the data on which these are founded. My book, like an
-Irish landscape dotted with green bogs, has its portions on which it may
-be perilous for the unpractised surveyor to make any considerable stand,
-but across which he may safely take his sights and lay down his angles.
-
-It will, I trust, be found, that in dealing with errors which, in at
-least their primary bearing, affect questions of science, I have not
-offended against the courtesies of scientific controversy. True, they
-are errors which also involve moral consequences. There is a species
-of superstition which inclines men to take on trust whatever assumes
-the name of science; and which seems to be a reaction on the old
-superstition, that had faith in witches, but none in Sir Isaac Newton,
-and believed in ghosts, but failed to credit the Gregorian calendar. And,
-owing mainly to the wide diffusion of this credulous spirit of the modern
-type, as little disposed to examine what it receives as its ancient
-unreasoning predecessor, the development doctrines are doing much harm on
-both sides of the Atlantic, especially among intelligent mechanics, and
-a class of young men engaged in the subordinate departments of trade and
-the law. And the harm, thus considerable in amount, must be necessarily
-more than merely considerable in degree. For it invariably happens,
-that when persons in these walks become materialists, they become also
-turbulent subjects and bad men. That belief in the existence after death,
-which forms the distinguishing _instinct_ of humanity, is too essential
-a part of man’s moral constitution not to be missed when away; and so,
-when once fairly eradicated, the life and conduct rarely fail to betray
-its absence. But I have not, from any consideration of the mischief thus
-effected, written as if arguments, like cannon-balls, could be rendered
-more formidable than in the cool state by being made red-hot. I have
-not even felt, in discussing the question, as if I had a man before me
-as an opponent; for though my work contains numerous references to the
-author of the “Vestiges,” I have invariably thought on these occasions,
-not of the anonymous writer of the volume, of whom I know nothing, but
-simply of an ingenious, well-written book, unfortunate in its facts and
-not always very happy in its reasonings. Further, I do not think that
-palæontological fact, in its bearing on the points at issue, is of such
-a doubtful complexion as to leave the geologist, however much from moral
-considerations in earnest in the matter, any very serious excuse for
-losing his temper.
-
-In my reference to the three great divisions of the geologic scale, I
-designate as _Palæozoic_ all the fossiliferous rocks, from the first
-appearance of organic existence down to the close of the Permian system;
-all as _Secondary_, from the close of the Permian system down to the
-close of the Cretaceous deposits; and all as _Tertiary_, from the close
-of the Cretaceous deposits down to the introduction of man. The wood-cuts
-of the volume, of which at least nine tenths of the whole represent
-objects never figured before, were drawn and cut by Mr. John Adams of
-Edinburgh, (8, Heriot Place,) with a degree of care and skill which has
-left me no reason to regret my distance from the London artists and
-engravers. So far at least as the objects could be adequately represented
-on wood, and in the limited space at Mr. Adams’ command, their truth
-is such that I can safely recommend them to the palæontologist. In
-the accompanying descriptions, and in my statements of geologic fact
-in general, it will, I hope, be seen that I have not exaggerated the
-peculiar features on which I have founded, nor rendered truth partial in
-order to make it serve a purpose. Where I have reasoned and inferred,
-the reader will of course be able to judge for himself whether the
-argument be sound or the deduction just; and to weigh, where I have
-merely speculated, the probability of the speculation; but as, in at
-least _some_ of my statements of fact, he might lie more at my mercy, I
-have striven in every instance to make these adequately representative of
-the actualities to which they refer. And so, if it be ultimately found
-that on some occasions I have misled others, it will, I hope, be also
-seen to be only in cases in which I have been mistaken myself. The first
-or popular title of my work, “Foot-prints of the Creator,” I owe to Dr.
-Hetherington, the well-known historian of the Church of Scotland. My
-other various obligations to my friends, literary and scientific, the
-reader will find acknowledged in the body of the volume, as the occasion
-occurs of availing myself of either the information communicated, or the
-organism, recent or extinct, lent me or given.
-
-
-
-
-HUGH MILLER, AUTHOR OF “OLD RED SANDSTONE” AND “FOOTPRINTS OF THE
-CREATOR.”
-
-
-The geological works of Hugh Miller have excited the greatest interest,
-not only among scientific men, but also among general readers. There is
-in them a freshness of conception, a power of argumentation, a depth
-of thought, a purity of feelings, rarely met with in works of that
-character, which are well calculated to call forth sympathy, and to
-increase the popularity of a science which has already done so much to
-expand our views of the Plan of Creation. The scientific illustrations
-published by Mr. Miller are most happily combined with considerations of
-a higher order, rendering both equally acceptable to the thinking reader.
-But what is in a great degree peculiar to our author, is the successful
-combination of Christian doctrines with pure scientific truths. On that
-account, his works deserve peculiar attention. His generalizations have
-nothing of the vagueness which too often characterize the writings
-of those authors who have attempted to make the results of science
-subservient to the cause of religion. Struck with the beauty of Mr.
-Miller’s works, it has for some time past been my wish to see them more
-extensively circulated in this country; and I have obtained leave from
-the author to publish an American edition of his “Footprints of the
-Creator,” for which he has most liberally furnished the publishers with
-the admirable wood-cuts of the original.
-
-While preparing some additional chapters, and various notes illustrative
-of certain points alluded to incidentally in this work, it was deemed
-advisable to preface it with a short biographical notice of the author.
-I had already sketched such a paper, when I became acquainted with a full
-memoir of this remarkable man, containing most interesting details of
-his earlier life, written by that eminent historian of the “Martyrs of
-Science,” the great natural philosopher of Scotland. It has occurred to
-me that, owing to the frequent references which I could not avoid to my
-own researches, I had better substitute this ample Biography for my short
-sketch, with such alterations and additions as the connection in which
-it is brought here would require. I therefore proceed to introduce our
-author with Sir David Brewster’s own words:—
-
-Of all the studies which relate to the material universe, there is none,
-perhaps, which appeals so powerfully to our senses, or which comes
-into such close and immediate contact with our wants and enjoyments,
-as that of Geology. In our hourly walks, whether on business or for
-pleasure, we tread with heedless step upon the apparently uninteresting
-objects which it embraces: but could we rightly interrogate the rounded
-pebble at our feet, it would read us an exciting chapter on the history
-of primeval times, and would tell us of the convulsions by which it
-was wrenched from its parent rock, and of the floods by which it was
-abraded and transported to its present humble locality. In our visit to
-the picturesque and the sublime in nature, we are brought into closer
-proximity to the more interesting phenomena of geology. In the precipices
-which protect our rock-girt shores, which flank our mountain glens, or
-which variegate our lowland valleys, and in the shapeless fragments at
-their base, which the lichen colors, and round which the ivy twines, we
-see the remnants of uplifted and shattered beds, which once reposed in
-peace at the bottom of the ocean. Nor does the rounded boulder, which
-would have defied the lapidary’s wheel of the Giant Age, give forth a
-less oracular response from its grave of clay, or from its lair of sand.
-Floated by ice from some Alpine summit, or hurried along in torrents of
-mud, and floods of water, it may have traversed a quarter of the globe,
-amid the crash of falling forests, and the death shrieks of the noble
-animals which they sheltered. The mountain range, too, with its catacombs
-below, along which the earthquake transmits its terrific sounds, reminds
-us of the mighty power by which it was upheaved;—while the lofty peak,
-with its cap of ice, or its nostrils of fire, places in our view the
-tremendous agencies which have been at work beneath us.
-
-But it is not merely amid the powers of external nature that the once
-hidden things of the Earth are presented to our view. Our temples and
-our palaces are formed from the rocks of a primeval age; bearing the
-very ripple-marks of a Pre-Adamite ocean,—grooved by the passage of the
-once moving boulder, and embosoming the relics of ancient life, and the
-plants by which it was sustained. Our dwellings, too, are ornamented with
-the variegated limestones,—the indurated tombs of molluscous life,—and
-our apartments heated with the carbon of primeval forests, and lighted
-with the gaseous element which it confines. The obelisk of granite,
-and the colossal bronze which transmit to future ages the deeds of the
-hero and the sage, are equally the production of the Earth’s prolific
-womb; and from the green bed of the ocean has been raised the pure and
-spotless marble, to mould the divine lineaments of beauty, and perpetuate
-the expressions of intellectual power. From a remoter age, and a still
-greater depth, the primary and secondary rocks have yielded a rich
-tribute to the chaplet of rank, and to the processes of art.
-
-Exhibiting, as it peculiarly does, almost all those objects of interest
-and research, Scotland has been diligently studied both by native
-and foreign observers; and she has sent into the geological field a
-distinguished group of inquirers, who have performed a noble feat in
-exploring the general structure of the Earth, in decyphering its ancient
-monuments, and in unlocking those storehouses of mineral wealth, from
-which civilized man derives the elements of that gigantic power which his
-otherwise feeble arm wields over nature.
-
-The occurrence of shells on the highest mountains, and the remains of
-plants and animals, which the most superficial observer could not fail
-to notice, in the rocks around him, have for centuries commanded the
-attention and exercised the ingenuity of every student of nature. But
-though sparks of geological truth were from time to time elicited by
-speculative minds, it was not till the end of the last century that
-its great lights broke forth, and that it took the form and character
-of one of the noblest of the sciences. Without undervaluing the labors
-of Werner, and other illustrious foreigners, or those of our southern
-countrymen, Mitchell and Smith, at the close of the last century, we
-may characterize the commencement of the present as the brightest
-period of geological discovery, and place its most active locality in
-the northern metropolis of our island. It was doubtless from the Royal
-Society of Edinburgh, as a centre, that a great geological impulse was
-propagated southward, and it was by the collision of the Wernerian and
-Huttonian views, the antagonist theories of water and of fire, that men
-of intellectual power were summoned from other studies; and that grand
-truths, which fanaticism and intolerance had hitherto abjured, rose
-triumphant over the ignorance and bigotry of the age. The Geological
-Society of London, which doubtless sprung from the excitement in the
-Scottish metropolis, entered on the new field of research with a
-faltering step. The prejudices of the English mind had been marshalled
-with illiberal violence against the Huttonian doctrines. Infidelity and
-Atheism were charged against their supporters; and had there been a
-Protestant Inquisition in England at that period of general political
-excitement, the geologists of the north would have been immured in its
-deepest dungeons.
-
-Truth, however, marched apace; and though her simple but majestic
-procession be often solemn and slow, and her votaries few and dejected,
-yet on this, as on every occasion, she triumphed over the most inveterate
-prepossessions, and finally took up her abode in those very halls and
-institutions where she had been persecuted and reviled. When their
-science had been thus acquitted of the charge of impiety and irreligion,
-the members of the Geological Society left their humble and timid
-position of being the collectors only of _the materials of future
-generalizations_, and became at once the most successful observers of
-geological phenomena, and the boldest asserters of geological truth.
-
-In this field of research, in which the physical, as well as the
-intellectual, frame of the philosopher is made tributary to science, two
-of our countrymen—Sir Roderick Murchison and Sir Charles Lyell—have been
-among our most active laborers. From the study of their native glens,
-these distinguished travellers, like the Humboldts and the Von Buchs of
-the continent, have passed into foreign lands, exploring the north and
-the south of Europe, and extending their labors to the eastern ranges of
-the Ural and the Timan, and to the Apallachians and the Alleghanies in
-the far west. But while our two countrymen were interrogating the strata
-of other lands, many able and active laborers had been at work in their
-own.
-
-Among the eminent students of the structure of the earth, Mr. Hugh
-Miller holds a lofty place, not merely from the discovery of new and
-undescribed organisms in the Old Red Sandstone, but from the accuracy and
-beauty of his descriptions, the purity and elegance of his composition,
-and the high tone of philosophy and religion which distinguishes all
-his writings. Mr. Miller is one of the few individuals in the history
-of Scottish science who have raised themselves above the labors of an
-humble profession, by the force of their genius and the excellence of
-their character, to a comparatively high place in the social scale.
-Mr. Telford, like Mr. Miller, followed the profession of a stone-mason,
-before his industry and self-tuition qualified him for the higher
-functions of an architect and an engineer. And Mr. Watt and Mr. Rennie
-rose to wealth and fame without the aid of a university education. But,
-distinguished as these individuals were, none of them possessed those
-qualities of mind which Mr. Miller has exhibited in his writings; and,
-with the exception of Burns, the uneducated genius which has done honor
-to Scotland during the last century, has never displayed that mental
-refinement, and classical taste, and intellectual energy, which mark all
-the writings of our author. We wish that we could have gratified our
-readers with an authentic and even detailed narrative of the previous
-history of so remarkable a writer, and of the steps by which his
-knowledge was acquired, and the difficulties which he encountered in its
-pursuit; but though this is not, to any great extent, in our power, we
-shall at least be able, chiefly from Mr. Miller’s own writings, to follow
-him throughout his geological career.
-
-Mr. Miller was born at Cromarty, of humble but respectable parents, whose
-history would have possessed no inconsiderable interest, even if it had
-not derived one of a higher kind from the genius and fortunes of their
-child. By the paternal side he was descended from a race of sea-faring
-people, whose family burying-ground, if we judge from the past, seems to
-be the sea. Under its green waves his father sleeps: his grandfather, his
-two granduncles, one of whom sailed round the world with Anson, lie also
-there; and the same extensive cemetery contains the relics of several of
-his more distant relatives. His father was but an infant of scarcely a
-year old, at the death of our author’s grandfather, and had to commence
-life as a poor ship-boy; but such was the energy of his mind, that, when
-little turned of thirty, he had become the master and owner of a fine
-large sloop, and had built himself a good house, which entitled his son
-to the franchise on the passing of the Reform Bill. Having unfortunately
-lost his sloop in a storm, he had to begin the world anew, and he soon
-became master and owner of another, and would have thriven, had he lived;
-but the hereditary fate was too strong for him, and when our author was a
-little boy of five summers, his father’s fine new sloop foundered at sea
-in a terrible tempest, and he and his crew were never more heard of. Mr.
-Miller had two sisters younger than himself, both of whom died ere they
-attained to womanhood. His mother experienced the usual difficulties
-which a widow has to encounter in the decent education of her family; but
-she struggled honestly and successfully, and ultimately found her reward
-in the character and fame of her son. It is from this excellent woman
-that Mr. Miller has inherited those sentiments and feelings which have
-given energy to his talents as the defender of revealed truth, and the
-champion of the Church of his fathers. She was the great granddaughter of
-a venerable man, still well known to tradition in the north of Scotland
-as Donald Roy of Nigg,—a sort of northern Peden, who is described in
-the history of our Church as the single individual who, at the age of
-eighty, when the presbytery of the district had assembled in the empty
-church for the purpose of inducting an obnoxious presentee, had the
-courage to protest against the intrusion, and to declare “that the blood
-of the people of Nigg would be required at their hands, if they settled
-a man _to the walls_ of that church.” Tradition has represented him as
-a seer of visions, and a prophesier of prophecies; but whatever credit
-may be given to stories of this kind, which have been told also of Knox,
-Welsh, and Rutherford, this ancient champion of Non-Intrusion was a man
-of genuine piety, and the savor of his ennobling beliefs and his strict
-morals has survived in his family for generations. If the child of such
-parents did not receive the best education which his native town could
-afford, it was not their fault, nor that of his teacher. The fetters
-of a gymnasium are not easily worn by the adventurous youth who has
-sought and found his pleasures among the hills and on the waters. They
-chafe the young and active limb that has grown vigorous under the blue
-sky, and never known repose but at midnight. The young philosopher of
-Cromarty was a member of this restless community; and he had been the
-hero of adventures and accidents among rocks and woods, which are still
-remembered in his native town. The parish school was therefore not the
-scene of his enjoyments; and while he was a truant, and, with reverence
-be it spoken, a dunce, while under its jurisdiction, he was busy in the
-fields and on the sea-shore in collecting those stores of knowledge
-which he was born to dispense among his fellow-men. He escaped, however,
-from school, with the knowledge of reading, writing, and a little
-arithmetic, and with the credit of uniting a great memory with a little
-scholarship. Unlike his illustrious predecessor, Cuvier, he had studied
-Natural History in the fields and among the mountains ere he had sought
-for it in books; while the French philosopher had become a learned
-naturalist before he had even looked upon the world of Nature. This
-singular contrast is not difficult to explain. With a sickly constitution
-and a delicate frame, the youthful Cuvier wanted that physical activity
-which the observation of Nature demands. Our Scottish geologist, on the
-contrary, in vigorous health, and with an iron frame, rushed to the rocks
-and the sea-shore in search of the instruction which was not provided for
-him at school, and which he could find no books to supply.
-
-After receiving this measure of education, Mr. Miller set out in
-February, 1821, with a heavy heart, as he himself confesses, “to make his
-first acquaintance with a life of labor and restraint:”—
-
- “I was but a slim, loose-jointed boy at the time, fond of the
- pretty intangibilities of romance, and of dreaming when broad
- awake; and woful change! I was now going to work at what Burns
- has instanced in his ‘Twa Dogs’ as one of the most disagreeable
- of all employments—to work in a quarry. Bating the passing
- uneasiness occasioned by a few gloomy anticipations, the
- portion of my life which had already gone by had been happy
- beyond the common lot. I had been a wanderer among rocks and
- woods,—a reader of curious books, when I could get them,—a
- gleaner of old traditionary stories,—and now I was going to
- exchange all my day-dreams and all my amusements for the kind
- of life in which men toil every day that they may be enabled to
- eat, and eat every day that they may be enabled to toil. The
- quarry in which I wrought lay on the southern shore of a noble
- inland bay, or frith, rather, (the Bay of Cromarty,) with a
- little, clear stream on the one side, and a thick fir wood on
- the other. It had been opened in the Old Red Sandstone of the
- district, and was overtopped by a huge bank of diluvial clay,
- and which rose over it in some places to the height of nearly
- thirty feet.”—_Old Red Sandstone_, p. 4.
-
-After removing the loose fragments below, picks and wedges and levers
-were applied in vain by our author and his brother workmen to tear up and
-remove the huge strata beneath. Blasting by gunpowder became necessary. A
-mass of the diluvial clay came tumbling down, “bearing with it two dead
-birds, that in a recent storm had crept into one of the deeper fissures,
-to die in the shelter.” While admiring the pretty cock goldfinch, and the
-light-blue and grayish-yellow woodpecker, and moralizing on their fate,
-the workmen were ordered to lay aside their tools, and thus ended the
-first day’s labor of our young geologist. The sun was then sinking behind
-the thick fir wood behind him, and the long dark shadows of the trees
-stretching to the shore. Notwithstanding his blistered hands, and the
-fatigue which blistered them, he found himself next morning as light of
-heart as his fellow-laborers, and able to enjoy the magnificent scenery
-around him, which he thus so beautifully describes:—
-
- “There had been a smart frost during the night, and the rime
- lay white on the grass as we passed onwards through the fields;
- but the sun rose in a clear atmosphere, and the day mellowed
- as it advanced into one of those delightful days of early
- spring which give so pleasing an earnest of whatever is mild
- and genial in the better half of the year. All the workmen
- rested at midday, and I went to enjoy my half hour alone on a
- mossy knoll in the neighboring wood, which commands through the
- trees a wide prospect of the bay and the opposite shore. There
- was not a wrinkle on the water, nor a cloud in the sky; and
- the branches were as moveless in the calm as if they had been
- traced on canvas. From a wooded promontory that stretched half
- way across the frith, there ascended a thin column of smoke. It
- rose straight on the line of a plummet for more than a thousand
- yards; and then, as reaching a thinner stratum of air, spread
- out equally on every side, like the foliage of a stately tree.
- Ben Wevis rose to the west, white with the yet unwasted snows
- of winter, and as sharply defined in the clear atmosphere as
- if all its sunny slopes and blue retiring hollows had been
- chiselled in marble. A line of snow ran along the opposite
- hills; all above was white, and all below was purple.”—_Old Red
- Sandstone_, pp. 6, 7.
-
-In raising from its bed the large mass of strata which the gunpowder had
-loosened, on the surface of the solid stone, our young quarrier descried
-the ridged and furrowed ripple marks which the tide leaves upon every
-sandy shore, and he wondered what had become of the waves that had thus
-fretted the solid rock, and of what element they had been composed. His
-admiration was equally excited by a circular depression in the sandstone,
-“broken and flawed in every direction, as if it had been the bottom of a
-pool recently dried up, which had shrunk and split in the hardening.” And
-before the day closed, a series of large stones had rolled down from the
-clay, “all rounded and water-worn, as if they had been tossed in the sea
-or the bed of a river for hundreds of years.” Was the clay which enclosed
-them created on the rock upon which it lay? No workman ever manufactures
-a half-worn article!—were the ejaculations of the geologist at his
-alphabet.
-
-Our author and his companions were soon removed to an easier wrought
-quarry, and one more pregnant with interest, which had been opened “in
-a lofty wall of cliffs that overhangs the northern shore of the Moray
-Frith.” Here the geology of the district exhibited itself in section.
-
- “We see in one place the primary rock, with its veins of
- granite and quartz,—its dizzy precipices of gneiss, and its
- huge masses of hornblende; we find the secondary rock in
- another, with its bed of sandstone and shale,—its spars, its
- clays, and its nodular limestones. We discover the still little
- known but highly interesting fossils of the Old Red Sandstone
- in one deposition; we find the beautifully preserved shells and
- lignites of the lias in another. There are the remains of two
- several creations at once before us. The shore, too, is heaped
- with rolled fragments of almost every variety of rock,—basalts,
- ironstones, hypersthenes, porphyries, bituminous shales, and
- micaceous schists. In short, the young geologist, had he all
- Europe before him, could hardly choose for himself a better
- field. I had, however, no one to tell me so at the time, for
- geology had not yet travelled so far north; and so, without
- guide or vocabulary, I had to grope my way as I best might,
- and find out all its wonders for myself. But so slow was the
- process, and so much was I a seeker in the dark, that the facts
- contained in these few sentences were the patient gatherings of
- years.”—_Old Red Sandstone_, pp. 9, 10.
-
-In this rich field of inquiry, our author encountered, almost daily, new
-objects of wonder and instruction. In one nodular mass of limestone he
-found the beautiful ammonite, like one of the finely sculptured volutes
-of an Ionic capital. Within others, fish-scales and bivalve shells;
-and in the centre of another he detected a piece of decayed wood. Upon
-quitting the quarry for the building upon which the workmen were to be
-employed, the workmen received half a holiday, and our young philosopher
-devoted this valuable interval to search for certain curiously shaped
-stones, which one of the quarriers told him resembled the heads of
-boarding-pikes, and which, under the name of _thunder-bolts_, were held
-to be a sovereign remedy for cattle that had been bewitched. On the
-shore two miles off, where he expected these remarkable bodies, he found
-deposits quite different either from the sandstone cliffs or the primary
-rocks further to the west. They consisted of “thin strata of limestone,
-alternating with thicker beds of a black slaty substance,” which burned
-with a bright flame and a bituminous odor. Though only the eighth part
-of an inch thick, each layer contained thousands of fossils peculiar to
-the lias,—scallops and gryphites, ammonites, twigs and leaves of plants,
-cones of pine, pieces of charcoal, and scales of fishes,—the impressions
-being of a chalky whiteness, contrasting strikingly with their black
-bituminous lair. Among these fragments of animal and vegetable life, he
-at last detected his _thunder-bolt_ in the form of a Belemnite, the
-remains of a kind of cuttle-fish long since extinct.
-
-In the exercise of his profession, which “was a wandering one,” our
-author advanced steadily, though slowly and surely, in his geological
-acquirements.
-
- “I remember,” says he, “passing direct on one occasion from the
- wild western coast of Ross-shire, where the Old Red Sandstone
- leans at a high angle against the prevailing quartz rock of
- the district, to where, on the southern skirts of Mid-Lothian,
- the mountain limestone rises amid the coal. I have resided
- one season on a raised beach on the Moray Frith. I have spent
- the season immediately following amid the ancient granites
- and contorted schists of the central Highlands. In the north,
- I have laid open by thousands the shells and lignites of the
- Oolite; in the south, I have disinterred from their matrices
- of stone or of shale the huge reeds and tree ferns of the
- carboniferous period.... In the north, there occurs a vast gap
- in the scale. The Lias leans unconformably against the Old Red
- Sandstone; there is no mountain limestone, no coal measures,
- none of the New Red Marls or Sandstones. There are at least
- three entire systems omitted. But the upper portion of the
- scale is well-nigh complete. In one locality we may pass from
- the Lower to the Upper Lias, in another from the Inferior to
- the Great Oolite, and onward to the Oxford Clay and the Coral
- Rag. We may explore in a third locality beds identical in their
- organisms with the Wealden of Sussex. In a fourth, we find the
- flints and fossils of the chalk. The lower part of the scale
- is also well-nigh complete. The Old Red Sandstone is amply
- developed in Moray, Caithness, and Ross, and the Grauwacke very
- extensively in Banffshire. But to acquaint one’s self with
- the three missing formations,—to complete one’s knowledge of
- the entire scale, by filling up the hiatus,—it is necessary
- to remove to the south. The geology of the Lothians is the
- geology of at least two thirds of the gap, and perhaps a little
- more;—the geology of Arran wants only a few of the upper
- beds of the New Red Sandstone to fill it entirely.”—_Old Red
- Sandstone_, pp. 13-17.
-
-After having spent nearly fifteen years in the profession of a
-stone-mason, Mr. Miller was promoted to a position more suited to his
-genius. When a bank was established in his native town of Cromarty, he
-received the appointment of accountant, and he was thus employed, for
-five years, in keeping ledgers and discounting bills. When the contest in
-the Church of Scotland had come to a close, by the decision of the House
-of Lords in the Auchterurder Case, Mr. Miller’s celebrated letter to Lord
-Brougham attracted the particular attention of the party which was about
-to leave the Establishment, and he was selected as the most competent
-person to conduct the _Witness_ newspaper, the principal metropolitan
-organ of the Free Church. The great success which this journal has
-met with is owing, doubtless, to the fine articles, political,
-ecclesiastical, and geological, which Mr. Miller has written for it. In
-the few leisure hours which so engrossing an occupation has allowed him
-to enjoy, he has devoted himself to the ardent prosecution of scientific
-inquiries; and we trust the time is not far distant when the liberality
-of his country, to which he has done so much honor, will allow him to
-give his whole time to the prosecution of science.
-
-Geologists of high character had believed that the Old Red Sandstone
-was defective in organic remains; and it was not till after ten years’
-acquaintance with it that Mr. Miller discovered it to be _richly
-fossiliferous_. The labors of other ten years were required to assign to
-its fossils their exact place in the scale.
-
-Among the fossils discovered by our author, the _Pterichthys_ or winged
-fish is doubtless the most remarkable. He had disinterred it so early as
-1831, but it was only in 1838 that he “introduced it to the acquaintance
-of geologists.” It was not till 1831 that Mr. Miller began to receive
-assistance in his studies from without. In the appendix to Messrs.
-Anderson of Inverness’s admirable _Guide to the Highlands and Islands of
-Scotland_, which “he perused with intense interest,” he found the most
-important information respecting the geology of the North of Scotland;
-and during a correspondence with the accomplished authors of that work,
-many of his views were developed, and his difficulties removed. In
-1838, he communicated to Dr. Malcolmson of Madras, then in Paris, a
-drawing and description of the _Pterichthys_. His letter was submitted
-to Agassiz, and subsequently a restored drawing was communicated to the
-Elgin Scientific Society. The great naturalist, as well as the members
-of the provincial society, were surprised at the new form of life
-which Mr. Miller had disclosed, and some of them, no doubt, regarded
-it with a sceptical eye. “Not many months after, however, a true _bona
-fide Pterichthys_ was turned up in one of the newly-discovered beds of
-Nairnshire.” In his last visit to Scotland, Agassiz found six species of
-the _Pterichthys_, three of which, and the wings of a fourth, were in Mr.
-Miller’s collection.
-
-This remarkable animal has less resemblance than any other fossil of
-the Old Red Sandstone to anything that now exists. When first brought
-to view by the single blow of a hammer, there appeared on a ground of
-light-colored limestone the effigy of a creature, fashioned apparently
-out of jet, with a body covered with plates, two powerful looking arms
-articulated at the shoulders, a head as entirely lost in the trunk as
-that of the ray, (or skate,) and a long angular tail, equal in length to
-a third of the entire figure. Its general resemblance is to the letter
-T,—the upper part of the vertical line being swelled out, and the lower
-part ending in an angular point, the two horizontal portions being, in
-the opinion of Agassiz, organs of locomotion. To this remarkable fossil
-M. Agassiz has given the appropriate name of _Pterichthys Milleri_. An
-account of it, accompanied with two fine specimens, was communicated
-to the Geological Section of the British Association at Glasgow, in
-September, 1840; and the most ample details, with accurate drawings,
-were afterwards published, in 1841, in Mr. Miller’s first work, _The Old
-Red Sandstone_, which was dedicated to Sir Roderick Murchison, who was
-born on the Old Red Sandstone of the North, in the same district as Mr.
-Miller, and whose great acquirements and distinguished labors are known
-all over the world among scientific men. This admirable work has already
-passed through three editions. From the originality and accuracy of its
-descriptions, and the importance of the researches which it contains, it
-has obtained for its author a high reputation among geologists; while
-from the elegance and purity of its style, and the force and liveliness
-of its illustrations, it has received the highest praise from its more
-general readers.[1]
-
-Although we have been obliged, from the information which it contains
-of our author’s early studies, to mention the “Old Red Sandstone” as if
-it had been his first work; yet so early as 1830, after he had made his
-first fossil discoveries at Cromarty, he composed a paper on the subject,
-(his first published production,) which appeared as one of the chapters
-of a small legendary and descriptive work, entitled _The Traditional
-History of Cromarty_, which did not appear till 1835. This chapter,
-entitled “The Antiquary of the World,” possesses a high degree of
-interest. After describing the scene around him in its pictorial aspect,
-and under the warm associations, which link it with existing life, he
-surveys it with the cool eye of an “antiquary of the world,” studying
-its once buried monuments, and decyphering the alphabet of plants and
-animals, the hieroglyphics which embosom the history of past times and
-of successive creations. The gigantic Ben Wevis, with its attendant
-hills, rose abruptly to the west. The distant peaks of Ben Vaichard
-appeared in the south, and far to the north were descried the lofty
-hills of Sutherland, and even the Ord-hill of Caithness. Descending from
-the towers of nature’s lofty edifice he surveys its ruins, its broken
-sculptures, and its half-defaced inscriptions, as exhibited in certain
-Ichthyic remains of the Lower Old Red Sandstone which had then no name,
-and which were unknown to the most accomplished geologists. Among these
-he specially notices “a confused bituminous-looking mass that had much
-the appearance of a toad or frog,” thus shadowing forth in the morning
-twilight the curious _Pterichthys_, which he was able afterwards, in
-better specimens, to exhibit in open day. As we have already referred,
-with some minuteness, to the fossils which our author had at this time
-discovered in the great charnel-house of the old world, we shall indulge
-our readers with a specimen of the noble sentiments which they inspired,
-and of the beautiful language in which these sentiments are clothed.
-
- “But let us quit this wonderful city of the dead, with all
- its reclining obelisks, and all its sculptured tumuli, the
- memorials of a race that exist only in their tombs. And yet,
- ere we go, it were well, perhaps, to indulge in some of those
- serious thoughts which we so naturally associate with the
- solitary burying-ground and the mutilated remains of the
- departed. Let us once more look around us, and say, whether,
- of all men, the Geologist does not stand most in need of
- the Bible, however much he may contemn it in the pride of
- speculation. We tread on the remains of organized and sentient
- creatures, which, though more numerous at one period than the
- whole family of man, have long since ceased to exist; the
- individuals perished one after one—their remains served only
- to elevate the floor on which their descendants pursued the
- various instincts of their nature, and then sunk, like the
- others, to form a still higher layer of soil; and now that the
- whole race has passed from the earth, and we see the animals
- of a different tribe occupying their places, what survives of
- them but a mass of inert and senseless matter, never again
- to be animated by the mysterious spirit of vitality—that
- spirit which, dissipated in the air, or diffused in the ocean,
- can, like the sweet sounds and pleasant odors of the past,
- be neither gathered up nor recalled! And O, how dark the
- analogy which would lead us to anticipate a similar fate for
- ourselves! As individuals, we are but as yesterday; to-morrow
- we shall be laid in our graves, and the tread of the coming
- generation shall be over our heads. Nay, have we not seen a
- terrible disease sweep away, in a few years, more than eighty
- millions of the race to which we belong; and can we think of
- this and say that a time may not come when, like the fossils
- of these beds our whole species shall be mingled with the
- soil, and when, though the sun may look down in his strength
- on our pleasant dwellings and our green fields, there shall be
- silence in all our borders, and desolation in all our gates,
- and we shall have no thought of that past which it is now our
- delight to recall, and no portion in that future which it is
- now our very nature to anticipate. Surely it is well to believe
- that a widely different destiny awaits us—that the _God_ who
- endowed us with those wonderful powers, which enable us to
- live in every departed era, every coming period, has given us
- to possess these powers forever; that not only does he number
- the hairs of our heads, but that his cares are extended to
- even our very remains; that our very bones, instead of being
- left, like the exuviæ around us, to form the rocks and clays
- of a future world, shall, like those in the valley of vision,
- be again clothed with muscle and sinew, and that our bodies,
- animated by the warmth and vigor of life, shall again connect
- our souls to the matter existing around us, and be obedient to
- every impulse of the will. It is surely no time, when we walk
- amid the dark cemeteries of a departed world, and see the cold
- blank shadows of the tombs falling drearily athwart the way—it
- is surely no time to extinguish the light given us to shine so
- fully and so cheerfully on our own proper path, merely because
- its beams do not enlighten the recesses that yawn around us.
- And O, what more unworthy of reasonable men than to reject
- so consoling a revelation on no juster quarrel, than when it
- unveils to us much of what could not otherwise be known, and
- without the knowledge of which we could not be other than
- unhappy, it leaves to the invigorating exercises of our own
- powers whatever, in the wide circle of creation, lies fully
- within their grasp!”—_The Antiquary of the World_, pp. 56-58.
-
-The next work published by Mr. Miller was entitled “_First Impressions
-of England and its People_,”[2] a popular and interesting volume, which
-has already gone through two editions, and which may be read with equal
-interest by the geologist, the philanthropist, and the general reader. It
-is full of knowledge and of anecdote, and is written in that attractive
-style which commands the attention even of the most incurious readers.
-
-This delightful work, though only in _one_ volume, is equal to _three_ of
-the ordinary type, and cannot fail to be perused with high gratification
-by all classes of readers. It treats of every subject which is presented
-to the notice of an accomplished traveller while he visits the great
-cities and romantic localities of merry England. We know of no tour
-in England written by a native in which so much pleasant reading and
-substantial instruction are combined; and though we are occasionally
-stopped in a very delightful locality by a precipice of the Old Red
-Sandstone, or frightened by a disinterred skeleton, or sobered by the
-burial-service over Palæozoic graves, we soon recover our equanimity,
-and again enter upon the sunny path to which our author never fails to
-restore us.
-
-Mr. Miller’s new work, the “_Footprints of the Creator_,” of which
-we publish now another edition, authorized by the writer, is very
-appropriately dedicated to Sir Philip Grey Egerton, Bart., M. P. for
-Cheshire—a gentleman who possesses a magnificent collection of fossils,
-and whose skill and acquirements in this department of geology is
-known and appreciated both in Europe and America. The work itself is
-divided into fifteen chapters, in which the author treats of the fossil
-geology of the Orkneys, as exhibited in the vicinity of Stromness; of
-the development hypothesis, and its consequences; of the history and
-structure of that remarkable fish, the Asterolepis; of the fishes of the
-Upper and Lower Silurian rocks; of the progress of degradation, and its
-history; of the Lamarckian hypothesis of the origin of plants, and its
-consequences; of the Marine and Terrestrial floras; and of final causes,
-and their bearing on geological history. In the course of these chapters
-Mr. Miller discusses the development hypothesis, or the hypothesis of
-natural law, as maintained by Lamarck and by the author of the Vestiges
-of Creation, and has subjected it, in its geological aspect, to the most
-rigorous examination. Driven by the discoveries of Lord Rosse from the
-domains of astronomy, where it once seemed to hold a plausible position,
-it might have lingered with the appearance of life among the ambiguities
-of the Palæozoic formations; but Mr. Miller has, with an ingenuity and
-patience worthy of a better subject, stripped it even of its semblance
-of truth, and restored to the Creator, as Governor of the universe, that
-power and those functions which he was supposed to have resigned at its
-birth.
-
-Having imposed upon himself the task of examining in detail the various
-fossiliferous formations of Scotland, our author extended his inquiries
-into the mainland of Orkney, and resided for some time in the vicinity
-of the busy seaport town of Stromness, as a central point from which the
-structure of the Orkney group of islands could be most advantageously
-studied. Like that of Caithness, the geology of these islands owes its
-principal interest to the immense development of the Lower Old Red
-Sandstone formation, and to the singular abundance of its vertebrate
-fossils. Though the Orkneys contain only the _third_ part of the Old
-Red Sandstone, which, but a few years ago, was supposed to be the least
-productive in fossils of any of the geological formations, yet it
-furnishes, according to Mr. Miller, more fossil fish than _every_ other
-geological system in England, Scotland, and Wales, from the Coal Measures
-to the Chalk, inclusive. It is, in short, “_the land of fish_,” and
-“could supply with ichthyolites, by the ton and by the ship-load, the
-museums of the world.” Its various deposits, with the curious organisms
-which they inclose, have been upheaved from their original position
-against a granitic axis, about six miles long and one broad, “forming the
-great back-bone of the western district of the Island Pomona; and on this
-granitic axis, fast jambed in between a steep hill and the sea, stands
-the town of Stromness.”
-
-The mass or pile of strata thus uplifted is described by Mr. Miller as a
-three-barred pyramid resting on its granite base, exhibiting three broad
-tiers—red, black, and gray—sculptured with the hieroglyphics in which
-its history is recorded. The great conglomerate base on which it rests,
-covering from 10,000 to 15,000 square miles, from the depth of from 100
-to 400 feet, consists of rough sand and water-worn pebbles; and above
-this have been deposited successive strata of mud, equal in height to
-the highest of our mountains, now containing the remains of millions and
-tens of millions of fish which had perished in some sudden and mysterious
-catastrophe.
-
-In the examination of the different beds of the three-barred formation,
-our author discovered a well-marked bone, like a petrified large roofing
-nail, in a grayish-colored layer of hard flag, about 100 yards over the
-granite, and about 160 feet over the upper stratum of the conglomerate.
-This singular bone, which Mr. Miller has represented in a figure, was
-probably the oldest vertebrate organism yet discovered in Orkney. It was
-5⅞ inches long, 2¼ inches across the head, and ³⁄₁₀ths of an inch thick
-in the stem, and formed a characteristic feature of the Asterolepis, as
-yet the most gigantic of the ganoid fishes, and probably one of the first
-of the Old Red Sandstone. In his former researches, our author had found
-that all of the many hundred ichthyolites which he had disinterred from
-the Lower Old Red Sandstone were comparatively of a small size, while
-those in the Upper Old Red were of great bulk; and hence he had naturally
-inferred, that vertebrate life had increased towards the close of the
-system—that, in short, it began with an age of dwarfs, and ended with an
-age of giants; but he had thus greatly erred, like the supporters of the
-development system, in founding positive conclusions on merely negative
-evidence; for here, at the very base of the system, where no dwarfs were
-to be found, he had discovered one of the most colossal of its giants.
-
-After this most important discovery, Mr. Miller extended his inquiries
-easterly for several miles along the bare and unwooded Lake of Stennis,
-about fourteen miles in circumference, and divided into an upper arm
-lower sheet of water by two long promontories jutting out from each side
-and nearly meeting in the middle. The sea enters this lake through the
-openings of a long rustic bridge, and hence the lower division of the
-lake “is salt in its nether reaches, and brackish in its upper ones;
-while the higher division is merely brackish in its nether reaches, and
-fresh enough in its upper ones to be potable.” The fauna and flora of
-the lake are therefore of a mixed character, the marine and fresh water
-animals having each their own reaches, though each kind makes certain
-encroachments on the province of the other.
-
-In the marine and lacustrine floras of the lake, Mr. Miller observed
-changes still more palpable. At the entrance of the sea, the _Fucus
-nodosus_ and _Fucus vesiculosus_ flourish in their proper form and
-magnitude. A little farther on in the lake, the F. nodosus disappears,
-and the F. vesiculosus, though continuing to exist for mile after mile,
-grows dwarfish and stunted, and finally disappears, giving place to
-rushes and other aquatic grasses, till the lacustrine has entirely
-displaced the marine flora. From these two important facts, the existence
-of the fragment of _Asterolepis_ in the lower flagstones of the Orkneys,
-and of the “curiously mixed semi-marine semi-lacustrine vegetation in the
-Loch of Stennis,” which our author regards as bearing directly on the
-development hypothesis, he takes occasion to submit that hypothesis to a
-severe examination, and to point out its consequences—its incompatibility
-with the great truths of morality and revealed religion. According
-to Professor Oken, one of the ablest supporters of the development
-theory, “There are two kinds of generation in the world, the creation
-proper, and the propagation that is sequent thereon, or the _original
-and secondary generation_. Consequently, no organism has been created
-of larger size than an infusorial point. No organism is, or ever has
-been created, which is not microscopic. Whatever is large has not been
-created, but developed. Man has not been created, but developed.” Hence
-it follows that during the great geological period, when race after race
-was destroyed, and new forms of life called into being, “nature had been
-pregnant with the human race,” and that immortal and intellectual Man is
-but the development of the Brute—itself the development of some monad or
-mollusc, which has been smitten into life by the action of electricity
-upon a portion of gelatinous matter.
-
-If the development theory be true, “the early fossils ought to be very
-small in size,” and “very low in organization.” In the earliest strata we
-ought to find only “mere _embryos_ and _fœtuses_; and if we find instead
-the _full-grown_ and _mature_, then must we hold that the testimony of
-geology is not only _not in accordance_ with the theory, but in positive
-opposition to it.” Having laid this down as the _principle_ by which
-the question is to be decided, our author proceeds to consider “what
-are the _facts_.” The _Asterolepis_ of Stromness _seems_ to be the
-oldest organism yet discovered in the most ancient geological system of
-Scotland, in which vertebrate remains occur. It is probably the oldest
-Cœlacanth that the world has yet produced, for there is no certain trace
-of this family in the great Silurian system, which lies underneath, and
-on which, according to our existing knowledge, organic existence first
-began. “How, then,” asks Mr. Miller, “on the two relevant points—bulk and
-organization—does it answer to the demands of the development hypothesis?
-Was it a mere fœtus of the finny tribe, of minute size and imperfect
-embryonic faculty? Or was it of, at least, the ordinary bulk, and, for
-its class, of the average organization?”
-
-In order to answer these questions, Mr. Miller proceeds in his _third_
-chapter to give the recent history of the Asterolepis; in his _fourth_,
-to ascertain the cerebral development of the earlier vertebrata; and in
-his _fifth_ chapter to describe the structure, bulk, and aspect of the
-Asterolepis. In the rocks of Russia certain fossil remains had been long
-ago discovered, of such a singular nature as to have perplexed Lamarck
-and other naturalists. Their true place among fishes was subsequently
-ascertained by M. Eichwald, a living naturalist; and Sir Roderick
-Murchison found that they were Ichthyolites of the Old Red Sandstone.
-Agassiz gave them the name of _Chelonichthys_; but in consequence of very
-fine specimens having been found in the Old Red Sandstone of Russia,
-which Professor Asmus of Dorpat sent to the British Museum, and which
-exhibited star-like markings, he abandoned his name of _Chelonichthys_,
-and adopted that of _Asterolepis_, or star-scale, which Eichwald had
-proposed. Many points, however, respecting this curious fossil remained
-to be determined, and it was fortunate for science that Mr. Miller was
-enabled to accomplish this object by means of a variety of excellent
-specimens which he received from Mr. Robert Dick, “an intelligent
-tradesman of Thurso, one of those working men of Scotland, of active
-curiosity and well developed intellect, that give character and standing
-to the rest.” Agassiz had inferred, from very imperfect fragments, that
-the _Asterolepis_ was a strongly-helmed fish of the _Cœlacanths_, or
-hollow spine family—that it was probably a flat-headed animal, and that
-the discovery of a head or of a jaw might prove that the genus Dendrodus
-did not differ from it. All these conjectures were completely confirmed
-by Mr. Miller, after a careful examination of the specimens of Mr. Dick.
-
-Before proceeding to describe the structure of the gigantic Asterolepis,
-Mr. Miller devotes a long and elaborate chapter to the subject of the
-cerebral development of the earlier vertebrata, in order to ascertain
-in what manner their true brains were lodged, and to discover the
-modification which the cranium, as their protecting box, received in
-subsequent periods. This inquiry, which he has conducted with great skill
-and ability, is not only highly interesting in itself, but will be found
-to have a direct bearing on the great question which it is his object to
-discuss and decide.
-
-The facts and reasonings contained in this chapter will, we doubt not,
-shake to its very base the bold theory of Professor Oken, which has been
-so generally received abroad, and which is beginning to find supporters
-even among the solid thinkers of our own country. In the _Isis_ of 1818,
-Professor Lorenz Oken has given the following account of the hypothesis
-to which we allude. “In August, 1806,” says he, “I made a journey over
-the Hartz. I slid down through the wood on the south side, and straight
-before me, at my very feet, lay a most beautiful blanched skull of
-a hind. I picked it up, turned it round, regarded it intensely;—the
-thing was done. ‘It is a vertebral column,’ struck me like a flood of
-lightning, ‘to the marrow and bone;’ and since that time the skull has
-been regarded as a vertebral column.”
-
-This remarkable hypothesis was at first received with enthusiasm by the
-naturalists of Germany, and, among others, by Agassiz, who, from grounds
-not of a geological kind, has more recently rejected it. It has been
-adopted by our distinguished countryman, Professor Owen, and forms the
-central idea in his lately published and ingenious work “On the Nature
-of Limbs.” The conclusion at which he arrives, that the fore-limbs of
-the vertebrata are the ribs of the occipital bone or vertebra set free,
-and (in all the vertebrata higher in the scale than the ordinary fishes)
-carried down along the vertebral column by a sort of natural dislocation,
-is a deduction from the idea that startled Professor Oken in the forest
-of the Hartz. Whatever support this hypothesis might have expected from
-Geology, has been struck from beneath it by this remarkable chapter of
-Mr. Miller’s work; and though anatomists may for a while maintain it
-under the influence of so high an authority as Professor Owen, we are
-much mistaken if it ever forms a part of the creed of the geologist.
-Mr. Miller indeed has, by a most skilful examination of the heads of
-the earliest vertebrata known to geologists, proved that the hypothesis
-derives no support from the structure which they exhibit, and Agassiz has
-even upon general principles rejected it as untenable.
-
-Mr. Miller’s next chapter on the structure, bulk, and aspect of the
-Asterolepis, is, like that which precedes it, the work of a master,
-evincing the highest powers of observation and analysis. Its size in the
-larger specimens must have been very great; and from a comparison of the
-proportion of the head in the Ganoids to the length of the body, which
-is sometimes as one to five, or one to six, or one to six and a half,
-or even one to seven, our author concludes that the total length of the
-specimens in his possession must have been at least eight feet three
-inches, or from nine feet nine to nine feet ten inches. The remains of an
-Asterolepis found by Mr. Dick at Thurso, indicate a length of from twelve
-feet five to thirteen feet eight inches; and one of the Russian specimens
-of Professor Asmus must have been from _eighteen_ to _twenty-three_ feet
-long. “Hence,” says Mr. Miller, “in the not unimportant circumstance
-of size—the most ancient Cœlacanths yet known, instead of taking their
-places agreeably to the demands of the development hypothesis among the
-sprats, sticklebacks, and minnows of their class, took their place among
-its huge basking sharks, gigantic sturgeons, and bulky swordfishes.
-They were giants, not dwarfs.” Again, judging by the analogies which
-its structure exhibits to that of fishes of the existing period, the
-Asterolepis must have been a fish high in the scale of organization.
-
-A specimen of Asterolepis, discovered by Mr. Dick, among the Thurso
-rocks, and sent to Mr. Miller, exhibited the singular phenomenon of a
-quantity of thick tar lying beneath it, which stuck to the fingers when
-lifting the pieces of rock. “What had been once the nerves, muscles, and
-blood of this ancient Ganoid, still lay under its bones,” a phenomenon
-which our author had previously seen beneath the body of a poor suicide,
-whose grave in a sandy bank had been laid open by the encroachments of a
-river, the sand beneath it having been “consolidated into a dark colored
-pitchy mass,” extending a full yard beneath the body. In like manner,
-the animal juices of the Asterolepis had preserved its remains, by “the
-pervading bitumen, greatly more conservative in its effects than the oil
-and gum of an old Egyptian undertaker.” The bones, though black as pitch
-retained to a considerable degree the peculiar qualities of the original
-substance, in the same manner as the adipocire of wet burying-grounds
-preserves fresh and green the bones which it encloses.
-
-In support of his anti-development views, Mr. Miller devotes his next and
-_sixth_ chapter to the recent history, order, and size of the fishes of
-the Upper and Lower Silurian rocks. Of these ancient formations, the bone
-bed of the Upper Ludlow rocks is the only one which, besides defensive
-spines of fish, contains teeth, fragments of jaws, and shagreen points,
-whereas, in the inferior deposits, defensive spates alone are found. The
-species discovered by Professor Phillips, in the Wenlock shale, were
-microscopic; and the author of the _Vestiges_ took advantage of this
-insulated fact to support his views, by pronouncing the little creatures
-to which the species belonged as the fœtal embryos of their class. Mr.
-Miller has, however, even on this ground, defeated his opponent. By
-comparing the defensive spines of the _Onchus Murchisoni_ of the Upper
-Ludlow bed with those of a recent _Spinax Acanthias_, or dog-fish, and
-of the _Cestracion Phillippi_, or Port Jackson shark, he arrives at the
-conclusion, that the fishes to which the species belonged must be all of
-considerable size; and in the following chapter _on the high standing
-of the Placoids_ he shews that the same early fishes were high in
-intelligence and organization.
-
-In his _ninth_ chapter on the _History and Progress of Degradation_,
-our author enters upon a new and interesting subject. The object of
-it is to determine the proper ground on which the standing of the
-earlier vertebrata should be decided, namely, the test of what he terms
-homological symmetry of organization. In nature there are monster
-families, just as there are in families monster individuals—men without
-feet, hands, or eyes, or with them in a wrong place—sheep with legs
-growing from their necks, ducklings with wings on their haunches, and
-dogs and cats with more legs than they require. We have thus, according
-to our author—1, _monstrosity through defect of parts_; 2, _monstrosity
-through redundancy of parts_; and 3, _monstrosity through displacement of
-parts_. This last species, united in some cases with the other two, our
-author finds curiously exemplified in the geological history of the fish,
-which he considers better known than that of any other division of the
-vertebrata; and he is convinced that it is from a survey of the progress
-of degradation in the great Ichthyic division that the standing of the
-kingly fishes of the earlier periods is to be determined.
-
-In the earliest vertebrate period, namely, the Silurian, our author
-shews that the fishes were homologically symmetrical in their
-organization, as exhibited in the Placoids. In the second great Ichthyic
-period, that of the Old Red Sandstone, he finds the first example in
-the class of fishes of _monstrosity, by displacement of parts_. In all
-the Ganoids of the period, there is the same departure from symmetry
-as would take place in man if his neck was annihilated, and the arms
-stuck to the back of the head. In the _Coccosteus_ and _Pterichthys_
-of the same period, he finds the first example of _degradation through
-defect_, the former resembling a human monster without hands, and the
-latter one without feet. After ages and centuries have passed away,
-and then after the termination of the Palæozoic period, a change takes
-place in the formation of the fish tail. “Other ages and centuries pass
-away, during which the reptile class attains to its fullest development
-in point of size, organization, and number; and then, after the times
-of the cretaceous deposits have begun, we find yet another remarkable
-monstrosity of displacement introduced among all the fishes of one very
-numerous order, and among no inconsiderable proportion of the fishes
-of another. In the newly-introduced Ctenoids (_Acanthopterygii_,) and
-in those families of the Cycloids which Cuvier erected into the order
-_Malacopterygii sub-brachiati_, the hinder limbs are brought forward and
-stuck on to the base of the previously misplaced fore limbs. All the
-four limbs, by a strange monstrosity of displacement, are crowded into
-the place of the extinguished neck. And such, in the present day, is the
-prevalent type among fishes. Monstrosity through _defect_ is also found
-to increase; so that the snake-like _apoda_, or feet-wanting fishes,
-form a numerous order, some of whose genera are devoid, as in the common
-eels and the congers, of only the hinder limbs, while in others, as in
-the genera _Muræna_ and _Synbranchus_, both hinder and fore-limbs are
-wanting.” From these and other facts, our author concludes that as in
-existing fishes we find many more proofs of the monstrosity, both from
-displacement and defect of parts, than in all the other three classes
-of the vertebrata, and as these monstrosities did not appear early, but
-late, “the progress of the race as a whole, though it still retains
-not a few of the higher forms, has been a progress not of development
-from the low to the high, but of degradation from the high to the low.”
-An extreme example of the degradation of distortion, superadded to
-that of displacement, may be seen in the flounder, plaice, halibut, or
-turbot,—fishes of a family of which there is no trace in the earlier
-periods. The creature is twisted half round and laid on its side. The
-tail, too, is horizontal. Half the features of its head are twisted to
-one side, and the other half to the other, while its wry mouth is in
-keeping with its squint eyes. One jaw is straight, and the other like
-a bow; and while one contains from _four_ to _six_ teeth, the other
-contains from _thirty_ to _thirty-five_.
-
-Aided by facts like these, an ingenious theorist might, as our author
-remarks, “get up as unexceptionable a theory of degradation as of
-development.” But however this may be, the principle of degradation
-actually exists, and “the history of its progress in creation bears
-directly against the assumption that the earlier vertebrata were of a
-lower type than the vertebrata of the same Ichthyic class which exist
-now.”
-
-In his next and _tenth_ chapter, our author controverts with his usual
-power the argument in favor of the development hypothesis, drawn from
-the predominance of the Brachiopods among the Silurian Molluscs. The
-existence of the highly organized Cephalopods, in the same formation,
-not only neutralizes this argument, but authorizes the conclusion that
-an animal of a very high order of organization existed in the earliest
-formation. It is of no consequence whether the Cephalopods, or the
-Brachiopods were most numerous. Had there been only one cuttle fish in
-the Silurian seas, and a million of Brachiopods, the fact would equally
-have overturned the development system.
-
-In the same chapter, Mr. Miller treats of the geological history of
-the Fossil flora, which has been pressed into the service of the
-development hypothesis. On the authority of Adolphe Brongniart, it was
-maintained that, previous to the age of the Lias, “Nature had failed to
-achieve a tree—and that the rich vegetation of the Coal Measures had
-been exclusively composed of magnificent immaturities of the vegetable
-kingdom, of gigantic ferns and club mosses, that attained to the size
-of forest trees, and of thickets of the swamp-loving horse-tail family
-of plants.” True exogenous trees, however, do exist of vast size, and
-in great numbers, in all the coal-fields of our own country, as has
-been proved by Mr. Miller. Nay, he himself discovered in the Old Red
-Sandstone, _Lignite_, which is proved to have formed part of a true
-gymnospermous tree, represented by the pines of Europe and America, or
-more probably, as Mr. Miller believes, by the Araucarians of Chili and
-New Zealand. This important discovery is pregnant with instruction. The
-ancient Conifer must have waved its green foliage over dry land, and it
-is not probable that it was the only tree in the primeval forest. “The
-ship carpenter,” as our author observes, “might have hopefully taken
-axe in hand to explore the woods for some such stately pine as the one
-described by Milton,—
-
- ‘Hewn on Norwegian hills, to be the mast
- Of some great admiral.’”
-
-Viewing this _olive leaf_ of the Old Red Sandstone as not at all devoid
-of poetry, our author invites us to a voyage from the latest formation up
-to the first zone of the Silurian formation,—thus passing from ancient to
-still more ancient scenes of being, and finding, as at the commencement
-of our voyage, a graceful intermixture of land and water, continent,
-river, and sea.
-
-But though the existence of a true Placoid, a real vertebrated fish, in
-the Cambrian limestone of Bala, and of true wood at the base of the Old
-Red Sandstone, are utterly incompatible with the development hypothesis,
-its supporters, thus driven to the wall, may take shelter under the
-vague and unquestioned truth that the lower plants and animals preceded
-the higher, and that the order of creation was fish, reptiles, birds,
-mammalia, quadrumana, and man. From this resource, too, our author
-has cut off his opponents, and proceeds to show that such an order of
-creation, “at once wonderful and beautiful,” does not afford even the
-slightest presumption in favor of the hypothesis which it is adduced to
-support.
-
-This argument is carried on in a popular and amusing dialogue in the
-_eleventh_ chapter. Mr. Miller shows, in the clearest manner, that
-“superposition is not parental relation,” or that an organism lying
-above another gives us no ground for believing that the lower organism
-was the parent of the higher. The theorist, however, looks only at those
-phases of truth which are in unison with his own views; and, when truth
-presents no such favorable aspect, he finally wraps himself up in the
-folds of ignorance and ambiguity—the winding-sheet of error refuted
-and exposed. We have not yet penetrated, says he, in feeble accents,
-to the formations which represent the dawn of being, and the simplest
-organism may yet be detected beneath the lowest fossiliferous rocks.
-This undoubtedly _may be_, and Sir Charles Lyell and Mr. Leonard Horner
-are of opinion that such rocks may yet be discovered; while Sir Roderick
-Murchison and Professor Sedgwick and Mr. Miller are of an opposite
-opinion. But even were such rocks discovered to-morrow, it would not
-follow that their organisms gave the least support to the development
-hypothesis. In the year 1837, when fishes were not discovered in the
-Upper Silurian rocks, the theorist would have rightly predicted the
-existence of lower fossiliferous beds; but when they are discovered, and
-their fossils examined, they furnish the strongest argument that could
-be desired against the theory they were expected to sustain. This fact,
-no doubt, is so far in favor of the supposition that there may be still
-lower fossil-bearing strata; but, as Mr. Miller observes, “The pyramid of
-organized existence, as it ascends into the by-past eternity, inclines
-sensibly towards its apex,—that apex of ‘_beginning_’ on which, on far
-other than geological grounds, it is our privilege to believe. The broad
-base of the superstructure planted on the existing scene stretches across
-the entire scale on life, animal and vegetable; but it contracts as it
-rises into the past;—man,—the quadrumana,—the quadrupedal man,—the bird
-and the reptile are each in succession struck from off its breadth, till
-we at length see it with the vertebrata, represented by only the fish,
-narrowing as it were to a point; and though the clouds of the upper
-region may hide its apex, we infer, from the declination of its sides,
-that it cannot penetrate much farther into the profound.”
-
-In our author’s next chapter, the _twelfth_ of the series, he proceeds
-to examine the “Lamarckian hypothesis of the origin of plants, and its
-consequences.”
-
-In his _thirteenth_ chapter, on “The two Floras, marine and terrestrial,”
-he has shown that all our experience is opposed to the opinion, that the
-one has been transmuted into the other. If the marine had been converted
-into terrestrial vegetation, we ought to have, in the Lake of Stennis,
-for example, plants of an intermediate character between the algæ of the
-sea, and the monocotyledons of the lake. But no such transition-plants
-are found. The algæ, as our author observes, become dwarfish and
-ill-developed. They cease to exist as the water becomes fresher, “until
-at length we find, instead of the brown, rootless, flowerless fucoids and
-confervæ of the ocean, the green, rooted, flowering flags, rushes, and
-aquatic grasses of the fresh water. Many thousands of years have failed
-to originate a single intermediate plant.” The same conclusion may be
-drawn from the character of the vegetation along the extensive shores of
-Britain and Ireland. No botanist has ever found a single plant in the
-transition state.
-
-The _fourteenth_ chapter of the “Footprints” will be perused with great
-interest by the general reader. It is a powerful and argumentative
-exposure of the development hypothesis, and of the manner in which the
-subject has been treated in the “Vestiges.” Whether we consider it in
-its nature, in its history, or in the character of the intellects with
-whom it originated, or by whom it has been received and supported, Mr.
-Miller has shown that it has nothing to recommend it. It existed as a
-wild dream before Geology had any being as a science. It was broached
-more than a century ago by De Maillet, who knew nothing of the geology
-even of his day. In a translation of his Telhamed, published in 1750,
-Mr. Miller finds very nearly the same account given of the origin of
-plants and animals, as that in the “Vestiges,” and in which the sea
-is described as that “great and fruitful womb of nature, in which
-organization and life first begin.” Lamarck, though a skilful botanist
-and conchologist, was unacquainted with geology; and as he first
-published his development hypothesis in 1802, (an hypothesis identical
-with that of the “Vestiges,”) it is probable that he was not then a very
-skilful zoologist. Nor has Professor Oken any higher claims to geological
-acquirements. He confesses that he wrote the first edition of his work
-in _a kind of inspiration!_ and it is not difficult to estimate the
-intelligence of the inspiring idol that announced to the German sage that
-the globe was a vast crystal, a little flawed in the facets, and that
-quartz, feldspar, and mica, the three constituents of granite, were the
-hail-drops of heavy showers of stone that fell into the original ocean,
-and accumulated into rocks at the bottom!
-
-Such is the unscientific parentage of the theories promulgated in the
-“Vestiges.” But the author of this work appeals in the first instance to
-science. Astronomy, Geology, Botany, and Zoology are called upon to give
-evidence in his favor; but the astronomer, geologist, botanist, and the
-zoologist, all refuse him their testimony, deny his premises, and reject
-his results. “It is not,” as Mr. Miller happily observes, “the illiberal
-religionist that casts him off. It is the inductive philosopher.” Science
-addresses him in the language of the possessed: “The astronomer I know,
-and the geologist I know; but who are ye?” Thus left alone in a cloud
-of star-dust, or in brackish water between the marine and terrestrial
-flora, he “appeals from science to the want of it,” casts a stone at
-our Scientific Institutions, and demands a jury of “ordinary readers,”
-as the only “tribunal” by which “the new philosophy is to be truly and
-righteously judged.”
-
-The last and _fifteenth_ chapter of Mr. Miller’s work, “On the Bearing
-of Final Causes on Geologic History,” if read with care and thought,
-will prove at once delightful and instructive. The principle of _final
-causes_, or the conditions of existence, affords a wide scope to our
-reason in Natural History, but especially in Geology. It becomes an
-interesting inquiry, if any reason can be assigned why at certain periods
-species began to exist, and became extinct after the lapse of lengthened
-periods of time, and why the higher classes of being succeeded the lower
-in the order of creation? The incompleteness of geological science,
-however, does not permit us to remove, for the present, the veil which
-hangs over this mysterious chronology; but our author is of opinion that
-in about a quarter of a century, in a favored locality like the British
-Islands, geological history “will assume a very extraordinary form.”
-
-It is a singular fact, which will yet lead to singular results, that
-Cuvier’s arrangement of the four classes of vertebrate animals should
-exhibit the same order as that in which they are found in the strata of
-the earth. In the _fish_, the average proportion of the brain to the
-spinal cord is only as 2 to 1. In the _reptile_, the ratio is 2½ to 1.
-In the _bird_, it is as 3 to 1. In the _mammalia_, it is as 4 to 1; and
-in _man_, it is as 23 to 1. No less remarkable is the fœtal progress of
-the human brain. It first becomes a brain resembling that of a fish; then
-it grows into the form of that of a reptile; then into that of a bird;
-then into that of a mammiferous quadruped, and finally it assumes the
-form of a human brain, “thus comprising in its fœtal progress an epitome
-of geological history, as if man were in himself a compendium of all
-animated nature, and of kin to every creature that lives.”
-
-With these considerations, Mr. Miller has brought his subject to the
-point at which Science in its onward progress now stands. It is to
-embryology we are in future to look for further information upon the
-most intimate relations which exist between all organized beings. We may
-fairly entertain the hope that the time is not far when we shall not
-only fully understand the Plan of Creation, but even lift some corner
-of the veil which has hitherto prevented us from forming adequate ideas
-of the first introduction of animal and vegetable life upon earth, and
-of the changes which both kingdoms have undergone in the succession of
-geological ages.
-
- L. AGASSIZ.
-
-CAMBRIDGE, _September, 1850_.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- PAGE
-
- STROMNESS AND ITS ASTEROLEPIS.—THE LAKE OF STENNIS 21
-
- THE DEVELOPMENT HYPOTHESIS, AND ITS CONSEQUENCES 37
-
- THE RECENT HISTORY OF THE ASTEROLEPIS.—ITS FAMILY 48
-
- CEREBRAL DEVELOPMENT OF THE EARLIER VERTEBRATA.—ITS
- APPARENT PRINCIPLE 62
-
- THE ASTEROLEPIS.—ITS STRUCTURE, BULK, AND ASPECT 94
-
- FISHES OF THE SILURIAN ROCKS, UPPER AND LOWER.—THEIR RECENT
- HISTORY, ORDER, AND SIZE 130
-
- HIGH STANDING OF THE PLACOIDS.—OBJECTIONS CONSIDERED 147
-
- THE PLACOID BRAIN.—EMBRYONIC CHARACTERISTICS NOT NECESSARILY
- OF A LOW ORDER 160
-
- THE PROGRESS OF DEGRADATION.—ITS HISTORY 181
-
- EVIDENCE OF THE SILURIAN MOLLUSCS.—OF THE FOSSIL FLORA.—ANCIENT
- TREE 205
-
- SUPERPOSITION NOT PARENTAL RELATION.—THE BEGINNINGS OF LIFE 230
-
- LAMARCKIAN HYPOTHESIS OF THE ORIGIN OF PLANTS.—ITS CONSEQUENCES 243
-
- THE TWO FLORAS, MARINE AND TERRESTRIAL.—BEARING OF THE
- EXPERIENCE ARGUMENT 262
-
- THE DEVELOPMENT HYPOTHESIS IN ITS EMBRYONIC STATE.—OLDER THAN
- ITS ALLEGED FOUNDATIONS 277
-
- FINAL CAUSES—THEIR BEARING ON GEOLOGIC HISTORY—CONCLUSION 303
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF WOOD-CUTS
-
-
- PAGE
-
- 1. Internal ridge of hyoid plate of _Asterolepis_ 31
-
- 2. Shagreen of _Raja clavata_:—of _Sphagodus_ 54
-
- 3. Scales of _Acanthodes sulcatus_:—shagreen of _Scyllium
- stellare_ 55
-
- 4. Scales of _Cheiracanthus microlepidotus_:—shagreen of
- _Spinax Acanthias_ 56
-
- 5. Section of shagreen of _Scyllium stellare_:—of scales of
- _Cheiracanthus microlepidotus_ 56
-
- 6. Scales of _Osteolepis microlepidotus_:—of an undescribed
- species of _Glyptolepis_ 57
-
- 7. Osseous points Of Placoid Cranium 65
-
- 8. Osseous centrum of _Spinax Acanthias_:—of _Raja clavata_ 67
-
- 9. Portions of caudal fin of _Cheiracanthus_:—of _Cheirolepis_ 69
-
- 10. Upper surface of cranium of Cod 72
-
- 11. Cranial buckler of _Coccosteus_ 74
-
- 12. Cranial buckler of _Osteolepis_ 75
-
- 13. Upper surface of head of _Osteolepis_ 77
-
- 14. Under surface of head of _Osteolepis_ 79
-
- 15. Head of _Osteolepis_, seen in profile 80
-
- 16. Cranial buckler of _Diplopterus_ 81
-
- 17. Ditto 82
-
- 18. Palatal dart-head, and group of palatal teeth, of _Dipterus_ 83
-
- 19. Cranial buckler of _Dipterus_ 85
-
- 20. Base of cranium of _Dipterus_ 86
-
- 21. Under jaw of _Dipterus_ 87
-
- 22. Longitudinal section of head of _Dipterus_ 88
-
- 23. Section of vertebral centrum of Thornback 92
-
- 24. Dermal tubercles of _Asterolepis_ 95
-
- 25. Scales of _Asterolepis_ 96
-
- 26. Portion of carved surface of scale 96
-
- 27. Cranial buckler of _Asterolepis_ 98
-
- 28. Inner surface of cranial buckler of _Asterolepis_ 99
-
- 29. Plates of cranial buckler of _Asterolepis_ 102
-
- 30. Portion of under jaw of _Asterolepis_ 103
-
- 31. Inner side of portion of under jaw of _Asterolepis_ 104
-
- 32. Portion of transverse section of reptile tooth of
- _Asterolepis_ 105
-
- 33. Section of jaw of _Asterolepis_ 106
-
- 34. Maxillary bone? 108
-
- 35. Inner surface of operculum of _Asterolepis_ 109
-
- 36. Hyoid plate 110
-
- 37. Nail-like bone of hyoid plate 111
-
- 38. Shoulder plate of _Asterolepis_ 112
-
- 39. Dermal bones of _Asterolepis_ 113
-
- 40. Internal bones of _Asterolepis_ 114
-
- 41. Ditto 115
-
- 42. Ischium of _Asterolepis_ 116
-
- 43. Joint of ray of Thornback:—of _Asterolepis_ 117
-
- 44. Coprolites of _Asterolepis_ 118
-
- 45. Hyoid plate of Thurso _Asterolepis_ 124
-
- 46. Hyoid plate of Russian _Asterolepis_ 127
-
- 47. Spine of _Spinax Acanthias_:—fragment of Onondago spine 143
-
- 48. Tail of _Spinax Acanthius_:—of _Ichthyosaurus tenuirostris_ 172
-
- 49. Port Jackson Shark (_Cestracion Phillippi_) 177
-
- 50. Tail of _Osteolepis_ 195
-
- 51. Tail of _Lepidosteus osseus_ 196
-
- 52. Tail of Perch 197
-
- 53. _Altingia excelsa_ (Norfolk-Island Pine) 212
-
- 54. Fucoids of the Lower Old Red Sandstone 216
-
- 55. Two species of Old Red Fucoids 217
-
- 56. Fern (?) of the Lower Old Red Sandstone 219
-
- 57. Lignite of the Lower Old Red Sandstone 221
-
- 58. Internal structure of lignite of Lower Old Red Sandstone 223
-
-
-
-
-STROMNESS AND ITS ASTEROLEPIS. THE LAKE OF STENNIS.
-
-
-When engaged in prosecuting the self-imposed task of examining in detail
-the various fossiliferous deposits of Scotland, in the hope of ultimately
-acquainting myself with them all, I extended my exploratory ramble, about
-two years ago, into the Mainland of Orkney, and resided for some time in
-the vicinity of Stromness.
-
-This busy seaport town forms that special centre, in this northern
-archipelago, from which the structure of the entire group can be most
-advantageously studied. The geology of the Orkneys, like that of
-Caithness, owes its chief interest to the immense development which
-it exhibits of one formation,—the Lower Old Red Sandstone,—and to the
-extraordinary abundance of its vertebrate remains. It is not too much
-to affirm, that in the comparatively small portion which this cluster
-of islands contains of the _third_ part of a system regarded only a
-few years ago as the least fossiliferous in the geologic scale, there
-are more fossil fish enclosed than in _every_ other geologic system
-in England, Scotland, and Wales, from the Coal Measures to the Chalk
-inclusive. Orkney is emphatically, to the geologist, what a juvenile
-Shetland poetess designates her country, in challenging for it a standing
-independent of the “Land of Cakes,”—a “Land of Fish;” and, were the trade
-once fairly opened up, could supply with ichthyolites, by the ton and the
-ship-load, the museums of the world. Its various deposits, with all their
-strange organisms, have been uptilted from the bottom against a granitic
-axis, rather more than six miles in length by about a mile in breadth,
-which forms the great back-bone of the western district of Pomona; and on
-this granitic axis—fast jammed in between a steep hill and the sea—stands
-the town of Stromness. Situated thus _at the bottom_ of the upturned
-deposits of the island, it occupies exactly such a point of observation
-as that which the curious eastern traveller would select, in front of
-some huge pyramid or hieroglyphic-covered obelisk, as a proper site for
-his tent. It presents, besides, not a few facilities for studying with
-the geological phenomena, various interesting points in physical science
-of a cognate character. Resting on its granitic base, _in front_ of
-the strangely sculptured pyramid of three broad tiers,—red, black, and
-gray,—which the Old Red Sandstone of these islands may be regarded as
-forming, it is but a short half mile from the Great Conglomerate base
-of the formation, and scarcely a quarter of a mile more from the older
-beds of its central flagstone deposit; while an hour’s sail on the one
-hand opens to the explorer the overlying arenaceous deposit of Hoy, and
-an hour’s walk on the other introduces him to the Loch of Stennis, with
-its curiously mixed flora and fauna. But of the Loch of Stennis and its
-productions more anon.
-
-The day was far spent when I reached Stromness: but as I had a fine
-bright evening still before me, longer by some three or four degrees of
-north latitude than the midsummer evenings of the south of Scotland,
-I set out, hammer in hand, to examine the junction of the granite and
-the Great Conglomerate, where it has been laid bare by the sea along
-the low promontory which forms the western boundary of the harbor. The
-granite here is a ternary of the usual components, somewhat intermediate
-in grain and color between the granites of Peterhead and Aberdeen;
-and the conglomerate consists of materials almost exclusively derived
-from it,—evidence enough of itself, that when this ancient mechanical
-deposit was in course of forming, the granite—exactly such a compound
-then as it is now—was one of the surface rocks of the locality, and
-much exposed to disintegrating influences. This conglomerate base of
-the Lower Old Red Sandstone of Scotland—which presents, over an area
-of many thousand square miles, such an identity of character, that
-specimens taken from the neighborhood of Lerwick, in Shetland, or of
-Gamrie, in Banff, can scarce be distinguished from specimens detached
-from the hills which rise over the Great Caledonian Valley, or from the
-cliffs immediately in front of the village of Contin—seems to have been
-formed in a vast oceanic basin of primary rock,—a Palæozoic Hudson’s or
-Baffin’s Bay,—partially surrounded, mayhap, by primary continents, swept
-by numerous streams, rapid and headlong, and charged with the broken
-debris of the inhospitable regions which they drained. The graptolite
-bearing grauwacke of Banffshire seems to have been the only fossiliferous
-rock that occurred throughout the entire extent of this ancient northern
-basin; and its few organisms now serve to open the sole vista through
-which the geological explorer to the north of the Grampians can catch a
-glimpse of an earlier period of existence than that represented by the
-ichthyolites of the Lower Old Red Sandstone.
-
-Very many ages must have passed ere, amid waves and currents, the
-water-worn debris which now forms the Great Conglomerate could have
-accumulated over tracts of sea-bottom from ten to fifteen thousand
-square miles in area, to its present depth of from one to four hundred
-feet. At length, however, a thorough change took place; but we can only
-doubtfully speculate regarding its nature or cause. The bottom of the
-Palæozoic basin became greatly less exposed. Some protecting circle of
-coast had been thrown up around it; or, what is perhaps more probable,
-it had sunk to a profounder depth, and the ancient shores and streams
-had receded, through the depression, to much greater distances. And, in
-consequence, the deposition of rough sand and rolled pebbles was followed
-by a deposition of mud. Myriads of fish, of forms the most ancient
-and obsolete, congregated on its banks or sheltered in its hollows;
-generation succeeded generation, millions and tens of millions perished
-mysteriously by sudden death; shoals after shoals were annihilated; but
-the productive powers of nature were strong, and the waste was kept
-up. But who among men shall reckon the years or centuries during which
-these races existed, and this muddy ocean of the remote past spread out
-to unknown and nameless shores around them? As in those great cities of
-the desert that lie uninhabited and waste, we can but conjecture their
-term of existence from the vast extent of their cemeteries. We only
-know that the dark, finely-grained schists in which they so abundantly
-occur must have been of comparatively slow formation, and that yet the
-thickness of the deposit more than equals the height of our loftiest
-Scottish mountains. It would seem as if a period equal to that in which
-all human history is comprised might be cut out of a corner of the period
-represented by the Lower Old Red Sandstone, and be scarce missed when
-away; for every year during which man has lived upon earth, it is not
-improbable that the _Pterichthys_ and its contemporaries may have lived a
-century. Their last hour, however, at length came. Over the dark-colored
-ichthyolitic schists so immensely developed in Caithness and Orkney,
-there occurs a pale-tinted, unfossiliferous sandstone, which in the
-island of Hoy rises into hills of from fourteen to sixteen hundred feet
-in height; and among the organisms of those newer formations of the Old
-Red which overlie this deposit, not a species of ichthyolite identical
-with the species entombed in the lower schists has yet been detected. In
-the blank interval which the arenaceous deposit represents, tribes and
-families perished and disappeared, leaving none of their race to succeed
-them, that other tribes and families might be called into being, and fall
-into their vacant places in the onward march of creation.
-
-Such, so far as the various hieroglyphics of the pile have yet rendered
-their meanings to the geologist, is the strange story recorded on the
-three-barred _pyramid_ of Stromness. I traced the formation upwards this
-evening along the edges of the upturned strata, from where the Great
-Conglomerate leans against the granite, till where it merges into the
-ichthyolitic flagstones; and then pursued these from older and lower to
-newer and higher layers, desirous of ascertaining at what distance over
-the base of the system its more ancient organisms first appear, and what
-their character and kind. And, embedded in a grayish-colored layer of
-hard flag, somewhat less than a hundred yards over the granite, and about
-a hundred and sixty feet over the upper stratum of the conglomerate, I
-found what I sought,—a well-marked bone,—in all probability the oldest
-vertebrate remain yet discovered in Orkney. What, asks the reader, was
-the character of this ancient organism of the Palæozoic basin?
-
-As shown by its cancellated texture, palpable to the naked eye, and
-still more unequivocally by the irregular complexity of fabric which
-it exhibits under the microscope,—by its speck-like life-points or
-canaliculi, that remind one of air-bubbles in ice,—its branching
-channels, like minute veins, through which the blood must once have
-flown,—and its general groundwork of irregular lines of corpuscular
-fibre, that wind through the whole like currents in a river studded with
-islands,—it was as truly osseous in its composition as the solid bones of
-any of the reptiles of the Secondary, or the quadrupeds of the Tertiary
-periods. And in form it closely resembled a large roofing-nail. With this
-bone our more practised palæontologists are but little acquainted, for
-no remains of the animal to which it belonged have yet been discovered
-in Britain to the south of the Grampians,[3] nor, except in the Old Red
-Sandstone of Russia, has it been detected any where on the Continent.
-Nor am I aware that, save in the accompanying wood-cut, (fig. 1,) it has
-ever been figured. The amateur geologists of Caithness and Orkney have,
-however, learned to recognize it as the “petrified nail.” The length
-of the entire specimen in this instance was five seven eighth inches,
-the transverse breadth of the head two inches and a quarter, and the
-thickness of the stem nearly three tenth parts of an inch. This nail-like
-bone formed a characteristic portion of the _Asterolepis_,—so far as
-is yet known, the most gigantic ganoid of the Old Red Sandstone, and,
-judging from the _place_ of this fragment, apparently one of the first.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 1.
-
-INTERNAL RIDGE OF HYOID PLATE OF ASTEROLEPSIS.[4]
-
-(One third the natural size, linear.)]
-
-There were various considerations which led me to regard the “petrified
-nail” in this case as one of the most interesting fossils I had ever
-seen; and, before quitting Orkney, to pursue my explorations farther to
-the south, I brought two intelligent geologists of the district,[5] to
-mark its place and character, that they might be able to point it out to
-geological visitors in the future, or, if they preferred removing it to
-their town museum, to indicate to them the stratum in which it had lain.
-It showed me, among other things, how unsafe it is for the geologist to
-base positive conclusions on merely negative data. Founding on the fact
-that, of many hundred ichthyolites of the Lower Old Red Sandstone which
-I had disinterred and examined, all were of comparatively small size,
-while in the Upper Old Red many of the ichthyolites are of great mass and
-bulk, I had inferred that vertebrate life had been restricted to minuter
-forms at the commencement than at the close of the system. It had begun,
-I had ventured to state in the earlier editions of a little work on the
-“Old Red Sandstone,” with an age of dwarfs, and had ended with an age
-of giants. And now, here, at the very base of the system, unaccompanied
-by aught to establish the contemporary existence of its dwarfs,—which
-appear, however, in an overlying bed about a hundred feet higher up,—was
-there unequivocal proof of the existence of one of the most colossal of
-its giants. But not unfrequently, in the geologic field, has the practice
-of basing positive conclusions on merely negative grounds led to a
-misreading of the record. From evidence of a kind exactly similar to that
-on which I had built, it was inferred, some two or three years ago, that
-there had lived no reptiles during the period of the Coal Measures, and
-no fish in the times of the Lower Silurian System.
-
-I extended my researches, a few days after, in an easterly direction from
-the town of Stromness, and walked for several miles along the shores of
-the Loch of Stennis,—a large lake about fourteen miles in circumference,
-bare and treeless, like all the other lakes and lochs of Orkney, but
-picturesque of outline, and divided into an upper and lower sheet of
-water by two low, long promontories, that jut out from opposite sides,
-and so nearly meet in the middle as to be connected by a thread-like
-line of road, half mound, half bridge. “The Loch of Stennis,” says Mr.
-David Vedder, the sailor-poet of Orkney, “is a beautiful Mediterranean in
-miniature.” It gives admission to the sea by a narrow strait, crossed,
-like that which separates the two promontories in the middle, by a
-long rustic bridge; and, in consequence of this peculiarity, the lower
-division of the lake is salt in its nether reaches and brackish in its
-upper ones, while the higher division is merely brackish in its nether
-reaches, and fresh enough in its upper ones to be potable. Viewed from
-the east, in one of the long, clear, sunshiny evenings of the Orkney
-summer, it seems not unworthy the eulogium of Vedder. There are moory
-hills and a few rude cottages in front; and in the background, some
-eight or ten miles away, the bold, steep mountain masses of Hoy; while
-on the promontories of the lake, in the middle distance, conspicuous
-in the landscape, from the relief furnished by the blue ground of the
-surrounding waters, stand the tall gray obelisks of Stennis—one group on
-the northern promontory, the other on the south,—
-
- “Old even beyond tradition’s breath.”
-
-The shores of both the upper and lower divisions of the lake were
-strewed, at the time I passed, by a line of _wrack_, consisting, for
-the first few miles from where the lower loch opens to the sea, of only
-marine plants, then of marine plants mixed with those of fresh-water
-growth, and then, in the upper sheet of water, of lacustrine plants
-exclusively. And the fauna of the loch is, I was informed, of as mixed a
-character as its flora,—the marine and fresh-water animals having each
-their own reaches, with certain debatable tracts between, in which each
-kind expatiates with more or less freedom, according to its specific
-nature and constitution,—some of the sea-fish advancing far on the fresh
-water, and others, among the proper denizens of the lake, encroaching
-far on the salt. The common fresh-water eel strikes out, I was told,
-farthest into the sea-water; in which, indeed, reversing the habits
-of the salmon, it is known in various places to deposit its spawn. It
-seeks, too, impatient of a low temperature, to escape from the cold of
-winter, by taking refuge in water brackish enough, in a climate such
-as ours, to resist the influence of frost. Of the marine fish, on the
-other hand, I found that the flounder got greatly higher than any of
-the others, inhabiting reaches of the lake almost entirely fresh. I
-have had an opportunity elsewhere of observing a curious change which
-fresh water induces in this fish. In the brackish water of an estuary,
-the animal becomes, without diminishing in general size, thicker and
-more fleshy than when in its legitimate habitat, the sea: but the flesh
-loses in quality what it gains in quantity;—it grows flabby and insipid,
-and the margin-fin lacks always its strip of transparent fat. But the
-change induced in the two floras of the lake—marine and lacustrine—is
-considerably more palpable and obvious than that induced in its two
-faunas. As I passed along the strait, through which it gives admission
-to the sea, I found the commoner fucoids of our sea-coasts streaming
-in great luxuriance in the tideway, from the stones and rocks of the
-bottom. I marked, among the others, the two species of kelp-weed, so
-well known to our Scotch kelp-burners,—_Fucus nodosus_ and _Fucus
-vesiculosus_,—flourishing in their uncurtailed proportions; and the
-not inelegant _Halidrys siliquosa_, or “tree in the sea,” presenting
-its amplest spread of pod and frond. A little farther in, _Halidrys_
-and _Fucus nodosus_ disappear, and _Fucus vesiculosus_ becomes greatly
-stunted, and no longer exhibits its characteristic double rows of
-bladders. But for mile after mile it continues to exist, blent with some
-of the hardier confervæ, until at length it becomes as dwarfish and
-nearly as slim of frond as the confervæ themselves; and it is only by
-tracing it through the intermediate forms that we succeed in convincing
-ourselves that, in the brown stunted tufts of from one to three inches
-in length, which continue to fringe the middle reaches of the lake,
-we have in reality the well-known Fucus before us. Rushes, flags, and
-aquatic grasses may now be seen standing in diminutive tufts out of the
-water; and a terrestrial vegetation at least continues to exist, though
-it can scarce be said to thrive, on banks covered by the tide at full.
-The lacustrine flora increases, both in extent and luxuriance, as that of
-the sea diminishes; and in the upper reaches we fail to detect all trace
-of marine plants: the algæ, so luxuriant of growth along the straits of
-this “miniature Mediterranean,” altogether cease; and a semi-aquatic
-vegetation attains, in turn, to the state of fullest development any
-where permitted by the temperature of this northern locality. A memoir
-descriptive of the Loch of Stennis, and its productions, animal and
-vegetable, such as old Gilbert White of Selborne could have produced,
-would be at once a very valuable and curious document, important to the
-naturalist, and not without its use to the geological student.
-
-I know not how it may be with others; but the special phenomena connected
-with Orkney that most decidedly bore fruit in my mind, and to which
-my thoughts have most frequently reverted, were those exhibited in
-the neighborhood of Stromness. I would more particularly refer to the
-characteristic fragment of _Asterolepis_, which I detected in its lower
-flagstones, and to the curiously mixed, semi-marine, semi-lacustrine
-vegetation of the Loch of Stennis. Both seem to bear very directly on
-that development hypothesis,—fast spreading among an active and ingenious
-order of minds, both in Britain and America, and which has been long
-known on the Continent,—that would fain transfer the work of creation
-from the department of miracle to the province of natural law, and would
-strike down, in the process of removal, all the old landmarks, ethical
-and religious.
-
-
-
-
-THE DEVELOPMENT HYPOTHESIS, AND ITS CONSEQUENCES.
-
-
-Every individual, whatever its species or order, begins and increases
-until it attains to its state of fullest development, under certain
-fixed laws, and _in consequence_ of their operation. The microscopic
-monad develops into a fœtus, the fœtus into a child, the child into
-a man; and, however marvellous the process, in none of its stages is
-there the slightest mixture of miracle; from beginning to end, all is
-progressive development, according to a determinate order of things.
-Has _Nature_, during the vast geologic periods, been pregnant, in like
-manner, with the human race? and is the species, like the individual,
-an effect of progressive development, induced and regulated by law? The
-assertors of the revived hypothesis of Maillet and Lamarck reply in the
-affirmative. Nor, be it remarked, is there positive atheism involved in
-the belief. God might as certainly have _originated_ the species by a
-law of development, as he _maintains_ it by a law of development; the
-existence of a First Great Cause is as perfectly compatible with the
-one scheme as with the other; and it may be necessary thus broadly to
-state the fact, not only in justice to the Lamarckians, but also fairly
-to warn their non-geological opponents, that in this contest the old
-anti-atheistic arguments, whether founded on the evidence of design, or
-on the preliminary doctrine of final causes, cannot be brought to bear.
-
-There are, however, beliefs, in no degree less important to the moralist
-or the Christian than even that in the being of a God, which seem wholly
-incompatible with the development hypothesis. It, during a period so
-vast as to be scarce expressible by figures, the creatures now human
-have been rising, by _almost_ infinitesimals, from compound microscopic
-cells,—minute vital globules within globules, begot by electricity on
-dead gelatinous matter,—until they have at length become the men and
-women whom we see around us, we must hold either the monstrous belief,
-that all the vitalities, whether those of monads or of mites, of fishes
-or of reptiles, of birds or of beasts, are individually and inherently
-immortal and undying, or that human souls are _not_ so. The difference
-between the dying and the undying,—between the spirit of the brute that
-goeth downward, and the spirit of the man that goeth upward,—is not a
-difference infinitesimally, or even atomically _small_. It possesses
-all the breadth of the eternity to come, and is an _infinitely great_
-difference. It cannot, if I may so express myself, be shaded off by
-infinitesimals or atoms; for it is a difference which—as there can be
-no class of beings intermediate in their nature between the dying and
-the undying—admits not of gradation at all. What mind, regulated by the
-ordinary principles of human belief, can possibly hold that every one
-of the thousand vital points which swim in a drop of stagnant water are
-inherently fitted to maintain their individuality throughout eternity? Or
-how can it be rationally held that a mere progressive step, in itself no
-greater or more important than that effected by the addition of a single
-brick to a house in the building state, or of a single atom to a body
-in the growing state, could ever have produced immortality? And yet,
-if the _spirit_ of a monad or of a mollusc be not immortal, then must
-there either have been a point in the history of the species at which
-a dying brute—differing from its offspring merely by an inferiority of
-development, represented by a few atoms, mayhap by a single atom—produced
-an undying man, or man in his present state must be a mere animal,
-possessed of no immortal soul, and as irresponsible for his actions to
-the God before whose bar he is, in consequence, never to appear, as his
-presumed relatives and progenitors the beasts that perish. Nor will it
-do to attempt escaping from the difficulty, by alleging that God at some
-certain link in the chain _might_ have converted a mortal creature into
-an immortal existence, by breathing into it a “living soul;” seeing that
-a renunciation of any such direct interference on the part of Deity in
-the work of creation forms the prominent and characteristic feature of
-the scheme,—nay, that it constitutes the very nucleus round which the
-scheme has originated. And thus, though the development theory be not
-atheistic, it is at least practically tantamount to atheism. For, if man
-be a dying creature, restricted in his existence to the present scene of
-things, what does it really matter to him, for any one moral purpose,
-whether there be a God or no? If in reality on the same religious level
-with the dog, wolf, and fox, that are by nature _atheists_,—a nature most
-properly coupled with irresponsibility,—to what one practical purpose
-should he know or believe in a God whom he, as certainly as they, is
-never to meet as his Judge? or why should he square his conduct by
-the requirements of the moral code, farther than a low and convenient
-expediency may chance to demand?[6]
-
-Nor does the purely Christian objection to the development hypothesis
-seem less, but even more insuperable than that derived from the
-province of natural theology. The belief which is perhaps of all others
-most fundamentally essential to the revealed scheme of salvation, is
-the belief that “God created man upright,” and that man, instead of
-proceeding onward and upward from this high and fair beginning, to a yet
-higher and fairer standing in the scale of creation, sank and became
-morally lost and degraded. And hence the necessity for that second
-dispensation of recovery and restoration which forms the entire burden
-of God’s revealed message to man. If, according to the development
-theory, the progress of the “first Adam” was an upward progress, the
-existence of the “second Adam”—that “happier man,” according to Milton,
-whose special work it is to “restore” and “regain the blissful seat” of
-the lapsed race—is simply a meaningless anomaly. Christianity, if the
-development theory be true, is exactly what some of the more extreme
-Moderate divines of the last age used to make it—an idle and unsightly
-excrescence on a code of morals that would be perfect were it away.
-
-I may be in error in taking this serious view of the matter; and, if so,
-would feel grateful to the man who could point out to me that special
-link in the chain of inference at which, with respect to the bearing of
-the theory on the two theologies—natural and revealed—the mistake has
-taken place. But if I be in error at all, it is an error into which I
-find not a few of the first men of the age,—represented, as a class, by
-our Professor Sedgwicks and Sir David Brewsters,—have also fallen; and
-until it be shown to _be_ an error, and that the development theory is in
-no degree incompatible with a belief in the immortality of the soul—in
-the responsibility of man to God as the final Judge—or in the Christian
-scheme of salvation—it is every honest man’s duty to protest against any
-_ex parte_ statement of the question, that would insidiously represent
-it as ethically an indifferent one, or as unimportant in its theologic
-bearing, save to “little religious sects and scientific coteries.” In
-an address on the fossil flora, made in September last by a gentleman
-of Edinburgh to the St. Andrew’s Horticultural Society, there occurs
-the following passage on this subject: “Life is governed by external
-conditions, and new conditions imply new races; but then as to their
-creation, that is the ‘_mystery of mysteries_.’ Are they created by an
-immediate fiat and direct act of the Almighty? or has He originally
-impressed life with an elasticity and adaptability, so that it shall
-take upon itself new forms and characters, according to the conditions
-to which it shall be subjected? Each opinion has had, and still has,
-its advocates and opponents; but the truth is, that _science_, so far
-as it knows, or rather so far as it has had the honesty and courage to
-avow, has yet been unable to pronounce a satisfactory decision. _Either
-way, it matters little_, _physically or morally_, either mode implies
-the same omnipotence, and wisdom, and foresight, and protection; and it
-is only your little religious sects and scientific coteries which make
-a pother about the matter,—sects and coteries of which it may be justly
-said, that they would almost exclude God from the management of his own
-world, if not managed and directed in the way that they would have it.”
-Now, this is surely a most unfair representation of the consequences,
-ethical and religious involved in the development hypothesis. It is not
-its compatibility with belief in the existence of a First Great Cause
-that has to be established, in order to prove it harmless; but its
-compatibility with certain other all-important beliefs, without which
-simple Theism is of no moral value whatever—a belief in the immortality
-and responsibility of man, and in the scheme of salvation by a Mediator
-and Redeemer. Dissociated from these beliefs, a belief in the existence
-of a God is of as little _ethical_ value as a belief in the existence of
-the great sea-serpent.
-
-Let us see whether we cannot determine what the testimony of Geology,
-on this question of creation by development, really is. It is always
-perilous to under-estimate the strength of an enemy; and the danger from
-the development hypothesis to an ingenious order of minds, smitten with
-the novel fascinations of physical science, has been under-estimated
-very considerably indeed. Save by a few studious men, who to the
-cultivation of Geology and the cognate branches add some acquaintance
-with metaphysical science, the general correspondence of the line of
-assault taken up by this new school of infidelity, with that occupied
-by the old, and the consequent ability of the assailants to bring, not
-only the recently forged, but also the previously employed artillery into
-full play along its front, has not only not been marked, but even not
-so much as suspected. And yet, in order to show that there actually is
-such a correspondence, it can be but necessary to state, that the great
-antagonist points in the array of the opposite lines, are simply the
-_law_ of development _versus_ the _miracle_ of creation. The evangelistic
-Churches cannot, in consistency with their character, or with a due
-regard to the interests of their people, slight or overlook a form of
-error at once exceedingly plausible and consummately dangerous, and which
-is telling so widely on society, that one can scarce travel by railway or
-in a steamboat, or encounter a group of intelligent mechanics, without
-finding decided trace of its ravages.
-
-But ere the Churches can be prepared competently to deal with it, or with
-the other objections of a similar class which the infidelity of an age so
-largely engaged as the present in physical pursuits will be from time to
-time originating they must greatly extend their educational walks into
-the field of physical science. The mighty change which has taken place
-during the present century, in the direction in which the minds of the
-first order are operating, though indicated on the face of the country in
-characters which cannot be mistaken, seems to have too much escaped the
-notice of our theologians. Speculative theology and the metaphysics are
-cognate branches of the same science; and when, as in the last and the
-preceding ages, the higher philosophy of the world was metaphysical, the
-Churches took ready cognizance of the fact, and, in due accordance with
-the requirements of the time, the battle of the Evidences was fought on
-metaphysical ground. But, judging from the preparations made in their
-colleges and halls, they do not now seem sufficiently aware—though the
-low thunder of every railway, and the snort of every steam engine, and
-the whistle of the wind amid the wires of every electric telegraph,
-serve to publish the fact—that it is in the departments of physics, not
-of metaphysics, that the greater minds of the age are engaged,—that the
-Lockes, Humes, Kants, Berkeleys, Dugald Stewarts, and Thomas Browns,
-belong to the past,—and that the philosophers of the present time, tall
-enough to be seen all the world over, are the Humboldts, the Aragos, the
-Agassizes, the Liebigs, the Owens, the Herschels, the Bucklands, and the
-Brewsters. In that educational course through which, in this country,
-candidates for the ministry pass, in preparation for their office,
-I find every group of great minds which has in turn influenced and
-directed the mind of Europe for the last three centuries, represented,
-more or less adequately, save the last. It is an epitome of all kinds
-of learning, with the exception of the kind most imperatively required,
-because most in accordance with the genius of the time. The restorers of
-classic literature—the Buchanans and Erasmuses—we see represented in our
-Universities by the Greek and what are termed the Humanity courses; the
-Galileos, Boyles, and Newtons, by the Mathematical and Natural Philosophy
-courses; and the Lockes, Kants, Humes, and Berkeleys, by the Metaphysical
-course. But the Cuviers, the Huttons, the Cavendishes, and the Watts,
-with their successors, the practical philosophers of the present age,—men
-whose achievements in physical science we find marked on the surface of
-the country in characters which might be read from the moon,—are _not_
-adequately represented. It would be perhaps more correct to say, that
-they are not represented at all;[7] and the clergy, as a class, suffer
-themselves to linger far in the rear of an intelligent and accomplished
-laity—a full age behind the requirements of the time. Let them not shut
-their eyes to the danger which is obviously coming. The battle of the
-Evidences will have as certainly to be fought on the field of physical
-science, as it was contested in the last age on that of the metaphysics.
-And on this new arena the combatants will have to employ new weapons,
-which it will be the privilege of the challenger to choose. The old,
-opposed to these, would prove but of little avail. In an age of muskets
-and artillery, the bows and arrows of an obsolete school of warfare
-would be found greatly less than sufficient, in the field of battle, for
-purposes either of assault or defence.
-
-“There are two kinds of generation in the world,” says Professor Lorenz
-Oken, in his “Elements of Physio-philosophy;” “the creation proper, and
-the propagation that is sequent thereupon—or the _generatio originaria_
-and _secundaria_. Consequently, no organism has been created of larger
-size than an infusorial point. No organism is, nor ever has one been
-created, which is not microscopic. Whatever is larger has not been
-created, but developed. Man has not been created, but developed.” Such,
-in a few brief dogmatic sentences, is the development theory. What,
-in order to establish its truth, or even to render it in some degree
-probable, ought to be the geological evidence regarding it? The reply
-seems obvious. In the first place, the earlier fossils ought to be very
-_small_ in size; in the second, very _low_ in organization. In cutting
-into the stony womb of nature, in order to determine what it contained
-mayhap millions of ages ago, we must expect, if the development theory
-be true, to look upon mere embryos and fœtuses. And if we find, instead,
-the full grown and the mature, then must we hold that the testimony of
-Geology is not only _not in accordance_ with the theory, but in positive
-opposition to it. Such, palpably, is the _principle_ on which, in this
-matter, we ought to decide. What are the _facts_?
-
-The oldest organism yet discovered in the most ancient geological
-system of Scotland in which vertebrate remains occur, _seems_ to be the
-_Asterolepis_ of Stromness. After the explorations of many years over a
-wide area, I have detected none other equally low in the system; nor have
-I ascertained that any brother-explorer in the same field has been more
-fortunate. It is, up to the present time, the most ancient Scotch witness
-of the great class of fishes that can in this case be brought into court;
-nay, it is in all probability the oldest _ganoid_ witness the world has
-yet produced; for there appears no certain trace of this order of fishes
-in the great Silurian system which lies underneath, and in which, so far
-as geologists yet know, organic existence first began. How, then, on the
-two relevant points—bulk and organization—does it answer to the demands
-of the development hypothesis? Was it a mere fœtus of the finny tribe,
-of minute size, and imperfect, embryonic faculty? Or was it of at least
-the ordinary bulk, and, for its class, of the average organization?
-May I solicit the forbearance of the non-geological reader, should my
-reply to these apparently simple questions seem unnecessarily prolix and
-elaborate? Peculiar opportunities of observation, and the possession of
-a set of unique fossils, enable me to submit to our palæontologists a
-certain amount of information regarding this ancient ganoid, which they
-will deem at once interesting and new; and the bearing of my statements
-on the general argument will, I trust, become apparent as I proceed.
-
-
-
-
-THE RECENT HISTORY OF THE ASTEROLEPIS. ITS FAMILY.
-
-
-It had been long known to the continental naturalists, that in certain
-Russian deposits, very extensively developed, there occur in considerable
-abundance certain animal organisms; but for many years neither their
-position nor character could be satisfactorily determined. By some they
-were placed too high in the scale of organized being; by others too low.
-Kutorga, a writer not very familiarly known in this country, described
-the remains as those of mammals;—the Russian rocks contained, he said,
-bones of quadrupeds, and, in especial, the teeth of swine: whereas
-Lamarck, a better known authority, though not invariably a safe one,—for
-he had a trick of dreaming when wide awake, and of calling his dreams
-philosophy,—assigned to them a place among the corals. They belonged,
-he asserted, as shown by certain star-like markings with which they are
-fretted, to the Polyparia. He even erected for their reception a new
-genus of Astrea, which he designated, from the little rounded hillock
-which rises in the middle of each star, the genus _Monticularia_. It was
-left to a living naturalist, M. Eichwald, to fix their true position
-zoologically among the class of fishes, and to Sir Roderick Murchison
-to determine their position geologically as ichthyolites of the Old Red
-Sandstone.
-
-Sir Roderick, on his return from his great Russian campaigns, in which
-he fared far otherwise than Napoleon, and accomplished more, submitted
-to Agassiz a series of fragments of these gigantic Ganoids; and the
-celebrated ichthyologist, who had been introduced little more than
-a twelvemonth before to the _Pterichthys_ of Cromarty, was at first
-inclined to regard them as the remains of a large cuirassed fish of
-the Cephalaspian type, but generically new. Under this impression he
-bestowed upon the yet unknown ichthyolite of which they had formed part,
-the name _Chelonichthys_, from the resemblance borne by the broken
-plates to those of the carapace and plastron of some of the Chelonians.
-At this stage, however, the Russian Old Red yielded a set of greatly
-finer remains than it had previously furnished; and of these casts were
-transmitted by Professor Asmus, of the University of Dorpat, to the
-British and London Geological Museums, and to Agassiz. “I knew not at
-first what to do,” says the ichthyologist, “with bones of so singular
-a conformation that I could refer them to no known type.” Detecting,
-however, on their exterior surfaces the star-like markings which had
-misled Lamarck, and which he had also detected on the lesser fragments
-submitted to him by Sir Roderick, he succeeded in identifying both the
-fragments and bones as remains of the same genus and on ascertaining
-that M. Eichwald had bestowed upon it, from these characteristic
-sculpturings, the generic name _Asterolepis_, or star-scale, he suffered
-the name which he himself had originated to drop. Even this second name,
-however, which the ichthyolite still continues to bear, is in some degree
-founded in error. Its true scales, as I shall by and by show, were not
-stelliferous, but fretted by a peculiar style of ornament, consisting
-of waved anastomosing ridges, breaking atop into angular-shaped dots,
-scooped out internally like the letter V; and were evidently intermediate
-in their character between the scales which cover the _Glyptolepis_
-and those of the _Holoptychius_. And the stellate markings which M.
-Eichwald graphically describes as minute paps rising out of the middle
-of star-like wreaths of little leaflets, were restricted to the dermal
-plates of the head.
-
-Agassiz ultimately succeeded in classing the bones which had at first so
-puzzled him, into two divisions—interior and dermal; and the latter he
-divided yet further, though not without first lodging a precautionary
-protest, founded on the extreme obscurity of the subject, into cranial
-and opercular. Of the interior bones he specified two,—a super-scapular
-bone, (_supra-scapulaire_,)—that bone which in osseous fishes completes
-the scapular arch or belt, by uniting the scapula to the cranium; and
-a maxillary or upper jaw-bone. But his world-wide acquaintance with
-existing fishes could lend him no assistance in determining the places
-of the dermal bones: they formed the mere fragments of a broken puzzle,
-of which the key was lost. Even in their detached and irreducible state,
-however, he succeeded in basing upon them several shrewd deductions. He
-inferred, in the first place, that the _Asterolepis_ was not, as had
-been at first supposed, a cuirassed fish, which took its place among
-the Cephalaspians, but a strongly helmed fish of that Cœlacanth family
-to which the _Holoptychius_ and _Glyptolepis_ belong; in the second,
-that, like several of its bulkier cogeners, it was in all probability
-a broad, flat-headed animal; and, in the third, that as its remains
-are found associated in the Russian beds with numerous detached teeth
-of large size,—the boar tusks of Kutorga—which present internally that
-peculiar microscopic character on which Professor Owen has erected his
-Dendrodic or tree-toothed family of fishes,—it would in all likelihood
-be found that both bones and teeth belonged to the same group. “It
-appears more than probable,” he said, “that one day, by the discovery of
-a head or an entire jaw, it will be shown that the genera _Dendrodus_
-and _Asterolepis_ form but one.” As we proceed, the reader will see how
-justly the ichthyologist assigned to the _Asterolepis_ its place among
-the Cœlacanths, and how entirely his two other conjectures regarding it
-have been confirmed. “I have had in general,” he concluded, “but small
-and mutilated fragments of the creature’s bones submitted to me, and
-of these, even the surface ornaments not well preserved; but I hope
-the immense materials with which the Old Red Sandstone of Russia has
-furnished the savans of that country will not be lost to science; and
-that my labors on this interesting genus, incomplete as they are, will
-excite more and more the attention of geologists, by showing them how
-ignorant we are of all the essential facts concerning the history of the
-first inhabitants of our globe.”
-
-I know not what the savans of Russia have been doing for the last few
-years; but mainly through the labors of an intelligent tradesman of
-Thurso, Mr. Robert Dick,—one of those working men of Scotland of active
-curiosity and well-developed intellect, that give character and standing
-to the rest,—I am enabled to justify the classification and confirm the
-conjectures of Agassiz. Mr. Dick, after acquainting himself, in the
-leisure hours of a laborious profession, with the shells, insects, and
-plants of the northern locality in which he resides, had set himself to
-study its geology; and with this view he procured a copy of the little
-treatise on the Old Red Sandstone to which I have already referred, and
-which was at that time, as Agassiz’s Monograph of the Old Red fishes had
-not yet appeared, the only work specially devoted to the palæontology
-of the system, so largely developed in the neighborhood of Thurso. With
-perhaps a single exception,—for the Thurso rocks do not yet seem to have
-yielded a _Pterichthys_,—he succeeded in finding specimens, in a state
-of better or worse keeping, of all the various ichthyolites which I had
-described as peculiar to the Lower Old Red Sandstone. He found, however,
-what I had _not_ described,—the remains of apparently a very gigantic
-ichthyolite; and, communicating with me through the medium of a common
-friend, he submitted to me, in the first instance, drawings of his new
-set of fossils; and ultimately, as I could arrive at no satisfactory
-conclusion from the drawings, he with great liberality made over to me
-the fossils themselves. Agassiz’s Monograph was not yet published; nor
-had I an opportunity of examining, until about a twelvemonth after,
-the casts, in the British Museum, of the fossils of Professor Asmus.
-Besides, all the little information, derived from various sources, which
-I had acquired respecting the Russian _Chelonichthys_,—for such was its
-name at the time,—referred it to the cuirassed type, and served but to
-mislead. I was assured, for instance, that Professor Asmus regarded
-his set of remains as portions of the plates and paddles of a gigantic
-_Pterichthys_, of from twenty to thirty feet in length. And so, as I had
-recognized in the Thurso fossils the peculiarities of the _Holoptychian_
-(Cœlacanth) family, I at first failed to identify them with the remains
-of the great Russian fish. All the larger bones sent me by Mr. Dick were,
-I found, cerebral; and the scales associated with these indicated, not
-a cuirass-protected, but a scale-covered body and exhibited, in their
-sculptured and broadly imbricated surfaces, the well-marked Cœlacanth
-style of disposition and ornament. But though I could _not_ recognize in
-either bones or scales the remains of one ichthyolite more of the Old
-Red Sandstone, “that could be regarded as manifesting as peculiar a type
-among fishes as do the Ichthyosauri and Plesiosauri among reptiles,”[8]
-I was engaged at the time in a course of inquiry regarding the cerebral
-development of the earlier vertebrata, that made me deem them scarce less
-interesting than if I could. Ere, however, I attempt communicating to the
-reader the result of my researches, I must introduce him, in order that
-he may be able to set out with me to the examination of the _Asterolepis_
-from the same starting-point, to the Cœlacanth family,—indisputably one
-of the oldest, and not the least interesting, of its order.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 2.
-
-a. _Shagreen of the Thornback (Raja clavata.)_
-
-b. _Shagreen of Sphagodus,—a placoid of the Upper Silurian._[9]]
-
-So far as is yet known, all the fish of the earliest fossiliferous
-system belonged to the placoid or “_broad plated_” order,—a great
-division of fishes, represented in the existing seas by the Sharks and
-Rays,—animals that to an internal skeleton of cartilage unite a dermal
-covering of points, plates, or spines of enamelled bone, and have their
-gills fixed. The dermal or cuticular bones of this order vary greatly in
-form, according to the species or family: in some cases they even vary,
-according to their place, on the same individual. Those button-like
-tubercles, for instance, with an enamelled thorn, bent like a hook,
-growing out of the centre of each, which run down the back and tail, and
-stud the pectorals of the thorn-back, (_Raja clavata_,) differ very much
-from the smaller thorns, with star-formed bases, which roughen the other
-parts of the creature’s body; and the bony points which mottle the back
-and sides of the sharks are, in most of the known species, considerably
-more elongated and prickly than the points which cover their fins, belly,
-and snout. The extreme forms, however, of the shagreen tubercle or plate
-seem to be those of the upright prickle or spine on the one hand, and of
-the slant-laid, rhomboidal, scale-shaped plate on the other. The minuter
-thorns of the ray (fig. 2, _a_) exemplify the extreme of the prickly
-type; the fins, abdomen, and anterior part of the head of the spotted
-dog-fish (_Scyllium stellare_) are covered by lozenge-shaped little
-plates, which glisten with enamel, and are so thickly set that they cover
-the entire surface of the skin, (fig. 3, _b_,)—and these seem equally
-illustrative of the scale-like form. They are shagreen points passing
-into osseous scales, without, however, becoming really such; though they
-approach them so nearly in the shape and disposition of their upper
-disks, that the true scales, also osseous, of the _Acanthodes sulcatus_,
-(fig. 3, _a_,) a Ganoid of the Coal Measures, can scarce be distinguished
-from them, even when microscopically examined. It is only when seen in
-section that the distinctive difference appears. The true scale of the
-Acanthodes, though considerably elevated in the centre, seems to have
-been planted on the skin; whereas the scale-like shagreen of the dog-fish
-is elevated over it on an osseous pedicle or footstalk (fig. 5, _a_) as
-a mushroom is elevated over the sward on its stem; and the base of the
-stalk is found to resemble in its stellate character that of a shagreen
-point of the prickly type. The apparent scale is, we find, a bony prickle
-bent at right angles a little over its base, and flattened into a
-rhomboidal disk atop.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 3.
-
-a. _Scales of Acanthodes sulcatus._
-
-b. _Shagreen of Scyllium stellare, (Snout.)_
-
-(Mag. eight diameters.)]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 4.
-
-a. _Scales of Cheiracanthus microlepidotus._
-
-b. _Shagreen of Spinax Acanthias. (Snout.)_
-
-(Mag. eight diameters.)]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 5.
-
-a. _Section of shagreen of Scyllium stellare._
-
-b. _Under surface of do._
-
-c. _Section of scales of Cheiracanthus microlepidotus._
-
-d. _Under surface of do._
-
-(Mag. eight diameters.)]
-
-In small fragments of shagreen, (fig. 2 _b_) which have been detected in
-the bone-bed of the Upper Ludlow Rocks, (Upper Silurian,) and constitute
-the most ancient portions of this substance known to the palæontologist,
-the osseous tubercles are, as in the minuter spikes of the ray, of the
-upright thorn-like type; they merely serve to show that the placoids
-of the first period possessed, like those of the existing seas, an
-ability of secreting solid bone on their cuticular surfaces; and that,
-though at least such of them as have bequeathed to us specimens of
-their dermal armature possessed it in the form farthest removed from
-that of their immediate successors the ganoid fishes, they resembled
-them not less in the substance of which their dermoskeletal, than in
-that of which their endoskeletal, parts were composed. For the internal
-skeleton in both orders, during these early ages, seems to have been
-equally cartilaginous, and the cuticular skeleton equally osseous. In
-the ichthyolitic formation immediately over the Silurians,—that of the
-Lower Old Red Sandstone,—the Ganoids first appear; and the members of at
-least one of the families of the deposit, the Acanths,—a family rich in
-genera and species,—seem to have formed connecting links between this
-second order and their placoid predecessors. They were covered with true
-scales (fig. 4, _a_,) and their free gills were protected by gill-covers;
-and so they must be regarded as real Ganoids but as the shagreen of the
-spotted dog-fish nearly approaches, in form and character, to ganoid
-scales, without being really such, the scales of this family, on the
-other hand, approached equally near, without changing their nature, to
-the shagreen of the Placoids, especially to that of the spiked dogfish,
-(_Spinax Acanthias_.) (Fig. 4, _b_.) We even find on their under surfaces
-what seems to be an approximation to the characteristic footstalk.
-They so considerably thicken in the middle from their edges inwards,
-(fig. 5, _c_,) as to terminate in their centres in obtuse points.
-With these shagreen-like scales, the heads, bodies, and fins of all
-the species of at least two of the Acanth genera,—_Cheiracanthus_ and
-_Diplacanthus_,—were as thickly covered as the heads, bodies, and fins
-of the sharks are with their shagreen; and so slight was the degree of
-imbrication, that the portion of each scale overlaid by the two scales in
-immediate advance of it did not exceed the one twelfth part of its entire
-area. In the scale of the _Cheiracanthus_ we find the covered portion
-indicated by a smooth, narrow band, that ran along its anterior edges,
-and which the furrows that fretted the exposed surface did not traverse.
-It may be added, that both genera had the anterior edge of their fins
-armed with strong spines,—a characteristic of several of the Placoid
-families.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 6.
-
-a. _Scales of Osteolepis macrolepidotus._
-
-b. _Scales of an undescribed species of Glyptolepis._[10]
-
-(The single scales mag. two diameters;—the others nat. size.)]
-
-In the Dipterian genera _Osteolepis_ and _Diplopterus_ the scales
-were more unequivocally such than in the Acanths, and more removed
-from shagreen. The under surface of each was traversed longitudinally
-by a raised bar, which attached it to the skin, and which, in the
-transverse section, serves to remind one of the shagreen footstalk.
-They are, besides, of a rhomboidal form; and, when seen in the finer
-specimens, lying in their proper places on what had been once the
-creature’s body, they seem merely laid down side by side in line, like
-those rows of glazed tiles that pave a cathedral floor; but on more
-careful examination, we find that each little tile was deeply grooved
-on its higher side and end, (for it lay diagonally in relation to the
-head,) like the flags of a stone roof, (fig. 6, _a_,)—that its lateral
-and anterior neighbors impinged upon it along these grooves to the
-extent of about one third its area,—and that it impinged, in turn,
-to the same extent on the scales that bordered on it posteriorly and
-latero-posteriorly. Now, in the Cœlacanth family, (and on this special
-point the foregoing remarks are intended to bear,) the scales, which were
-generally of a round or irregularly oval form, (fig. 6, _b_,) overlapped
-each other to as great an extent as in any of the existing fishes of
-the Cycloid or Ctenoid orders,—to as great an extent, for instance, as
-in the carp, salmon, or herring. In a slated roof there is no part on
-which the slates do not lie double, and along the lower edge of each
-tier they lie triple;—there is more of slate covered than of slate seen:
-whereas in a tile-roof, the covered portion is restricted to a small
-strip running along the top and one of the edges of each tile, and the
-tiles do not lie double in more than the same degree in which the slates
-lie triple. The scaly cover of the two genera of Dipterians to which
-I have referred was a cover on the _tile_-roof principle; and this is
-an exceedingly common characteristic of the scales of the Ganoids. The
-scaly cover of the Cœlacanths, on the other hand, was a cover on the
-_slate_-roof principle;—there was in some of their genera about one third
-more of each scale covered than exposed; and this is so rare a ganoidal
-mode of arrangement, that, with the exception of the _Dipterus_,—a genus
-which, though it gives its name to the Dipterian sept, differed greatly
-from every other Dipterian,—I know not, beyond the limits of the ancient
-Cœlacanth family, a single Ganoid that possessed it. The bony covering of
-the Cœlacanths was _farthest_ removed in character from shagreen, as that
-of their contemporaries the Acanths approximated to it most nearly; they
-were, in this respect, the two extremes of their order; and did we find
-the Cœlacanths in but the later geological formations, while the Acanths
-were restricted to the earlier, it might be argued by assertors of the
-development hypothesis, that the amply imbricated, slate-like scale of
-the latter had been developed in the lapse of ages from the shagreen
-tubercle, by passing in its downward course—broadening and expanding
-as it descended—through the minute, scarcely imbricated disks of the
-Acanths, and the more amply imbricated tile-like rhombs of the Dipterians
-and Palæonisci, until it had reached its full extent of imbrication in
-the familiar modern type exemplified in both the Cœlacanths and the
-ordinary fishes. But such is not the order which nature has observed;—the
-two extremes of the ganoid scale appear together in the same early
-formation: both become extinct at a period geologically remote; and the
-ganoid scales of the existing state of things which most nearly resemble
-those of ancient time are scales formed on the intermediate or tile-roof
-principle.
-
-The scales of the Cœlacanths were, in almost all the genera which
-compose the family, of great size; in some species, of the greatest size
-to which this kind of integument ever attained. Of a Cœlacanth of the
-Coal Measures, the _Holoptychius Hibberti_, the scales in the larger
-specimens were occasionally from five to six inches in diameter. Even
-in the _Holoptychius nobilissimus_, in an individual scarcely exceeding
-two and a half feet in length, they measured from an inch and a half to
-an inch and three quarters each way. In the splendid specimen of this
-last species, in the British Museum, there occur but fourteen scales
-between the ventrals, though these lie low on the creature’s body, and
-the head; and in a specimen of a smaller species,—the _Holoptychius
-Andersoni_,—but about seventeen. The exposed portion of the scale was
-in most species of the family curiously fretted by intermingled ridges
-and furrows, pits and tubercles, which were either boldly relieved, as
-in the _Holoptychius_, or existed, as in the _Glyptolepis_, as slim,
-delicately chiselled threads, lines, and dots. The head was covered by
-strong plates, which were roughened with tubercles either confluent or
-detached, or hollowed, as in the _Bothriolepis_, into shallow pits. The
-jaws were thickly set with an outer range of true fish teeth, and more
-thinly with an inner range of what seem _reptile_ teeth, that stood up,
-tall and bulky, behind the others, like officers on horseback seen over
-the heads of their foot-soldiers in front. The _double_ fins,—pectorals
-and ventrals,—were characterized each by a thick, angular, scale-covered
-centre, fringed by the rays; and they must have borne externally
-somewhat the form of the sweeping paddles of the Ichthyosaurian genus,—a
-peculiarity shared also by the double fins of the _Dipterus_. The
-_single_ fins, in all the members of the family of which specimens
-have been found sufficiently entire to indicate the fact, were four in
-number,—an anal, a caudal, and two dorsal fins; and, with the exception
-of the anterior dorsal, which was comparatively small, and bent downwards
-along the back, as if its rays had been distorted when young,[11] they
-were all of large size. They crowded thickly on the posterior portion of
-the body,—the anterior dorsal opposite the ventrals, and the posterior
-dorsal opposite the anal fin. The fin-rays of the various members of the
-family, and such of their spinous processes as have been detected, were
-hollow tubular bones; or rather, like the larger pieces in the framework
-of the Placoids, they were cartilaginous within, and covered externally
-by a thin osseous crust or shell, which alone survives; and to this
-peculiarity they owe their family name, Cœlacanth, or “hollow-spine.”
-The internal hollow, _i. e._ cartilaginous centre, was, however,
-equally a characteristic of the spinous processes of the _Coccosteus_.
-In their general proportions, the Cœlacanths, if we perhaps except one
-species,—the _Glyptolepis microlepidotus_,—were all squat, robust,
-strongly-built fishes, of the Dirk Hatterick or Balfour-of-Burley type;
-and not only in the larger specimens gigantic in their proportions, but
-remarkable for the strength and weight of their armor, even when of but
-moderate stature. The specimen of _Holoptychius nobilissimus_ in the
-British Museum could have measured little more than three feet from snout
-to tail when most entire; but it must have been nearly a foot in breadth,
-and a bullet would have rebounded flattened from its scales. And such
-was that ancient Cœlacanth family, of which the oldest of our Scotch
-Ganoids,—the _Asterolepis_ of Stromness,—formed one of the members, and
-which for untold ages has had no living representative.
-
-Let us now enter on our proposed inquiry regarding the cerebral
-development of the earlier vertebrata, and see whether we cannot
-ascertain after what manner the first true brains were lodged, and
-what those modifications were which their protecting box, the cranium,
-received in the subsequent periods. Independently of its own special
-interest, the inquiry will be found to have a direct bearing on our
-general subject.
-
-
-
-
-CEREBRAL DEVELOPMENT OF THE EARLIER VERTEBRATA. ITS APPARENT PRINCIPLE.
-
-
-It is held by a class of naturalists, some of them of the highest
-standing, that the skulls of the vertebrata consist, like the columns
-to which they are attached, of vertebral joints, composed each, in the
-more typical forms of head, as they are in the trunk, of five parts or
-elements,—the centrum or body, the two spinous processes which enclose
-the spinal cord, and the two ribs. These cranial vertebræ, four in
-number, correspond, it is said, to the four senses that have their seat
-in the head: there is the nasal vertebra, the centrum of which is the
-vomer, its spinal processes the nasal and ethmoid bones, and its ribs the
-_upper_ jaws; there is the ocular vertebra, the centrum of which is the
-anterior portion of the sphenoid bone, its spinal processes the frontals,
-and its ribs the _under_ jaws; there is the lingual vertebra, the centrum
-of which is the posterior sphenoid bone, its spinal processes the
-parietals, and its ribs the hyoid and branchial bones,—portions of the
-skeleton largely developed in fishes; and, lastly, there is the auditory
-vertebra, the centrum of which is the base of the occipital bone, and its
-spinal processes the occipital crest, and which in the osseous fishes
-bears attached to it, as its ribs, the bones of the scapular ring. And
-the cerebral segments thus constructed we find represented in typical
-diagrams of the skull, as real vertebræ. Professor Owen, in his lately
-published treatise on “The Nature of Limbs,”—work charged with valuable
-fact, and instinct with philosophy,—figures in his draught of the
-archetypal skeleton of the vertebrata, the four vertebræ of the head, in
-a form as unequivocally such as any of the vertebræ of the neck or body.
-
-Now, for certain purposes of generalization, I doubt not that the
-conception may have its value. There are in all nature and in all
-philosophy certain central ideas of general bearing, round which, at
-distances less or more remote, the subordinate and particular ideas
-arrange themselves,
-
- “Cycle and epicycle, orb in orb.”
-
-In the classifications of the naturalist, for instance, all _species_
-range round some central _generic_ idea; all genera round some central
-idea, to which we give the name of _order_; all orders round some central
-idea of _class_; all classes round some central idea of _division_;
-and all divisions round the interior central idea which constitutes
-a _kingdom_. Sir Joshua Reynolds forms his theory of beauty on this
-principle of central ideas. “Every species of the animal, as well as
-of the vegetable creation,” he remarks, “may be said to have a fixed
-or determinate form, towards which nature is continually inclining,
-like various lines terminating in a centre; or it may be compared to
-pendulums vibrating in different directions over one central point,
-which they all cross, though only one of their number passes through
-any other point.” He instances, in illustrating his theory, the Grecian
-_beau ideal_ of the human nose, as seen in the statues of the Greek
-deities. It formed a straight line; whereas all deformity of nose is of
-a convex or concave character, and occasioned by either a rising above
-or a sinking below this medial line of beauty. And it may be of use, as
-it is unquestionably of interest, to conceive, after this manner, of a
-certain type of skeleton, embodying, as it were, the central or primary
-type of all vertebral skeletons, and consisting of a double range of
-rings, united by the bodies of the vertebræ, as the two rings of a
-figure 8 are united at their point of junction; the upper ring forming
-the enclosure of the brain,—spinal, and cephalic; the lower that of
-the viscera,—respiratory, circulatory, and digestive. Such is the idea
-embodied in Professor Owen’s archetypal skeleton. It is a series of
-vertebræ composing double rings,—their _brain_-rings comparatively small
-in the vertebræ of the trunk, but of much greater size in the vertebræ
-of the head. But it must not be forgotten, that central ideas, however
-necessary to the classification of the naturalist, are not historic
-facts. We may safely hold, with the philosophic painter, that the outline
-of the typical human nose is a straight line; but it would be very
-unsafe to hold, as a consequence, that the first men had all straight
-noses. And when we find it urged by at least one eminent assertor of the
-development hypothesis,—Professor Oken,—that light was the main agent in
-developing the substance of nerve,—that the nerves, ranged in pairs, in
-turn developed the vertebræ, each vertebra being but “the periphery or
-envelope of a pair of nerves,”—and that the nerves of those four senses
-of smell, sight, taste, and hearing, which, according to the Professor,
-“make up the head,” originated the four cranial vertebræ which constitute
-the skull,—it becomes us to test the central idea, thus converted into a
-sort of historic myth, by the realities of actual history. What, then,
-let us inquire, is the real history of the cerebral development of the
-vertebrata, as recorded in the rocks of the earlier geologic periods?
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 7.
-
-_Osseous points of placoid cranium._[12]
-
-(Mag. twelve diameters)]
-
-Though the vertebrata existed in the ichthyic form throughout the vastly
-extended Silurian period, we find in that system no remains of the
-cranium: the Silurian fishes _seem_, as has been already said, (page
-53,) to have been exclusively Placoid, and the purely cartilaginous box
-formed by nature for the protection of the brain in this order has in
-no case been preserved. Teeth, and, in at least one or two instances,
-the minute jaws over which they were planted have been found, but no
-portion of the skull. We know, however, that in the fishes of the same
-order which now exist, the cranium consists of one undivided piece of a
-cartilaginous substance, set thickly over its outer surface with minute
-polygonal points of bone, (fig. 7,) composed internally of star-like
-rays, that radiate from the centre of ossification, and that present, in
-consequence, seen through a microscope, the appearance of the polygonal
-cells of a coral of the genus Astrea. The pattern induced is that of
-stars set within polygons. Along the sides or top of this unbroken
-cranial box, that exhibits no mark of suture, we find the perforations
-through which the nerves of smell, sight, taste, and hearing passed from
-the brain outwards, and see that they have failed to originate distinct
-vertebral envelopes for themselves;—they all lodge in one undivided
-mansion-house, and have merely separate doors. We find, further, that
-the homotypal _ribs_ of the entire cranium consist, not of four, but
-simply of a single pair, attached to the occiput, and which serves both
-to suspend the jaws, upper and nether, in their place under the middle of
-the head, and to lend support to the hyoid and branchial framework; while
-the scapular ring we find existing, as in the higher vertebrata, not as
-a cerebral, but as a cervical or dorsal appendage. In the wide range
-of the animal kingdom there are scarce any two pieces of organization
-that less resemble one another in form than the vertebræ of the placoids
-resemble their skulls; and the difference is not merely external, but
-extends to even their internal construction. In both skull and vertebræ
-we detect an union of bone and cartilage; but the bone of each vertebra
-forms an internal continuous nucleus, round which the cartilage is
-arranged, whereas in the skulls it is the cartilage that is internal, and
-the bone is spread in granular points over it. If we dip the body of one
-of the dorsal vertebræ of a herring into melted wax, and then withdraw
-it, we will find it to represent in its crusted state the vertebral
-centrum of a Placoid,—soft without, and osseous within; but in order
-to represent the placoid skull, we would have first to mould it out of
-one unbroken piece of wax, and then to cover it over with a priming of
-bone-dust. And such is the effect of this arrangement, that, while the
-skull of a Placoid, exposed to a red heat, falls into dust, from the
-circumstance that the supporting framework on which the granular bone
-was arranged perishes in the fire, the vertebral centrum, whose internal
-framework is itself bone, and so _not_ perishable, comes out in a state
-of beautiful entireness,—resembling in the thornback a squat sand-glass,
-elegantly fenced round by the lateral pillars, (fig. 8, _b_;) and in
-the dog-fish (_a_) a more elongated sand-glass, in which the lateral
-pillars are wanting. Such are the heads and vertebral joints of the
-existing Placoids; and such, reasoning from analogy, seem to have been
-the character and construction of the heads and vertebral joints of the
-Placoids of the Silurian period,—earliest-born of the Vertebrata.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 8.
-
-a. _Osseous centrum of Spinax Acanthias._
-
-b. _Osseous centrum of Raja clavata._
-
-(Nat. size.)]
-
-The most ancient brain-bearing craniums that have come down to us
-in the fossil state, are those of the Ganoids of the Lower Old Red
-Sandstone; and in these fishes the true skull appears to have been
-as entirely a simple cartilaginous box, as that of the Placoids of
-either the Silurian period or of the present time, or of those existing
-Ganoids, the sturgeons. In the Lower Old Red genera _Cheiracanthus_ and
-_Diplacanthus_, though the heads are frequently preserved as amorphous
-masses of colored matter, we detect no trace of internal bone, save
-perhaps in the gill-covers of the first-named genus, which were fringed
-by from eighteen to twenty minute osseous rays. The cranium seems to have
-been covered, as in the shark family, by skin, and the skin by minute
-shagreen-like scales; and all of the interior cerebral framework which
-appears underneath exists simply as faint impressions of an undivided
-body, covered by what seem to be osseous points,—the bony molecules,
-it is probable, which encrusted the cartilage. The jaws, in the better
-specimens, are also preserved in the same doubtful style, and this state
-of keeping is the common one in deposits in which every true bone,
-however delicate, presents an outline as sharp as when it occupied its
-place in the living animal. The dermal or skin-skeleton of both genera,
-which consisted, as has been shown (pages 55, 56) of shagreen-like
-osseous scales and slender spines, both brilliantly enamelled, is
-preserved entire; where as the interior framework of the head exists as
-mere point speckled impressions; and the inference appears unavoidable
-that parts which so invariably differ in their state of keeping now, must
-have essentially differed in their substance originally.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 9.
-
-a. _Portion of caudal fin of Cheiracanthus._[13]
-
-b. _Portion of caudal fin of Cheirolepis Cummingiæ._
-
-(Mag. three diameters.)]
-
-Now, in the _Cheiracanthus_ we detect the first faint indications of
-a peculiar arrangement of the dermal skeleton, in relation to certain
-parts of the skeleton within, which—greatly more developed in some of its
-contemporaries—led to important results in the general structure of these
-Ganoids, and furnishes the true key to the character of the early ganoid
-head. In such of the existing Placoids as I have had an opportunity of
-examining, the only portions of the dermal skeleton of bone which conform
-in their arrangement to portions of the interior skeleton of cartilage,
-are the teeth, which are always laid on a base of skin right over the
-jaws: there is also an approximation to arrangement of a corresponding
-kind, though a distant one, in those hook-armed tubercles of certain
-species of rays which run along the vertebral column; but in the shagreen
-by which the creatures are covered I have been able to detect no such
-arrangement. Whether it occurs on the fins, the body, or the head, or in
-the scale form, or in that of the prickle, it manifests the same careless
-irregularity. And on the head and body of the _Cheiracanthus_, and on
-all its fins save one, the shagreen-like scales, though laid down more
-symmetrically in lines than true shagreen, manifested an equal absence
-of arrangement in relation to the framework within. On that one fin,
-however;—the caudal,—the scales, passing from their ordinary rhomboidal
-to a more rectangular form, ranged themselves in right lines over the
-internal rays, (fig. 9, _a_,) and imparted to these such strength as a
-splint of wood or whalebone fastened over a fractured toe or finger
-imparts to the injured digit,—a provision which was probably rendered
-necessary in the case of this important organ of motion, from the
-circumstance that it was the only fin which the creature possessed that
-was not strengthened and protected anteriorly by a strong spine. In the
-_Cheirolepis_,—a contemporary fish, characterized, like its cogeners the
-_Cheiracanthus_ and _Diplacanthus_, by shagreen-like scales, but in which
-the spines were wanting,—we find a farther development of the provision.
-In all the fins the richly-enamelled dermal-covering was arranged in
-lines over the rays, (fig. 9, _b_;) and the scale, which assumes in the
-fins, like the scales on the tail of the _Cheiracanthus_, though somewhat
-more irregularly, a rectangular shape, is so considerably elongated,
-that it assumes for its normal character as a scale, that of the joint
-of an external ray. A similar arrangement of external protection takes
-place in this genus over the bones of the head; the cartilaginous jaws
-receive their osseous dermal covering, and, with these, the hyoid bones,
-the opercules, and the cranium. And it is in these dermal plates,
-which covered an interior skull, of which, save in one genus,—the
-_Dipterus_,—not a vestige remains in any of the Old Red fishes thus
-protected, that we first trace what seem to be the homologues of the
-cranial bones of the osseous fishes,—at least their homologues so far as
-the _cuticular_ can represent the _internal_. They appear for the first
-time, not as modified spinous processes, broadened, as in the carapace
-of the Chelonians, into _osseous_ plates, but like those _corneous_
-external plates of this order of reptiles, (known in one species as the
-tortoise-shell of commerce,) the origin of which is purely cuticular,
-and which evince so little correspondence in their divisions with the
-sutures of the bones on which they rest, that they have been instanced,
-in their relation to the joinings beneath, as admirable illustrations of
-the _cross-banding_ of the mechanician.
-
-In the heads of the osseous fishes, the cranium proper, though
-consisting, like the skulls of birds, reptiles, and mammals, of several
-bones, exists from snout to nape, and from mastoid to mastoid, as
-one unbroken box; whereas all the other bones of the head, such as
-the maxillaries and intermaxillaries, the lower jaws, the opercular
-appendages, the branchial arches, and the branchiostegous rays,
-are connected but by muscle and ligament, and fall apart under the
-putrefactive influences, or in the process of boiling. This unbroken box,
-which consists, in the cod, of twenty-five bones, is the _homologue_ of
-that cranial box of the Placoids which consists of one entire piece, and
-the _homotype_, according to Oken, of the bodies and spinal processes of
-four vertebræ; while the looser bones which drop away represent their
-_ribs_. The upper surface of the box,—that extending from the nasal
-bone to the nape,—is the only part over which a dermal buckler could
-be laid, as it is the only part with which the external skin comes in
-contact; and so it is between this upper surface and the cranial bucklers
-of the earlier Ganoids that we have to institute comparisons. For it
-is a curious fact, that, with the exception of the Old Red genera
-_Acanthodus_, _Cheiracanthus_, and _Diplacanthus_,[14] all the Ganoids of
-the period in which Ganoids first appear _have_ dermal bucklers placed
-right over their true skulls, and that these, though as united in their
-parts as the bones proper to the cranium in quadrupeds and fishes, are
-composed of several pieces, furnished each with its independent centre
-of ossification. The Dipterians, the Cœlacanths, the Cephalaspians, and
-at least one genus placed rather doubtfully among the Acanths,—the genus
-_Cheirolepis_,—all possessed cranial bucklers extending from the nape to
-the snout, in which the plates, various, in the several genera, in form
-and position, were fast _soldered_ together, though in every instance the
-lines of suture were distinctly marked.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 10.
-
-UPPER SURFACE OF CRANIUM OF COD.[15]
-
-A, _Occipital bone_. B, B, _Parietals_. C, C, C, _Superior frontal_. D,
-D, _Anterior frontal_. I, _Nasal bone_. F, F, _Posterior frontals_. E, E,
-_Mastoid bones_. 2, 2, _Eye orbits_. a, a, _Par-occipital bones_.]
-
-On each side of this external cranium the various cerebral plates, like
-the corresponding cerebral _ribs_ in the osseous fishes, were free, at
-least not anchylosed together; and some of their number unequivocally
-performed, in part at least, the functions of two of these cerebral
-ribs, viz. the upper and under jaws, with the functions of the opercular
-appendages attached to the latter. In the cod, as in most other osseous
-fishes, the upper portion of the cranium consists of thirteen bones,
-which represent, however, only seven bones in the human skull,—the nasal,
-the frontal, the two parietal, the occipital, and one-half the two
-temporal bones. And whereas in man, and in most of the mammals, there are
-four of these placed in the medial line,—the four which, according to the
-assertors of the vertebral theory, form the spinal crests of the four
-cerebral vertebræ,—in the cod there are but three. The super-occipital
-bone, A, (fig. 10,) pieces on to the superior frontal, C, C, C; and the
-parietals, B, B, which in the human subject from the upper and middle
-portions of the cranial vault, are thrust out laterally and posteriorly,
-and take their places, in a subordinate capacity, on each side of the
-super-occipital. This is not an invariable arrangement among fishes;—in
-the carp genus, for instance, the parietals assume their proper medial
-place between the occipital and frontal bones; but so very general is
-the displacement, that Professor Owen regards it as characteristic of
-the great ichthyic class, and as the first example in the vertebrata,
-reckoning from the lower forms upwards, of a sort of natural dislocation
-among the bones,—“a modification,” he remarks, “which, sometimes
-accompanied by great change of place, has tended most to obscure the
-essential nature of parts, and their true relations to the archetype.”
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 11.
-
-CRANIAL BUCKLER OF COCCOSTEUS DECIPIENS.
-
-a, a, _Points of attachment to the cuirass which covered the upper part
-of the creature’s body_.]
-
-Of all the cerebral bucklers of the first ganoid period, that which
-best bears comparison with the cranial front of the cod is the buckler
-of the _Coccosteus_, (fig. 11.) The general proportions of this portion
-of the ancient Cephalaspian head differ very considerably from those of
-the corresponding part in the modern cycloid one; but in their larger
-divisions, the modern and the ancient answer bone to bone. Three osseous
-plates in the _Coccosteus_, A, C, I, the homologues, apparently, of the
-occipital, frontal, and nasal bones, range along the medial line. The
-apparent homologues of the parietals, B, B, occupy the same position
-of lateral displacement as the parietals of the cod and of so many
-other fishes. The posterior frontals, F, and the anterior frontals,
-D, also occupy places relatively the same, though the latter, which
-are of greater proportional size, encroach much further, laterally and
-posteriorly, on the superior frontal C, C, C, and sweep entirely round
-the upper half of the eye orbits, 2, 2. The apparent homologue of the
-mastoid bone, E, which also occupies its proper place, joins posteriorly
-to a little plate, a, imperfectly separated in most specimens from the
-parietal, but which seems to represent the par-occipital bone; and it is
-a curious circumstance, that as, in many of the osseous fishes, it is to
-these bones that the forks of the scapular arch are attached, they unite
-in the _Coccosteus_ in furnishing, in like manner, a point of attachment
-to the cuirass which covered the upper part of the creature’s body. Of
-the true internal skull of the _Coccosteus_ there remains not a vestige
-Like that of the sturgeon, it must have been a perishable cartilaginous
-box.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 12.
-
-CRANIAL BUCKLER OF OSTEOLEPIS.]
-
-In the _Osteolepis_,—an animal the whole of whose external head I have,
-at an expense of some labor, and from the examination of many specimens,
-been enabled to restore,—the cranial buckler (fig. 12) was divided in a
-more arbitrary style; and we find that an element of uncertainty mingles
-with our inferences regarding it, from the circumstance that some of its
-lines of division, especially in the frontal half, were not real sutures,
-but formed merely a kind of surface-tatooing, resorted to as if for
-purposes of ornament. The cranial buckler of the _Asterolepis_ exhibited,
-as I shall afterwards have occasion to show, a similar peculiarity;—both
-had their pseudo-sutures, resembling those false joints introduced by the
-architect into his rusticated basements, in order to impart the necessary
-aspect of regularity to what is technically termed the coursing and
-banding of the fabric. We can however, determine, notwithstanding the
-induced obscurity that the buckler of the _Osteolepis_ was divided
-transversely in the middle into two main parts or segments,—an occipital
-part, C, and a frontal part, A; and that the occipital segment _seems_
-to include also the parietal and mastoid plates, and the frontal segment
-to comprise, with its own proper plates, not only the nasal plate, but
-also the representative of the anterior part of the vomer. All, however,
-is obscure. But in our uncertainty regarding the homologies of the
-divisions of this dermal buckler, let us not forget the homology of the
-buckler itself, as a whole, with the upper surface of the true cranium
-in the osseous fishes. Though frequently crushed and broken, it exists
-in all the finer specimens of my collection as a symmetrically arranged
-collocation of enamelled plates, as firmly united into one piece,
-though they all indicate their distinct centres of ossification, as the
-corresponding surface of the cranium in the carp or cod. The lateral
-curves in the frontal part immediately opposite the lozenge-shaped plate
-in the centre, show the position of the eyes, which were placed in this
-genus, as in some of the carnivorous turtles, immediately over the
-mouth,—an arrangement common to almost all the Ganoids of the Lower Old
-Red Sandstone. The nearly semicircular termination of the buckler formed
-the creature’s snout; and in the _Osteolepis_, as in the _Glyptolepis_
-and the _Diplopterus_, it was armed on the under side, like the vomer of
-so many of the osseous fishes, with sharp teeth. Some of my specimens
-indicate the nasal openings a little in advance of the eyes. The nape of
-the creature was covered by three detached plates, (9, 9, 9, fig. 13,)
-which rested upon anterior dorsal scales, and whose homologies, in the
-osseous fishes, may possibly be found in those bones which, uniting
-the shoulder-bones to the head, complete the scapular belt or ring. The
-operculum we find represented by a single plate (8) which had attached to
-it, as its sub-operculum, a plate (13) of nearly equal size, (see figs.
-14 and 15.) Four small plates (2, 4, 5) formed the under curve of the
-eyes, described in many of the osseous fishes by a chain of small bones
-or ossicles; a considerably larger plate (6) occupied the place of the
-preopercular bone; while the intermaxillaries had their representatives
-in well-marked plates, (3, 3,) which, in the genera _Osteolepis_,
-_Diplopterus_, and _Glyptolepis_, we find bristling so thickly with
-teeth along their lower edges, as to remind us of the miniature saws
-employed by the joiner in cutting out circular holes. These external
-intermaxillaries did not, as in the perch or cod, meet in front of the
-nasal bone and vomer, but joined on at the side, a little in advance of
-the eyes, leaving the rounded termination of the cranial buckler, which,
-like the intermaxillaries, was thickly fringed with teeth, to form, as
-has been already said, the creature’s snout.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 13.
-
-UPPER PART OF HEAD OF OSTEOLEPIS.]
-
-The under jaws (10)—strongly-marked bones in at least all the Dipterian
-and Cœlacanth genera—we find represented externally by massy plates,
-bearing, like those of the upper jaw, their range of teeth. As shown
-in a well-preserved specimen of the lower jaw of _Holoptychius_, in
-my possession, they were boxes of bone enclosing a bulky nucleus of
-cartilage, which, in approaching towards the condyloid process, where
-great strength was necessary, was thickly traversed by osseous cancelli,
-and passed at the joint into true bone. It is in the under jaws of the
-earlier Ganoids that we first detect a true union of the external with
-the internal skeleton,—of the bony plates and teeth, which were _mere
-plates and teeth of the skin_, with the osseous, granular walls which
-enclosed at least all the larger pieces of the cartilaginous framework
-of the interior. The jaws of the Rays and Sharks, formed of cartilage,
-and fenced round on their sides and edges by their thin coverings of
-polygonal, bony points, are wholly internal and skin-covered; whereas
-the teeth, which rest on the soft cuticular integument right over them,
-are as purely dermal as the surrounding shagreen. Teeth and shagreen
-may, we find, be alike stripped off with the skin. Now, in the earlier
-ganoidal jaw, two sides of the osseous box which it composed,—its outer
-and under sides,—were mere dermal plates, representative of the skin
-of the placoids, or of their shagreen; while the other two,—its upper
-and inner sides,—seem to have been developments of the interior osseous
-walls which covered the endo-skeletal cartilage. Nor is it unworthy of
-notice, that the reptile fishes of the period had their _ichthyic_ teeth
-ranged along the edge of an exterior _dermal_ plate which covered the
-outer side of the jaw; whereas their _reptile_ teeth were planted on
-a plate, apparently of interior development, which covered its upper
-edge. It is further worthy of remark, that while the teeth of the dermal
-plate,—themselves also dermal,—seem as if they had grown out of it, and
-formed part of it,—just as the teeth of the Placoids grew out of the
-skin on which they rest,—the _reptile_ teeth within rested in shallow
-pits,—the first faint indications of true sockets.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 14.
-
-UNDER PART OF HEAD OF OSTEOLEPIS.[16]]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 15.
-
-HEAD OF OSTEOLEPIS, SEEN IN PROFILE.]
-
-That space included within the arch formed by the sweep of the under
-jaws, which we find occupied in the osseous fishes by the hyoid bones and
-the branchiostegous rays, was filled up externally, in the Dipterians
-and Cœlacanths, and in at least two genera of Cephalaspians, by dermal
-plates; in some genera, such as the _Diplopterus_, by three plates; in
-others, such as the _Holoptychius_ and _Glyptolepis_, by two; and in
-the _Asterolepis_, as we shall afterwards see, by but a single plate.
-In the _Osteolepis_ these plates were increased to five in number, by
-the little plates 14, 14, (fig. 14,) which, however, may have been also
-present in the _Diplopterus_, though my specimens fail to show them. The
-general arrangement was of much elegance,—an elegance, however, which,
-in the accompanying restorations, the dislocation of the free plates,
-drawn apart to indicate their detached character, somewhat tends to
-obscure. But the position of the eyes must have imparted to the animal
-a sinister reptile-like aspect. The profile, (fig. 15,) the result, not
-of a chance-drawn outline, arbitrarily filled up, but produced by the
-careful arrangement in their proper places of actually existing plates,
-serves to show how perfectly the dermo-skeletal parts of the creature
-were developed. Some of the animals with which we are best acquainted, if
-represented by but their cuticular skeleton, would appear simply as sets
-of hoofs and horns. Even the tortoise or pengolin would present about the
-head and limbs their gaps and missing portions; but the dermo-skeleton
-of the _Osteolepis_, composed of solid bone, and burnished with enamel,
-exhibited the outline of the fish entire, and, with the exception of
-the eye, the filling up of all its external parts. Presenting outside,
-in its original state, no fragment of skin or membrane, and with even
-its most flexible organs sheathed in enamelled bone, the _Osteolepis_
-must have very much resembled a fish carved in ivory; and, though so
-effectually covered, it would have appeared, from the circumstance, that
-it wore almost all its bone outside, as naked as the human teeth.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 16.
-
-CRANIAL BUCKLER OF DIPLOPTERUS.]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 17.
-
-CRANIAL BUCKLER OF DIPLOPTERUS.]
-
-The cranial buckler of the _Diplopterus_ (fig. 16) somewhat resembled
-that of its fellow-dipterian the _Osteolepis_, but exhibited greater
-elegance of outline. My first perfect specimen, which I owe to the
-kindness of Mr. John Miller, of Thurso, an intelligent geologist of the
-north, reminded me, as it glittered in jet-black enamel on its ground
-of pale gray, of those Roman cuirasses which one sees in old prints,
-impaled on stakes, as the central objects in warlike trophies formed
-of spoils taken in battle. The rounded snout represented the chest and
-shoulders, the middle portion the waist, and the expansion at the nape
-the piece of dress attached, which, like the Highland kilt, fell adown
-the thighs. The addition of a fragment of a sleeve, suspended a little
-over the eye orbits, 2, 2, seemed all that was necessary in order to
-render the resemblance complete. But as I disinterred the buried edges of
-the specimen with a graver, the form, though it grew still more elegant,
-became less that of the ancient coat of armor; the snout expanded into
-a semicircle; the eye orbits gradually deepened; and the entire fossil
-became not particularly like any thing but the thing it once was,—the
-cranial buckler of the _Diplopterus_. The print (fig. 17) exhibits its
-true form. It consists of two main divisions, occipital (A) and frontal,
-(C, fig. 16;) and in each of these we find a pair of smaller divisions,
-with what seem to be indications of yet further division, marked, not by
-lines, but by dots; though I have hitherto failed to determine whether
-the plates which these last indicate possess their independent centres of
-ossification. Not unfrequently, however, has the comparative anatomist
-to seek the analogues of two bones in one; nor is it at least _more_
-difficult to trace in the faint divisions of the cranial buckler of the
-_Diplopterus_, the homologues of the occipital, frontal, parietal,
-mastoid, and nasal bones, than to recognize the representatives of the
-carpals of the middle and ring finger in man, in the cannon bone of the
-fore leg of the ox. I may mention in passing, that the little central
-plate of the frontal division, (1, fig. 16,) which so nearly corresponds
-with that of the _Osteolepis_, occurred, though with considerable
-variations of form and homology, and some slight difference of position,
-in all the Ganoids of the Old Red Sandstone whose craniums were covered
-with an osseous buckler, and that its place was always either immediately
-between the eyes or a very little over them. Its never-failing recurrence
-shows that it must have had _some_ meaning, though it may be difficult
-to say what. In the _Coccosteus_ it takes the form of the male dovetail,
-which united the nasal plate or snout to the plate representative
-of the superior frontal. Of the cartilaginous box which formed the
-interior skull of either _Osteolepis_, or _Diplopterus_, or, with but
-one exception, of the interior skulls of any of their contemporaries, no
-trace, as I have said, has yet been detected. The solitary exception in
-the case is, however, one of singular interest.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 18.
-
-a. _Palatal dart-head._
-
-b. _Group of palatal teeth._]
-
-In a collection of miscellaneous fragments sent me by Mr. Dick from the
-rocks of Thurso, I detected patches of palatal teeth ranged in nearly the
-quadratures of circles, and which radiated outwards from the rectangular
-angle or centre, (fig. 18, _b_.) And with the patches there occurred
-plates exactly resembling the barbed head of a dart, (_a_,) with which
-I had been previously acquainted, though I had failed to determine their
-character or place. The excellent state of keeping of some of Mr. Dick’s
-specimens now enabled me to trace the patches with the dart-head, and
-several other plates, to a curious piece of palatal mechanism, ranged
-along the base of a ganoid cranium, covered externally by a brightly
-enamelled buckler, and to ascertain the order in which patches and plates
-occurred. And then, though not without some labor, I succeeded in tracing
-the buckler with which they were associated to the _Dipterus_,—a fish
-which, though it has engaged the attention of both Cuvier and Agassiz,
-has not yet been adequately restored. It is on an ill-preserved Orkney
-specimen of the cranial buckler of this Ganoid that the ichthyologist has
-founded his genus _Polyphractus_; while groupes of its palatal teeth from
-the Old Red of Russia he refers to a supposed Placoid,—the _Ctenodus_.
-But in the earlier stages of palæontological research, mistakes of this
-character are wholly unavoidable. The palæontologist who did avoid them
-would be either very unobservant, or at once very rash and very fortunate
-in his guesses. If, ere an entire skeleton of the _Ichthyosaurus_
-had turned up, there had been found in different localities, in the
-Liasic formation, a beak like that of a porpoise, teeth like that of
-a crocodile, a head and sternum like that of a lizard, paddles like
-those of a cetacean, and vertebræ like those of a fish, it would have
-been greatly more judicious, and more in accordance with the existing
-analogies, to have erected, provisionally at least, places specifically,
-or even generically separated, in which to range the separate pieces,
-than to hold that they had all united in one anomalous genus; though such
-was actually the fact. And Agassiz, in erecting three distinct genera
-out of the fragments of a single genus, has in reality acted at once
-more prudently and more intelligently than if he had avoided the error
-by rashly uniting parts which in their separate state indicate no tie of
-connection.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 19.
-
-CRANIAL BUCKLER OF DIPTERUS.]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 20.
-
-BASE OF CRANIUM OF DIPTERUS.]
-
-The cranial buckler of the _Dipterus_ (fig. 19) was, like that of the
-_Diplopterus_, of great beauty. In some of the finer specimens, we find
-the enamel ornately tatooed, within the more strongly-marked divisions,
-by delicately traced lines, waved and bent, as if upon the principle
-of Hogarth; and though the lateral plates are numerous and small, and
-defy the homologies, we may trace in those of the central line, from the
-snout to the nape, what seem to be the representatives of the frontal,
-parietal, and occipital bones,—the parietals ranging, as in the skull
-of the carp and in that of most of the mammals, in their proper place
-in the medial line. But the under surface of the cranium, armed, as on
-the upper surface, with plates of bone, exhibited an arrangement still
-more peculiar, (fig. 20.) Its rectangular patches of palatal teeth, its
-curious dart-like bone, placed immediately behind these, and attached,
-as the dart-head is attached to the handle, to a broad lozenge-shaped
-plate, with two strong osseous processes projecting on either side, forms
-such a _tout ensemble_ as is unique among fishes. Even here, however,
-there may be traced at least a shade of homological resemblance to the
-bones which form the base of the osseous skull. The single lozenge-shaped
-plate, (A,) with its dart-head, occupies the place of the basi-occipital
-bone; the posterior portion of the vomer seems represented by a strong
-bony ridge, extending towards the snout; two separate bones, each bearing
-one of the angular patches of teeth, corresponds to the sphenoid bone
-and its alæ; and attached laterally to each of these there is the strong
-projecting bone, on which the lower jaw appears to have hinged, and
-which apparently represents the lower part of the temporal bone. Not less
-singular was the form of the creature’s under jaw, (fig. 21.) I know no
-other fish-jaw, whether of the recent or the extinct races, that might
-be so readily mistaken for that of a quadruped. It exhibits not only the
-condyloid, but also the coronoid processes; and, save that it broadens
-on its upper edges, where in mammals the grinders are placed, so as to
-furnish field enough for angular patches of teeth, which correspond with
-the angular patches in the palate, it might be regarded, found detached,
-as at least a reptilian, if not mammalian, bone. The disposition of
-the palatal teeth of the _Dipterus_ will scarce fail to remind the
-mechanist of the style of grooving resorted to in the formation of
-mill-stones for the grinding of flour; nor is it wholly improbable that,
-in correspondence with the rotatory motion of the stones to which the
-grooving is specially adapted, jaws so hinged may have possessed some
-such power of lateral motion as that exemplified by the human subject in
-the use of the molar teeth.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 21.
-
-UNDER JAW OF DIPTERUS.]
-
-The protection afforded by the osseous covering of both the upper and
-under surface of the cranium of this ichthyolite has resulted, in
-several instances, in the preservation, though always in a greatly
-compressed state, of the cranium itself, and the consequent exhibition
-of two very important cranial cavities, the brain-pan proper, and the
-passage through which the spinal cord passed into the brain. In the
-sturgeon the brain occupies nearly the middle of the head; and there
-is a considerable part of the occipital region traversed by the spine
-in a curved channel, which, seen in profile, appears wide at the nape,
-but considerably narrower where it enters the brain-pan, and altogether
-very much resembling the interior of a miniature hunting-horn. And such
-exactly was the arrangement of the greater cavities in the head of the
-_Dipterus_. The portion of the cranium which was overlaid by what may be
-regarded as the occipital plate was traversed by a cavity shaped like a
-Lilliputian bugle-horn; while the hollow in which the brain was lodged
-lay under the two parietal plates, and the little elliptical plate in
-the centre. The accompanying print, (fig. 22,) though of but slight
-show, may be regarded by the reader with some little interest, as a not
-inadequate representation of the most ancient brain-pan on which human
-eye has yet looked,—as, in short, the type of cell in which, myriads of
-ages ago, in at least one genus, that mysterious substance was lodged, on
-whose place and development so very much in the scheme of creation was
-destined to depend. The specimen from which the figure is taken was laid
-open laterally by chance exposure to the waves on the shores of Thurso,
-another specimen, cut longitudinally by the saw of the lapidary, yields a
-similar section, but greatly more compressed in the cavities; on which,
-of course, as unsupported hollows, the compression to which the entire
-cranium had been exposed chiefly acted. When the top and bottom of a
-box are violently forced together, it is the empty space which the box
-encloses that is annihilated in consequence of the violence.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 22.
-
-LONGITUDINAL SECTION OF HEAD OF DIPTERUS]
-
-It is deserving of notice, that the analogies of the cranial cavities
-in this ancient Ganoid should point so directly on the cranial cavities
-of that special Ganoid of the present time which unites a true skull of
-cartilage to a dermal skull of osseous plates,—a circumstance strongly
-corroborative of the general evidence, negative and positive, on which
-I have concluded that the true skulls of the first Ganoids were also
-cartilaginous. It is further worthy of observation, that in all the
-sections of the cranium of _Dipterus_ which I have yet examined, the
-internal line is continuous, as in the Placoids, from nape to snout,
-and that the true skull presents no trace of those cerebral vertebræ of
-which skulls are regarded by Oken and his disciples as developments.
-Historically at least, the progress of the ichthyic head seems to have
-been a progress from simple cartilaginous boxes to cartilaginous boxes
-covered with osseous plates, that performed the functions whether active
-or passive, of internal bones; and then from external plates to the
-interior bones which the plates had previously represented, and whose
-proper work they had done.
-
-The principle which rendered it necessary that the divisions which exist
-in the dermal skulls of the first Ganoids should so closely correspond
-with the divisions which exist in the internal skulls of the osseous
-fishes of a greatly later period, does not seem to lie far from the
-surface. Of the solid parts of the ichthyic head, a certain set of
-pieces afford protection to the brain and cerebral nerves, and to some
-of the organs of the senses, such as those of seeing and hearing; while
-another certain set of pieces constitute the framework through which an
-important class of functions, manducatory and respiratory, are performed.
-The protective bones of merely passive function are fixed, whereas the
-bones of active function, such as the jaws, the osseous framework of the
-opercules, and the hyoid bones, are to the necessary extent free, _i.
-e._ capable of independent motion. Of course, the detached character
-necessary to the free cerebral bones would be equally necessary in
-cerebral plates united dermally to the pieces of the cartilaginous
-framework, which performed in the ancient fish the functions of these
-free bones. And hence jaw plates, opercular plates, and hyoid plates,
-whose homological relation with recent jaws and opercular and hyoid
-bones cannot be mistaken. They were operative in performing identical
-mechanical functions, and had to exist, in consequence, in identical
-mechanical conditions. And an equally simple, though somewhat different
-principle, seems to have regulated the divisions of the fixed cranial
-bucklers of the Old Red Ganoids, and to have determined their homologies
-with the fixed cerebral bones of the osseous fishes.
-
-These cranial bucklers, extending from nape to snout, protected the
-exposed upper surface of the cartilaginous skull, and conformed to it in
-shape, as a helmet conforms to the shape of the head, or a breast-plate
-to the shape of the chest. And as the cartilaginous heads resembled in
-general outline the osseous ones, the buckler which covered their upper
-surface resembled in general outline the upper surface of the osseous
-skull. It was in no case entirely a flat plate; but in every species
-rounded over the snout and in most species at the sides; and so, in
-order that its characteristic proportions might be preserved throughout
-the various stages of growth in the head which it covered, it had to be
-formed from several distinct centres of ossification, and to extend in
-area around the edges of the plates originated from these. The workman
-finds no difficulty in adding to the size of a piece of straight wall,
-whether by heightening or lengthening it; but he cannot add to the size
-of a dome or arch, without first taking it down, and then erecting it
-anew on a larger scale. In the domes and arches of the animal kingdom,
-the problem is solved by building them up of distinct pieces, few or
-many, according to the demands of the figure which they compose, and
-rendering these pieces capable of increase along their edges. It is on
-this principle that the Cystidea, the Echinidæ, the Chelonian carapace
-and plastron, and the skulls of the osseous Vertebrata, are constructed.
-It is also the principle on which the cranial bucklers of the ancient
-Ganoids were formed.[17] And from the general resemblance in figure of
-these bucklers to the upper surface of the osseous skull, the separate
-parts necessary for the building up of the one were anticipated, by many
-ages, in the building up of the other; just as we find external arches
-of stone which were erected two thousand years ago, constructed on the
-same principle, and relatively of the same parts, as internal arches of
-brick built in the present age. Doubtless, however, with this mechanical
-necessity for correspondence of parts in the formation of corresponding
-erections, there may have mingled that regard for typical resemblance
-which seems so marked a characteristic of the _style_, if I may so
-express myself, in which the Divine Architect gives expression to his
-ideas. The external osseous buckler He divided after the general pattern
-which was to be exemplified, in latter times, in the divisions of the
-internal osseous skull; as if in illustration of that “ideal exemplar”
-which dwelt in his mind from eternity, and on the palpable existence
-of which sober science has based deductions identical in their scope
-and bearing with some of the sublimest doctrines of the theologian.
-“The recognition,” says Professor Owen, “of an ideal exemplar for the
-vertebrated animals, proves that the knowledge of such a being as man
-existed before man appeared; for the Divine mind which planned the
-archetype also foreknew all its modifications. The archetypal idea was
-manifested in the flesh, under divers such modifications, upon this
-planet, long prior to the existence of those animal species that actually
-exemplify it.”
-
-But while we find place in that geological history in which every
-character is an organism, for the “ideal exemplar” of Professor Owen,
-we find _no_ place in it for the vertebræ-developed skull of Professor
-Oken. The true genealogy of the head runs in an entirely different line.
-The nerves of the cerebral senses did not, we find, originate cerebral
-vertebræ, seeing that the heads of the first and second geologic periods
-had their cerebral nerves, but _not_ their cerebral vertebræ; and that
-what are regarded as cerebral-vertebræ appear for the first time, not in
-the early fishes, but in the reptiles of the Coal formation. The line of
-succession through the fish, indicated by the Continental assertor of
-the development hypothesis, is a line cut off. All the existing evidence
-conspires to show that the placoid heads of the Silurian system were,
-like the placoid heads of the recent period, mere cartilaginous boxes;
-and that in the succeeding system there existed ganoidal heads, that
-to the internal cartilaginous box added external plates of bone, the
-homologues, apparently,—so far at least as the merely cuticular could
-be representative of the endo-skeletal,—of the opercular, maxillary,
-frontal, and occipital bones in the osseous fishes of a long posterior
-period,—fishes that were not ushered upon the scene until after the
-appearance of the reptile in its highest forms and of even the marsupial
-quadruped.
-
-
-
-
-THE ASTEROLEPIS, ITS STRUCTURE, BULK, AND ASPECT.
-
-
-With the reader, if he has accompanied me thus far, I shall now pass
-on to the consideration of the remains of the _Asterolepis_. Our
-preliminary acquaintance with the cerebral peculiarities of a few of
-its less gigantic contemporaries will be found of use in enabling us to
-determine regarding a class of somewhat resembling peculiarities which
-characterized this hugest Ganoid of the Old Red Sandstone.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 24.
-
-_Dermal tubercles of Asterolepis_
-
-(Mag. two diameters.)]
-
-The head of the _Asterolepis_, like the heads of all the other
-Cœlacanths, and of all the Dipterians, was covered with osseous
-plates,—its body with osseous scales; and, as I have already had occasion
-to mention, it is from the star-like tubercles by which the cerebral
-plates were fretted that M. Eichwald bestowed on the creature its
-generic name. Agassiz has even erected species on certain varieties in
-the pattern of the stars, as exhibited on detached fragments; but I am
-far from being satisfied that we are to seek in their peculiarities of
-style the characters by which the several species were distinguished.
-The stellar form of the tubercle seems to have been its normal or most
-perfect form as it was also, with certain modifications, that of the
-tubercle of the _Coccosteus_ and _Pterichthys_; but its development as
-a complete star was comparatively rare: in most cases the tubercles
-existed without the rays,—frequently in the insulated pap-like shape,
-but not rarely confluent, or of an elongated or bent form; and when to
-these the characteristic rays were added, the stars produced were of a
-rather eccentric order,—stars somewhat resembling the shadows of stars
-seen in water. Individual specimens have already been found, on which, if
-we recognize the form of the tubercle as a specific character, several
-species might be erected. The accompanying wood-cut (fig. 24) represents,
-from a Thurso specimen, what seems to be the true normal pattern of
-these cerebral carvings. Seen in profile (_b_) the tubercles resemble
-little hillocks, perforated at their base by single lines of thickly-set
-caves; while seen from above, (_a_,) the narrow piers of bone by which
-the caves are divided take the form of rays. The reader will scarce fail
-to recognise in this print the coral _Monticularia_ of Lamarck, or to
-detect, in at least the profile, the peculiarity which suggested the name.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 25.
-
-SCALES OF ASTEROLEPIS.
-
-(Nat. size.)
-
-a. _Inner surface of scale._
-
-b. _Exterior surface._]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 26.
-
-PORTION OF CARVED SURFACE OF SCALE.
-
-(Mag. four diameters.)]
-
-The scales which covered the creature’s body (fig. 25) were, in
-proportion to its size, considerably smaller and thinner than those
-of the _Holoptychius_, which, however, they greatly resemble in their
-general style of sculpture. Each, on the lower part of its exposed
-field, was, we see, fretted by longitudinal anastomosing ridges, which,
-in the upper part, break into detached angular tubercles, placed with
-the apex downwards, and hollowed, leaf-like, in the centre; while that
-covered portion which was overlaid by the scales immediately above we
-find thickly pitted by microscopic hollows, that give to this part of the
-field, viewed under a tolerably high magnifying power, a honeycombed
-appearance. The central and lower parts of the interior surface of the
-scale (_a_) are in most of the specimens irregularly roughened; while a
-broad, smooth band, which runs along the top and sides, and seems to have
-furnished the line of attachment to the creature’s body, is comparatively
-smooth. The exterior carvings, though they demand the assistance of
-the lens to see them aright, are of singular elegance and beauty; as
-perhaps the accompanying wood-cut, (fig. 26,) which gives a magnified
-view of a portion of the scale immediately above (_b_) from the middle
-of the honeycombed field on the right side, to where the anastomosing
-ridges bend gracefully in their descent, may in some degree serve to
-show. I have seen a richly inlaid coat of mail, which was once worn by
-the puissant Charles the Fifth; but its elaborate carvings, though they
-belonged to the age of Benvenuto Cellini, were rude and unfinished,
-compared with those which fretted the armor of the _Asterolepis_.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 27.
-
-CRANIAL BUCKLER OF ASTEROLEPIS.
-
-(One fifth nat. size, linear.)]
-
-The creature’s cranial buckler, which was of great size and strength,
-might well be mistaken for the carapace of some Chelonian fish of no
-inconsiderable bulk. The cranial bucklers of the larger Dipterians
-were ample enough to have covered the corresponding part in the skulls
-of our middle-sized market-fish, such as the haddock and whiting; the
-buckler of a _Coccosteus_ of the extreme size would have covered, if
-a little altered in shape, the upper surface of the skull of a cod,
-but the cranial buckler of _Asterolepis_, from which the accompanying
-wood-cut was taken, (fig. 27,) would have considerably more than covered
-the corresponding part in the skull of a large horse; and I have at
-least one specimen in my collection which would have fully covered
-the front skull of an elephant. In the smaller specimens, the buckler
-somewhat resembles a laborer’s shovel divested of its handle, and sorely
-rust-eaten along its lower or cutting edge. It consisted of plates,
-connected at the edges by flat squamous sutures, or, as a joiner might
-perhaps say, _glued_ together in _bevelled_ joints. And in consequence
-of this arrangement, the same plates which seem broad on the exterior
-surface appear comparatively narrow on the interior one, and _vice
-versa_; the occipital plate, (_a_,) which, running from the nape along
-the centre of the buckler, occupies so considerable a space on its outer
-surface, exhibits inside a superficies reduced at least one half. Like
-nine tenths of its contemporaries, the _Asterolepis_ exhibits the little
-central plate between the eyes; but the eye orbits, unlike those of the
-_Coccosteus_, and of all the Dipterian genera, which were half-scooped
-out of the cranial buckler, half-encircled by detached plates, were
-placed completely within the field of the buckler,—a circumstance in
-which they resemble the eye orbits of the _Pterichthys_, and, among
-existing fish, those of the sea-wolf. The characteristic is also a
-distinctive one in Cuvier’s second family of the Acanthopterygii,—the
-“fishes with hard cheeks.” A deep line immediately over the eyes, which,
-however, indicated no suture, but seems to have been merely ornamental,
-forms a sort of rudely tatooed eyebrow; the marginal lines parallel to
-the lateral edges of the buckler were also mere tatooings; but all the
-others indicated joints which, though more or less anchylosed, had a
-real existence. So flat was the surface, that the edge of a ruler rests
-upon it, in my several specimens, both lengthwise and across; but it was
-traversed by two flat ridges, which, stretching from the corners of the
-latero-posterior, _i. e._ parietal, plates, (_b_, _b_,) converged at the
-little plate between the eyes, while along the centre of the depressed
-angle which they formed, a third ridge, equally flat with the others, ran
-towards the same point of convergence from the nape. The three ridges,
-when strongly relieved by a slant light, resemble not inadequately an
-impression, on a large scale, of the Queen’s broad arrow.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 28.
-
-INNER SURFACE OF CRANIAL BUCKLER OF ASTEROLEPIS.
-
-(One fifth nat. size, linear.)]
-
-The inner surface of the cranial buckler of _Asterolepis_, (fig.
-28,)—that which rested on the cartilaginous box which formed the
-creature’s interior skull,—stands out in bolder relief from the stone
-than its outer surface, and forms a more picturesque object. Like the
-inner surfaces of the bucklers of _Coccosteus_ and _Pterichthys_, but
-much more thickly than these, it was traversed by minute channelled
-markings, somewhat resembling those striæ which may be detected in the
-flatter bones of the ordinary fishes, and which seem in these to be
-mere interstices between the osseous fibres. And in the plates, as in
-the bones, they radiate from the centres of ossification, which are
-comparatively dense and massy, towards the thinner overlapping edges.
-These radiating lines are equally well marked in the cerebral bones of
-the human fœtus. The three converging ridges on the outer surface we
-find on the inner surface also,—the lateral ones a little bent in the
-middle, but so directly opposite those outside, that the thickening of
-the buckler which takes place along their line is at least as much a
-consequence of their inner as of their outer elevation over the general
-platform. A fourth bar ran transversely along the nape, and formed the
-cross beam on which the others rested; for the three longitudinal ridges
-may be properly regarded as three strong beams, which, extending from
-the transverse beam at the nape to the front, where they converged like
-the spokes of a wheel at the nave, gave to the cranial roof a degree of
-support of which, from its great flatness, it may have stood in need. In
-cranial bucklers in which the average thickness of the plates does not
-exceed three _eighth_ parts of an inch, their thickness in the centre of
-the ridges exceeds three _quarters_. The head of the largest crocodile
-of the existing period is defended by an armature greatly less strong
-than that worn by the _Asterolepis_ of the Lower Old Red Sandstone. Why
-this ancient Ganoid should have been so ponderously helmed we can but
-doubtfully guess; we only know, that when nature arms her soldiery, there
-are assailants to be resisted and a state of war to be maintained. The
-posterior central plate, the homologue apparently of the occipital bone,
-was curiously carved into an ornate massive leaf, like one of the larger
-leaves of a Corinthian capital, and terminated beneath, where the stem
-should have been, in a strong osseous knob, fashioned like a pike head.
-Two plates immediately over it, the homologues of the superior frontal
-bone, with the little nasal plate which, perched atop in the middle,
-lay between the creature’s eyes, resembled the head and breast in the
-female figure, at least not less closely than those of the “lady in the
-lobster;” the posterior frontal plates in which the outer and nether
-half of the eye orbits were hollowed formed a pair of sweeping wings,
-and thus in the centre of the buckler we are presented with the figure
-of an angel, robed and winged, and of which the large sculptured leaf
-forms the body, traced in a style in no degree more rude than we might
-expect to see exemplified on the lichen-encrusted shield of some ancient
-tombstone of that House of Avenel which bore as its arms the effigies
-of the Spectre Lady. Children have a peculiar knack in detecting such
-resemblances; and the discovery of the angel in the cranium of the
-_Asterolepis_ I owe to one of mine.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 29.
-
-PLATE OF CRANIAL BUCKLER OF ASTEROLEPIS.]
-
-It is on this inner side of the cranial buckler, where there are no such
-pseudo-joinings indicated as on the external surface, that the homologies
-of the plates of which it is composed can be best traced. It might be
-well, however, ere setting one’s self to the work of comparison, to
-examine the skulls of a few of the osseous fishes of our coast, and to
-mark how very considerably they differ from one another in their lines of
-suture and their general form. The cerebral divisions of the conger-eel,
-for instance, are very unlike those of the haddock or whiting; and the
-sutures in the head of the gurnard are dissimilarly arranged from those
-in the head of the perch. And after tracing the general type in the
-more anomalous forms, and finding, with Cuvier, that in even these the
-“skull consists of the same bones, though much subdivided, as the skulls
-of the other vertebrata,” we will be the better qualified for grappling
-with the not greater anomalies which occur in the cranial buckler of the
-_Asterolepis_. The occipital plate, _A_, _a_, _a_, (fig. 29,) occupies
-its ordinary place opposite the centre of the nape; the two parietals, B,
-B, rest beside it in their usual ichthyic position of displacement; the
-superior frontal we find existing, as in the young of many animals, in
-two pieces, C, C; the nasal plate I, placed immediately in advance of it,
-is flanked, as in the cod, by the anterior frontals, D, D; the posterior
-frontals, F, F, which, when viewed as in the print, from beneath, seem of
-considerable size, and describe laterally and posteriorly about one half
-the eye orbits, have their area on the exterior surface greatly reduced
-by the overriding squamose sutures of the plates to which they join; and
-lastly, two of these overlying plates, E, E,—which, occurring in the
-line of the lateral bar or beam, are of great strength and thickness,
-and lie for two thirds of their length along the parietals, and for the
-remaining third along the superior frontals,—represent the mastoid bones.
-Such, so far as I have been yet able to read the cranial buckler of the
-_Asterolepis_, seem to be the homologies of its component plates.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 30.
-
-PORTION OF UNDER JAW OF ASTEROLEPIS, (OUTER SIDE.)
-
-(One half nat. size.)]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 31.
-
-PORTION OF UNDER JAW OF ASTEROLEPIS, (INNER SIDE.)
-
-(One half nat. size.)]
-
-There were no parts of the animal more remarkable than its jaws. The
-under jaws,—for the nether maxillary consisted, in this fish, as in
-the placoid fishes, and in the quadrupeds generally, of two pieces
-joined in the middle,—were, like those of the _Holoptychius_, boxes
-of bone, which enclosed central masses of cartilage. The outer and
-under sides were thickly covered with the characteristic star-like
-tubercles; and along the upper margin or lip there ran a thickly-set row
-of small broadly-based teeth, planted as directly on the edge of the
-exterior plate as iron spikes on the upper edge of a gate (fig. 30.)
-Mr. Parkinson expresses some wonder, in his work on fossils, that, in
-a fine ichthyolite in the British Museum, not only the _teeth_ should
-have been preserved, but also the _lips_; but we now know enough of
-the construction of the ancient Ganoids to cease wondering. The _lips_
-were formed of as solid bone as the teeth themselves, and had as fair a
-chance of being preserved entire; just as the metallic rim of a _cogged_
-wheel has as fair a chance of being preserved as the metallic cogs that
-project from it. Immediately behind the front row,—in which the teeth
-present the ordinary ichthyic appearance,—there ran a thinly-set row of
-huge _reptile_ teeth, based on an interior platform of bone, which formed
-the top of the cartilage-enclosing box composing the jaw. These were at
-once bent outwards and twisted laterally, somewhat like nails that have
-been drawn out of wood by the claw of a carpenter’s hammer, and bent
-awry with the wrench, (fig. 31.) They were furrowed longitudinally from
-point to base by minute thickly-set striæ and were furnished laterally,
-in most of the specimens though not in all, with two sharp cutting
-edges. The reptile had as yet no existence in creation; but we see its
-future coming symbolized in the dentition of this ancient Ganoid: it,
-as it were, shows us the _crocodile_ lying entrenched behind the fish.
-The interior structure of these reptile teeth is very remarkable. In the
-longitudinal section we find numerous cancelli, ranged lengthwise along
-the outer edges, but much crossed, net-like, within,—greatly more open
-towards the base than at the point,—and giving place in the centre to a
-hollow space, occasionally traversed by a few slim osseous partitions.
-In the transverse section these cancelli are found to radiate from
-the open centre towards the circumference, like the spokes of a wheel
-from the nave; and each spoke seems as if, like Aaron’s rod, it had
-become instinct with vegetative life, and had sprouted into branch and
-blossom. Seen in a microscope of limited field, that takes in, as in
-the accompanying print, (fig. 32,) not more than a fourth part of the
-section, the appearance presented is that of a well-trained wall tree.
-And hence the generic name _Dendrodus_, given by Professor Owen to teeth
-found detached in the deposits of Moray, when the creatures to which they
-had belonged were still unknown,—a name, however, which will, I suspect,
-be found synonymous rather with that of a family than of a genus; for
-so far as I have yet examined, I find that the dendrodic or tree-like
-tooth, was in at least the Old Red Sandstone, a characteristic of all
-the Cœlacanth family. I may mention, however, as a curious subject of
-inquiry, that the Cœlacanths of the Coal Measures seem to have had their
-reptile teeth formed of pure ivory,—a substance, which I have not yet
-detected among the reptile-fish of the Old Red. Towards the base of the
-reptile teeth of _Asterolepis_, the interstices between the branches
-greatly widen, as in the branches of a tree in winter divested of its
-foliage, (fig. 33, _c_;) the texture also opens towards the base in the
-_fish_-teeth, outside, in which, however, the pattern in the transverse
-section is greatly less complex and ornate than that which the reptile
-teeth exhibits. When cut across near the point, they appear each as a
-thick ring, (_b_,) traversed by lines that radiate towards the centre;
-when cut across about half way down, they somewhat resemble, seen under
-a high magnifying power those cast-iron wheels on which the engineer
-mounts his railway carriages, (_a_.) In the longitudinal section their
-line of junction with the jaw is marked by numerous openings, but by no
-line of division, and they appear as thickly dotted by what were once
-canaliculi, or life points, as any portion of the dermal bone on which
-they rest.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 32.
-
-PORTION OF TRANSVERSE SECTION OF REPTILE TOOTH OF ASTEROLEPIS
-
-a. _Nat. size._
-
-b. _Mag. twelve diameters._]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 33.
-
-A. _Section of Jaw of Asterolepis._
-
-c. _Reptile tooth as shown in section._
-
-a, b, & c. _Row of ichthyic teeth in dermal plate of jaw._
-
-B. _Magnified representatives of ichthyic teeth, a and b, in_ A.]
-
-It seems truly wonderful, when one considers it, to what minute and
-obscure ramifications that variety of pattern which nature so loves to
-maintain is found to descend. It descends in the fishes, both recent
-and extinct, to even the microscopic structure of their teeth; and
-we find, in consequence, not less variety of figure in the sliced
-fragments of the teeth of the ichthyolites of a single formation, than
-in the carved blocks of an extensive calico print-yard. Each _species_
-has its own distinct pattern, as if, in all the individuals of which
-it consisted, the same block had been employed to stamp it; and each
-_genus_ its own general _type_ of pattern, as if the same radical idea,
-variously altered and modified, had been wrought upon in all. In the
-_Dendrodic_ (Cœlacanth?) family, for instance, it is the radical type,
-that from a central nave there should radiate, spoke-like, a number
-of arborescent branches; but in the several genera and species of the
-family, the branches belong, if I may so express myself, to different
-shrubs, and present dissimilar outlines. It has appeared to me, that
-at least a _presumption_ against the transmutation of species might be
-based on those inherent peculiarities of structure which are thus found
-to pervade the entire texture of the framework of animals. If we find
-erections differing from one another merely in external form, we have
-no difficulty in conceiving how, by additions and alterations, they
-might be brought to exhibit a perfect uniformity of plan and aspect:
-_transmutation_,—_development_,—_progression_,—(if one may use such
-terms,)—seem possible in such circumstances. But if the buildings differ
-from each other, not only in external form, but also in every brick and
-beam, bolt and nail, no mere scheme of external alteration could ever
-induce a real resemblance. Every brick would have to be taken down, and
-every beam and bolt removed. The problem could not be wrought by the
-remodelling of an old house: the only mode of solving it would be by the
-erection of a new one.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 34.
-
-MAXILLARY BONE?
-
-(One fourth nat. size, linear.)]
-
-Of the upper maxillary bones of the _Asterolepis_, I only know that
-a considerable fragment of one of the pieces, recognized as such by
-Agassiz, has been found in the neighborhood of Thurso by Mr. Dick,
-unaccompanied, however, by any evidence respecting its place or function.
-It exhibits none of the characteristic tubercles of the dermal bones,
-and no appearance of teeth; but is simply a long bent bone, resembling
-somewhat less than the half of an ancient bow of steel or horn,—such
-a bow as that which Ulysses bended in the presence of the suitors.
-By some of the Russian geologists this bone was at first regarded as
-a portion of the arm or wing of some gigantic _Pterichthys_. In the
-accompanying print (fig. 34) I have borrowed the general outline from
-that of a specimen of Professor Asmus, of which a cast may be seen in
-the British Museum; while the shaded portion represents the fragment
-found by Mr. Dick. The intermaxillary bones, like the dermal plates of
-the lower jaw, were studded by star-like tubercles, and bristled thickly
-along their lower edges with the ichthyic teeth, flanked by teeth of
-the reptilian character. The opercules of the animal consisted, as in
-the sturgeon, of single plates (fig. 35) of great massiveness and size,
-thickly tubercled outside, without trace of joint or suture, and marked
-on their under surface by channelled lines, that radiate, as in the other
-plates, from the centre of ossification. That space along the nape which
-intervened between the opercules, was occupied, as in the _Dipterus_ and
-_Diplopterus_, by three plates, which covered rather the anterior portion
-of the body than the posterior portion of the head, and which, in the
-restoration of _Osteolepis_, (fig. 13,) appear as the plates, 9, 9, 9. I
-can say scarce any thing regarding the lateral plates which lay between
-the intermaxillaries and the cranial buckler, and which exist in the
-_Osteolepis_, fig. 13, as the plates 2, 4, 5, 6, and 7; nor do I know how
-the snout terminated, save that in a very imperfect specimen it exhibits,
-as in the _Diplopterus_ and _Osteolepis_, a rounded outline, and was set
-with teeth.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 35.
-
-INNER SURFACE OF OPERCULUM OF ASTEROLEPIS.
-
-(One fifth nat. size, linear.)]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 36.
-
-HYOID PLATE.
-
-(One ninth nat. size, linear.)]
-
-That space comprised within the arch of the lower jaws, in which the
-hyoid bone and branchiostegous rays of the osseous fishes occur, was
-filled by a single plate of great size and strength, and of singular
-form, (fig. 36;) and to this plate, existing as a steep ridge running
-along the centre of the interior surface, and thickening into a massy
-knob at the anterior termination, that nail-shaped organism, which I have
-described as one of the most characteristic bones of the _Asterolepis_,
-belonged. In the _Osteolepis_, the space corresponding to that occupied
-by this hyoid plate was filled, as shown in fig. 14, by five plates of
-not inelegant form; and the divisions of the arch resembled those of
-a small Gothic window, in which the single central mullion parts into
-two branches atop. In the _Holoptychius_ and _Glyptolepis_ there were
-but two plates; for the central mullion, _i. e._ line of division,
-did not branch atop; and in the _Asterolepis_, where there was no
-line of division, the strong nail-like bone occupied the place of the
-central mullion. The hyoidal armature of the latter fish was strongest
-in the line in which the others were weakest. Each of the five hyoid
-plates of the _Osteolepis_, or of the two plates of the _Glyptolepis_
-or _Holoptychius_, had its own centre of ossification; and in the
-single plate of _Asterolepis_, the centre of ossification, as shown by
-the radiations of the fibre, was the nail-head. This head, placed in
-immediate contact with the strong boxes of bone which composed the under
-jaw, just where their central joining occurred, seems to have lent them
-a considerable degree of support, which at such a juncture may have been
-not unnecessary. In some of the nail-heads, belonging, it is probable, to
-a different species of _Asterolepis_ from that in which the nail figured
-in page 7, and the plate in the opposite page, occurred,—for its general
-form is different, (fig. 37,)—there appear well-marked ligamentary
-impressions closely resembling that little spongy pit in the head of the
-human thigh-bone to which what is termed the round ligament is attached.
-The entire hyoid-plate, viewed on its outer side, resembles in form the
-hyoid-bone,—or cartilage rather,—of the spotted dog-fish, (_Scyllium
-stellare_;) but its area was at least a hundred times more extensive
-than in the largest _Scyllium_, and, like all the dermal plates of the
-_Asterolepis_, it was thickly fretted by the characteristic tubercles.
-In the Ray, as in the Sharks, the piece of thin cartilage of which this
-plate seems the homologue, is a flat, semi-transparent disk; and there
-is no part of the animal in which the progress of those bony molecules
-which encrust the internal framework may be more distinctly traced, as if
-in the act of creeping over what they cover, in slim threads or shooting
-points,—and much resembling new ice creeping in a frosty evening over the
-surface of a pool.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 37.
-
-NAIL-LIKE BONE OF HYOID PLATE.
-
-(One half nat. size.)]
-
-That suite of shoulder-bones that in the osseous fishes forms the belt
-or frame on which the opercules rest, and furnishes the base of the
-pectorals, was represented in the _Asterolepis_, as in the sturgeon, by a
-ring of strong osseous plates, which, in one of the two species of which
-trace is to be found among the rocks of Thurso, were curiously fretted
-on their external surfaces, and in the other species comparatively
-smooth. The largest, or coracoidian plate of the ring, as it occurs in
-the more ornate species, (fig. 38,) might be readily enough mistaken,
-when seen with only its surface exposed for the ichthyodorulite of
-some large fish, allied, mayhap, to the _Gyracanthus formosus_ of the
-Coal Measures; but when detached from the stone, the hollow form and
-peculiar striæ of the inferior surface serve to establish its true
-character as a dermal plate. The diagonal furrowings which traversed
-it, as the twisted flutings traverse a Gothic column moulded after the
-type of the Apprentice Pillar in Roslin chapel, seem to have underlaid
-the edge of the opercule; at least I find a similar arrangement in the
-shoulder-plates of a large species of _Diplopterus_, which are deeply
-grooved and furrowed where the opercule rested, as if with the design of
-keeping up a communication between the branchiæ and the external element,
-even when the gill-cover was pressed closely down upon them. And,—as in
-these shoulder-plates of the _Diplopterus_ the furrows yield their place
-beyond the edge of the opercule to the punctulated enamel common to the
-outer surface of all the creature’s external plates and scales,—we find
-them yielding their place, in the shoulder-plates of the _Asterolepis_,
-to the starred tubercles.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 38.
-
-SHOULDER (_i. e._ CORACOID?) PLATE OF ASTEROLEPIS.
-
-(One third nat. size, linear.)]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 39.
-
-DERMAL BONES OF ASTEROLEPIS.
-
-(One third nat. size, linear.)]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 40.
-
-INTERNAL BONES OF ASTEROLEPIS.
-
-(One half nat. size, linear.)]
-
-A few detached bones, that bear on their outer surfaces the dermal
-markings, must have belonged to that angular-shaped portion of the head
-which intervened between the cranial buckler and the intermaxillary bone;
-but the key for assigning to them their proper place is still to find;
-and I suspect that no amount of skill on the part of the comparative
-anatomist will ever qualify him to complete the work of restoration
-without it. I have submitted to the reader the cranial bucklers of
-_five_ several genera of the ganoids of the Old Red Sandstone; but no
-amount of study bestowed on these would enable even the most skilful
-ichthyologist to restore a _sixth_; nor is the lateral area of the head,
-which was, I find, variously occupied in each genus, less difficult to
-restore than the buckler which surmounted it. Two of the more entire of
-these dermal bones I have figured (fig. 39, _a_ and _b_) in the hope
-of assisting future inquirers, who, were they to pick up all the other
-plates, might yet be unable, lacking the figured ones, to complete the
-whole. The curiously-shaped plate _a_, represented in its various sides
-by the figures 1, 2, 3, is of an acutely angular form in the transverse
-section, (the external surface, 1, forming an angle which varies from
-thirty to forty-five degrees with the base, 3;) and as it lay, it is
-probable when in its original place, immediately under the edge of the
-cranial buckler, it may have served to commence the line of deflection
-from the flat top of the head to the steep descent of the sides, just
-as what are technically termed the _spur_-stones in a gable-head serve
-to commence the line of deflection from the vertical outline of the
-wall to the inclined line of the roof, or as the spring-stones of an
-arch serve to commence the curve. A few internal bones in my possession
-are curious, but exceedingly puzzling. The bone _a_, fig. 40, which
-resembles a rib, or branchiostegous ray, of one of the ordinary fishes,
-formed apparently part of that osseous _style_ which in fishes such as
-the haddock and cod we find attached to the suite of shoulder-bones, and
-which, according to Cuvier, is the analogue of the coracoidian bone,
-and, according to Professor Owen, the analogue of the clavicle. Fig.
-_b_ is a mere fragment, broken at both ends, but exhibiting, in a state
-of good keeping, lateral expansions, like those of an ancient halbert.
-Fig. _c_, 41, which is also a fragment, though a more considerable
-one, bears in its thicker and straighter edge a groove like that of an
-ichthyodorulite, which, however, the bone itself in no degree resembles.
-Fig. _d_ is a flat bone, of a type common in the skeleton of fishes, but
-which, in mammals, we find exemplified in but the scapulars. It seems,
-like these, to have furnished the base to which some suite of movable
-bones was articulated,—in all likelihood that proportion of the carnal
-bonelets of the pectoral fins which are attached in the osseous fishes
-to its apparent homologue, the radius. Fig. _e_, a slim light bone,
-which narrows and thickens in the centre, and flattens and broadens at
-each end, was probably a scapula or shoulder-blade,—a bone which in
-most fishes _splices_ on, as a sailor would say, by squamose jointings,
-to the coracoidian bone at the one end, and the super-scapular bone at
-the other. As indicated by its size, it must have belonged to a small
-individual: it is, however, twice as long, and about six times as bulky,
-as the scapula of a large cod.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 41.
-
-INTERNAL BONES OF ASTEROLEPIS.
-
-(One third nat. size, linear.)]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 42.
-
-ISCHIUM OF ASTEROLEPIS.
-
-(One half nat. size, linear.)]
-
-Of the bone represented in fig. 42, I have determined, from a Cromarty
-specimen, the place and use: it formed the interior base to which
-one of the ventral fins was attached. In all fishes the bones of the
-hinder extremities are inadequately represented: in none do we find the
-pelvic arch complete; and to that nether portion of it which we do find
-represented, and which Professor Owen regards as the homologue of the
-_os ischium_ or hip-bone, the homologues of the metatarsal and toe-bones
-are attached, to the exclusion of the bones of the thigh and leg. In the
-Abdominales,—fishes such as the salmon and carp,—that have the ventrals
-placed behind the abdomen, in the position analogous to that in which
-the hinder legs of the reptiles and mammals occur, the ischiatic bones
-generally exist as flat triangular plates, with their heads either
-turned _inwards_ and downwards, as in the herring, or _outwards_ and
-downwards, as in the pike; whereas in some of the cartilaginous fishes,
-such as the Rays and Sharks, they exist as an undivided cartilaginous
-band, stretched transversely from ventral to ventral. And such, with
-but an upward direction, appears to have been their position in the
-_Asterolepis_. They seem to have united at the narrow neck A, over the
-middle of the lower portion of the abdomen; and to the notches of the
-flat expansion B,—notches which exactly resemble those of the immensely
-developed carpal bones of the Ray,—five metatarsal bones were attached,
-from which the fin expanded. It is interesting to find the number in this
-ancient representative of the vertebrata restricted to five,—a number
-greatly exceeded in most of the existing fishes, but which is the true
-normal number of the vertebrate sub-kingdom as shown in all the higher
-examples such as man, the _quadrumana_, and in most of the _carnaria_.
-The form of this bone somewhat resembles that of the analogous bone in
-those fishes, such as the perch and gurnard, cod and haddock, which have
-their ventrals suspended to the scapular belt; but its position in the
-Cromarty specimen, and that of the ventrals in the various specimens of
-the Cœlacanth family in which their place is still shown, forbids the
-supposition that _it_ was so suspended,—a circumstance in keeping with
-all the existing geological evidence on the subject, which agrees in
-indicating, that of the low type of fishes that have, monster-like, their
-_feet_ attached to their necks, the Old Red Sandstone does not afford a
-trace. This inferior type, now by far the most prevalent in the ichthyic
-division of the animal kingdom, does not seem to have been introduced
-until near the close of the Secondary period, long after the fish had
-been degraded from its primal place in the fore front of creation. In
-one of my specimens a few fragments of the rays are preserved, (fig. 43,
-_b_.) They are about the eighth part of an inch in diameter: depressed
-in some cases in the center, as if, over the internal hollow formed by
-the decay of the cartilaginous centre, the bony crust of which they are
-composed had given way; and, like the rays of the thornback, they are
-thickened at the joints, and at the processes by which they were attached
-to the ischiatic base. It may be proper, I should here state, that of
-some of the internal bones figured above I have no better evidence that
-they belonged to the _Asterolepis_, than that they occur in the same
-beds with the dermal plates which bear the characteristic star-like
-markings,—that they are of very considerable size,—and that they formed
-no part of the known fishes of the formation.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 43.
-
-a. _Single joint of ray of Thornback._
-
-b. _Single joint of ray of Asterolepis._]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 44.
-
-COPROLITES OF ASTEROLEPIS.
-
-(Nat. Size.[18])]
-
-On exactly the same grounds I infer that certain large coprolites of
-common occurrence in the Thurso flagstones, which contain the broken
-scales of Dipterians, and exhibit a curiously twisted form, (fig. 44,)
-also belonged to the _Asterolepis_; and from these, that the creature
-was carnivorous in its habits,—an inference which the character of
-its teeth fully corroborates; and farther, that, like the sharks and
-rays, and some of the extinct Enaliosaurs, it possessed the spiral
-disposition of intestine. Paley, in his chapter on the compensatory
-contrivances palpable in the structure of various animals, refers to a
-peculiar substitutory provision which occurs in a certain amphibious
-animal described in the Memoirs of the French Academy. “The reader
-will remember,” he says, “what we have already observed concerning the
-_intestinal_ canal,—that its length, so many times exceeding that of the
-body, promotes the extraction of the chyle from the aliment, by giving
-room for the lacteal vessels to act upon it through a greater space.
-This long intestine, whenever it occurs, is in other animals disposed in
-the abdomen from side to side, in returning folds. But in the animal now
-under our notice, the matter is managed otherwise. The same intention is
-mechanically effectuated, but by a mechanism of a different kind. The
-animal of which I speak is an amphibious quadruped, which our authors
-call the Alopecias or sea-fox. The intestine is straight from one end to
-the other but in this straight, and consequently short intestine, is a
-winding, cork-screw, spiral passage, through which the food, not without
-several circumvolutions, and, in fact, by a long route, is conducted to
-its exit. Here the shortness of the gut is _compensated_ by the obliquity
-of the perforation.” This structure of intestine, which all the true
-Placoids possess, and at least the Sturiones among existing Ganoids,
-seems to have been an exceedingly common one during both the Palæozoic
-and Secondary periods. It has left its impress on all the better
-preserved coprolites of the Coal Measures, so abundant in the shales of
-Newhaven and Burdie House, and on those of the Lias and Chalk. It seems
-to be equally a characteristic of well nigh all the bulkier coprolites
-of the Lower Old Red Sandstone.[19] In these, however, it manifests
-a peculiar trait, which I have failed to detect in any of the recent
-fishes; nor have I yet seen it indicated, in at least the same degree, by
-the Carboniferous or Secondary coprolitic remains. In the bowels which
-moulded the coprolites of Lyme-Regis, of the Chalk, and of the Newhaven
-and Granton beds, a single screw must have winded within the cylindrical
-tube, as a turnpike stair winds within its hollow shaft; and such also is
-the arrangement in the existing Sharks and Rays; whereas the bowels which
-moulded the coprolites of the Lower Old Red Sandstone must have been
-traversed by triple or quadruple screws laid closely together, as we find
-the stalk of an old-fashioned wine-glass traversed by its thickly-set
-spiral lines of thread-like china. And so, while on the surface of both
-the Secondary and Carboniferous coprolites there is space between the
-screw-like lines for numerous cross markings that correspond to the
-thickly set veiny branches which traverse the sides of the recent placoid
-bowel, the entire surface of the Lower Old Red coprolites is traversed
-by the spiral markings. Is there nothing strange in the fact, that after
-the lapse of mayhap millions of years,—nay, it is possible, millions
-of ages,—we should be thus able to detect at once general resemblance
-and special dissimilarity in even the most perishable parts of the most
-ancient of the Ganoids?
-
-I must advert, in passing, to a peculiarity exemplified in the state of
-keeping of the bones of this ancient Ganoid, in at least the deposits
-of Orkney and Caithness. The original animal matter has been converted
-into a dark-colored bitumen, which in some places, where the remains
-lie thick, pervades the crevices of the rocks, and has not unfrequently
-been mistaken for coal. In its more solid state it can hardly be
-distinguished, when used in sealing a letter,—a purpose which it serves
-indifferently well,—from black wax of the ordinary quality; when more
-fluid, it adheres scarce less strongly to the hands than the coal-tar of
-our gas-works and dock-yards. Underneath a specimen of _Asterolepis_,
-first pointed out to me in its bed among the Thurso rocks by Mr. Dick,
-and which, at my request, he afterwards raised and sent me to Edinburgh,
-packed up in a box, there lay a quantity of thick tar, which stuck as
-fast to my fingers, on lifting out the pieces of rock, as if I had laid
-hold of the planking of a newly tarred yawl. What had been once the
-nerves, muscles, and blood of this ancient Ganoid still lay under its
-bones, and reminded me of the appearance presented by the remains of a
-poor suicide, whose solitary grave, dug in a sandy bank in the north
-of Scotland, had been laid open by the encroachments of a river. The
-skeleton, with pieces of the dress still wrapped round it, lay at length
-along the section; and, for a full yard beneath, the white dry sand was
-consolidated into a dark-colored pitchy mass, by the altered animal
-matter which had escaped from it, percolating downwards, in the process
-of decay.
-
-In consequence of the curious chemical change which has thus taken place
-in the animal juices of the _Asterolepis_, its remains often occur in
-a state of beautiful preservation: the pervading bitumen, greatly more
-conservative in its effects than the oils and gums of an old Egyptian
-undertaker, has maintained, in their original integrity, every scale,
-plate, and bone. They may have been much broken ere they were first
-committed to the keeping of the rock, or in disentangling them from
-its rigid embrace; but they have, we find, caught no harm when under
-its care. Ere the skeleton of the Bruce, disinterred after the lapse of
-five centuries, was recommitted to the tomb, such measures were taken
-to secure its preservation, that, were it to be again disinterred, even
-after as many more centuries had passed, it might be found retaining
-unbroken its gigantic proportions. There was molten pitch poured over
-the bones, in a state of sufficient fluidity to permeate all the pores,
-and fill up the central hollows, and which, soon hardening around
-them, formed a bituminous matrix, in which they may lie unchanged for
-a thousand years. Now, exactly such was the process to which nature
-resorted with these gigantic skeletons of the Old Red Sandstone. Like the
-bones of the Bruce, they are bones steeped in pitch; and so thoroughly
-is every pore and hollow still occupied, that, when cast into the fire,
-they flame like torches. Though black as jet, they still retain, too,
-in a considerable degree, the peculiar _qualities_ of the original
-substance. The late Mr. George Sanderson of Edinburgh, one of the most
-ingenious lapidaries in the kingdom, and a thoroughly intelligent man,
-made several preparations for me, for microscopic examination, from
-the teeth and bones; and though they were by far the oldest vertebrate
-remains he had ever seen, they exhibited, he informed me, in the
-working, more of the characteristics of recent teeth and bone than any
-other fossils he had ever operated upon. Recent bone when in the course
-of being reduced on the wheel to the degree of thinness necessary to
-secure transparency, is apt, under the heat induced by the friction, to
-acquire a springy elasticity, and to start up from the glass slip to
-which it has been cemented; whereas bone in the fossil state usually
-lies as passive, in such circumstances, as the stone which envelopes
-it. Mr. Sanderson was, however, surprised to find that the bone of the
-_Asterolepis_ still retained its elasticity, and was scarce less liable,
-when heated, to start from the glass,—a peculiarity through which he at
-first lost several preparations. I have seen a human bone that had for
-ages been partially embedded in a mass of adipocere, partially enveloped
-in the common mould of a churchyard, exhibit two very different styles
-of keeping. In the adipocere it was as fresh and green as if it had
-been divested of the integuments only a few weeks previous; whereas the
-portion which projected into the mould had become brittle and porous, and
-presented the ordinary appearance of an old churchyard bone. And what the
-adipocere had done for the human bone in this case, seems to have been
-done for the bones of the _Asterolepis_ by the animal bitumen.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 45.
-
-HYOID PLATE OF THURSO ASTEROLEPIS.[20]
-
-(One fifth the nat. size, linear.)]
-
-The size of the _Asterolepis_ must, in the larger specimens, have been
-very great. In all those ganoidal fishes of the Old Red Sandstone that
-had the head covered with osseous plates, we find that the cranial
-buckler bore a certain definite proportion,—various in the several genera
-and species,—to the length of the body. The drawing-master still teaches
-his pupils to regulate the proportions of the human figure by the seven
-head-lengths which it contains; and perhaps shows them how an otherwise
-meritorious draftsman,[21] much employed half an age ago in drawing for
-the wood-engraver, used to render his figures squat and ungraceful by
-making them a head too short. Now, those ancient Ganoids which possessed
-a cranial buckler may, we find, be also measured by head-lengths. Thus,
-in the _Coccosteus decipiens_, the length of the cranial buckler from
-nape to snout equalled one fifth the entire length of the creature
-from snout to tail. The entire length of the _Glyptolepis_ was equal to
-about five one half times that of its cranial buckler. The _Pterichthys_
-was formed in nearly the same proportions. The _Diplopterus_ was fully
-seven times the length of its buckler: and the _Osteolepis_ from six and
-a half to seven. In all the cranial bucklers of the _Asterolepis_ yet
-found, the snout is wanting. The very fine specimen figured in page 99
-(fig. 28) terminates abruptly at the little plate between the eyes, the
-specimen figured in page 98 (fig. 27) terminates at the upper line of
-the eye. The terminal portion which formed the snout is wanting in both,
-and we thus lack the measure, or _module_, as the architect might say,
-by which the proportions of the rest of the creature were regulated.
-We can, however, very nearly approximate to it. A hyoid plate in my
-collection (fig. 45) is, I find, so exactly proportioned in size to the
-cranial buckler, (fig. 28,) that it might have belonged to the same
-individual; and by fitting it in its proper place, and then making the
-necessary allowance for the breadth of the nether jaw, which swept two
-thirds around it, and was surmounted by the snout, we ascertain that
-the buckler, when entire, must have been, as nearly as may be, a foot
-in length. If the _Asterolepis_ was formed in the proportions of the
-_Coccosteus_, the buckler (fig. 28) must have belonged to an individual
-five feet in length; if in the proportions of the _Pterichthys_ or
-_Glyptolepis_, to an individual five and a half feet in length; and
-if in those of the _Diplopterus_ or _Osteolepis_, to an individual of
-from six and a half to seven feet in length. Now I find that the hyoid
-plate can be inscribed—such is its form—in a semicircle, of which the
-nail-shaped ridge in the middle (if we strike off a minute portion of the
-sharp point, usually wanting in detached specimens) forms very nearly
-the radius, and of which the diameter equals the breadth of the cranial
-buckler, along a line drawn across at a distance from the nape, equal
-to two thirds of the distance between the nape and the eyes. Thus, the
-largest diameter of a hyoid plate which belonged to a cranial buckler a
-foot in length is, I find, equal to seven one quarter inches, while the
-length of its nape somewhat exceeds three five eighth inches. The nail of
-the Stromness specimen measures five and a half inches. It must have run
-along a hyoid plate eleven inches in transverse breadth, and have been
-associated with a cranial buckler eighteen one eighth inches in length;
-and the _Asterolepis_ to which it belonged must have measured from snout
-to tail, if formed, as it probably was, in the proportions of its brother
-Cœlacanth the _Glyptolepis_, eight feet three inches; and if in those
-of the _Diplopterus_, from nine feet nine to ten feet six inches. This
-oldest of Scottish fish—this earliest-born of the Ganoids yet known—was
-at least as bulky as a large porpoise.
-
-It was small, however, compared with specimens of the _Asterolepis_
-found elsewhere. The hyoid plate figured in page 110, (fig. 36,)—a
-Thurso specimen which I owe to the kindness of Mr. Dick,—measures
-nearly fourteen inches, and the cranial buckler of the same individual,
-fifteen one fourth inches, in breadth. The latter, when entire, must
-have measured twenty-three one half inches in length; and the fish to
-which it belonged, if formed in the proportions of the _Glyptolepis_,
-ten feet six inches; and if in those of the _Diplopterus_, from twelve
-feet five to thirteen feet eight inches in length. Did the shield still
-exist in its original state as a buckler of tough, enamel-crusted bone,
-it might be converted into a Highland target, nearly broad enough to
-cover the ample chest of a Rob Roy or Allan M’Aulay, and strong enough to
-dash aside the keenest broadsword. Another hyoid plate found by Mr. Dick
-measures sixteen one half inches in breadth; and a cast in the British
-Museum, from one of the Russian specimens of Professor Asmus, (fig. 46,)
-twenty-four inches. The individual to which this last plate belonged
-must, if built in the shorter proportions, have measured eighteen, and if
-in the longer, twenty-three feet in length. The two hyoid plates of the
-specimen of _Holoptychius_ in the British Museum measure but four and a
-half inches along that transverse line in which the Russian _Asterolepis_
-measures two feet, and the largest Thurso specimen sixteen inches and a
-half. The maxillary bone of a cod-fish two and a half feet from snout to
-tail measures three inches in length. One of the Russian maxillary bones
-in the possession of Professor Asmus measures in length twenty-eight
-inches. And that space circumscribed by the sweep of the lower jaw
-which it took, in the Russian specimen, a hyoid plate twenty-four
-inches in breadth to fill, could be filled in the two-and-a-half-feet
-cod by a plate whose breadth equalled but an inch and a half. Thus, in
-the not unimportant circumstance of size, the most ancient Ganoids yet
-known, instead of taking their places, agreeably to the demands of the
-development hypothesis, among the sprats, sticklebacks, and minnows of
-their class, took their place among its huge basking sharks, gigantic
-sturgeons, and bulky sword-fishes. They were giants, not dwarfs.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 46.
-
-HYOID PLATE OF RUSSIAN ASTEROLEPIS.
-
-(One twelfth the natural size, linear.)]
-
-But what of their organization? Were they fishes low or high in the
-scale? On this head we can, of course, determine merely by the analogies
-which their structure exhibits to that of fishes of the existing
-period; and these point in three several directions;—in two of the
-number, directly on genera of the high Ganoid order; and in the third,
-on the still higher Placoids and Enaliosaurs. No trace of vertebræ
-has yet been found; and so we infer—lodging, however, a precautionary
-protest, as the evidence is purely negative, and therefore it some
-degree inconclusive—that the vertebral column of the _Asterolepis_
-was, like that of the sturgeon, cartilaginous. Respecting its external
-covering, we positively know, as has been already shown, that, like
-the _Lepidosteus_ of America and the _Polypterus_ of the Nile, it was
-composed of strong plates and scales of solid bone; and, regarding its
-dentition, that, as in these last genera, and even more decidedly than
-in these, it was of the mixed ichthyic-reptilian character,—an outer row
-of thickly-set fish-teeth being backed by an inner row of thinly-set
-reptile-teeth. And its form of coprolite indicates the spiral disposition
-of intestine common to the Rays and Sharks of the existing period, and
-of the Ichthyosauri of the Secondary ages. Instead of being, as the
-development hypothesis would require, a fish low in its organization,
-it seems to have ranged on the level of the highest ichthyic-reptilian
-families ever called into existence. Had an intelligent being, ignorant
-of what was going on upon earth during the week of creation, visited
-Eden on the morning of the sixth day, he would have found in it many
-of the inferior animals, but no trace of man. Had he returned again in
-the evening, he would have seen, installed in the office of keepers of
-the garden, and ruling with no tyrant sway as the humble monarchs of
-its brute inhabitants, two mature human creatures, perfect in their
-organization, and arrived at the full stature of their race. The entire
-evidence regarding them, in the absence of all such information as that
-imparted to Adam by Milton’s angel, would amount simply to this, that
-in the morning man _was not_, and that in the evening he _was_. There,
-of course, could not exist, in the circumstances, a single appearance
-to sanction the belief that the two human creatures whom he saw walking
-together among the trees at sunset had been “developed from infusorial
-points,” not created mature. The evidence would, on the contrary,
-lie all the other way. And in no degree does the geologic testimony
-respecting the earliest Ganoids differ from what, in the supposed case,
-would be the testimony of Eden regarding the earliest men. Up to a
-certain point in the geologic scale we find that the Ganoids _are not_;
-and when they at length make their appearance upon the stage, they enter
-large in their stature and high in their organization.
-
-
-
-
-FISHES OF THE SILURIAN ROCKS—UPPER AND LOWER. THEIR RECENT HISTORY,
-ORDER, AND SIZE.
-
-
-But the system of the Old Red Sandstone represents the _second_, not
-the _first_, great period of the world’s history. There was a preceding
-period at least equally extended, perhaps greatly more so, represented
-by the Upper and Lower Silurian formations. And what is the testimony
-of this morning period of organic existence, in which, so far as can
-yet be shown, vitality, in the planet which man inhabits, and of whose
-history or productions he knows anything, was first associated with
-matter? May not the development hypothesis find a standing in the system
-representative of this earliest age of creation, which it fails to find
-in the system of the Old Red Sandstone?
-
-It has been confidently asserted, not merely that it _may_, but that it
-_does_. Ever since the publication, in 1839, of Sir Roderick Murchison’s
-great work on the Silurian System, it had been known that the remains
-of fishes occur in a bed of the “Ludlow Rock,”—one of the most modern
-deposits of the _Upper_ Silurian division; and subsequent discoveries
-both in England and America, had shown that even the _base_ of this
-division has its ichthyic organisms. But for year after year, the
-lower half of the system,—a division more than three thousand feet in
-thickness,—had failed, though there were hands and eyes busy among its
-deposits, to yield any vertebrate remains. During the earlier half of
-the first great period of organic existence, though the polyparia,
-radiata, articulata, and mollusca, existed, as their remains testified,
-by myriads, fish had, it was held, not yet entered upon the scene; and
-the assertors of the development theory founded largely on the presumed
-fact of their absence. “It is still customary,” says the author of the
-“Vestiges of Creation,” in his volume of “Explanations,” “to speak of
-the earliest fauna as one of an elevated kind. When rigidly examined, it
-is not found to be so. IN THE FIRST PLACE, IT CONTAINS NO FISH. There
-were seas supporting crustacean and molluscan life, but _utterly devoid
-of a class of tenants who seem able to live in every example of that
-element which supports meaner creatures_. This single fact, that only
-invertebrated animals now lived, is surely in itself a strong proof that,
-in the course of nature, _time_ was necessary for the creation of the
-superior creatures. And if so, it undoubtedly is a powerful evidence of
-such a theory of development as that which I have presented. If not, let
-me hear an equally plausible reason for the great and amazing fact, that
-seas were for numberless ages destitute of fish. I fix my opponents down
-to the consideration of this fact, so that no diversion respecting high
-molluscs shall avail them.” And how is this bold challenge to be met?
-
-Most directly, and after a fashion that at once discomfits the challenger.
-
-It might be rationally enough argued in the case, that the author of
-the “Vestiges” was building greatly more on a piece of purely negative
-evidence,—the presumed absence of fish from the Lower Silurian
-formations,—than purely negative evidence is, from its nature as such,
-suited to bear; that only a very few years had passed since it was known
-that vertebrate remains occurred in the _Upper_ Silurian, and only a
-few more since they had been detected in the Old Red Sandstone; nay,
-that within the present century their frequent occurrence in even the
-Coal Measures was scarce suspected; and that, as his argument, had it
-been founded twelve years ago on the supposed absence of fishes from
-the Upper Silurian, or twenty years ago on the supposed absence of
-fishes from the Old Red Sandstone, would have been quite as plausible
-in reference to its negative data then as in reference to its negative
-data now, so it might now be quite as erroneous as it assuredly would
-have been then. Or it might be urged, that the fact of the absence of
-fish from the Lower Silurians, even were it really a fact, would be in
-no degree less reconcilable with the theory of creation by direct act,
-than with the hypothesis of gradual development. The fact that Adam
-did not exist during the first, second, third, fourth, and fifth days
-of the introductory week of Scripture narrative, furnishes no argument
-whatever against the fact of his creation on the sixth day. And the
-remark would of course equally apply to the non-existence of fishes
-during the Lower Silurian period, had they been really non-existent
-at the time, and to their sudden appearance in that of the Upper. But
-the objection admits of a greatly more conclusive answer. “I fix my
-opponents down,” says the author of the “Vestiges,” “to the consideration
-of this fact,” _i. e._ that of the absence of fishes from the earliest
-fossiliferous formations. And I, in turn, fix you down, I reply, to the
-consideration of the antagonist fact, not negative, but positive, and
-now, in the course of geological discovery, fully established, that
-fishes were _not_ absent from the earliest fossiliferous formations.
-From none of the great geological formations were fishes absent,—not
-even from the formations of the Cambrian division. “The Lower Silurian,”
-says Sir Roderick Murchison, in a communication with which, in 1847, he
-honored the writer of these chapters, “is no longer to be viewed as an
-invertebrate period; for the _Onchus_ (species not yet decided) has been
-found in the Llandeilo Flags and in the Lower Silurian rocks of Bala.
-In one respect I am gratified by the discovery; for the form is so very
-like that of the _Onchus Murchisoni_ of the Upper Ludlow rock, that it
-is clear the Silurian system is one great natural-history series, as is
-proved, indeed, by all its other organic remains.” It may be mentioned
-further, in addition to this interesting statement, that the Bala spine
-was detected in its calcareous matrix by the geologists of the Government
-Survey, and described to Sir Roderick as that of an _Onchus_, by a very
-competent authority in such matters,—Professor Edward Forbes, and that
-the annunciation of the existence of spines of fishes in the Llandeilo
-Flags we owe to one of the most cautious and practised geologists of the
-present age,—Professor Sedgwick of Cambridge.
-
-So much for the _fact_ of the existence of vertebrata in the Lower
-Silurian formations, and the _argument_ founded on their presumed
-absence. Let me now refer—their presence being determined—to the tests
-of size and organization. Were these Silurian fishes of a bulk so
-inconsiderable as in any degree to sanction the belief that they had
-been developed shortly before from microscopic points? Or were they of a
-structure so low as to render it probable that their development was at
-the time incomplete? Were they, in other words, the embryos and fœtuses
-of their class? or did they, on the contrary, rank with the higher and
-larger fishes of the present time?
-
-It is of importance that not only the direct _bearing_, but also the
-actual _amount_, of the evidence in this case, should be fairly stated.
-So far as it extends, the testimony is clear; but it does not extend
-far. All the vertebrate remains yet detected in the Silurian System,
-if we except the debris of the Upper Ludlow bone-bed, might be sent
-through the Post-Office in a box scarcely twice the size of a copy of
-the “Vestiges.” The naturalist of an exploring party, who, in crossing
-some unknown lake, had looked down over the side of his canoe, and seen
-a few fish gliding through the obscure depths of the water, would be but
-indifferently qualified, from what he had witnessed, to write a history
-of _all_ its fish. Nor, were the some six or eight individuals of which
-he had caught a glimpse to be of small size, would it be legitimate for
-him to infer that only small-sized fish lived in the lake; though, were
-there to be some two or three large ones among them, he might safely
-affirm the contrary. Now, the evidence regarding the fishes of the
-Silurian formation very much resembles what that of the naturalist would
-be, in the supposed case, regarding the fishes of the unexplored lake;
-with, however, this difference, that as the deposits of the ancient
-system in which they occur have been examined for years in various parts
-of the world, and all its characteristic organisms, save the ichthyic
-ones, found in great abundance and fine keeping, we may conclude that
-the fish of the period were comparatively few. The palæontologist, so
-far as the question of number is involved, is in the circumstances, not
-of the naturalist who has only once crossed the unknown lake, but of the
-angler who, day after day, casts his line into some inland sea abounding
-in shell-fish and crustacea, and, after the lapse of months, can scarce
-detect a nibble, and, after the lapse of years, can reckon up all the
-fish which he has caught as considerably under a score. The existence
-of this great division of the animal kingdom, like that of the earlier
-reptiles during the Carboniferous period, did not form a prominent
-characteristic of those ages of the earth’s history in which they began
-to be.
-
-The earliest discovered vertebral remains of the system—those of the
-Upper Ludlow rock—were found in digging the foundations of a house at
-Ludford, on the confines of Shropshire, and submitted, in 1838, by
-Sir Roderick Murchison to Agassiz, through the late Dr. Malcolmson of
-Madras. I used at the time to correspond on geological subjects with Dr.
-Malcolmson,—an accomplished geologist and a good man, too early lost to
-science and his friends,—and still remember the interest which attached
-on this occasion to his communication bearing the Paris post-mark,
-from which I learned for the first time that there existed ichthyic
-fragments greatly older than even the ichthyolites of the Lower Old Red
-Sandstone, and which made me acquainted with Agassiz’s earliest formed
-decision regarding them. Though existing in an exceedingly fragmentary
-condition,—for the materials of the thin dark-colored layer in which
-they had lain seemed as if they had been triturated in a mortar,—the
-ichthyologist succeeded in erecting them into six genera; though it may
-be very possible,—as some of these were formed for the reception of
-detached spines, and others for the reception of detached teeth,—that,
-as in the case of _Dipterus_ and _Asterolepis_, the fragments of but
-a single genus may have been multiplied into two genera or more. And
-minute scale-like markings, which mingled with the general mass, and
-were at first regarded as the impressions of real scales, have been
-since recognized as of the same character with the scale-like markings
-of the _Seraphim_ of Forfarshire, a huge crustacean. Even admitting,
-however, that a set of teeth and spines, with perhaps the shagreen points
-represented in page 54, fig. 2, _b_, in addition, may have all belonged
-to but a single species of fish, there seem to be materials enough,
-among the remains found, for the erection of two species more. And we
-have evidence that at least two of the three kinds were fishes of the
-Placoid order, (_Onchus Murchisoni_ and _Onchus tenuistriatus_,) and—as
-the supposed scales must be given up—no good evidence that the other kind
-was not. The ichthyic remains of the Silurian System next discovered
-were first introduced to the notice of geologists by Professor Phillips,
-at the meeting of the British Association in 1842.[22] They occurred,
-he stated, in a quarry near Hales End, at the base of the Upper Ludlow
-rock, immediately over the Aymestry Limestone, and were so exceedingly
-diminutive, that they appeared to the naked eye as mere discolored spots;
-but resolved under the microscope into scattered groupes of minute
-spines, like those of the _Cheiracanthus_, with what seemed to be still
-more minute _scales_, or, perhaps,—what in such circumstances could
-scarce be distinguished from scales,—shagreen points of the scale-like
-type. The next ichthyic organism detected in the Silurian rocks occurred
-in the Wenlock Limestone, a considerably lower and older deposit, and was
-first described in the “Edinburgh Review” for 1845 by a vigorous writer
-and masterly geologist, (generally understood to be Professor Sedgwick of
-Cambridge,) as “a characteristic portion of a fish undoubtedly belonging
-to the Cestraciont family of the Placoid order.” In the “American
-Journal of Science” for 1846, Professor Silliman figured, from a work
-of the States’ Surveyors, the defensive spine of a Placoid found in the
-Onondago Limestone of New York,—a rock which occurs near the base of the
-Upper Silurian System, as developed in the western world;[23] and in
-the same passage he made reference to a mutilated spine detected in a
-still lower American deposit,—the Oriskany Sandstone. In the Geological
-Journal for 1847, it was announced by Professor Sedgwick, that he had
-found “_defences of fishes_” in the Upper Llandeilo Flags, and by Sir
-Roderick Murchison, that the “defence of an _Onchus_” had been detected
-by the geologists of the Government survey, in the Limestone near Bala.
-Sir Roderick referred in the same number to the remains of a fish found
-by Professor Phillips in the Wenlock Shale. And such, up to the present
-time, is the actual _amount_ of the evidence with which we have to deal,
-and the dates of its piecemeal production. Let us next consider the
-_order of its occurrence in the geologic scale_.
-
- { +-----+
- { Upper | | Fish, 1838,
- { Ludlow. | 1 | (Murchison.)
- { | | Fish, 1842,
- { +-----+ (Phillips.)
- { Aymestry | |
- { Limestone. | 2 |
- { +-----+
- UPPER SILURIAN ROCKS. { Lower | |
- { Ludlow. | 3 |
- { +-----+
- { Wenlock | | Fish, 1845,
- { Limestone. | 4 | (Sedgwick.)
- { | | Fish, 1846,
- { +-----+ (Silliman.)
- { Wenlock | 5 | Fish, 1847.
- { Shale. | | (Phillips.)
- +-----+
- -----
- { +-----+
- { Caradoc | |
- { Sandstone, | 6 |
- { &c. | |
- LOWER SILURIAN ROCKS. { +-----+
- { Llandeilo | | Fish, 1847,
- { Flags, &c. | 7 | (Sedgwick.)
- { +-----+
- -----
- { +-----+
- { Plynlimmon | |
- { Group. | _a_ |
- { +-----+
- { Bala | | Fish, 1847,
- CAMBRIAN ROCKS. { Limestone. | _b_ | (Geologists of
- { | | Government
- { +-----+ Survey.)
- { Snowdon | |
- { Group. | _c_ | Fucoids.
- { | |
- { +-----+
-
-The better marked sub-divisions of the Silurian System, as described
-in the great work specially devoted to it, may be regarded as seven
-in number. An eight has since been added, by the transference of the
-Tilestones from the lower part of the Old Red Sandstone group, to the
-upper part of the Silurian group underneath; but in order the better to
-show how ichthyic discovery has in its slow course penetrated into the
-depths, I shall retain the divisions recognized as those of the system
-when that course began. The highest or most modern Silurian deposit,
-then, (No. 1 of the accompanying diagram,) is the _Upper_ Ludlow Rock;
-and it is in the superior strata of this division that the bone-bed
-discovered in 1838 occurs; while the exceedingly minute vertebrate
-remains described by Professor Phillips in 1842 occur in its base. The
-division next in the descending order is the Aymestry Limestone, (No. 2;)
-the next (No. 3.) the _Lower_ Ludlow rock; then (No. 4.) the Wenlock or
-Dudley Limestone occurs; and then, last and oldest deposit of the _Upper_
-Silurian formation, the Wenlock shale, (No. 5.) It is in the fourth, or
-Wenlock Limestone division, that the defensive spine described in the
-“Edinburgh Review” for 1845 as the oldest vertebrate organism known at
-the time, was found;[24] while the vertebrate organism found by Professor
-Phillips belongs to the fifth, or base deposit of the Upper Silurian.
-Further, the American spines of Onondago and Oriskany, described in 1846,
-occurred in rocks deemed contemporary with those of the Wenlock division.
-We next cross the line which separates the base of the Upper from the top
-of the Lower Silurian deposits, and find a great arenaceous formation,
-(No. 6,) known as the Caradoc Sandstones; while the Llandeilo Flags, (No.
-7,) the formation upon which the sandstones rest, compose, according to
-the sections of Sir Roderick, published in 1839, the lowest deposit of
-the Lower Silurian rocks. And it is in the upper part of this lowest
-member of the system that the ichthyic defences, announced in 1847 by
-Professor Sedgwick, occur. Vertebrate remains have now been detected in
-the same relative position in the _seventh_ and _most ancient_ member
-of the system, that they were found to occupy in its _first_ and _most
-modern_ member ten years ago. But this is not all. Beneath the Lower
-Silurian division there occur vast fossiliferous deposits, to which the
-name “Cambrian System” was given, merely provisionally, by Sir Roderick,
-but which Professor Sedgwick still retains as representative of a
-distinct geologic period; and it is in these, greatly below the Lower
-Silurian base line, as drawn in 1839, that the Bala Limestones occur.
-The Plynlimmon rocks (_a_)—a series of conglomerate, grauwacke, and
-slate beds, several thousand yards in thickness—intervene between the
-Llandeilo Flags and the Limestones of Bala, (_b_.) And, of consequence,
-the defensive spine of the _Onchus_, announced in 1847 as detected in
-these limestones by the geologists of the Government Survey, must have
-formed part of a fish that perished many ages ere the oldest of the Lower
-Silurian formations _began_ to be deposited.
-
-Let us now, after this survey of both the amount of our materials, and
-the order and time of their occurrence, pass on to the question of size,
-as already stated. Did the ichthyic remains of the Silurian System,
-hitherto examined and described, belong to large or to small fishes? The
-question cannot be altogether so conclusively answered as in the case
-of those Ganoids of the Lower Old Red Sandstone whose dermal skeletons
-indicate their original dimensions and form. In fishes of the Placoid
-order, such as the Sharks and Rays, the dermal skeleton is greatly less
-continuous and persistent than in such Ganoids as the Dipterians and
-Cœlacanths; and when their remains occur in the fossil state, we can
-reason, in most instances, regarding the bulk of the individuals of which
-they formed part, merely from that of detached teeth or spines, whose
-proportion to the entire size of the animals that bore them cannot be
-strictly determined. We can, indeed, do little more than infer, that
-though a large Placoid may have been armed with but small spines or
-teeth, a small Placoid could not have borne very large ones. And to this
-Placoid order all the Silurian fish, from the Aymestry Limestone to the
-Cambrian deposits of Bala inclusive, unequivocally belong. Nor, as has
-been already said, is there sufficient evidence to show that any of the
-ichthyic remains of the Upper Ludlow rocks do _not_ belong to it. It is
-peculiarly the order of the system. The Ludlow bone-bed contains not
-only defensive spines, but also teeth, fragments of jaws, and shagreen
-points; whereas, in all the inferior deposits which yield any trace of
-the vertebrata, the remains are those of defensive spines exclusively.
-Let us, then, take the defensive spine as the part on which to found our
-comparison.
-
-One of the best marked Placoids of the Upper Ludlow bone-bed is that
-_Onchus Murchisoni_ to which the distinguished geologist whose name it
-bears refers, in his communication, as so nearly resembling the oldest
-Placoid yet known,—that of the Bala Limestone. And the living fishes
-with which the _Onchus Murchisoni_ must be compared, says Agassiz,
-though “the affinity,” he adds, “may be rather distant,” are those of
-the genera “_Cestracion_, _Centrina_, and _Spinax_.” I have placed
-before me a specimen of recent _Spinax_, of a species well known to
-all my readers on the sea-coast, the _Spinax Acanthias_, or common
-dog-fish, so little a favorite with our fishermen. It measures exactly
-two feet three inches in length; and of the defensive spines of its two
-dorsals,—these spear-like thorns on the creature’s back immediately in
-advance of the fins, which so frequently wound the fisher’s hand,—the
-anterior and smaller measures, from base to point, an inch and a half,
-and the posterior and larger, two inches. I have also placed before me
-a specimen of _Cestracion Phillippi_, (the Port Jackson Shark,) a fish
-now recognized as the truest existing analogue of the Silurian Placoids.
-It measures twenty-two three fourth inches in length, and is furnished,
-like _Spinax_, with two dorsal spines, of which the anterior and larger
-measures from base to point one one half inch, and the posterior and
-smaller, one one fifth inch. But the defensive spine of the _Onchus
-Murchisoni_, as exhibited in one of the Ludlow specimens, measures,
-though mutilated at both ends, three inches and five eighth parts in
-length. Even though existing but as a fragment, it is as such nearly
-twice the length of the largest spine of the dog-fish, unmutilated and
-entire, and considerably _more_ than twice the length of the largest
-spine of the Port Jackson Shark. The spines detected by Professor
-Phillips, in an inferior stratum of the same upper deposit, were, as
-has been shown, of microscopic minuteness; and when they seemed to
-rest on the extreme horizon of ichthyic existence as the most ancient
-remains of their kind, the author of the “Vestiges” availed himself of
-the fact. He regarded the little creatures to which they had belonged
-is the fœtal embryos of their class, or—to employ the language of the
-Edinburgh Reviewer—as “the tokens of Nature’s first and half-abortive
-efforts to make fish out of the lower animals.” From the latter editions
-of his work, the paragraph to which the Reviewer refers has, I find,
-been expunged; for the horizon has greatly extended, and what seemed
-to be its line of extreme distance has travelled into the middle of
-the prospect. But that the passage should have at all existed is a not
-uninstructive circumstance, and shows how unsafe it is, in more than
-external nature, to regard the line at which, for the time, the landscape
-closes, and heaven and earth seem to meet, as in reality the world’s end.
-The Wenlock spine, though certainly not microscopic, is, I am informed
-by Sir Philip Egerton, of but small size; whereas the contemporary spine
-of the Onondago Limestone, though comparatively more a fragment than the
-spine of the Upper Ludlow _Onchus_,—for it measures only three inches in
-length,—is at least five times as bulky as the largest spine of _Spinax
-Acanthias_. Representing one of the massier fishes disporting amid the
-some four or five small ones, of which in my illustration, the naturalist
-catches a glimpse in fording the unknown lake, it at least serves to
-show that all the Silurian ichthyolites must not be described as small,
-seeing that not only might many of its undetected fish have been large,
-but that some of those which _have_ been detected were actually so.
-Another American spine, of nearly the same formation,—for it occurs in
-a limestone, varying from twenty to seventy feet in thickness, which
-immediately overlies that of the Onondago deposit, though still more
-fragmentary than the first, for its length is only two three eighth
-inches,—maintains throughout a nearly equal thickness,—a circumstance
-in itself indicative of considerable size; and in positive bulk it
-almost rivals the Onondago one. Of the Lower Silurian and Bala fishes no
-descriptions or figures have yet appeared. And such, up to the present
-time, is the testimony derived from this department of Geology, so far
-as I have been able to determine it, regarding the size of the ancient
-Silurian vertebrata. “No organism,” says Professor Oken, “is, nor ever
-has one been, created, which is not microscopic.” The Professor’s pupils
-and abettors, the assertors of the development hypothesis, appeal to
-the geological evidence as altogether on _their_ side in the case; and
-straightway a few witnesses enter court. But, lo! among the expected
-dwarfs, there appear individuals of more than the average bulk and
-stature.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 47.
-
-a. _Posterior Spine of Spinax Acanthias._
-
-b. _Fragment of Onondago Spine._
-
-(Natural Size.)]
-
-Still, however, the question of organization remains. Did these ancient
-Placoid fishes stand high or low in the scale? According to the poet,
-“What can we reason but from what we know?” We are acquainted with the
-Placoid fishes of the present time; and from these only, taking analogy
-as our guide, can we form any judgment regarding the rank and standing
-of their predecessors, the Placoids of the geologic periods. But the
-consideration of this question, as it is specially one on which the
-later assertors of the development hypothesis concentrate themselves, I
-must, to secure the space necessary for its discussion, defer till my
-next chapter. Meanwhile, I am conscious I owe an apology to the reader
-for what he must deem tedious minuteness of description, and a too
-prolix amplitude of statement. It is only by representing things as they
-actually are, and in the true order of their occurrence, that the effect
-of the partially selected facts and exaggerated descriptions of the
-Lamarckian can be adequately met. True, the disadvantages of the more
-sober mode are unavoidably great. He who feels himself at liberty to
-arrange his collected shells, corals, and fish-bones, into artistically
-designed figures, and to select only the pretty ones, will be of course
-able to make of them a much finer show than he who is necessitated to
-represent them in the order and numerical proportions in which they occur
-on some pebbly beach washed by the sea. And such is the advantage, in a
-literary point of view, of the ingenious theorist, who, in making figures
-of his geological facts, takes no more of them than suits his purpose,
-over the man who has to communicate the facts as he finds them. But the
-homelier mode is the true one. “Could we obtain,” says a distinguished
-metaphysician, “a distinct and full history of all that has passed in
-the mind of a child, from the beginning of life and sensation till it
-grows up to the use of reason,—how its infant faculties began to work,
-and how they brought forth and ripened all the various notions, opinions,
-and sentiments which we find in ourselves when we come to be capable
-of reflection,—this would be a treasure of natural history which would
-probably give more light into the human faculties than all the systems
-of philosophers about them since the beginning of the world. But it is
-in vain,” he adds, “to wish for what nature has not put within the reach
-of our power.” In like manner, could we obtain, it may be remarked, a
-full and distinct account of a single class of the animal kingdom, from
-its first appearance till the present time, “this would be a treasure
-of natural history which would cast more light” on the origin of living
-existences, and the true economy of creation, than all the theories of
-all the philosophers “since the beginning of the world.” And in order to
-approximate to such a history as nearly as possible,—and it does seem
-possible to approximate near enough to substantiate the true readings of
-the volume, and to correct the false ones,—it is necessary that the real
-vestiges of creation should be carefully investigated, and their order of
-succession ascertained.
-
-
-
-
-HIGH STANDING OF THE PLACOIDS.—OBJECTIONS CONSIDERED.
-
-
-We have seen that some of the Silurian Placoids were large of size: the
-question still remains, Were they high in intelligence and organization?
-
-The Edinburgh Reviewer, in contending with the author of the “Vestiges,”
-replies in the affirmative, by claiming for them the first place among
-fishes. “Taking into account,” he says, “the brain and the whole nervous,
-circulating, and generative systems, they stand at the highest point of
-a natural ascending scale.” They are fishes, he again remarks, that rank
-among “the very highest types of their class.”
-
-“The fishes of this early age, and of all other ages previous to
-the Chalk,” says his antagonist, in reply, “are, for the most part,
-cartilaginous. The cartilaginous fishes—_Chondropterygii_ of Cuvier—are
-placed by that naturalist as a second series in his descending scale;
-being, however, he says, ‘in some measure _parallel to the first_.’
-How far this is different from their being the highest types of the
-fish class, need not be largely insisted upon. Linnæus, again, was so
-impressed by the low characters of many of this order, that he actually
-ranked them with worms. Some of the cartilaginous fishes, nevertheless,
-have certain peculiar features of organization, chiefly connected with
-reproduction, in which they excel other fish; but such features are
-partly partaken of by families in inferior sub-kingdoms, showing that
-they cannot truly be regarded as marks of grade in their own class. When
-we look to the great fundamental characters particularly to the framework
-for the attachment of the muscles, what do we find?—why, that of these
-Placoids,—‘the highest types of their class,’—it is barely possible to
-establish their being vertebrata at all, the back-bone having generally
-been too slight for preservation, although the vertebral columns of later
-fossil fishes are as entire as those of any other animals. In many of
-them traces can be observed of the muscles having been attached to the
-external plates, strikingly indicating their low grade as vertebrate
-animals. The Edinburgh Reviewer ‘highest types of their class’ are in
-reality a separate series of that class, generally inferior, taking the
-leading features of organization of structure as a criterion, but when
-details of organization are regarded, stretching farther, both downward
-and upward, than the other series; so that, looking at one extremity, we
-are as much entitled to call them the lowest, as the Reviewer, looking at
-another extremity, is to call them the ‘highest of their class.’ Of the
-general inferiority there can be no room for doubt. Their cartilaginous
-structure is, in the first place, analogous to the embryonic state of
-vertebrated animals in general. The maxillary and intermaxillary bones
-are in them rudimental. Their tails are finned on the under side only,—an
-admitted feature of the salmon in an embryonic stage; and the mouth is
-placed on the under side of the head,—also a mean and embryonic feature
-of structure. These characters are essential and important, whatever
-the Edinburgh Reviewer may say to the contrary; they are the characters
-which, above all, I am chiefly concerned in looking to, for they are
-features of embryonic progress, and embryonic progress is the grand key
-to the theory of development.”
-
-Such is the ingenious piece of special pleading which this most popular
-of the Lamarckians directs against the standing and organization of the
-earlier fishes. Let us examine it somewhat in detail, and see whether
-the slight admixture of truth which it contains serves to do aught more
-than to render current, like the gilding of a counterfeit guinea spread
-over the base metal, the amount of error which lies beneath. I know
-not a better example than that which it furnishes, of the entanglement
-and perplexity which the meshes of an artificial classification, when
-converted, in argumentative processes, into symbols and abstractions, are
-sure to involve subjects simple enough in themselves.
-
-Fishes, according to the classification of a preponderating majority
-of the ichthyologists that have flourished from the earliest times
-down to those of Agassiz, have been divided into two great series, the
-_Ordinary_ or osseous, and the _Chondropterygii_ or cartilaginous. And
-these two divisions of the class, instead of being ranged consecutively
-in a continuous line, the one in advance of the other, have been
-ranged in two parallel lines, the one directly abreast of the other.
-There is this further peculiarity in the arrangement, that the line
-of the cartilaginous series, from the circumstance that some of its
-families rise higher and some sink lower in the scale than any of the
-ordinary fishes, outflanks the array of the osseous series at both
-ends. The front which it presents contains fewer genera and species
-than that of the osseous division; but, like the front of an army drawn
-out in single file, it extends along a greater length of ground. And
-to this long-fronted series of the cartilaginous, or, according to
-Cuvier, _chondropterygian_ fishes, the Placoid families of Agassiz
-belong,—among the rest, the Placoids of the Silurian formations, Upper
-and Lower. But though all the Placoids of this latter naturalist be
-cartilaginous fishes, all cartilaginous fishes are not Placoids. The
-_Sturionidæ_ are cartilaginous, and are, as such, ranked by Cuvier
-among the _Chondropterygii_, whereas Agassiz places them in his Ganoid
-order. Many of the extinct fishes, too, such as the _Acanthodei_,
-_Dipteridæ_, _Cephalaspidæ_, were, as we have seen, cartilaginous in
-their internal framework, and yet true Ganoids notwithstanding. The
-principle of Agassiz’s classification wholly differs from that of Cuvier
-and the older ichthyologists; for it is a classification founded, not
-on the character of the internal but on that of the cuticular or dermal
-skeleton. And while to the geologist it possesses great and obvious
-advantages over every other,—for of the earlier fishes very little more
-than the cuticular skeleton survives,—it has this further recommendation
-to the naturalist, that, (in so far at least as its author has been true
-to his own principles,) instead of anomalously uniting the highest and
-lowest specimens of their class,—the fishes that most nearly approximate
-to the reptiles on the one hand, and the fishes that sink furthest
-towards the worms on the other,—it gathers into one consistent order all
-the individuals of the higher type, distinguished above their fellows
-by their development of brain, the extensive range of their instincts,
-and the perfection of their generative systems. Further, the history of
-animal existences, as recorded in the sedimentary rocks of our planet,
-reads a recommendation of this scheme of classification which it extends
-to no other. We find that in the progress of creation the fishes _began
-to be_ by groupes and septs, arranged according to the principle on which
-it erects its orders. The Placoids came first, the Ganoids succeeded
-them, and the Ctenoids and Cycloids brought up the rear. The march has
-been marshalled according to an appointed programme, the order of which
-it is peculiarly the merit of Agassiz to have ascertained.
-
-Now, may I request the reader to mark, in the first place that what we
-have specially to deal with at the present stage of the argument are the
-Placoid fishes of the Silurian formations, Upper and Lower. May I ask him
-to take note, in the second, that the long-fronted _chondropterygian_
-series of Cuvier, though it includes, as has already been said, the
-Placoid order of Agassiz,—just as the red-blooded division of animals
-includes the bimana and quadrumana,—is no more to be regarded as
-_identical_ with the Placoids, than the red-blooded animals are to be
-regarded as identical with the apes or with the human family. It simply
-includes them in the character of _one_ of the three great divisions into
-which it has been separated,—the division ranged, if I may so express
-myself, on the extreme right of the line; its middle portion, or main
-body, being composed of the _Sturiones_, a family on the general level of
-the osseous fishes; while, ranged on the extreme left, we find the low
-division of the _Suctorii_, _i. e._ Cyclostomi, or Lampreys. But with
-the middle and lower divisions we have at present nothing to do; for of
-neither of them, whether _Sturiones_ or _Suctorii_, does the Silurian
-System exhibit a trace. Further be it remarked, that the scheme of
-classification which gives an abstract standing to the _Chondropterygii_,
-is in itself merely a certain perception of resemblance which existed
-in certain minds, having _cartilage_ for its general idea; just as
-another certain perception of resemblance in one other certain mind
-had _cuticular skeleton_ for its general idea, and as yet another
-perception of resemblance in yet other certain minds had _red blood_
-for its general idea. As shown by the disparities which obtain among
-the section which the scheme serves to separate from the others, it no
-more determines rank or standing than that greatly more ancient scheme
-of classification into “ring-streaked and spotted,” which served to
-distinguish the flocks of the patriarch Jacob from those of Laban his
-father-in-law, but which did not distinguish goats from sheep, nor sheep
-from cattle.
-
-The effect of introducing, after this manner, generalizations made
-altogether irrespective of _rank_, and avowedly without reference to it,
-into what are inherently and specifically _questions of rank_, admits of
-a simple illustration.
-
-Let us suppose that it was not with the standing of the Silurian Placoids
-that we had to deal, but with that of the _mammals_ of the recent
-period, including the _quadrumana_, and even the _bimana_, and that we
-had ventured to describe them, in the words of the Edinburgh Reviewer,
-as “the very highest types of their class.” What would be thought of
-the reasoner who, in challenging the justice of the estimate, would
-argue that these creatures, men as well as monkeys, belonged simply to
-that division of red-blooded animals which includes, with the bimana
-and quadrumana, the frog, the gudgeon, and the _earthworm_?—a division,
-he might add, “which, when details of organization are regarded,
-stretches farther, both downward and upward,” than that division of the
-white-blooded animals to which the crab, the spider, the cuttle-fish,
-and the dragon fly belong; “so that, looking at one extremity, any one
-is as much entitled to call the red-blooded animals the lowest division,
-as any other, looking at another extremity, is to call them the highest
-division, of animals.” What, it might well be asked in reply, has the
-earthworm, with its red-blood to do in a question respecting the place
-and standing of the bimana? Or what, in the parallel case, have the
-_Suctorii_—the worms of Linnæus—to do in a question respecting the
-place and standing of the real Placoids? True it is that, according to
-one principle of classification, now grown somewhat obsolete, men and
-earthworms are equally red-blooded animals; true it is that, according
-to another principle of classification, the Placoids of Agassiz and the
-cartilaginous worms of Linnæus are equally _Chondropterygii_. The bimana
-and the earthworm have their red blood in common; the glutinous hag and
-the true Placoids have as certainly their internal cartilage in common;
-and if the fact of the red blood of the worm lowers in no degree the rank
-of the bimana, then, on the same principle, the fact of the internal
-cartilage of the glutinous hag cannot possibly detract from the standing
-of the true Placoid. In both cases they are creatures that entirely
-differ,—the earthworms from the bimana, and the cartilaginous _worms_
-from the Placoids; and the classification which tags them together,
-whether it be that of Aristotle or that of Cuvier, cannot be converted
-into a sort of minus quantity, of force enough to detract from the value
-and standing of the bimana in the one case, or of the true Placoids
-in the other. It is in no degree derogatory to the human family that
-earthworms possess red blood; it is in no degree derogatory to the true
-Placoids that the _Suctorii_ possess cartilaginous skeletons.
-
-Let the reader now mark the use which has been made, by the author of
-the “Vestiges,” of the name and authority of Linnæus. “Linnæus,” he
-states, “was so impressed by the low character of many of this order,
-(the _Chondropterygii_,) that he actually ranked them with worms.” Now,
-what is the fact here? Simply that Linnæus had no such general order as
-the _Chondropterygii_ in his eye at all. Though chiefly remarkable as a
-naturalist for the artificialness of his classifications, his estimate
-of the cartilaginous fishes was remarkable—though carried too far in its
-extremes, and in some degree founded in error—for an opposite quality.
-It was an estimate formed, in the main, on a natural basis. Instead of
-taking their cartilaginous skeleton into account, he looked chiefly at
-their standing as animals; and, struck with that extent of front which
-they present, and with both their superiority on the extreme right, and
-their inferiority on the extreme left, to the ordinary fishes, he erected
-them into two separate orders, the one lower and the other higher than
-the members of the osseous line. And so far was he from regarding the
-true Placoids—those _Chondropterygii_ which to an internal skeleton of
-cartilage add external plates, points, or spines of bone—as low in the
-scale, that he actually raised them above fishes altogether, by erecting
-them into an order of reptiles,—the older _Amphibia Nantes_. Surely, if
-the name of Linnæus was to be introduced into this controversy at all, it
-ought to have been in connection with _this_ special fact; seeing that
-the point to be determined in the question under discussion is simply
-the place and standing of that very order which the naturalist rated so
-high,—not the place and standing of the order which he degraded. It so
-happens that there is one of the _Chondropterygii_ which, so far from
-being a true Placoid, does not possess a single osseous plate, point, or
-spine: it is a worm like creature, without eyes, without movable jaws,
-without vertebral joints, without scales, always enveloped in slime, and
-greatly abhorred by our Scotch boatmen of the Moray Frith, who hold that
-it burrows, like the grave-worm, in the decaying bodies of the dead.
-And this creature, “the glutinous hag,” or, according to north-country
-fishermen, the “ramper-eel,” or “poison-ramper,” was regarded by Linnæus
-as belonging, not to the class of fishes, but to the Vermes. Now, _this_
-is the special fact with which, in the development controversy, the
-author of the “Vestiges” connects the name of the Swedish naturalist!
-All the fish of the Silurian System belonged to that true Placoid order
-which Linnæus, impressed by its high standing, erected into an order,
-not of worms, but of reptiles. He elevated A, the true Placoid, while he
-degraded B, the glutinous hag. But it was necessary to the argument of
-the author of the “Vestiges” that the earliest existing fish should be
-represented as fish low in the scale; and so he has cited the name and
-authority of Linnæus in its bearing against the glutinous hag B, as if
-it had borne against the standing of the true Placoid A. The Patagonians
-are the tallest and bulkiest men in the world, whereas their neighbors,
-the Fuegians are a slim and diminutive race. And if, in some controversy
-raised regarding the real size of the more gigantic tribe, they were to
-be described as the “very _tallest_ types of their class,” any statement
-in reply, to the effect that some trustworthy voyager had examined
-certain races of the extreme south of America, and had found that they
-were both short and thin, would be neither relevant in its facts nor
-legitimate in its bearing. But if the controversialist who thus strove
-to strengthen his case by the voyager’s authority, was at the same time
-fully aware that the voyager had seen not only the diminutive Fuegians,
-but also the gigantic Patagonians, and that he had described these last
-as very gigantic indeed, the introduction of the statement regarding the
-smaller race, when he wholly sank the statement regarding the larger,
-would be not merely very irrelevant in the circumstances, but also very
-unfair. Such, however, is the style of statement to which the author of
-the “Vestiges” has (I trust inadvertently) resorted in this controversy.
-
-It is not uninstructive to mark how slowly and gradually the naturalists
-have been groping their way to a right classification in the ichthyic
-department of their science, and how it has been that identical
-perception of resemblance, having _cartilage_ for its general idea,
-to which the author of the “Vestiges” attaches so much importance,
-that has served mainly to retard their progress. Not a few of the more
-distinguished among their number deemed it too important a distinction
-to be regarded as merely secondary; and so long as it was retained as
-a primary characteristic, the fishes failed to range themselves in the
-natural order;—dissimilar tribes were brought into close neighborhood,
-while tribes nearly allied were widely separated. It failed, as has
-been shown, to influence Linnæus; and though he no doubt pressed his
-peculiar views too far when he degraded the glutinous hag into a worm,
-and elevated the Sharks and Rays into reptiles, it is certainly worthy
-of remark, that, in the scheme of classification which is now regarded
-as the _most natural_,—that of Professor Muller, modified by Professor
-Owen,—the ichthyic worms of the Swede are placed in the first and
-lowest order of fishes,—the _Dermopteri_,—and the greater part of his
-ichthyic reptiles, in the eleventh and highest,—the _Plagiostomi_. Cuvier
-yielded, as has been shown, to the idea of resemblance founded on the
-_material_ of the ichthyic framework, and so ranged his fishes into two
-parallel lines. Professor Oken, after first enunciating as law that “the
-characteristic _organ_ of fishes is the osseous system,” confessed the
-“great difficulty” which attaches to the question of skeletal “texture
-or substance,” and finally gave up the distinction founded on it as
-obstinately irreducible to the purposes of a natural classification.
-“The cartilaginous fishes,” he says, “appear to belong to each other,
-and are also usually arranged together; yet amongst them we find those
-species, such as the Lampreys, which obviously occupy the lowest grade
-of all fishes, while the Sharks and Rays remind us of the Reptilia.”
-And so, sinking the consideration of texture altogether, he placed the
-family of the Lamprey, including the glutinous hag, at the bottom of the
-scale, and the Sharks and Rays at the top. Agassiz’s system, peculiarly
-his own, has had the rare merit, as I have shown, of furnishing a key
-to the history of the fish in its several dynasties, which we may in
-vain seek in any other. His divisions,—if, retaining his strongly-marked
-Placoids and Ganoids, as orders stamped in the mint of nature, we throw
-his perhaps less obviously divisible Ctenoids and Cycloids into one
-order,—the corneous or horn-covered,—are scarcely less representative
-of periods than those great classes of the vertebrata, mammals, birds,
-reptiles, and fishes, which we find not less regularly ranged in their
-order of succession in the geologic record than in the “Animal Kingdom”
-of Cuvier,—a shrewd corroboration, in both cases, I am disposed to
-think, of the rectitude of the arrangement. What seems to be the special
-defect of his system is, that having erected his four orders, and then
-finding a certain number of residuary families that, on his principle
-of cuticular character, stubbornly refused to fall into any determinate
-place, he distributed them among the others, with reference chiefly to
-the totally distinct principle of Cuvier. Thus the _Suctorii_, soft,
-smooth, slimy-skinned fishes, that do not possess a single placoid
-character, and are not true Placoids, he has yet placed in his Placoid
-order, influenced, apparently, by the “perception of resemblance that
-has _cartilage_ for its central idea;” and the effect has been a massing
-into one anomalous and entangled group the fishes of the first period
-of geologic history, with fishes of which we do not find a trace save
-in the existing scene of things, and of the highest families of their
-class with families that occupy the lowest place. But we live in an age
-in which even the benefactors of the world of mind cannot make false
-steps with impunity; and so, while Agassiz’s _three_ ichthyic orders will
-continue to be recognized by the palæontologist as the orders of three
-great geologic periods, the _Suctorii_ have already been struck from off
-his higher fishes by the classification of Muller and Owen, and carried
-to that lowest point in the scale (indicated by Linnæus and Oken) which
-their inferior standing renders so obviously the natural one. Some of
-my readers may perhaps remember how finely Bacon, in his “Wisdom of the
-Ancients,” interprets the old mythologic story of Prometheus. Prometheus,
-says the philosopher, had conferred inestimable favors on men, by
-moulding their forms into shape, and bringing them fire from heaven; and
-yet they complained of him and his teachings to Jupiter. And the god,
-instead of censuring their ingratitude, was pleased with the complaint,
-and rewarded them with gifts. In putting nature to the question, it is
-eminently wholesome to be doubting, cross-examining, complaining; ever
-demanding of our masters and benefactors the philosophers, that they
-should reign over us, not arbitrarily and despotically,
-
- “Like the old kings, with high exacting looks,
- Sceptred and globed,”
-
-but like our modern constitutional monarchs, who govern by law; and,
-further, that an appeal from their decisions on all subjects within the
-jurisdiction of Nature should for ever be open to Nature herself. The
-seeming ingratitude of such a course, if the “complaints” be made in a
-right spirit and on proper grounds, Jupiter always rewards with gifts.
-
-Let us now see for ourselves, in this spirit, whether there may not be
-something absolutely derogatory, in the existence of a cartilaginous
-skeleton, to the creatures possessing it; or whether a deficit of
-internal bone may not be greatly more than neutralized, as it assuredly
-must have been in the view of Linnæus, Muller, and Owen, by a larger than
-ordinary share of a vastly more important substance.
-
-
-
-
-THE PLACOID BRAIN. EMBRYONIC CHARACTERISTICS NOT NECESSARILY OF A LOW
-ORDER.
-
-
-That special substance, according to whose mass and degree of development
-all the creatures of this world take rank in the scale of creation,
-is not _bone_, but _brain_. Were animals to be ranged according to
-the solidity of their bones, the class of birds would be assigned the
-first place; the family of the _Felidæ_, including the tiger and lion,
-the second; and the other terrestrial carnivora the third. Man and the
-herbivorous animals, though tolerably low in the scale, would be in
-advance of at least the reptiles. Most of these, however, would take
-precedence of the sagacious _Delphinidæ_; the osseous fishes would
-come next in order; the true Placoids would follow, succeeded by the
-_Sturiones_; and the _Suctorii_, _i. e._ Cyclostomi or Lampreys, would
-bring up the rear. There would be evidently no order here: the utter
-confusion of such an arrangement, like that of the bits of a dissected
-map flung carelessly out of its box by a child, would of itself
-demonstrate the inadequacy and erroneousness of the regulating principle.
-But how very different the appearance presented, when for _solidity of
-bone_ we substitute _development of brain_! Man takes his proper place
-at the head of creation; the lower mammalia follow,—each species in
-due order, according to its modicum of intelligence; the birds succeed
-the mammalia; the reptiles succeed the birds; the fishes succeed the
-reptiles; next in the long procession come the invertebrate animals; and
-these, too, take rank, if not according to their development of brain
-proper, at least according to their development of the _substance_ of
-brain. The occipital nervous ganglion of the scorpion greatly exceeds
-in size that of the earthworm; and the occipital nervous ring of the
-lobster, that of the intestinal Ascaris. At length, when we reach the
-lowest or _acrite_ division of the animal kingdom, the substance of
-brain altogether disappears. It has been calculated by naturalists, that
-in the vertebrata, the brain in the class of fishes bears an average
-proportion to the spinal cord of about two to one; in the class of
-reptiles, of about two and a half to one; in the class of birds, of about
-three to one; in the class of mammals, of about four to one; and in the
-high-placed, sceptre-bearing human family, a proportion of not less than
-_twenty-three_ to one. It is palpably according to development of brain,
-not development of bone, that we are to determine points of precedence
-among the animals,—a fact of which no one can be more thoroughly aware
-than the author of the “Vestiges” himself. Of this let me adduce a
-striking instance, of which I shall make further use anon.
-
-“All life,” says Oken, “is from the sea; none from the continent.
-Man also is a child of the warm and shallow parts of the sea in the
-neighborhood of the land.” Such also was the hypothesis of Lamarck and
-Maillet. In following up the view of his masters, the author of the
-“Vestiges” fixes on the _Delphinidæ_ as the sea-inhabiting progenitors
-of the simial family, and, through the simial family, of man For that
-highest order of the mammalia to which the _Simiadæ_ (monkeys) belong,
-“there remains,” he says, “a basis in the _Delphinidæ_, the last and
-smallest of the cetacean tribes. This affiliation has a special support
-in the brain of the dolphin family, which is distinctly allowed to be,
-in proportion to general bulk, the greatest among mammalia next to the
-orang-outang and man. We learn from Tiedemann, that each of the cerebral
-hemispheres is composed, as in man and the monkey tribe, of three
-lobes,—an anterior, a middle, and a posterior; and these hemispheres
-present much more numerous circumvolutions and grooves than those of any
-other animal. Here it might be rash to found any thing upon the ancient
-accounts of the dolphin,—its familiarity with man, and its helping him
-in shipwreck and various marine disasters; although it is difficult to
-believe these stories to be altogether without some basis in fact. There
-is no doubt, however, that the dolphin evinces a predilection for human
-society, and charms the mariner by the gambols which it performs beside
-his vessel.”
-
-Here, then, the author of the “Vestiges” palpably founds on a large
-development of brain in the dolphin, and on the manifestation of a
-correspondingly high order of instincts,—and this altogether irrespective
-of the structure or composition of the creature’s internal skeleton. The
-substance to which he looks as all-important in the case is _brain_, not
-_bone_. For were he to estimate the standing of the dolphin, not by its
-brain, but by its skeleton, he would have to assign to it a place, not
-only _not_ in advance of its brethren the _mammalia_ of the sea, but
-even in the rear of the _reptiles_ of the sea, the marine tortoises, or
-turtles,—and scarce more than abreast of the osseous fishes. “Fishes,”
-says Professor Owen, in his “Lectures on the Vertebrate Animals,”
-“have the least proportion of earthy matter in their bones; birds the
-largest. The mammalia, especially the active, predatory species, have
-more earth, or harder bones, than reptiles. In each class, however, there
-are differences in the density of bone among its several members. For
-example, in the fresh-water fishes, the bones are lighter, and retain
-more animal matter, than in those which swim in the denser sea. And in
-the _dolphin_, a warm-blooded marine animal, they differ little in this
-respect from those of the sea-fish.” Such being the fact, it is surely
-but fair to inquire of the author of the “Vestiges,” why he should
-determine the rank and standing of the _Delphinidæ_ according to one set
-of principles, and the rank and standing of the Placoids according to
-another and entirely different set? If the _Delphinidæ_ are to be placed
-high in the scale, notwithstanding the softness of their skeletons,
-simply because their brains are large, why are the Placoids to be
-placed low in the scale, notwithstanding the largeness of their brains,
-simply because their skeletons are soft? It is not too much to demand,
-that on the principle which he himself recognizes as just, he should
-either degrade the dolphin or elevate the Placoid. For it is altogether
-inadmissible that he should reason on one set of laws when the exigencies
-of his hypothesis require that creatures with soft skeletons should be
-raised in the scale, and on another and entirely different set when its
-necessities demand that they should be depressed.
-
-But do the Placoids possess in reality a large development of brain? I
-have examined the brains of almost all the common fish of our coast, both
-osseous and cartilaginous, not, I fear, with the skill of a Tiedemann,
-but all the more intelligently in consequence of what Tiedemann had
-previously done and written: and so I can speak with some little
-confidence on the subject, so far at least as my modicum of experience,
-thus acquired, extends. Of all the common fish of the Scottish seas,
-the spotted or lesser dog-fish bears, in proportion to its size, the
-largest brain; the gray or picked dog-fish ranks next in its degree
-of development; the Rays, in their various species, follow after; and
-the osseous fishes compose at least the great body of the rear; while
-still further behind, there lags a hapless class—the _Suctorii_, one of
-which, the glutinous hag, has scarce any brain, and one, the _Amphioxus_
-or lancelet, wants brain altogether. I have compared the brain of the
-spotted dog-fish with that of a young alligator, and have found that in
-scarce any perceptible degree was it inferior, in point of bulk, and very
-slightly indeed in point of organization, to the brain of the reptile.
-And the instincts of this Placoid family,—one of the truest existing
-representatives of the Placoids of the Silurian System[25] to which we
-can appeal,—correspond, we invariably find, with their superior cerebral
-development. I have seen the common dog-fish, _Spinax Acanthias_,
-hovering in packs in the Moray Frith, some one or two fathoms away from
-the side of the herring boat from which, when the fishermen were engaged
-in hauling their nets, I have watched them, and have admired the caution
-which, with all their ferocity of disposition, they rarely failed to
-manifest;—how they kept aloof from the net, even more warily than the
-cetacea themselves,—though both dog-fish and cetacea are occasionally
-entangled;—and how, when a few herrings were shaken loose from the
-meshes they at once darted upon them, exhibiting for a moment, through
-the green depths, the pale gleam of their abdomens, as they turned upon
-their sides to seize the desired morsels,—a motion rendered necessary
-by the position of the mouth in this family; and how next, their object
-accomplished, they fell back into their old position, and waited on as
-before. And I have been assured by intelligent fishermen, that at the
-deep-sea white-fishing, in which baited hooks, not nets, are employed,
-the degree of shrewd caution exercised by these creatures seems more
-extraordinary still. The hatred which the fisher bears to them arises not
-more from the actual amount of mischief which they do him, than from the
-circumstance that in most cases they persist in doing it with complete
-impunity to themselves. I have seen, said an observant Cromarty fisherman
-to the writer of these chapters, a pack of dog-fish watching beside
-our boat, as we were hauling our lines, and severing the hooked fish,
-as they passed them, at a bite, just a little above the vent, so that
-they themselves escaped the swallowed hook; and I have frequently lost,
-in this way, no inconsiderable portion of a fishing. I have observed,
-however, he continued, that when a fresh pack of hungry dog-fish came
-up, and joined the pack that had been robbing us so coolly, and at their
-leisure, a sudden rashness would seize the whole,—the united packs would
-become a mere heedless mob, and, rushing forward, they would swallow
-our fish entire, and be caught themselves by the score and the hundred.
-We may see something very similar to this taking place among even the
-shrewder mammalia. When pig refuses to take his food, his mistress
-straightway calls upon the cat, and, quickened by the dread of the coming
-rival, he gobbles up his rations at once. With the comparatively large
-development of brain, and the corresponding manifestations of instinct,
-which the true Placoids exhibit, we find other unequivocal marks of a
-general superiority to their class. In their reproductive organs they
-rank not with the common fishes, nor even with the lower reptiles,
-but with the Chelonians and the Sauria. Among the Rays, as among the
-higher animals, there are individual attachments formed between male and
-female: their eggs unlike the mere spawn of the osseous fishes, or of
-even the Batrachians, are, like those of the tortoise and the crocodile,
-comparatively few in number, and of considerable size: their young,
-too, like the young of birds and of the higher reptiles, pass through
-no such metamorphosis as those of the toad and frog, or of the amphibia
-generally. And some of their number—the common dog-fish for instance—are
-ovoviviparous, bringing forth their young, like the common viper and the
-viviparous lizard, alive and fully formed.
-
-“But such features,” says the author of the “Vestiges,” referring
-chiefly to certain provisions connected with the reproductory system
-in the Placoids, “are partly partaken of by families in inferior
-sub-kingdoms, showing that they cannot truly be regarded as marks of
-grade in their own class.” Nay, single features do here and there occur
-in the inferior sub-kingdoms, which very nearly resemble single features
-in the placoid character and organization, which even very nearly
-resemble single features in the _human_ character and organization; but
-is there any of the inferior sub-kingdoms in which there occurs such
-a _collocation_ of features? or does such a collocation occur in any
-class of animals—setting the Placoids wholly out of view—which is not
-a high class? Nay, further, does there occur in any of the inferior
-sub-kingdoms—existing even as a single feature—that most prominent,
-leading characteristic of this series of fishes,—a large brain?
-
-But is not the “cartilaginous structure” of the Placoids analogous to
-the embryonic state of vertebrated animals in general? Do not the other
-placoid peculiarities to which the author of the “Vestiges” refers,—such
-as the heterocercal or one-sided tail, the position of the mouth on the
-under side of the head, and the rudimental state of the maxillaries
-and intermaxillaries,—bear further analogies with the embryonic state
-of the higher animals? And is not “embryonic progress the grand key to
-the theory of development?” Let us examine this matter. “These are the
-characters,” says this ingenious writer, “which, above all, I am chiefly
-concerned in looking to; for they are features of embryonic progress, and
-embryonic progress is the grand key to the theory of development.” Bold
-assertion, certainly; but, then, assertion is not argument! The statement
-is not a reason for the faith that is in the author of the “Vestiges,”
-but simply an avowal of it; it is simply a confession, not a defence,
-of the Lamarckian creed; and, instead of being admitted as embodying a
-first principle, it must be put stringently to the question, in order to
-determine whether it contain a principle at all.
-
-In the first place, let us remark, that the cartilaginous structure
-of the Placoids bears no very striking analogy to the cartilaginous
-structure of the higher vertebrata in the embryonic state. In the case
-of the _Delphinidæ_, with their soft skeletons, the analogy is greatly
-more close. Bone consists of animal matter, chiefly gelatinous, hardened
-by a diffusion of inorganic earth. In the bones of young and fœtal
-mammalia, inhabitants of the land, the gelatinous prevails; in the old
-and middle-aged there is a preponderance of the earth. Now, in the bones
-of the dolphin there is comparatively little earth. The analogies of
-its internal skeleton bear, not on the skeletons of its brethren the
-mature full-grown mammals of the land, but on the skeletons of their
-immature or fœtal offspring. But in the case of the true Placoids that
-analogy is faint indeed. Their skeletons contain true bone;—the vertebral
-joints of the Sharks and Rays possess each, as has been shown, an osseous
-nucleus, which retains, when subjected to the heat of a common fire,
-the complete form of the joint; and their cranial framework has its
-surface always covered over with hard osseous points. But though their
-skeletons possess thus their modicum of bone, unlike those of embryonic
-birds or mammals, they contain, in what is properly their cartilage, no
-gelatine. The analogy signally fails in the very point in which it has
-been deemed specially to exist. The cartilage of the _Chondropterygii_
-is a substance so essentially different from that of young or embryonic
-birds and mammals, and so unique in the animal kingdom, that the heated
-water in which the one readily dissolves has no effect whatever upon the
-other. It is, however, a curious circumstance, exemplified in some of the
-Shark family,[26] though it merely serves, in its exceptive character,
-to establish the general fact, that while the rays of the double fins,
-which answer to the phalanges, are all formed of this _indissoluble_
-cartilage, those rays which constitute their outer framework, with the
-rays which constitute the framework of all the single fins, are composed
-of a _mucoidal_ cartilage, which boils into glue. At certain definite
-lines a change occurs in the texture of the skeleton; and it is certainly
-suggestive of thought, that the difference of substance which the change
-involves distinguishes that part of the skeleton which is homologically
-representative of the skeletons of the higher vertebrata, from that part
-of it which is peculiar to the creature as a fish, viz. the dorsal and
-caudal rays, and the extremities of the double fins. These emphatically
-ichthyic portions of the animal may be dissipated by boiling, whereas
-what Linnæus would perhaps term its _reptilian_ portion abides the heat
-without reduction.
-
-But is not the one-sided tail, so characteristic of the sharks, and of
-almost all the ancient Ganoids, also a characteristic of the young salmon
-just burst from the egg? Yes, assuredly; and, so far as research on the
-subject has yet extended, of not only the salmon, but of _all_ the other
-osseous fishes in their fœtal state. The salmon, on its escape from the
-egg, is a little monster of about three quarters of an inch in length,
-with a huge heart-shaped bag, as bulky as all the rest of its body,
-depending from its abdomen. In this bag provident nature has packed up
-for it, in lieu of a nurse, food for five weeks; and, moving about every
-where in its shallow pool, with its provision knapsack slung fast to it,
-it reminds one disposed to be fanciful, save that its burden is on the
-wrong side, of Scottish soldiers of the olden time summoned to attend
-their king in war,—
-
- “Each on his _back_, a slender store,
- His forty days’ provision bore,
- As ancient statutes tell.”
-
-Around that terminal part of the creature’s body traversed by the
-caudal portion of the vertebral column, which commences in the salmon
-immediately behind the ventrals, there runs at this period, and for the
-ensuing five weeks in which it does not feed, a membranous fringe or fin,
-which exactly resembles that of the tadpole, and which, existing simply
-as an expansion of the skin, exhibits no mark or rays. In the place of
-the true caudal fin, however, we may detect with the assistance of a
-lens, an internal framework with two well-marked lobes, and ascertain,
-further, that this tail is set on awry,—the effect of a slight upward
-bend in the creature’s body. And when viewed in a strong light as a
-transparency, we perceive that the spinal cord takes the same upward
-bend, and, as in the sturgeon, passes in an exceedingly attenuated
-form into the upper lobe. What may be regarded as the _design_ of the
-arrangement is probably to be found in the peculiar form given to the
-little creature by the protuberan bag in front. A wise instinct teaches
-it, from the moment of its exclusion from the egg, to avoid its enemies.
-In the instant the human shadow falls upon its pool, we see it darting
-into some recess at the side or bottom, with singular alacrity; and in
-order to enable it to do so, and to steer itself aright,—as, like an
-ill-trimmed vessel, deep in the water ahead, the balance of its body
-is imperfect,—there is, if I may so express myself, a heterocercal
-peculiarity of helm required. It has got an irregularly-developed tail to
-balance an irregularly-developed body, as skiffs _lean_ on the one beam
-and _full_ on the other require, in rowing, a cast of the rudder to keep
-them straight in their course.
-
-Sinking altogether, however, the final cause of the peculiarity, and
-regarding it simply as a _fœtal_ one, that indicates a certain stage
-of imperfection in the creature in which it occurs, on what principle,
-I ask, are we to infer that what is a sign of immaturity in the young
-of one set of animals, is a mark of inferior organization in the adult
-forms of another set? The want of eyes in any of the animal families, or
-the want of organs of progression, or a fixed and sedentary condition,
-like that of the oyster, are all marks of great inferiority. And yet,
-if we admit the principle, that what are evidences of immaturity in
-the young members of one family are signs of inferior organization in
-the fully-grown members of another, it could easily be shown that eyes
-and legs are defects, and that the unmoving oyster stands higher in the
-scale than the ever-restless fish or bird. The immature _Tubularia_
-possess locomotive powers, whereas in their fully developed state they
-remain fixed to one spot in their convoluted tubes. The immature _Lepas_
-is furnished with members well adapted for swimming, and with which it
-swims freely; as it rises towards maturity, these become blighted and
-weak; and, when fully grown,—fixed by its fleshy pedicle to the rock or
-floating log to which it attached itself in its transition state,—it is
-no longer able to swim. The immature _Balanus_ is furnished with two
-eyes: in its state of maturity these are extinguished, and it passes its
-period of full development in darkness. Further, it is not generally held
-that in the human family a white skin is a decided mark of degradation,
-but rather the reverse; and yet nothing can be more certain than that
-the Negro fœtus has a white skin. Since eyes, and organs of progression,
-and a power of moving freely, and a white skin, are mere embryonic
-peculiarities in the _Balanus_, the _Lepas_, the _Tubularia_, and the
-Negro, and yet are in themselves, when found in the mature animal,
-evidences of a high, not of a low standing, on what principle, I ask are
-we to infer that the peculiarity of a heterocercal tail, embryonic in the
-salmon, is, when found in the mature Placoid, an evidence, not of a high
-standing, but of a low? Every true analogy in the case favors an exactly
-opposite view. In the heterocercal or one-sided tail, the vertebral
-joints gradually diminish, as in the tails of the _Sauria_ and _Ophidia_,
-till they terminate in a point; whereas the homocercal tail common to the
-osseous fishes exhibits no true analogy with the tails of the higher
-orders. Its abruptly terminating vertebral column, immensely developed
-posterior processes, and broadly expanded osseous rays, seem to be simply
-a few of the many marks of decline and degradation which fishes, the
-oldest of the vertebrata, exhibit in this late age of the world, and
-which, in at least the earlier geologic periods, when they were greatly
-younger as a class, they did not betray.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 48.
-
-a. _Tail of Spinax Acanthias._
-
-b. _Tail of Ichthyosaurus Tenuirostris_, (Buckland.)]
-
-In illustration of this view, I would fain recommend to the reader a
-simple experiment. Let him procure the tail of a common dog-fish, (fig.
-48, _a_,) and cutting it across about half an inch above where the
-caudal fin begins, let him boil it smartly for about half an hour. He
-will first see it swell and then burst, all around those thinner parts
-of the fin that are traversed by the caudal rays,—wholly mucoidal, as
-shown by this test, in their texture, and which yield to the boiling
-water, as if formed of isinglass. They finally dissolve, and drop away,
-with the surrounding cuticular integument; and then there only remains,
-as the insoluble framework of the whole, the bodies of the vertebræ,
-with their neural and hœmal processes. The tail has now lost much of its
-ichthyic character, and has acquired, instead, a considerable degree of
-resemblance to the reptilian tail, as exemplified in the saurians. I
-have introduced into the wood-cut, for the purpose of comparison, the
-tail of the ichthyosaurus, (_b_.) It consists, like the other, of a
-series of gradually diminishing vertebræ, and must have also supported,
-says Professor Owen, a propelling fin, placed vertically, as in the
-shark, which, however, from its perishable nature, has in every instance
-disappeared in the earth, as that of the dog-fish disappears in the
-boiling water. It will be seen that its processes are comparatively
-smaller than those of the fish, and that the bodies of its vertebræ are
-shorter and bulkier; but there is at least a general correspondence of
-the parts; and were the tail of the crocodile, of which the vertebral
-bodies are slender and the processes large, to be substituted for that of
-the enaliosaur here, the correspondence would be more marked still. After
-thus _developing_ the tail of the reptile out of that of the fish,—as the
-cauldron-bearing Irish magician of the tale developed young ladies out
-of old women,—simply by _boiling_, let the reader proceed to a second
-stage of the experiment, and see whether he may not be able still further
-to develope the reptilian tail so obtained, into that of the mammal, by
-_burning_. Let him spread it out on a piece of iron hoop, and thrust it
-into the fire; and then, after exposure for some time to a red heat has
-consumed and dissipated its merely cartilaginous portions, such as the
-neural and hœmal processes, with the little pieces which form the sides
-of the neural arch, and left only the whitened bodies of the vertebræ,
-let him say whether the bony portion which remains does not present a
-more exact resemblance to the mammiferous tail—that of the dog, for
-example—than any thing else he ever saw. The Lamarckians may well deem it
-an unlucky circumstance, that one special portion of their theory should
-demand the depreciation of the heterocercal tail, seeing that it might be
-represented with excellent effect in another, as not merely a connecting
-link in the upward march of progression between the tail of the true fish
-and that of the true reptile, but as actually containing in itself—as
-the caterpillar contains the future pupa and butterfly—the elements of
-the reptilian and mammiferous tail. If there be any virtue in analogy,
-the heterocercal tail is, I repeat, of a decidedly higher type than the
-homocercal one. It furnishes the first example in the vertebrata of the
-coccygeal vertebræ diminishing to a point, which characterizes not only
-all the higher reptiles, but also all the higher mammals, and which we
-find represented by the _Os coccygis_ in man himself. But to this special
-point I shall again refer.
-
-With regard to that rudimentary state of the _occipital_ framework of
-the Placoids to which the author of the “Vestiges” refers, it may be but
-necessary to say that, notwithstanding the simplicity of their box-like
-skulls, they bear in their character, as cases for the protection of
-the brain, at least as close an analogy to the skulls of the higher
-animals, as those of the osseous fishes, which consist usually of the
-extraordinary number of from sixty to eighty bones,—a mark—the author of
-the “Vestiges” himself being judge in the case—rather of inferiority than
-the reverse. “Elevation is marked in the scale,” we find him saying,
-“by an animal exchanging a multiplicity of parts serving one end, for
-a smaller number.” The skull of a cod consists of about thrice as many
-separate bones as that of a man. But I do not well see that in this case
-the fact either of _simplicity_ in excess or of _multiplicity_ in excess
-can be insisted upon in either direction, as a proper basis for argument.
-Nearly the same remark applies to the maxillaries as to the skull. The
-under jaw in man consists of a single bone; that of the thornback—if we
-do not include the two suspending _ribs_, which belong equally to the
-upper jaw—of two bones, (the number in all the mammiferous quadrupeds:)
-that of the cod of four bones, and, if we include the suspending
-_ribs_, of twelve. On what principle are we to hold, with _one_ as the
-representative number of the highest type of jaw, that _two_ indicates
-a lower standing than _four_, or _four_ than _twelve_? In reference to
-the further statement, that in many of the ancient fishes “traces can
-be observed of the muscles having been attached to the external plates,
-strikingly indicating their low grade as vertebrate animals,” it may
-be answer enough to state, that the peculiarity in question was not a
-characteristic of the _most_ ancient fishes,—the Placoids of the Silurian
-system,—but of some Ganoids of the succeeding systems. The reader may
-remember, as a case in point, the example furnished by the nail-like bone
-of _Asterolepis_, figured in page 111, in which there exists depressions
-resembling that of the round ligament in the head of the quadrupedal
-thigh-bone. And as for the remark that the opening of the mouth of
-the Placoid, “on the under side of the head,” is indicative of a low
-embryonic condition, it might be almost sufficient to remark, in turn,
-that the lowest family of fishes—that to which the supposed worms of
-Linnæus belong—have the mouth not under, but at the anterior termination
-of the head,—in itself an evidence that the position of the mouth at the
-extremity of the muzzle, common to the greater number of the osseous
-fishes, can be no very high character, seeing that the humblest of the
-_Suctorii_ possess it; and that many osseous fishes, whose mouths open,
-not on the under, but the upper side of the snout, as in the distorted
-and asymmetrical genus _Platessa_, are not only in no degree superior to
-their bony neighbors, and far inferior to the placoid ones, but bear,
-in direct consequence of the arrangement, an expression of unmistakable
-stupidity. The objection, however, admits of a greatly more conclusive
-reply.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 49.
-
-PORT JACKSON SHARK, (_Cestracion Phillippi_.)]
-
-“This fish, to speak in the technical language of Agassiz,” says the
-Edinburgh Reviewer, in reference to the ancient ichthyolite of the
-Wenlock Shale, “undoubtedly belongs to the Cestraciont family of the
-Placoid order,—proving to demonstration that the oldest known fossil fish
-[1845] belongs to the highest type of that division of the vertebrata.”
-I may add, that the character and family of this ancient specimen was
-determined by our highest British authority in fossil ichthyology,
-Sir Philip Egerton. And it is in depreciation of Professor Sedgwick’s
-statement regarding its high standing that the author of the “Vestiges”
-refers to the supposed inferiority indicated by a mouth opening, not at
-the extremity of the muzzle, but under the head. Let us, then, fully
-grant, for the argument’s sake, that the occurrence of the mouth in the
-muzzle _is_ a sign of superiority, and its occurrence under the head a
-mark of great inferiority, and then ascertain how the fact stands with
-regard to the _Cestracion_. “The Cestracion sub-genus,” says Mr. James
-Wilson, in his admirable treatise on fishes, which forms the article
-ICHTHYOLOGY in the “Encyclopædia Britannica,” “has the temporal aperture,
-the anal fin, and rounded teeth, of _Squalus Mustelus_; _but the mouth is
-TERMINAL, or AT THE EXTREMITY OF THE POINTED MUZZLE_.” The accompanying
-figure, (fig. 49,) taken from a specimen of _Cestracion_ in the
-collection of Professor John Fleming, may be recorded as of some little
-interest, both from its direct bearing on the point in question, and from
-the circumstance that it represents, not inadequately for its size, the
-sole surviving species (_Cestracion Phillippi_) of the oldest vertebrate
-family of creation. With this family, so far as is yet known, ichthyic
-existence first began. It does not appear that on the globe which we
-inhabit there was ever an ocean tenanted by living creatures at all that
-had not its _Cestracion_,—a statement which could not be made regarding
-any other vertebrate family. In Agassiz’s “Tabular View of the Genealogy
-of Fishes,” the Cestracionts, and they only, sweep across the entire
-geologic scale. And, as shown in the figure, the mouth in this ancient
-family, instead of opening, as in the ordinary sharks, under the middle
-of the head, to expose them to the suspicion of being creatures of low
-and embryonic character, opened in a broad, honest-looking muzzle, very
-much resembling that of the hog. The mouths of the most ancient Placoids
-of which we know any thing, _did not_, I reiterate, _open under their
-heads_.
-
-But why introduce the element of embryonic progress into this question
-at all? It is not a question of embryonic progress. The very legerdemain
-of the sophist—the juggling by which he substitutes his white balls
-for black, or converts his pigeons into crows—consists in the art of
-attaching the conclusions founded on the facts or conditions of one
-subject, to some other subject essentially distinct in its nature.
-Gestation is not creation. The history of the young of animals in their
-embryonic state is simply the history of the fœtal young; just as the
-history of insect transformation, in which it has been held by good men,
-but weak reasoners, that there exists direct evidence of the doctrine
-of the resurrection, is the history of insect transformation, and of
-nothing else. True, the human mind is so constituted that it converts
-all nature into a storehouse of comparisons and analogies; and this fact
-of the metamorphosis of the creeping caterpillar, after first passing
-through an intermediate period of apparent death as an inert aurelia,
-into a winged image, seemed to have seized on the human fancy at a very
-early age, as wonderfully illustrative of life, death, and the future
-state. The Egyptians wrapped up the bodies of their dead in the chrysalis
-form, so that a mummy, in their apprehension, was simply a human pupa,
-waiting the period of its enlargement; and the Greeks had but one word
-in their language for butterfly and the soul. But not the less true is
-it, notwithstanding, that the facts of insect transformation furnish no
-legitimate key to the totally distinct facts of a resurrection of the
-body, and of a life after death. And on what principle, then, are we to
-trace the origin of past dynasties in the changes of the fœtus if not
-the rise of the future dynasty in the transformations of the caterpillar?
-“These [embryonic] characters [that of the heterocercal tail, and of the
-mouth of the ordinary shark type] are essential and important,” remarks
-the author of the “Vestiges,” “whatever the Edinburgh Reviewer may say
-to the contrary;—they are the characters which, above all, I am chiefly
-concerned in looking to, for they are the features of embryonic progress,
-and embryonic progress is the grand key to the theory of development.”
-Yes; the grand key to the theory of _fœtal_ development; for embryonic
-progress _is_ fœtal development. But on what is the assertion based
-that they form a key to the history of creation? Aurelia are not human
-bodies laid out for the sepulchre, nor are butterflies human souls;
-as certainly gestation is not creation, nor a life of months in the
-uterus a succession of races for millions of ages outside of it. On
-what grounds, then, is the assertion made? Does it embody the result
-of a discovery or announce the message of a revelation? Did the author
-of the “Vestiges” find it out for himself, or did an angel from heaven
-tell it him? If it be a discovery, show us, we ask, the steps through
-which you have been conducted to it; if a revolution produce, for our
-satisfaction, the evidence on which it rests. For we are not to accept
-as data, in a question of science, idle comparisons or vague analogies,
-whether produced through the intentional juggling of the sophist, or
-involuntarily conjured up in the dreamy delirium of an excited fancy.
-
-It is one of the difficulties incident to the task of replying to any
-dogmatic statement of error, that every mere annunciation of a false
-fact or false principle must be met by elaborate counter-statement or
-carefully constructed argument and that prolixity is thus unavoidably
-entailed on the controversialist who labors to set right what his
-antagonist has set wrong. The promulgator of error may be lively and
-entertaining, whereas his pains-taking confutator runs no small risk of
-being tedious and dull. May I, however, solicit the forbearance of the
-reader, if, after already spending much time in skirmishing on ground
-taken up by the enemy,—one of the disadvantages incident to the mere
-defendant in a controversy of this nature,—I spend a little more in
-indicating what I deem the proper ground on which the standing of the
-earlier vertebrata should be decided. To the test of _brain_ I have
-already referred, as all-important in the question: I would now refer to
-the test of what may be termed _homological symmetry of organization_.
-
-
-
-
-THE PROGRESS OF DEGRADATION. ITS HISTORY.
-
-
-Though all animals be fitted by nature for the life which their instincts
-teach them to pursue, naturalists have learned to recognize among them
-certain aberrant and mutilated forms, in which the type of the special
-class to which they belong seems distorted and degraded. They exist
-as the monster _families_ of creation, just as among families there
-appear from time to time monster _individuals_,—men, for instance,
-without feet, or hands, or eyes, or with their feet, hands, or eyes
-grievously misplaced,—sheep with their fore legs growing out of their
-necks, or ducklings with their wings attached to their haunches. Among
-these degraded races, that of the footless serpent, which “goeth upon
-its belly,” has been long noted by the theologian as a race typical, in
-its condition and nature, of an order of hopelessly degraded beings,
-borne down to the dust by a clinging curse; and, curiously enough, when
-the first comparative anatomists in the world give _their_ readiest
-and most prominent instance of degradation among the denizens of the
-natural world, it is this very order of footless reptiles that they
-select. So far as the geologist yet knows, the Ophidians did not appear
-during the Secondary ages, when the monarchs of creation belonged to
-the reptilian division, but were ushered upon the scene in the times of
-the Tertiary deposits, when the mammalian dynasty had supplanted that
-of the Iguanodon and Megalosaurus. Their ill omened birth took place
-when the influence of their house was on the wane, as if to set such a
-stamp of utter hopelessness on its fallen condition, as that set by the
-birth of a worthless or idiot heir on the fortunes of a sinking family.
-The degradation of the Ophidians consists in the absence of limbs,—an
-absence total in by much the greater number of their families, and
-represented in others, as in the boas and pythons, by mere abortive
-hinder limbs concealed in the skin; but they are thus not only _monsters
-through defect of parts_, if I may so express myself, but also _monsters
-through redundancy_, as a vegetative repetition of vertebra and ribs, to
-the number of three or four hundred, forms the special contrivance by
-which the want of these is compensated. I am also disposed to regard the
-poison-bag of the venomous snakes as a mark of degradation;—it seems,
-judging from analogy, to be a protective provision of a low character,
-exemplified chiefly in the invertebrate families,—ants, centipedes,
-and mosquitos,—spiders, wasps, and scorpions. The higher carnivora
-are, we find, furnished with unpoisoned weapons, which, like those of
-civilized man, are sufficiently effective, simply from the excellence
-of their construction, and the power with which they are wielded, for
-every purpose of assault or defence. It is only the squalid savages and
-degraded boschmen of creation that have their feeble teeth and tiny
-stings steeped in venom, and so made formidable. _Monstrosity through
-displacement of parts_ constitutes yet another form of degradation; and
-this form, united, in some instances, to the other two, we find curiously
-exemplified in the geological history of the fish,—a history which, with
-all its blanks and missing portions, is yet better known than that of
-any other division of the vertebrata. And it is, I am convinced, from a
-survey of the progress of degradation in the great ichthyic division,—a
-progress recorded as “with a pen of iron in the rock for ever,”—and not
-from superficial views founded on the cartilaginous or non-cartilaginous
-texture of the ichthyic skeleton, that the standing of the kingly fishes
-of the earlier periods is to be adequately determined. Any other mode
-of survey, save the parallel mode which takes development of brain into
-account, evolves, we find, nothing like principle, and lands the inquirer
-in inextricable difficulties and inconsistencies.
-
-In all the higher non-degraded vertebrata we find a certain uniform
-type of skeleton, consisting of the head, the vertebral column, and
-four limbs; and these last, in the various symmetrical forms, whether
-exemplified in the higher fish, the higher reptiles, the higher birds,
-the higher mammals, or in man himself, occur always in a certain
-determinate order. In all the mammals, the scapular bases of the fore
-limbs begin opposite the eighth vertebra from the skull backwards, the
-seven which go before being cervical or neck vertebræ; in the birds,—a
-division of the vertebrata that, from their peculiar organization,
-require longer and more flexible necks than the mammals,—the scapulars
-begin at distances from the occiput, varying, according to the species,
-from opposite the thirteenth to opposite the twenty-fourth vertebra;
-and in the reptiles—a division which, according to Cuvier, “presents
-a greater diversity of forms, characters, and modes of gait, than any
-of the other two,”—they occur at almost all points, from opposite
-the second vertebra, as in the frog, to opposite the thirty-third or
-thirty-fourth vertebra, as in some species of plesiosaurus. But in
-all,—whether mammals, birds, or undegraded reptiles,—they are so placed,
-that the creatures possess _necks_, of greater or less length, as an
-essential portion of their general type. The hinder limbs have also in
-all these three divisions of the animal kingdom their typical place.
-They occur opposite, or very nearly opposite, the posterior termination
-of the abdominal cavity, and mark the line of separation between the
-vertebræ of the trunk (dorsal, lumbar, and sacral) and the third and
-last, or _caudal_ division of the column,—a division represented in
-man by but four vertebræ, and in the crocodile by about thirty-five,
-but which is found to exist, as I have already said, in all the more
-perfect forms. The limbs, then, in all the symmetrical animals of the
-first three classes of the vertebrata, mark the three great divisions of
-the vertebral column,—the division of the _neck_, the division of the
-_trunk_, and the division of the _tail_. Let us now inquire how the case
-stands with the fourth and lowest class,—that of the fishes.
-
-In those existing Placoids that represent the fishes of the earliest
-vertebrate period, the places of the double fins,—pectorals and
-ventrals,—which form in the ichthyic class the true homologues of the
-limbs, correspond to the places which these occupy in the symmetrical
-mammals, birds, and reptiles. The scapular bases of the fore or pectoral
-fins ordinarily begin opposite the twelfth or fourteenth vertebra;[27]
-but they range, as in man and the mammals, in a forward direction, so
-that the fins themselves are opposite the eighth or tenth. The pelvic
-bases of the ventral fins are placed nearly opposite the base of the
-abdomen, so that, as in all the symmetrical animals, the vent opens
-between, or nearly between, those hinder limbs which the bases support.
-In the Rays, which, so far as is yet known, did not appear in creation
-until the Secondary ages had begun, the bases of the fore limbs, _i.
-e._ pectoral fins, are attached to the lower part of a huge cervical
-vertebra, nearly equal in length to _all_ the trunk vertebræ united; and
-in the Chimeridæ, which also first appear in the Secondary division,
-they are attached, as in the osseous fishes, to the hinder part of the
-head. But in the representatives of all those Silurian Placoids yet
-known, of which the family can be determined, or any thing with safety
-predicated, the cervical division is found to occur as a series of
-vertebræ: they present in this, as in the hinder portion of their bodies,
-the homological symmetry of organization typical of that vertebral
-sub-kingdom to which they belong.
-
-In the second great period of ichthyic existence,—that of the Old
-Red Sandstone,—we find the first example, in the class of fishes, of
-“monstrosity through _displacement_ of parts,” and apparently also—in
-at least two genera, though the evidence on this head be not yet quite
-complete—of “monstrosity through _defect_ of parts.” In all the Ganoids
-of the period, with (so far as we can determine the point) only two
-exceptions, the scapular bases of the fore limbs are brought forward
-from their typical place opposite the base of the cervical vertebræ, and
-stuck on to the occipital plate. There occurs, in consequence, in one
-great order of the ichthyic class, such a departure from the symmetrical
-type as would take place in a monster example of the human family in
-whom the neck had been annihilated, and the arms stuck on to the back of
-the head. And in the genera _Coccosteus_ and _Pterichthys_ we find the
-first example of degradation through _defect_. In the _Pterichthys_ the
-_hinder_ limbs seem wanting, and in the _Coccosteus_ we find no trace
-of the _fore_ limbs. The one resembles a monster of the human family
-born without hands, and the other a monster born without feet. Ages
-and centuries pass, and long unreckoned periods come to a close; and
-then, after the termination of the Palæozoic period, we see that change
-taking place in the form of the ichthyic tail, to which I have already
-referred, (and to which I must refer at least once more,) as singularly
-illustrative of the progress of degradation. Yet other ages and centuries
-pass away, during which the reptile class attains to its fullest
-development, in point of size, organization, and number; and then, after
-the times of the Cretaceous deposits have begun, we find yet another
-remarkable monstrosity of displacement introduced among all the fishes of
-one very numerous order, and among no inconsiderable proportion of the
-fishes of another. In the newly-introduced Ctenoids, (_Acanthopterygii_,)
-and in those families of the Cycloids which Cuvier erected into the order
-_Malacopterygii sub-brachiati_, the hinder limbs are brought forward,
-and stuck on to the base of the previously misplaced fore limbs. All the
-four limbs, by a strange monstrosity of displacement, are crowded into
-the place of the extinguished neck. And such, at the present day, is the
-prevalent type among fishes. Monstrosity through _defect_ is also found
-to increase; so that the snake-like _apoda_, or feet-wanting fishes, form
-a numerous order, some of whose genera are devoid, as in the common eels
-and the congers, of only the hinder limbs, while in others, as in the
-genera Muræna and Synbranchus, both hinder and fore limbs are wanting.
-In the class of fishes, as fishes now exist, we find many more evidences
-of the monstrosity which results from both the misplacement and defect
-of parts, than in the other three classes of the vertebrata united, and
-knowing their geological history better than that of any of the others,
-we know, in consequence, that the monstrosities did not appear _early_,
-but _late_, and that the progress of the race as a whole, though it
-still retains not a few of the higher forms, has been a progress, not of
-development from the low to the high, but of degradation from the high to
-the low.
-
-The reader may mark for himself, in the flounder, plaice, halibut, or
-turbot,—fishes of a family of which there appears no trace in the earlier
-periods,—an extreme example of the degradation of distortion superadded
-to that of displacement. At a first glance the _limbs_ seem but to
-exhibit merely the amount of natural misarrangement and misorder common
-to the _Acanthopterygii_ and _Sub-brachiati_;—the base of the pectorals
-are stuck on to the head, and the base of the ventrals attached to that
-of the pectorals. From the circumstance, however, that the creature is
-twisted half round and laid on its side, we find that at least one of the
-pairs of double fins—the pectorals—perform the part of single fins,—one
-projecting from the animal’s superior, the other from its inferior side,
-in the way the anal and dorsal fins project from the upper and under
-surfaces of other fishes; while its real dorsal and anal fins, both
-developed very largely, and—in order to preserve its balance—in about an
-equal degree, and wonderfully correspondent in form, perform, from their
-lateral position, the functions of single fins. Indeed, at a first glance
-they seem the analogues of the largely-developed pectorals of a very
-different family of flat fishes,—the Rays. It would appear as if single
-and double fins, by some such mutual agreement as that which, according
-to the old ballad, took place between the churl of Auchtermuchty and his
-wife, had agreed to exchange callings, and perform each the work of the
-other. The tail, too, possesses, in consequence of the twist, not the
-vertical position of other fish-tails, but is spread out horizontally,
-like the tails of the cetacea. It is however, in the head of the flounder
-and its cogeners that we find the more extraordinary distortions
-exemplified. In order to accommodate it to the general twist, which
-rendered lateral what in other fishes is dorsal and abdominal, and dorsal
-and abdominal what in other fishes is lateral, one half its features had
-to be twisted to the one side, and the other half to the other. The face
-and cranium have undergone such a change as that which the human face and
-cranium would undergo, were the eyes to be drawn towards the left ear,
-and the mouth towards the right. The skull, in consequence, exhibits, in
-its fixed bones, a strange Cyclopean character, unique among the families
-of creation: it has its one well-marked eye orbit opening, like that of
-Polyphemus, direct in the middle of the fore part of its head; while
-the other, external to the cranium altogether, we find placed among the
-free bones, directly over the maxillaries. And the wry mouth—twisted in
-the opposite direction, as if to keep up such a balance of deformity as
-that which the breast-hump of a hunchback forms to the hump behind—is in
-keeping with the squint eyes. The jaws are strangely asymmetrical. In
-symmetrical fishes the two bones that compose the anterior half of the
-lower jaw are as perfectly correspondent in form and size as the left
-hand or left foot is correspondent, in the human subject, to the _right_
-hand or _right_ foot; but not such their character in the flounder.
-The one is a broad, short, nearly straight bone; the other is larger,
-narrower, and bent like a bow; and while the one contains only from four
-to six teeth, the other contains from thirty to thirty-five. Scarcely in
-the entire ichthyic kingdom are there any two jaws that less resemble
-one another than the two halves of the jaw of the flounder, turbot,
-halibut, or plaice. The intermaxillary bones are equally ill matched:
-the one is fully twice the size of the other, and contains about thrice
-as many teeth. That bilateral symmetry of the skeleton which is so
-_invariable_ a characteristic of the vertebrata, that ordinary observers,
-who have eyes for only the rare and the uncommon, fail to remark it,
-but which a Newton could regard as so wonderful, and so thoroughly in
-harmony with the uniformity of the planetary system, has scarce any
-place in the asymmetrical head of the flounder. There exists in some of
-our north country fishing villages an ancient apologue, which, though
-not remarkable for point or meaning, at least serves to show that this
-peculiar example of distortion the rude fishermen of a former age were
-observant enough to detect. Once on a time the fishes met, it is said, to
-elect a king; and their choice fell on the herring. “The herring king!”
-contemptuously exclaimed the flounder, a fish of consummate vanity, and
-greatly piqued on this occasion that its own presumed claims should have
-been overlooked; “where, then, am I?” And straightway, in punishment of
-its conceit and rebellion, “its eyes turned to the back of its head.”
-Here is there a story palpably founded on the degradation of misplacement
-and distortion, which originated ages ere the naturalist had recognized
-either the term or the principle.
-
-It would be an easy matter for an ingenious theorist, not much disposed
-to distinguish between the minor and the master laws of organized
-being, to get up quite as unexceptionable a theory of degradation as
-of development. The one-eyed, one-legged Chelsea pensioner, who had a
-child, unborn at the time, laid to his charge, agreed to recognize his
-relationship to the little creature, if, on its coming into the world,
-it was found to have a green patch over its eye, and a wooden leg.
-And, in order to construct a hypothesis of progressive degradation,
-the theorist has but to take for granted the transmission to other
-generations of defects and compensating redundancies at once as extreme
-and accidental as the loss of eyes or limbs, and the acquisition of
-timber legs or green patches. The snake, for instance, he might regard as
-a saurian, that, having accidentally lost its limbs, exerted itself to
-such account throughout a series of generations, in making up for their
-absence, as to spin out for itself, by dint of writhing and wriggling,
-rather more than a hundred additional vertebræ, and to alter, for
-purposes of greater flexibility, the structure of all the rest. And as
-fishes, when nearly stunned by a blow, swim for a few seconds on their
-side, he might regard the flounders as a race of half-stunned fishes,
-previously degraded by the misplacement of their limbs, that, instead of
-recovering themselves from the blow given to some remote parent of the
-family, had expended all their energies in twisting their mouths round
-to what chanced to be the under side on which they were laid, and their
-eyes to what chanced to be the upper, and that made their pectorals
-serve for anal and dorsal fins, and their anal and dorsal fins serve
-for pectorals. But while we must recognize in nature certain laws of
-disturbance, if I may so speak, through which, within certain limits,
-traits which are the result of habit or circumstance in the parents are
-communicated to their offspring, we would err as egregiously, did we
-take only these into account, without noting that infinitely stronger
-antagonist law of reproduction and restoration which, by ever gravitating
-towards the original type, preserves the integrity of races, as the
-astronomer would, who, in constructing his orrery, recognized only that
-law of propulsion through which the planets speed through the heavens,
-without taking into account that antagonist law of gravitation which,
-by maintaining them in their orbits, insures the regularity of their
-movements. The law of restoration would recover and right the stunned
-fish laid on its side; the law of reproduction would give limbs to the
-offspring of the mutilated saurian. We have evidence, in the extremeness
-of the degradation in these cases, that it cannot be a degradation
-hereditarily derived from accident. Nature is, we find, active, not in
-perpetuating the accidental wooden legs and green patches of ancestors
-in their descendants, but in restoring to the offspring the true limbs
-and eyes which the parents have lost. It is, however, not with a theory
-of hereditary degradation, but a hypothesis of gradual development, that
-I have at present to deal; and what I have to establish as proper to
-the present stage of my argument is, that this principle of degradation
-really exists, and that the history of its progress in creation bears
-directly against the assumption that the earlier vertebrata were of a
-lower type than the vertebrata of the same ichthyic class which exist
-now.[28]
-
-The progress of the ichthyic tail, as recorded in geologic history,
-corresponds with that of the ichthyic limbs. And as in the existing
-state of things we find fishes that _nearly_ represent, in this respect,
-all the great geologic periods,—I say _nearly_, not _fully_, for I
-am acquainted with no fish adequately representative of the period
-of the Old Red Sandstone,—it may be well to cast a glance over the
-_contemporary_ series, as illustrative of the _consecutive_ one. In those
-Placoids of the shark family that to a large brain unite homological
-symmetry of organization, and represent the fishes of the first period,
-we find, as I have already shown, that the vertebræ gradually diminish
-in the caudal division of the column, until they terminate in a point,—a
-circumstance in which they resemble not merely the betailed reptiles,
-but also all the higher mammiferous quadrupeds, and even man himself.
-And it is this peculiarity, stamped upon the less destructible portions
-of the framework of the tail,—vertebræ and processes,—rather than the
-one-sided or heterocercal form of the surrounding fin, composed of but
-a mucoidal substance, that constitutes its grand characteristic; seeing
-that in some Placoid genera, such as _Scyllium Stellare_, the terminal
-portion of the fin is scarce less largely developed above than below,
-and that in others, as in most of the Ray family, the under lobe of the
-fin is wholly wanting. In the sturgeon,—one of the few Ganoids of the
-present time,—we become sensible of a peculiar modification in this
-heterocercal type of tail: the lower lobe is, we find, composed, as in
-_Spinax_ and _Scyllium_, of rays exclusively; while through the centre
-of the upper lobe there runs an acutely angular patch of lozenge-shaped
-plates, like that which runs through the centre of the double fins of
-_Dipterus_ and the Cœlacanths. But while in the sharks the gradually
-diminishing vertebræ stand out in bold relief, and form the thickest
-portion of the tail, that which represents them in the sturgeon (the
-angular patch) is slim and thin,—slimmer in the middle than even at the
-sides;—in part a consequence, no doubt, of the want, in this fish, of
-solid vertebræ, but a consequence also of the extreme attenuation of the
-nervous cord, in its prolongation into the lobe of the fin. Further,
-the rays of the tail—its peculiarly ichthyic portion, which are purely
-mucoidal in _Spinax_, _Scyllium_, and _Cestracion_—have become osseous in
-the sturgeon. The _fish_ has _set_ and become _fixed_, as cement sets in
-a building, or colors are fixed by a mordant. And it is worthy of special
-remark that, correspondent with the peculiarly _ichthyic_ development
-of tail in this fish, we find the prevailing ichthyic displacement of
-the fore limbs. Again, in the _Lepidosteus_, another of the true Ganoids
-which still exist, the internal angle of the upper lobe of the tail
-wholly disappears, and with the internal angle the prolongation of the
-nervous cord. Still, however, it is what the tail of the sturgeon would
-become were the angular patch to be obliterated, and rays substituted
-instead,—it is a tail set on awry. And in this fish also we find the
-ichthyic displacement of fore limb. One step more, and we arrive at
-the homocercal or equal-lobed tail, which seems to attain to its most
-extreme type in those fishes in which, as in the perch and flounder, the
-last vertebral joint, either very little or very abruptly diminished
-in size, expands into broad processes without homologue in the higher
-animals, on which the caudal rays rest as their bases. And in by much the
-larger proportion of these fishes all the four limbs are slung round the
-neck;—they at once exhibit the homocercal tail in its broadest type, and
-displacement of limb in its most extreme form.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 50.
-
-TAIL OF OSTEOLEPIS.]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 51.
-
-TAIL OF LEPIDOSTEUS OSSEUS.]
-
-Now, in tracing the geologic history of the ichthyic tail, we find these
-several steps or gradations from the heterocercal to the homocercal,
-represented by periods and formations. The Siluran periods may be
-regarded as representative of that true heterocercal tail of the
-Placoids, exemplified in _Spinax_, (page 172, fig. 48,) and _Cestracion_,
-(page 177, fig. 49.) The whole caudal portion of this latter animal,
-commencing immediately behind the ventrals, is, as becomes a true
-tail, slim, when compared with its trunk; the vertebræ are of very
-considerable solidity; the rays mucoidal; and where the spinal column
-runs into the terminal fin, it takes such an upward turn as that which
-the horse-jockey imparts, by the process of _nicking_, to the tails of
-the hunter and the racehorse. And with the heterocercal tail, so true in
-its homologies to the tails of the higher vertebrata, we find associated,
-as has been shown, the true homological position of the fore limbs.
-With the commencement of the Old Red Sandstone the ganoidal tail first
-presents itself; and we become sensible of a change in the structure
-of the attached fin, similar to that exemplified in the caudal rays of
-the sturgeon. As shown by the irregularly-angular patch of scales which
-in all the true Cœlacanths, and almost all the Dipterians,[29] runs
-through the _upper_ lobe of the fin, and terminates in a point, (see
-fig. 50,) it must have possessed the gradually diminishing vertebræ, or
-a diminishing spinal cord, their analogue; but the rays, fairly _set_,
-as their state of keeping in the rocks certify, exist as narrow oblong
-plates of solid bone; and their anterior edges are strengthened by a line
-of osseous defences, that pass from scales into rays. And in harmonious
-accompaniment with this fairly _stereotyped_ edition of the ichthyic
-tail, we find, in the fishes in which it appears, the first instance of
-displacement of _limb_,—the bases of the pectorals being removed from
-their original position, and stuck on to the nape of the neck. It may
-be remarked, in passing, that in the tails of two ganoidal genera of
-this period,—the _Coccosteus_ and _Pterichthys_,—the analogies traceable
-lie rather in the direction of the tails of the Rays than in those of
-the Sharks; and that one of these, the _Coccosteus_, seems, as has been
-already intimated, to have had no pectorals, while it is doubtful whether
-in the _Pterichthys_ the pectorals were not attached to the shoulder,
-instead on the head. In the Carboniferous and Permian systems there
-occur, especially among the numerous species of the genus _Palæoniscus_,
-tails of the type exemplified by the internal angle of the tail of
-the sturgeon: the lozenge-shaped scales run in acutely angular patches
-through their upper lobes; but such is their extreme flatness, as shown
-by the disposition of the enamelled covering, that it appears exceedingly
-doubtful whether any vertebral column ran beneath;—they seem but to have
-covered greatly diminished prolongations of the spinal cord. In the
-base of the Secondary division,—another long stage towards the existing
-state of things,—we find, with the homocercal tail, which now appears
-for the first time, numerous tails like that of the _Lepidosteus_, (fig.
-51,) of an intermediate type;—they are rather tails set on awry than
-truly heterocercal. The diminished cord has disappeared from among the
-fin rays. In the numerous Lepidoid genus, and the genera _Semionotus_
-and _Tetra gonolepis_,—all ganoidal fishes of the Secondary period—this
-intermediate style is very marked; while in their contemporaries of the
-genera _Uræus_, _Microdon_, and _Pycnodus_, we find the earliest examples
-of true homocercal tails. And in the Ctenoids and Cycloids of the Chalk
-the homocercal tail receives its fullest development. It finds bases for
-its rays in broad non-homological processes, that spread out behind
-abruptly-terminating vertebræ, (fig. 52,) in the same period in which,
-by a strange process of degradation, the four ichthyic limbs are first
-gathered into a cluster, and hung about the neck.[30]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 52.
-
-TAIL OF PERCH.]
-
-I am aware that by some very distinguished comparative anatomists, among
-the rest Professor Owen, the attachment, so common among fishes, of the
-scapular arch and the fore limbs to the occipital bone, is regarded,
-not as a displacement, but as a normal and primary condition of the
-parts. Recognizing in the scapular bones the _ribs_ of the occipital
-_centrum_, the anatomists of this school of course consider them, when
-found articulated to the occiput, as in their proper and original place,
-and as in a state of natural dislocation when removed, as in all the
-reptiles, birds, and mammals, farther down. We find Professor Oken
-borrowing support to his hypothesis from this view. The limbs, he tells
-us, are simply ribs, that in the course of ages have been set free, and
-have become by development what they now are. And it is unquestionably
-a curious and interesting fact, that there are certain animals, such
-as the crocodile, in which every centrum of the vertebral column, and
-of every _vertebra_ of the head, has its ribs or rib-like appendages,
-with the exception of the occipital _centrum_. And it is another equally
-curious fact, that there is another certain class of animals, such as
-the osseous horn-covered fishes, with the Sturionidæ, Salamandroidei,
-and at least one genus among the Placoids, (the Chimæroidei,) in which
-this occipital centrum bears as its _ribs_ the scapular bones, with
-their appendages the fore limbs. It is the _centrum_ without _ribs_
-that is selected in these animals as the centrum to which the scapular
-_ribs_ should be attached. Be it remembered, however, that while it
-is unquestionably the part of the comparative anatomist to determine
-the relations and homologies of those parts of which all animals are
-composed, and to interpret the significancy in the scale of being of the
-various modes and forms in which they exist, it is as unquestionably the
-part of the geologist to declare their history, and the order of their
-succession _in time_. The questions which fall to be determined by the
-geologist and anatomist are entirely different. It is the function of the
-anatomist to decide regarding the high and the low, the typical and the
-aberrant; and so, beginning at what is lowest or highest in the scale,
-or least or most symmetrical in type, he passes through the intermediate
-forms to the opposite extreme: and such is the order natural and proper
-to his science. It is the vocation of the geologist, on the other hand,
-to decide regarding the early and the late. It is with _time_, not with
-_rank_, that he has to deal. Nor is it in the least surprising that he
-should seem at issue with the comparative anatomist, when, in classifying
-his groupes of organized being according to the periods of their
-appearance, there is an order of arrangement forced upon him, different
-from that which, on an entirely different principle, the anatomist
-pursues. Nor can there be a better illustration of a collision of this
-kind, than the one furnished by the case in point. That peculiarity of
-structure which, as the lowest in the vertebral skeleton, is to the
-comparative anatomist the primary and original one, and which, as such,
-furnishes him with his starting point, is to the geologist not primary,
-but secondary, simply because it was not primary, but secondary, in the
-order of its occurrence. It belongs, so far as we yet know, not to the
-_first_ period of vertebrate existence, but to the _second_; and appears
-in geologic history as does that savage state which certain philosophers
-have deemed the original condition of the human species, in the history
-of civilization, when read by the light of the Revealed Record, under the
-shadow of those gigantic ruins of the East that date only a few centuries
-after the Flood. It is found to be a _degradation_ first introduced
-during the lapse of an intermediate age,—not the normal condition which
-obtained during the long cycles of the primal one. It indicates, not the
-starting point from which the race of creation began, but the stage of
-retrogradation beyond it at which the pilgrims who set out in a direction
-opposite to that of the goal first arrived.[31]
-
-This fact of degradation, strangely indicated in geologic history, with
-reference to all the greater divisions of the animal kingdom, has often
-appeared to me a surpassingly wonderful one. We can see but imperfectly,
-in those twilight depths to which all such subjects necessarily belong;
-and yet at times enough does appear to show us what a very superficial
-thing infidelity may be. The general advance in creation has been
-incalculably great. The lower divisions of the vertebrata preceded
-the higher;—the fish preceded the reptile, the reptile preceded the
-bird, the bird preceded the mammiferous quadruped, and the mammiferous
-quadruped preceded man. And yet, is there one of these great divisions
-in which, in at least some prominent feature, the present, through this
-mysterious element of degradation, is not inferior to the past? There
-was a time in which the ichthyic form constituted the highest example
-of life; but the seas during that period did not swarm with fish of the
-degraded type. There was, in like manner, a time when all the carnivora
-and all the herbivorous quadrupeds were represented by reptiles; but
-there are no such magnificent reptiles on the earth now as reigned over
-it then. There was an after time, when birds seem to have been the sole
-representatives of the warm-blooded animals; but we find, from the prints
-of their feet left in sandstone, that the tallest men might have
-
- “Walked under their huge legs, and peeped about.”
-
-Further, there was an age when the quadrupedal mammals were the magnates
-of creation; but it was an age in which the sagacious elephant, now
-extinct, save in the comparatively small Asiatic and African circles, and
-restricted to two species, was the inhabitant of every country of the Old
-World, from its southern extremity to the frozen shores of the northern
-ocean; and when vast herds of a closely allied and equally colossal genus
-occupied its place in the New. And now, in the times of the high-placed
-human dynasty,—of those formally delegated monarchs of creation, whose
-nature it is to look behind them upon the past, and before them, with
-mingled fear and hope, upon the future,—do we not as certainly see the
-elements of a state of ever-sinking degradation, which is to exist for
-ever, as of a state of ever-increasing perfectibility, to which there is
-to be no end? Nay, of a higher race, of which we know but little, this
-much we at least know, that they long since separated into two great
-classes,—that of the “elect angels,” and of “angels, that kept not their
-first estate.”
-
-
-
-
-EVIDENCE OF THE SILURIAN MOLLUSCS—OF THE FOSSIL FLORA. ANCIENT TREE.
-
-
-After dwelling at such length on the earlier fishes, it may seem scarce
-necessary to advert to their lower contemporaries the mollusca,—that
-great division of the animal kingdom which Cuvier places second in the
-descending order, in his survey of the entire series, and first among the
-invertebrates; and which Oken regards as the division out of which the
-immediately preceding class of the vertebral animals have been developed.
-“The fish,” he says, “is to be viewed as a mussel, from between whose
-shells a monstrous abdomen has grown out.” There is, however, a
-peculiarity in the molluscan group of the Silurian system, to which I
-must be permitted briefly to refer, as, to employ the figure of Sterne,
-it presents “two handles” of an essentially different kind, and as in all
-such two-handled cases, the mere special pleader is sure to avail himself
-of only the handle which best suits his purpose for the time.
-
-Cuvier’s first and highest class of the molluscs is formed of what are
-termed the Cephalopods,—a class of creatures possessed of great freedom
-of motion: they can walk, swim, and seize their prey; they have what even
-the lowest fishes such as the lancelet, want,—a brain enclosed in a
-cartilaginous cavity in the head, and perfectly formed organs of sight;
-they possess, too, what is found in no other mollusc,—organs of hearing;
-and in sagacity and activity they prove more than matches for the smaller
-fishes, many of which they overmaster and devour. With this highest
-class there contrasts an exceedingly low molluscous class at the bottom
-of the scale, or, at least, at what is now the bottom of the scale; for
-they constitute Cuvier’s _fifth_ class; while his _sixth_ and last, the
-Cirrhopodes, has been since withdrawn from the molluscs altogether,
-and placed in a different division of the animal kingdom. And this low
-class, the Brachiopods, are creatures that, living in bivalve shells,
-unfurnished with spring hinges to throw them open, and always fast
-anchored to the same spot, can but thrust forth, through the interstitial
-chinks of their prison-houses, spiral arms, covered with cilia, and
-winnow the water for a living. Now, it so happens that the molluscan
-group of the Silurian system is composed chiefly of these two extreme
-classes. It contains some of the other forms; but they are few in number,
-and give no character to the rocks in which they occur. There was nothing
-by which I was more impressed, in a visit to a Silurian region, than that
-in its ancient graveyards, as in those of the present day, though in a
-different sense, the high and the low should so invariably meet together.
-It is, however, not impossible that, in even the present state of things,
-a similar union of the extreme forms of the marine mollusca may be taking
-place in deep-sea deposits. Most of the intermediate forms provided
-with shells capable of preservation, such as the shelled Gasteropoda
-and the Conchifers, are either littoral, or restricted to comparatively
-small depths; whereas the Brachiopoda are deep-sea shells; and the
-Cephalopoda may be found voyaging far from land, in the upper strata
-of the sea above them. Even in the seas that surround our own island,
-the Brachiopodous molluscs—terebratula and crania—have been found, ever
-since deep-sea dredging became common, to be not very rare shells; and in
-the Mediterranean, where they are less rare still, fleets of Argonauts,
-the representatives of a highly organized family of the Cephalopods, to
-which it is now believed the Bellerophon of the Palæozoic rocks belonged,
-may be seen skimming along the surface, with sail and oar, high over the
-profound depths in which they lie. And, of course, when death comes, that
-comes to high and low, the remains of both Argonauts and Brachiopods
-must lie together at the bottom, in beds almost totally devoid of the
-intermediate forms.
-
-Now, the author of the “Vestiges,” in maintaining his hypothesis,
-suspends it on the handle furnished him by the immense abundance of the
-Silurian Brachiopods. The Silurian period, he says, exhibits “a scanty
-and most defective development of life; so much so, that Mr. Lyell calls
-it, _par excellence_, the age of Brachiopods, with reference to the by
-no means exalted bivalve shell-fish which forms its predominant class.
-Such being the actual state of the case, I must persist in describing
-even the fauna of this age, which we now know was not the first, as,
-generally speaking, such a humble exhibition of the animal kingdom as
-we might expect, upon the development theory, to find at an early stage
-of the history of organization.” The reader will at once discern the
-fallacy here. The Silurian period was peculiarly an age of Brachiopods,
-for in no other period were Brachiopods so numerous, specifically or
-individually, or of such size or importance; whereas it was not _so
-peculiarly_ an age of Cephalopods, for these we find introduced in still
-greater numbers during the Liasic and Oolitic periods. In 1848, when
-Professor Edward Forbes edited the Palæontological map of Britain and
-Ireland, which forms one of the very admirable series of “Johnstone’s
-Physical Atlas,” the Cephalopods of the Silurian rocks of England and
-Wales were estimated at forty-eight species, and the Brachiopods at
-one hundred and fifty; whereas at the same date there were two hundred
-and five Cephalopods of the Oolitic formations enumerated, and but
-fifty-four Brachiopods. It is the molluscs of the inferior, not those
-of the superior class, that constitute (with their contemporaries the
-Trilobites) the characteristic fossils of the Silurian rocks; and hence
-the propriety of the distinctive name suggested by Sir Charles Lyell.
-But in the development question, what we have specially to consider is,
-not the _numbers_ of the low, but the _standing_ of the high. A country
-may be distinctively a country of flocks and herds, or a country of
-the carnivorous mammalia, or, like New South Wales or the Galapagos, a
-country of marsupial animals or of reptiles. Its human inhabitants may
-be merely a few hunters or shepherds, too inconsiderable in numbers, and
-too much like their brethren elsewhere, to give it any peculiar standing
-as a home of men. But in estimating the highest point in the scale to
-which the animal kingdom has attained within its limits, it is of its few
-men, not of its many beasts, that we must take note. And the point to be
-specially decided regarding the organisms of the Silurian system, in this
-question, is, not the proportion in _number_ which the lower forms bore
-to the higher, but the exact _rank_ which the higher bore in the scale
-of existence. Did the system furnish but a single Cephalopod or a single
-fish, we would yet have as certainly to determine that the chain of being
-reached as high as the Cephalopod or the fish, as if the remains of these
-creatures constituted its most abundant fossils. The chain of animal
-life reached quite as high on the evening of the sixth day of creation,
-when the human family was restricted to a single pair, as it does now,
-when our statists reckon up by millions the inhabitants of the greater
-capitals of the world; and the special pleader who, in asserting the
-contrary, would insist on determining the point, not by the _rank_ of the
-men of Eden, but by the _number_ of minnows or sticklebacks that swarmed
-in its rivers, might be perhaps deemed ingenious in his expedients, but
-certainly not very judicious in the use of them. It is worthy of remark,
-however, that the Brachiopods of those Palæozoic periods in which the
-group occupied such large space in creation, consisted of greatly larger
-and more important animals than any which it contains in the present day.
-It has yielded to what geological history shows to be the common fate,
-and sunk into a state of degradation and decline.
-
-The geological history of the vegetable, like that of the animal kingdom,
-has been pressed into the service of the development hypothesis; and
-certainly their respective courses, both in actual arrangement and in
-their relation to human knowledge, seem wonderfully alike. It is not
-much more than twenty years since it was held that no exogenous plant
-existed during the Carboniferous period. The frequent occurrence of
-Coniferæ in the Secondary deposits had been conclusively determined
-from numerous specimens; but, founding on what seemed a large amount of
-negative evidence, it was concluded that, previous to the Liasic age,
-nature had failed to achieve a tree, and that the rich vegetation of the
-Coal Measures had been exclusively composed of magnificent immaturities
-of the vegetable kingdom,—of gigantic ferns and club-mosses, that
-attained to the size of forest trees, and of thickets of the swamp-loving
-horsetail family of plants, that well nigh rivalled in height those
-forests of masts which darken the rivers of our great commercial cities.
-Such was the view promulgated by M. Adolphe Brongniart; and it may be
-well to remark that, so far as the evidence on which it was based was
-positive, the view was sound. It _is_ a fact, that inferior orders of
-plants were developed in those ages in a style which, in their present
-state of degradation, they never exemplify: they took their place, not,
-as now, among the pigmies and abortions of creation, but among its
-tallest and goodliest productions. It is, however, _not_ a fact that they
-were the highest vegetable forms of their time. True exogenous trees
-also existed in great numbers and of vast size. In various localities
-in the coal fields of both England and Scotland,—such as Lennel Braes
-and Allan Bank in Berwickshire, High-Heworth, Fellon, Gateshead, and
-Wideopen near Newcastle-upon-Tyne, and in quarries to the west of the
-city of Durham,—the most abundant fossils of the system are its true
-woods. In the quarry of Craigleith, near Edinburgh, three huge trunks
-have been laid open during the last twenty years, within the space of
-about a hundred and fifty yards, and two equally massy trunks, within
-half that space, in the neighboring quarry of Granton, all low in the
-Coal Measures. They lie diagonally athwart the strata,—at an angle of
-about thirty,—with the nether and weightier portion of their boles
-below, like snags in the Mississippi; and we infer, from their general
-direction, that the stream to which they reclined must have flowed from
-nearly north-east to south-west. The current was probably that of a
-noble river, which reflected on its broad bosom the shadow of many a
-stately tree. With the exception of one of the Granton specimens, which
-still retains its strong-kneed roots, they are all mere portions of
-trees, rounded at both ends as if by attrition or decay; and yet one
-of these portions measures about six feet in diameter by sixty-one feet
-in length; another four feet in diameter by seventy feet in length; and
-the others, of various thickness, but all bulky enough to equal the
-masts of large vessels, range in length from thirty-six to forty-seven
-feet. It seems strange to one who derives his supply of domestic fuel
-from the Dalkeith and Falkirk coal-fields, that the Carboniferous
-flora could ever have been described as devoid of trees. I can scarce
-take up a piece of coal from beside my study fire, without detecting
-in it fragments of carbonized wood, which almost always exhibit the
-characteristic longitudinal fibres, and not unfrequently the medullary
-rays. Even the trap-rocks of the district enclose, in some instances,
-their masses of lignite, which present in their transverse sections,
-when cut by the lapidary, the net-like reticulations of the coniferæ.
-The fossil botanist, who devoted himself chiefly to the study of
-microscopic structure, would have to decide, from the facts of the case,
-not that trees were absent during the Carboniferous period, but that,
-in consequence of their having been present in amazing numbers, their
-remains had entered more palpably and extensively into the composition
-of coal than those of any other vegetable.[32] So far as is yet known,
-they all belonged to the two great divisions of the coniferous family,
-araucarians and pines. The huge trees of Craigleith and Granton were of
-the former tribe, and approximate more nearly to _Altingia excelsa_, the
-Norfolk-Island pine,—a noble araucarian, that rears its proud head from a
-hundred and sixty to two hundred feet over the soil, and exhibits a green
-and luxuriant breadth of foliage rare among the Coniferæ,—than any other
-living tree.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 53.
-
-ALTINGIA EXCELSA, (NORFOLK-ISLAND PINE.)
-
-_From a young specimen in the Botanic Garden, Edinburgh._]
-
-Beyond the Coal Measures terrestrial plants become extremely rare. The
-fossil botanist, on taking leave of the lower Carboniferous beds, quits
-the land, and sets out to sea; and it seems in no way surprising, that
-the specimens which he there adds to his herbarium should consist mainly
-of _Fucaceæ_ and _Conferveæ_. The development hypothesis can borrow no
-support from the simple fact, that while a high terrestrial vegetation
-grows upon dry land, only algæ grow in the sea; and even did the Old Red
-Sandstone and Silurian systems furnish, as their vegetable organisms,
-fucoids exclusively, the evidence would amount to no more than simply
-this, that the land of the Palæozoic periods produced plants of the land,
-and the sea of the Palæozoic periods produced plants of the sea.
-
-In the Upper Old Red Sandstone,—the formation of the _Holoptychius_
-and the _Stagonolepis_,—the only vegetable remains which I have yet
-seen are of a character so exceedingly obscure and doubtful, that all
-I could venture to premise regarding them is, that they _seem_ to be
-the fragments of sorely comminuted fucoids. In the formation of the
-Middle Old Red,—that of the Cephalaspis and the gigantic lobster of
-Carmylie,—the vegetable remains are at once more numerous and better
-defined. I have detected among the gray micaceous sandstones of
-Forfarshire a fucoid furnished with a thick, squat stem, that branches
-into numerous divergent leaflets or fronds, of a slim parallelogrammical,
-grass-like form, and which, as a whole, somewhat resembles the scourge
-of cords attached to a handle with which a boy whips his top. And
-Professor Fleming describes a still more remarkable vegetable organism
-of the same formation, “which, occurring in the form of circular, flat
-patches, composed each of numerous smaller contiguous circular pieces, is
-altogether not unlike what might be expected to result from a compressed
-berry, such as the bramble or rasp.” In the Lower Old Red,—the formation
-of the _Coccosteus_ and _Cheiracanthus_,—the remains of fucoids are more
-numerous still. There are gray slaty beds among the rocks of Navity, that
-owe their fissile character mainly to their layers of carbonized weed;
-and “among the rocks of Sandy-Bay, near Thurso,” says Mr. Dick, “the
-dark impressions of large fucoids are so numerous, that they remind one
-of the interlaced boughs and less bulky pine-trunks that lie deep in our
-mosses.” A portion of a stem from the last locality, which I owe to Mr.
-Dick, measures three inches in diameter; but the ill-compacted cellular
-tissue of the algæ is but indifferently suited for preservation; and so
-it exists as a mere coaly film, scarcely half a line in thickness.
-
-The most considerable collection of the Lower Old Red fucoids which
-I have yet seen is that of the Rev. Charles Clouston of Sandwick, in
-Orkney,—a skilful cultivator of geological science, who has specially
-directed his palæontological inquiries on the vegetable remains of the
-flagstones of his district, as the department in which most remained
-to be done; but his numerous specimens only serve to show what a
-poverty-stricken flora that of the ocean of the Lower Old Red Sandstone
-must have been. I could detect among them but two species of plants;—the
-one an imperfectly preserved vegetable, more nearly resembling a
-club-moss than aught else which I have seen, but which bore on its
-surface, instead of the well-marked scales of the _Lycopodiaceæ_,
-irregular rows of tubercles, that, when elongated in the profile, as
-sometimes happens, might be mistaken for minute, ill-defined leaves;
-the other, a smooth-stemmed fucoid, existing on the stone in most cases
-as a mere film, in which, however, thickly-set longitudinal fibres are
-occasionally traceable, and which may be always distinguished from the
-other by its sharp-edged outline, and from the circumstance that its
-stems continue to retain the same diameter for considerable distances,
-after throwing off at acute angles numerous branches nearly as bulky
-as themselves. In a Thurso specimen, about two feet in length, which I
-owe to the kindness of Mr. Dick, there are stems continuous throughout,
-that, though they ramify in that space into from six to eight branches,
-are nearly as thick atop as at bottom. They are the remains, in all
-probability, of a long, flexible weed, that may have somewhat resembled
-those fucoids of the intertropical seas, which, streaming slantwise
-in the tide, rise not unfrequently to the surface in from fifteen to
-twenty fathoms of water; and as, notwithstanding their obscurity,
-they are among the most perfect specimens of their class yet found,
-and contrast with the stately araucarians of the Coal Measures, in a
-style which cannot fail to delight the heart of every assertor of the
-development hypothesis, I present them to the reader from Mr. Dick’s
-specimen, in a figure (fig. 54) which, however slight its interest, has
-at least the merit of being true. The stone exhibits specimens of the two
-species of Mr. Clouston’s collection,—the sharp-edged, finely-striated
-weed, _a_, and that roughened by tubercles, _b_; which, besides the
-distinctive character manifested on its surface, differs from the other
-in rapidly losing breath with every branch which it throws off, and,
-in consequence, runs soon to a point. The cut on the opposite page
-(fig. 55) represents not inadequately the cortical peculiarities of
-the two species when best preserved. The surface of the tubercled one
-will perhaps remind the Algologist of the knobbed surface of the thong
-or receptacle of _Himanthalia lorea_, a recent fucoid, common on the
-western coast of Scotland, but rare on the east. An Orkney specimen
-lately sent me by Mr. William Watt, from a quarry at Skaill, has much
-the appearance of one of the smaller ferns, such as the moor-worts, sea
-spleen-worts, or maiden-hairs. It exists as an impression in diluted
-black, on a ground of dark gray, and has so little sharpness of outline,
-that, like minute figures in oil-paintings, it seems more distinct when
-viewed at arm’s length than when microscopically examined; but enough
-remains to show that it must have been a terrestrial, not a marine
-plant. The accompanying print (fig. 56) may be regarded as no unfaithful
-representation of this unique fossil its state of imperfect keeping.
-The vegetation of the Silurian system, from its upper beds down till
-where we reach the zero of life, is, like that of the Old Red Sandstone,
-almost exclusively fucoidal. In the older fossiliferous deposits of the
-system in Sweden, Russia, the Lake Districts of England, Canada, and
-the United States, fucoids occur, to the exclusion, so far as is yet
-known, of every other vegetable form; and such is their abundance in some
-localities, that they render the argillaceous rocks in which they lie
-diffused, capable of being fired as an alum slate, and exist in others
-as seams of a compact anthracite, occasionally used as fuel. They also
-occur in those districts of Wales in which the place and sequence of the
-various Silurian formations were first determined, though apparently
-in a state of keeping from which little can be premised regarding
-their original forms. Sir Roderick Murchison sums up his notice of the
-vegetable remains of the system in the province whence it derives its
-name, by stating that he had submitted his specimens to “Mr. Robert Brown
-and Dr. Greville, and that neither of these eminent botanists were able
-to say much more regarding them than that they were fucoid-like bodies.”
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 54.
-
-FUCOIDS OF THE LOWER OLD RED SANDSTONE.
-
-a. _Smooth-stemmed species._
-
-b. _Tubercled species._
-
-(One sixth nat. size, linear.)]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 55.
-
-a. _Smooth-stemmed species._
-
-b. _Tubercled species._
-
-(Natural size.)]
-
-Such are the vegetable organisms of the Old Red Sandstone and Silurian
-systems: they are the remains of the ancient marine plants of ancient
-marine deposits and, as such, lend quite as little support to the
-development hypothesis as the recent algæ of our existing seas. The
-case, stated in its most favorable form, amounts simply to this,—that
-at certain early periods,—represented by the Upper and Lower Silurian
-and the Old Red deposits,—the seas produced sea-plants; and that, at
-a certain later period,—that of the Carboniferous system,—the land
-produced land-plants. But even this, did it stand alone, would be a _too_
-favorable statement. I have seen, on one occasion, the fisherman bring
-up with his nets, far in the open sea, a wild rose-bush, that, though
-it still bore its characteristic thorns, was encrusted with serpula,
-and laden with pendulous lobularia. It had been swept from its original
-habitat by some river in flood, that had undermined and torn down the
-bank on which it grew; and after floating about, mayhap for months, had
-become so saturated with water, that it could float no longer. And in
-that single rose-bush, dragged up to the light and air from its place
-among Sertularia, Flustra, Serpula, and the deep-sea fucoids, I had as
-certain an evidence of the existence of the dicotyledonous plant, as if
-I had all the families of the Rosaecæ before me. Now, we are furnished
-by the more ancient formations with evidence regarding the existence
-of a terrestrial vegetation, such as that which the rose-bush in this
-case supplied. We cannot expect that the proofs should be numerous. In
-the chart of the Pacific attached to the better editions of “Cook’s
-Voyages,” there are several notes along the tract of the great navigator,
-that indicate where, in mid ocean, trees or fragments of trees had been
-picked up. These entries, however, are but few, though they belong to all
-the three voyages together: if I remember aright, there are only five
-entries in all,—two in the Northern, and three in the Southern Pacific.
-The floating shrub or tree, at a great distance from land, is of rare
-occurrence in even the present scene of things, though the breadth of
-land be great, and trees numerous; and in the times of the Silurian and
-Old Red Sandstone systems, when the breadth of land was apparently _not_
-great, and trees and shrubs, in consequence, _not_ numerous, it must
-have been of rarer occurrence still. We learn, however, from Sir Charles
-Lyell, that in the “Hamilton group of the United States,—a series of
-beds that corresponds in many of its fossils with the Ludlow rocks of
-England,—plants allied to the _Lepidodendra_ of the Carboniferous type
-are abundant; and that in the lower Devonian strata of New York the same
-plants occur associated with ferns.” And I am able to demonstrate, from
-an interesting fossil at present before me, that there existed in the
-period of the Lower Old Red Sandstone vegetable forms of a class greatly
-higher than either _Lepidodendra_ or ferns.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 56.
-
-FERN? OF THE LOWER OLD RED SANDSTONE.
-
-(Natural size.)]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 57.
-
-LIGNITE OF THE LOWER OLD RED SANDSTONE.
-
-(One third nat. size, linear.)]
-
-In my little work on the Old Red Sandstone, I have referred to an
-apparent lignite of the Lower Old Red of Cromarty, which presented, when
-viewed by the microscope, marks of the internal fibre. The surface,
-when under the glass, resembled, I said, a bundle of horse-hairs lying
-stretched in parallel lines: and in this specimen alone, it was added,
-had I found aught in the Lower Old Red Sandstone approaching to proof of
-the existence of dry land. About four years ago I had this lignite put
-stringently to the question by Mr. Sanderson, and deeply interesting was
-the result. I must first mention, however, that there cannot rest the
-shadow of a doubt regarding the place of the organism in the geologic
-scale. It is unequivocally a fossil of the Lower Old Red Sandstone. I
-found it partially embedded, with many other nodules half-disinterred
-by the sea, in an ichthyolitic deposit, a few hundred yards to the
-east of the town of Cromarty, which occurs more than four hundred
-feet over the Great Conglomerate base of the system. A nodule that
-lay immediately beside it contained a well-preserved specimen of the
-_Coccosteus Decipiens_; and in the nodule in which the lignite itself
-is contained, (fig. 57,) the practised eye may detect a scattered group
-of scales of _Diplacanthus_, a scarce less characteristic organism of
-the lower formation. And what, asks the reader, is the character of this
-very ancient vegetable,—the most ancient, by three whole formations,
-that has presented its internal structure to the microscope? Is it as
-low in the scale of development as in the geological scale? Does this
-venerable Adam of the forest appear, like the Adam of the infidel, as a
-squalid, ill-formed savage, with a rugged shaggy nature, which it would
-require the suggestive necessities of many ages painfully to lick into
-civilization? Or does it appear rather like the Adam of the poet and the
-theologian, independent, in its instantaneously-derived perfection, of
-all after development?
-
- “Adam, the goodliest man of men since born
- His sons.”
-
-Is its tissue vascular or cellular, or, like that of some of the
-cryptogamia, intermediate? Or what, in fine, is the nature and bearing
-of its mute but emphatic testimony, on that doctrine of progressive
-development of late so strangely resuscitated?
-
-In the first place, then, this ancient fossil is a true wood,—a
-Dicotyledonous or Polycotyledonous _Gymnosperm_, that, like the pines
-and larches of our existing forests, bore naked seeds, which, in their
-state of germination, developed either double lobes to shelter the embryo
-within, or shot out a fringe of verticillate spikes, which performed
-the same protective functions, and that, as it increased in bulk year
-after year, received its accessions of growth in outside layers. In
-the transverse section the cells bear the reticulated appearance which
-distinguish the coniferæ, (fig. 58, _a_;) the lignite had been exposed
-in its bed to a considerable degree of pressure; and so the openings
-somewhat resemble the meshes of a net that has been drawn a little awry;
-but no general obliteration of their original character has taken place,
-save in minute patches, where they have been injured by compression or
-the bituminizing process. All the tubes indicated by the openings are, as
-in recent coniferæ, of nearly the same size; and though, as in many of
-the more ancient lignites, there are no indications of annual rings, the
-direction of the medullary rays is distinctly traceable. The longitudinal
-sections are rather less distinct than the transverse one; in the section
-parallel to the radius of the stem or bole the circular disks of the
-coniferæ were at first not at all detected; and, as since shown by a
-very fine microscope, they appear simply as double and triple lines of
-undefined dots, (_b_,) that somewhat resemble the stippled markings
-of the miniature painter; nor are the openings of the medullary rays
-frequent in the tangental section (_i. e._ that parallel to the bark,)
-(_c_;) but nothing can be better defined than the peculiar arrangement
-of the woody fibre, and the longitudinal form of the cells. Such is the
-character of this, the most ancient of lignites yet found, that yields
-to the microscope the peculiarities of its original structure. We find
-in it an unfallen _Adam_,—not a half-developed savage.[33]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 58.
-
-INTERNAL STRUCTURE OF LIGNITE OF LOWER OLD RED SANDSTONE.
-
-a. _Transverse section._
-
-b. _Longitudinal section, (parallel to radius, or medullary rays.)_
-
-c. _Longitudinal section, (tangental, or parallel to the bark.)_
-
-(Mag. forty diameters.)]
-
-The olive leaf which the dove brought to Noah established at least three
-important facts, and indicated a few more. It showed most conclusively
-that there was dry land, that there were olive trees, and that the
-climate of the surrounding region, whatever change it might have
-undergone, was still favorable to the development of vegetable life.
-And, further, it might be very safely inferred from it, that if olive
-trees had survived, other trees and plants must have survived also; and
-that the dark muddy prominences round which the ebbing currents were fast
-sweeping to lower levels, would soon present, as in antediluvian times,
-their coverings of cheerful green. The olive leaf spoke not of merely
-a partial, but of a general vegetation. Now, the coniferous lignite of
-the Lower Old Red Sandstone we find charged, like the olive leaf, with
-a various and singularly interesting evidence. It is something to know,
-that in the times of the _Coccosteus_ and _Asterolepis_ there existed dry
-land, and that that land wore, as at after periods, its soft, gay mantle
-of green. It is something also to know, that the verdant tint was not
-owing to a profuse development of the mere immaturities of the vegetable
-kingdom,—crisp, slow-growing lichens, or watery spore-propagated fungi
-that shoot up to their full size in a night,—nor even to an abundance
-of the more highly organized families of the liverworts and the mosses.
-These may have abounded then, as now; though we have not a shadow of
-evidence that they did. But while we have no proof whatever of _their_
-existence, we have conclusive proof that there existed orders and
-families of a rank far above them. On the dry land of the Lower Old
-Red Sandstone, on which, according to the theory of Adolphe Brogniart,
-nothing higher than a lichen or a moss could have been expected, the
-ship-carpenter might have hopefully taken axe in hand, to explore the
-woods for some such stately pine as the one described by Milton,—
-
- “Hewn on Norwegian hills, to be the mast
- Of some great admiral.”
-
-Viewed simply in its picturesque aspect, this _olive leaf_ of the Old
-Red seems not at all devoid of poetry. We sail upwards into the high
-geologic zones, passing from ancient to still more ancient scenes of
-being; and, as we voyage along, find ever in the surrounding prospect,
-as in the existing scene from which we set out, a graceful intermixture
-of land and water, continent, river, and sea. We first coast along the
-land of the Tertiary, inhabited by the strange quadrupeds of Cuvier,
-and waving with the reeds and palms of the Paris Basin; the land of the
-Wealden, with its gigantic iguanodon rustling amid its tree ferns and
-its cycadeæ, comes next; then comes the green land of the Oolite, with
-its little pouched insectivorous quadruped, its flying reptiles, its
-vast jungles of the Brora equisetum, and its forests of the Helmsdale
-pine; and then, dimly as through a haze, we mark, as we speed on, the
-thinly scattered islands of the New Red Sandstone, and pick up in our
-course a large floating leaf, veined like that of a cabbage, which not a
-little puzzles the botanists of the expedition. And now we near the vast
-Carboniferous continent, and see along the undulating outline, between us
-and the sky, the strange forms of a vegetation, compared with which that
-of every previously seen land seems stunted and poor. We speed day after
-day along endless forests, in which gigantic club-mosses wave in air a
-hundred feet over head, and skirt interminable marshes, in which thickets
-of reeds overtop the mast-head. And, where mighty rivers come rolling to
-the sea, we mark, through the long-retiring vistas which they open into
-the interior, the higher grounds of the country covered with coniferous
-trees, and see doddered trunks of vast size, like those of Granton
-and Craigleith, reclining under the banks in deep muddy reaches, with
-their decaying tops turned adown the current. At length the furthermost
-promontory of this long range of coast comes full in view: we near it,—we
-have come up abreast of it: we see the shells of the Mountain Limestone
-glittering white along its further shore, and the green depths under our
-keel lightened by the flush of innumerable corals; and then, bidding
-farewell to the land forever,—for so the geologists of but five years
-ago would have advised,—we launch into the unmeasured ocean of the Old
-Red, with its three consecutive zones of animal life. Not a single patch
-of land more do those geologic charts exhibit which we still regard as
-new. The zones of the Silurian and Cambrian succeed the zones of the Old
-Red; and, darkly fringed by an obscure bank of cloud ranged along the
-last zone in the series, a night that never dissipates settles down upon
-the deep. Our voyage, like that of the old fabulous navigators of five
-centuries ago, terminates on the sea in a thick darkness, beyond which
-there lies no shore and there dawns no light. And it is in the middle of
-this vast ocean, just where the last zone of the Old Red leans against
-the first zone of the Silurian, that we have succeeded in discovering
-a solitary island unseen before,—a shrub-bearing land, much enveloped
-in fog, but with hills that at least look green in the distance. There
-are patches of floating sea-weed much comminuted by the surf all around
-it; and on one projecting headland we see clear through our glasses a
-cone-bearing tree.
-
-This certainly is not the sort of arrangement demanded by the exigencies
-of the development hypothesis. A true wood at the base of the Old Red
-Sandstone, or a true Placoid in the Limestones of Bala, very considerably
-beneath the base of the Lower Silurian system, are untoward misplacements
-for the purposes of the Lamarckian; and who that has watched the progress
-of discovery for the last twenty years, and seen the place of the
-earliest ichthyolite transferred from the Carboniferous to the Cambrian
-system, and that of the earliest exogenous lignite from the Lias to the
-Lower Devonian, will now venture to say that fossil wood may not yet
-be detected as low in the scale as any vegetable organism whatever, or
-fossil fish as low as the remains of any animal? But though the response
-of the earlier geologic systems be thus unfavorable to the development
-hypothesis, may not men such as the author of the “Vestiges” urge, that
-the geologic evidence, taken as a whole, and in its bearing on groupes
-and periods, establishes the general fact that the lower plants and
-animals preceded the higher,—that the conifera, for instance, preceded
-our true forest trees, such as the oak and elm,—that, in like manner, the
-fish preceded the reptile, that the reptile preceded the bird, that the
-bird preceded the mammiferous quadruped and the quadrumana, and that the
-mammiferous quadruped and the quadrumana preceded man? Assuredly yes!
-They may and do urge that Geology furnishes evidence of such a succession
-of existences; and the arrangement seems at once a very wonderful and
-very beautiful one. Of that great and imposing procession of being of
-which this world has been the scene, the programme has been admirably
-marshalled. But the order of the arrangement in no degree justifies the
-inference based upon it by the Lamarckian. The fact that fishes and
-reptiles were created on an earlier day than the beasts of the field
-and the human family, gives no ground whatever for the belief that “the
-peopling of the earth was one of a natural kind, requiring time,” or that
-the reptiles and fishes have been not only the predecessors, but also the
-progenitors of the beasts and of man. The geological phenomena, even had
-the author of the “Vestiges” been consulted in their arrangement, and
-permitted to determine their sequence, would yet have failed to furnish,
-not merely an adequate foundation for the development hypothesis,
-but even the slightest presumption in its favor. In making good the
-assertion, may I ask the reader to follow me through the details of a
-simple though somewhat lengthened illustration?
-
-
-
-
-SUPERPOSITION NOT PARENTAL RELATION. THE BEGINNINGS OF LIFE.
-
-
-Several thousand years ago, ere the upheaval of the last of our raised
-beaches, there existed somewhere on the British coast a submarine bed,
-rich in sea-weed and the less destructible zoophytes, and inhabited by
-the commoner crustaceæ and molluscs. Shoals of herrings frequented it
-every autumn, haunted by their usual enemies the dog-fish, the cod, and
-the porpoise; and, during the other seasons of the year, it was swum
-over by the ling, the hake, and the turbot. A considerable stream, that
-traversed a wide extent of marshy country, waving with flags and reeds,
-and in which the frog and the newt bred by millions, entered the sea
-a few hundred yards away, and bore down, when in flood, its modicum
-of reptilian remains, some of which, sinking over the submarine bed,
-found a lodgment at the bottom. Portions of reeds and flags were also
-occasionally entombed, with now and then boughs of the pine and juniper,
-swept from the higher grounds. Through frequent depositions of earthy
-matter brought down by the streamlet, and of sand thrown up by the sea,
-a gradual elevation of the bottom went on, till at length the deep-sea
-bed came to exist as a shallow bank, over which birds of the wader family
-stalked mid-leg deep when plying for food; and on one occasion a small
-porpoise, losing his way, and getting entangled amid its shoals, perished
-on it, and left his carcass to be covered up by its mud and silt. That
-elevation of the land, or recession of the sea, to which the country owes
-its last acquired marginal strip of soil, took place, and the shallow
-bank became a flat meadow, raised some six or eight feet above the
-sea-level. Herbs, shrubs, and trees, in course of time covered it over;
-and then, as century succeeded century, it gathered atop a thick stratum
-of peaty mould, embedding portions of birch and hazel bushes, and a few
-doddered oaks. When in this state, at a comparatively recent period,
-an Italian boy, accompanied by his monkey, was passing over it, when
-the poor monkey, hard-wrought and ill-fed, and withal but indifferently
-suited originally for braving the rigors of a keen northern climate,
-lay down and died, and his sorrowing master covered up the remains. Not
-many years after, the mutilated corpse of a poor shipwrecked sailor was
-thrown up, during a night-storm, on the neighboring beach: it was a mere
-fragment of the human frame,—a mouldering unsightly mass, decomposing
-in the sun; and a humane herd-boy, scooping out a shallow grave for it,
-immediately over that of the monkey, buried it up. Last of all, a farmer,
-bent on agricultural improvement, furrowed the flat meadow to the depth
-of some six or eight feet, by a broad ditch, that laid open its organic
-contents from top to bottom. And then a philosopher of the school of
-Maillet and Lamarck, chancing to come that way, stepped aside to examine
-the phenomena, and square them with his theory.
-
-First, along the bottom of the deep ditch he detects marine organisms of
-a low order, and generally of a small size There are dark indistinct
-markings traversing the gray silt which he correctly enough regards
-as the remains of fucoids and blent with these, he finds the stony
-cells of flustra, the calcareous spindles of the sea-pen, the spines
-of echinus, and the thin granular plates of the crustacea. Layers of
-mussel and pecten shells come next, mixed up with the shells of buccinum,
-natica, and trochus. Over the shells there occur defensive spines of
-the dog-fish, blent with the button-like, thornset boucles of the ray.
-And the minute skeletons of herrings, with the vertebral and cerebral
-bones of cod, rest over these in turn. He finds, also, well-preserved
-bits of reed, and a fragment of pine. Higher up, the well-marked bones
-of the frog occur, and the minute skeleton of a newt; higher still, the
-bones of birds of the diver family; higher still, the skeleton of a
-porpoise; and still higher, he discovers that of a monkey, resting amid
-the decayed boles and branches of dicotyledonous plants and trees. He
-pursues his search, vastly delighted to find his doctrine of progressive
-development so beautifully illustrated; and last of all he detects, only
-a few inches from the surface, the broken remains of the poor sailor. And
-having thus collected his facts, he sets himself to collate them with
-his hypothesis. To hold that the zoophytes had been created zoophytes,
-the molluscs molluscs, the fishes fishes, the reptiles reptiles, or the
-man a man, would be, according to our philosopher, alike derogatory to
-the Divine wisdom and to the acumen and vigor of the human intellect: it
-would be “_distressing to him to be compelled to picture the power of
-God, as put forth in any other manner than in those slow, mysterious,
-universal laws, which have so plainly an eternity to work in_;” nor,
-with so large an amount of evidence before him as that which the ditch
-furnishes,—evidence conclusive to the effect that creation is but
-development,—does he find it necessary either to cramp his faculties or
-outrage his taste, by a weak yielding to the requirements of any such
-belief.
-
-Meanwhile the farmer,—a plain, observant, elderly man, comes up, and
-he and the philosopher enter into conversation. “I have been reading
-the history of creation in the side of your deep ditch,” says the
-philosopher, “and find the record really very complete. Look there,” he
-adds, pointing to the unfossiliferous strip that runs along the bottom
-of the bank; “there, life, both vegetable and animal, first began. It
-began, struck by electricity out of albumen, as a congeries of minute
-globe-shaped atoms,—each a hollow sphere within a sphere, as in the
-well-known Chinese puzzle; and from these living atoms were all the
-higher forms progressively developed. The ditch, of course, exhibits
-none of the atoms with which being first commenced; for the atoms don’t
-keep;—we merely see their place indicated by that unfossiliferous band
-at the bottom; but we may detect immediately over it almost the first
-organisms into which—parting thus early into the two great branches of
-organic being—they were developed. _There_ are the fucoids, first-born
-among vegetables,—and _there_ the zoophytes, well nigh the lowest of the
-animal forms. The fucoids are marine plants; for, according to Oken,
-‘all life is from the sea,—none from the continent;’ but _there_, a few
-feet higher, we may see the remains of reeds and flags,—semi-aqueous,
-semi-aerial plants of the comparatively low monocotyledonous order into
-which the fucoids were developed; higher still we detect fragments
-of pines, and, I think, juniper,—trees and shrubs of the land of an
-intermediate order, into which the reeds and flags were developed
-in turn; and in that peaty layer immediately beneath the vegetable
-mould, there occur boughs and trunks of blackened oak,—a noble tree
-of the dicotyledonous division,—the highest to which vegetation in its
-upward course has yet attained. Nor is the progress of the other great
-branch of organized being—that of the animal kingdom—less distinctly
-traceable. The zoophytes became crustacea and molluscs,—the crustacea
-and molluscs, dog-fishes and herrings,—the dog-fish, a low placoid,
-shot up chiefly into turbot, cod, and ling; but the smaller osseous
-fish was gradually converted into a batrachian reptile; in short,
-the herring became a frog,—an animal that still testifies to its
-ichthyological origin, by commencing life as a fish. Gradually, in
-the course of years, the reptile, expanding in size and improving in
-faculty, passed into a warm-blooded porpoise; the porpoise at length,
-tiring of the water as he began to know better, quitted it altogether,
-and became a monkey, and the monkey by slow degrees improved into
-man,—yes, into man, my friend, who has still a tendency, especially
-when just shooting up to his full stature, and studying the ‘Vestiges,’
-to resume the monkey. Such, Sir, is the true history of creation, as
-clearly recorded in the section of earth, moss, and silt, which you have
-so opportunely laid bare. Where that ditch now opens, the generations
-of the man atop lived, died, and were developed. _There_ flourished
-and decayed his great-great-great-great-grandfather the sea-pen,—his
-great-great-great-grandfather the mussel,—his great-great-grandfather
-the herring,—his great-grandfather the frog,—his grandfather the
-porpoise,—and his father the monkey. And _there_ also lived, died, and
-were developed, the generations of the oak, from the kelp-weed and tangle
-to the reed and the flag, and from the reed and the flag, to the pine,
-the juniper, the hazel, and the birch.”
-
-“Master,” replies the farmer, “I see you are a scholar and, I suspect,
-a wag. It would take a great deal of believing to believe all that.
-In the days of my poor old neighbor the infidel weaver, who died of
-_delirium tremens_ thirty years ago, I used to read Tom Paine; and, as I
-was a little wild at the time, I was, I am afraid, a bit of a sceptic.
-It wasn’t easy work always to be as unbelieving as Tom, especially when
-the conscience within got queasy; but it would be a vast deal easier,
-Master, to _doubt_ with Tom than to _believe_ with you. I am a plain
-man, but not quite a fool; and as I have now been looking about me in
-this neighborhood for the last forty years, I have come to know that it
-gives no assurance that any one thing grew out of any other thing because
-it chances to be found atop of it, Master. See, yonder is Dobbin lying
-lazily atop of his bundle of hay; and yonder little Jack, with bridle in
-hand, and he in a few minutes will be atop of Dobbin. And all I see in
-that ditch, Master, from top to bottom, is neither more nor less than a
-certain top-upon-bottom order of things. I see sets of bones and dead
-plants lying on the top of other sets of bones and dead plants,—things
-lying atop of things, as I say, like Dobbin on the hay and Jack upon
-Dobbin. I doubt not the sea was once here, Master, just as it was once
-where you see the low-lying field yonder, which I won from it ten years
-ago. I have carted tangle and kelp-weed where I now cut clover and
-rye-grass, and have gathered periwinkles where I now see snails. But it
-is _clean against experience_, as my poor old neighbor the weaver used
-to say,—against _my_ experience, Master,—that it was the kelp-weed that
-became the rye-grass, or that the periwinkles freshened into snails.
-The kelp-weed and periwinkles belong to those plants and animals of the
-sea that we find growing in _only_ the sea; the rye-grass and snails,
-to those plants and animals of the land that we find growing on _only_
-the land. It is contrary to all experience, and all testimony too, that
-the one passed into the other, and so I cannot believe it; but I do
-and must believe, instead,—for it is not contrary to experience, and
-much according to testimony,—that the Author of all created both land
-productions and sea productions at the ‘times before appointed,’ and
-‘determined the bounds of their habitation.’ ‘By faith we understand
-that the worlds were framed by the word of God;’ and I find I can be
-a believer on God’s terms at a much less expense of credulity than an
-infidel on yours.”
-
-But in this form at least it can be scarce necessary that the argument
-should be prolonged.
-
-The geological phenomena, I repeat, even had the author of the “Vestiges”
-been consulted in their arrangement, and permitted to determine their
-sequence, would fail to furnish a single presumption in favor of the
-development hypothesis. Does the ditch-side of my illustration furnish it
-with a single favoring presumption? The arrangement and sequence of the
-various organisms are complete in both the zoological and phytological
-branch. The flag and reed succeed the fucoid; the fir and juniper succeed
-the flag and reed; and the hazel, birch, and oak succeed the fir and
-juniper. In like manner, and with equal regularity, zoophytes, the
-radiata, the articulata, mollusca, fishes, reptiles, birds, and mammals,
-are ranged, the superior in succession over the inferior classes, in
-the true ascending order; and yet we at once see that the evidence of
-the ditch-side, amounting in the aggregate to no more than this, that
-the remains of the higher lie over those of the lower organisms, gives
-not a shadow of support to the hypothesis that the lower produced the
-higher. For, according to the honest farmer, the fact that any one thing
-is found lying on the top of any other thing, furnishes no presumption
-whatever that the thing below stands in the relation of parent to
-the thing above. And the evidence which the well-ranged organisms of
-the ditch-side do not furnish, the organisms of the entire geologic
-scale, even were they equally well ranged, would fail to supply. The
-fossiliferous portion of the ditch-side of my illustration may be, let us
-suppose, some five or six _feet_ in thickness; the fossiliferous portion
-of the earth’s crust must be some five or six _miles_ in thickness.
-But the mere circumstance of space introduces no new element into
-the question. Equally in both cases the fact of superposition is not
-_identical_ with the fact of parental relation, nor even in any degree an
-_analogous_ fact.
-
-As, however, the succession of remains in the fossiliferous series of
-rocks is infinitely less favorable to the development hypothesis than
-that of the organisms of the ditch-side, it is not very surprising
-that the disciples of the development school should be now evincing a
-disposition to escape from the ascertained facts of Geology, and the
-legitimate conclusions based upon these, unto unknown and unexplored
-provinces of the science; or that they should be found virtually urging,
-that though some of the ascertained facts may seem to bear against them,
-the facts not yet ascertained may be found telling in their favor.
-Such, in effect, is the course taken by the author of the “Vestiges,”
-in his “Explanations,” when, availing himself of a difference of
-opinion which exists among some of our most accomplished geologists
-regarding the first epochs of organized existence, he takes part with
-the section who hold that we have not yet penetrated to the deposits
-representative of the dawn of being, and that fossil-charged formations
-may yet be detected beneath the oldest rocks of what is now regarded
-as the lowest fossiliferous system. Sir Charles Lyell and Mr. Leonard
-Hornet represent the abler and better-known assertors of this last view;
-while Sir Roderick Murchison and Professor Sedgwick rank among the more
-distinguished assertors of the antagonist one. It would be of course
-utterly presumptuous in the writer of these pages to attempt deciding
-a question regarding which such men differ; but in forming a judgment
-for myself, various considerations incline me to hold, that the point
-is now very nearly determined at which, to employ the language of Sir
-Roderick, “life was first breathed into the waters.” The pyramid of
-organized existence, as it ascends in the by-past eternity, inclines
-sensibly towards its apex,—that apex of “_beginning_” in which, on
-far other than geological grounds, it is our privilege to believe.
-The broad base of the superstructure, planted on the existing _now_,
-stretches across the entire scale of life, animal and vegetable; but it
-contracts as it rises into the past;—man—the quadrumana—the quadrupedal
-mammal—the bird—and the reptile—are each in succession struck from off
-its breadth, till we at length see it with the vertebrata, represented
-by only the fish, narrowing, as it were, to a point; and though the
-clouds of the upper region may hide its extreme apex, we infer from the
-declination of its sides, that it cannot penetrate much farther into the
-profound. When Steele and Addison were engaged in breaking up, piecemeal,
-their Spectator Club,—killing off good Sir Roger de Coverly with a
-defluction, marrying Will Honeycomb to his tenant’s daughter, and sending
-away Captain Sentry and Sir Andrew Freeport to their estates to the
-country,—it was shrewdly inferred that the “Spectator” himself was very
-soon to quit the field; and the sudden discontinuance of his lucubrations
-justified the inference. And a corresponding style of reasoning, based
-on the corresponding fact of the breaking up and piecemeal disappearance
-of the group of organized being, seems equally admissible. It is
-somewhat difficult to conceive how at least _many_ more volumes of the
-geologic record than the known ones could be got up without the _club_.
-Further,—so far as yet appears, the fish must have lived in advance of
-the reptile during the three protracted periods of the Old Red Sandstone,
-the two still more protracted periods of the Upper and Lower Silurians,
-and the perhaps more protracted period still of the Cambrian deposits;—in
-all, apparently, a greatly more extended space than that in which the
-reptile lived in advance of the quadrupedal mammal, or the quadrupedal
-mammal lived in advance of man. On principles somewhat similar to those
-on which, with reference to the average term of life, the genealogist
-fixes the probable period of some birth in his chain of succession of
-which he cannot determine the exact date, it seems natural to infer that
-the _birth_ of the fish should have taken place at least not earlier than
-the times of the Cambrian system.
-
-There is another consideration, of at least equal, if not greater
-weight. A general correspondence is found to obtain in widely-separated
-localities, in the organic contents of that lowest band of the Lower
-Silurian or Cambrian system in which fossils have been detected. In
-Russia, in Sweden, in Norway, in the Lake district of England, and in
-the United States, there are certain rocks which occupy relatively
-the same place, and enclose what may be described generally as the
-same remains. They occur in Scandinavia as that “fucoidal band” of Sir
-Roderick Murchison which forms the base of the vast Palæozoic basin of
-the Baltic; they exist in Cumberland and Westmoreland as the Skiddaw
-slates of Professor Sedgwick, and bear also their fucoidal impressions,
-blent with graptolites; they are present in North America as those
-Potsdam sandstones of the States’ geologists in which fucoids so abound,
-mixed with a minute lingula, that they impart to some portions of the
-strata a carboniferous character. But with these deep-lying beds in
-all the several localities, thousands of miles apart, in which their
-passage into the inferior deposits has been traced, fossils cease. And
-why cease with them? In one locality the ancient ocean may have been of
-such a depth in the period immediately _previous_, and represented, in
-consequence, by the strata immediately _beneath_, that no animal could
-have _lived_ at its bottom,—though I do not well see why the remains
-of those animals who, like the shark and pilot-fish, are frequently
-seen swimming over the profoundest depths, might not, did such exist
-at the time, be notwithstanding _found_ at its bottom; or in another
-locality every trace of organization in the nether rocks may have been
-obliterated, at some posterior period, by fire. But it is difficult to
-imagine that that uniform cessation of organized life at one point, which
-seems to have conducted Sir Roderick Murchison and Professor Sedgwick
-to their conclusion, should have been thus a mere effect of accident.
-Accident has its laws, but uniformity is not one of them; and should the
-experience be invariable, as it already seems extensive, that immediately
-beneath the fucoidal beds organic remains cease, I do not see how the
-conclusion is to be avoided, that they represent the period in which at
-least _existences capable of preservation_ were first introduced. Every
-case of coincident cessation which has occurred since the determination
-of the second case, must be reckoned, not simply as an additional
-unit in evidence, but, on the principles which determine mathematical
-probability, as a unit multiplied first by the chances against its
-occurrence, regarded as a mere contingency in that exact formation, and
-second, by the sum of all the previous occurrences at the same point.
-
-In this curious question, however, which it must be the part of future
-explorers in the geological field definitely to settle, the Lamarckian
-can have no legitimate stake. It is but natural that, in his anxiety to
-secure an ultimate retreat for his hypothesis, he should desire to see
-that darkness in which ghosts love to walk settling down on the extreme
-verge of the geological horizon, and enveloping in its folds the first
-beginnings of life. But even did the cloud exist, it is, if I may so
-express myself, on its nearer side, where there is light,—not within nor
-beyond it, where there is none,—that the battle must be fought. It is to
-Geology _as it is known to be_, that the Lamarckian has appealed,—not
-to Geology as it is _not_ known to be. He has summoned into court
-_existing_ witnesses; and, finding their testimony unfavorable, he seeks
-to neutralize their evidence by calling from the “vasty deep,” of the
-unexamined and the obscure, witnesses that “won’t come,”—that by the
-legitimate authorities are not known even to exist,—and with which he
-himself is, on his own confession, wholly unacquainted, save in the old
-scholastic character of mere possibilities. The _possible_ fossil can
-have no more standing in this controversy than the “_possible angel_.”
-He tells us that we have not yet got down to that base-line of all the
-fossiliferous systems at which life first began; and very possibly we
-have not. But what of that? He has carried his appeal to Geology _as it
-is_;—he has referred his case to the testimony of the _known_ witnesses,
-for in no case can the _unknown_ ones be summoned or produced. It is on
-the evidence of the known, and the known only, that the exact value of
-his claims must be determined; and his appeal to the unknown serves but
-to show how thoroughly he himself feels that the actually ascertained
-evidence bears against him. The severe censure of Johnson on reasoners of
-this class is in no degree over-severe. “He who will determine,” said the
-moralist, “against that which he knows, because there may be something
-which he knows not,—he that can set hypothetical possibility against
-acknowledged certainty,—is not to be admitted among reasonable beings.”
-
-But the honest farmer’s reminiscences of his deceased neighbor the
-weaver, and his use at second-hand of Hume’s experience-argument,
-naturally lead me to another branch of the subject.
-
-
-
-
-LAMARCKIAN HYPOTHESIS OF THE ORIGIN OF PLANTS. ITS CONSEQUENCES.
-
-
-I have said that the curiously-mixed, semi-marine, semi-lacustrine flora
-of the Lake of Stennis became associated in my mind, like the ancient
-_Asterolepis_ of Stromness, with the development hypothesis. The fossil,
-as has been shown, represents not inadequately the geologic evidence in
-the question,—the mixed vegetation of the lake may be regarded as forming
-a portion of the phytological evidence.
-
-“All life,” says Oken, “is from the sea. Where the sea organism, by
-self-elevation, succeeds in attaining into form, there issues forth
-from it a higher organism. Love arose out of the sea-foam. The primary
-mucus (that in which electricity originates life) was, and is still,
-generated in those very parts of the sea where the water is in contact
-with earth and air, and thus upon the shores. The first creation of the
-organic took place where the first mountain summits projected out of the
-water,—indeed, without doubt, in India, if the Himalaya be the highest
-mountain. _The first organic forms, whether plants or animals, emerged
-from the shallow parts of the sea._” Maillet wrote to exactly the same
-effect a full century ago. “In a word,” we find him saying, in his
-“Telliamed,” “do not herbs, plants, roots, grains, and all of this kind
-that the earth produces and nourishes, come from the sea? Is it not at
-least natural to think so, since we are certain that all our habitable
-lands came originally from the sea? Besides, in small islands far from
-the continent, which have appeared but a few ages ago at most, and where
-it is manifest that never any man had been, we find shrubs, herbs, roots,
-and sometimes animals. Now, you must be forced to own either that these
-productions owed their origin to the sea, or to a new creation, which is
-absurd.”
-
-It is a curious fact, to which, in the passing, I must be permitted to
-call the attention of the reader, that all the leading assertors of the
-development hypothesis have been bad geologists. Maillet had for his
-errors and deficiencies the excellent apology that he wrote more than
-a hundred years ago, when the theory of a universal ocean, promulgated
-by Leibnitz nearly a century earlier, was quite as good as any of the
-other theories of the time, and when Geology, as a science, had no
-existence. And so we do not wonder at an ignorance which was simply that
-of his age, when we find him telling his readers that plants _must_
-have originated in the sea, seeing that “all our habitable lands came
-originally from the sea;” meaning, of course, by the statement, not at
-all what the modern geologist would mean were he to employ even the same
-words, but simply that there was a time when the universal ocean covered
-the whole globe, and that, as the waters gradually diminished, the
-loftier mountain summits and higher table-lands, in appearing in their
-new character as islands and continents, derived their flora from what,
-in a universal ocean could be the only possible existing flora,—that
-of the sea. But what shall we say of the equally profound ignorance
-manifested by Professor Oken, a living authority, whom we find prefacing
-for the Ray Society, in 1847, the English translation of his “Elements
-of Physio-philosophy?” “The first creation of the organic took place,”
-we find him saying, “where the first mountain summits projected out
-of the sea,—_indeed, without doubt, in India, if the Himalaya be the
-highest mountain_.” Here, evidently, in this late age of the world, in
-which Geology _does_ exist as a science, do we find the ghost of the
-universal ocean of Leibnitz walking once more, as if it had never been
-laid. Is there now in all Britain even a tyro geologist so unacquainted
-with geological fact as not to know that the richest flora which the
-globe ever saw had existed for myriads of ages, and then, becoming
-extinct, had slept in the fossil state for myriads of ages more, ere
-the highest summits of the Himalayan range rose over the surface of the
-deep? The Himalayas disturbed, and bore up along with them in their
-upheaval, vast beds of the Oolitic system. Belemnites and ammonites have
-been dug out of their sides along the line of perpetual snow, seventeen
-thousand feet over the level of the sea. What in the recent period form
-the loftiest mountains of the globe, existed as portions of a deep-sea
-bottom, swum over by the fishes and reptiles of the great Secondary
-period, when what is now Scotland had its dark forests of stately
-pine,—represented in the present age of the world by the lignites of
-Helmsdale, Eathie, and Eigg,—and when the plants of a former creation
-lay dead and buried deep beneath, in shales and fire-clay,—existing as
-vast beds of coal, or entombed in solid rock, as the brown massy trunks
-of Granton and Craigleith. And even ere these last existed as living
-trees, the coniferous lignite of the Lower Old Red Sandstone found at
-Cromarty had passed into the fossil state, and lay as a semi-calcareous,
-semi-bituminous mass, amid perished _Dipterians_ and extinct _Coccostei_.
-So much for the Geology of the German Professor. And be it remarked,
-that the _actualities_ in this question can be determined by only the
-geologist. The mere naturalist may indicate from the analogies of his
-science, what possibly _might_ have taken place, but what really _did_
-take place, and the true order in which the events occurred, it is the
-part of the geologist to determine. It cannot be out of place to remark,
-further, that geological discovery is in no degree responsible for the
-infidelity of the development hypothesis; seeing that, in the first
-place, the hypothesis _is greatly more ancient than the discoveries_,
-and, in the second, that its more prominent assertors are _exactly the
-men who know least of geological fact_. But to this special point I shall
-again refer.
-
-The author of the “Vestiges” is at one, regarding the supposed marine
-origin of terrestrial plants, with Maillet and Oken; and he regards the
-theory, we find him stating in his “Explanations,” as the true key to
-the well-established fact, that the vegetation of groupes of islands
-generally corresponds with that of the larger masses of land in their
-neighborhood. Marine plants of the same kinds crept out of the sea, it
-would seem, upon the islands on the one hand, and upon the larger masses
-of land on the other, and thus produced the same flora in each; just as
-tadpoles, after passing their transition state, creep out of their canal
-or river on the opposite banks, and thus give to the fields or meadows on
-the right-hand side a supply of frogs, of the same appearance and size
-as those poured out upon the fields and meadows of the left. “Thus, for
-example,” we find him saying, “the Galapagos exhibit general characters
-in common with South America; and the Cape de Verd islands, with Africa.
-They are, in Mr. Darwin’s happy phrase, satellites to those continents,
-in respect of natural history. Again,” he continues, “when masses of
-land are only divided from each other by narrow seas, there is usually a
-community of forms. The European and African shores of the Mediterranean
-present an example. Our own islands afford another of far higher value.
-It appears that the flora of Ireland and Great Britain is various, or
-rather that we have five floras or distinct sets of plants, and that
-each of these is partaken of by a portion of the opposite continent.
-There are, first, a flora confined to the west of Ireland, and imparted
-likewise to the north-west of Spain; second, a flora in the south-west
-promontory of England and of Ireland, extending across the Channel to
-the north-west coast of France; third, one common to the south-east
-of England and north of France; fourth, an Alpine flora developed in
-the Scottish and Welsh Highlands, and intimately related to that of
-the Norwegian Alps; fifth, a flora which prevails over a large part of
-England and Ireland, ‘mingled with other floras, and diminishing slightly
-as we proceed westward:’ this bears intimate relation with the flora
-of Germany. Facts so remarkable would force the meanest fact-collector
-or species-demonstrator into generalization. The really ingenious man
-who lately brought them under notice (Professor Edward Forbes) could
-only surmise, as their explanation, that the spaces now occupied by the
-intermediate seas must have been dry land at the time when these floras
-were created. In that case, either the original arrangement of the
-floras, or the selection of land for submergence, must have been apposite
-to the case in a degree far from usual. The necessity for a simpler cause
-is obvious, and it is found in the hypothesis of a _spread of terrestrial
-vegetation from the sea into the lands adjacent_. The community of forms
-in the various regions opposed to each other merely indicates a distinct
-marine creation in each of the oceanic areas respectively interposed, and
-which would naturally advance into the lands nearest to it, as far as
-circumstances of soil and climate were found agreeable.”
-
-Such, regarding the origin of terrestrial vegetation, are the views
-of Maillet, Oken, and the author of the “Vestiges.” They all agree in
-holding that the plants of the land existed in their first condition as
-weeds of the sea.
-
-Let me request the reader at this stage, ere we pass on to the
-consideration of the experience-argument, to remark a few incidental,
-but by no means unimportant, consequences of the belief. And, first, let
-him weigh for a moment the comparative demands on his credulity of the
-theory by which Professor Forbes accounts for the various floras of the
-British Islands, and that hypothesis of transmutation which the author of
-the “Vestiges” would so fain put in its place, as greatly more simple,
-and, of course, more in accordance with the principles of human belief.
-In order to the reception of the Professor’s theory, it is necessary to
-hold, in the first place, that the creation of each species of plant
-took place, not by repetition of production in various widely-separated
-centres, but in some single centre, from which the species propagated
-itself by seed, bud, or scion, across the special area which it is now
-found to occupy. And this, in the first instance, is of course as much an
-assumption as any of those assumed numbers or assumed lines with which,
-in algebra and the mathematics, it is necessary in so many calculations
-to set out, in quest of some required number or line, which, without the
-assistance of the assumed ones, we might despair of ever finding. But
-the assumption is in itself neither unnatural nor violent; there are
-various very remarkable analogies which lend it support; the facts which
-seem least to harmonize with it are not wholly irreconcilable, and are,
-besides, of a merely exceptional character; and, further, it has been
-adopted by botanists of the highest standing.[34] It is necessary to
-hold, in the second place, in order to the reception of the theory, that
-the area of the earth’s surface occupied by the British Islands and the
-neighboring coasts of the Continent once stood fifty fathoms higher, in
-relation to the existing sea-level, than it does now,—a belief which,
-whatever its specific grounds or standing in this particular case, is
-at least in strict accordance with the general geological phenomena of
-subsidence and elevation, and which, so far from outraging any experience
-founded on observation or testimony, runs in the same track with what
-is known of wide areas now in the course of sinking, like that on the
-Italian coast, in which the Bay of Baiæ and the ruins of the temple of
-Serapis occur, or that in Asia, which includes the Run of Cutch; or of
-what is known of areas in the course of rising, like part of the coast
-of Sweden, or part of the coast of South America, or in Asia along the
-western shores of Aracan. Whereas, in order to close with the _simpler_
-antagonistic belief of the author of the “Vestiges,” it is necessary
-to hold, _contrary_ to all experience, that _dulce_ and _henware_[35]
-became, through a very wonderful metamorphosis, cabbage and spinnage;
-that kelp-weed and tangle bourgeoned into oaks and willows; and that
-_slack_, _rope-weed_, and _green-raw_,[36] shot up into mangel-wurzel,
-rye-grass, and clover. _Simple_, certainly! An infidel on terms such
-as these could with no propriety be regarded as an _unbeliever_. It is
-well that the New Testament makes no such extraordinary demands on human
-credulity.
-
-Let us remark further, at this stage, that, judging from the generally
-received geological evidence in the case, very little time seems to be
-allowed by the author of the “Vestiges” for that miraculous process of
-transmutation through which the low algæ of our sea-shores are held to
-have passed into high orders of plants which constitute the prevailing
-British flora. The boulder clay, which rises so high along our hills,
-and which, as shown by its inferior position on the lower grounds, is
-decidedly the most ancient of the country’s superficial deposits, is yet
-so modern, geologically, that it contains only recent shells. It belongs
-to that cold, glacial, post-Tertiary period, in which what is now Britain
-existed as a few groupes of insulated hill-tops, bearing the semi-arctic
-vegetation of our fourth flora,—that true _Celtic_ flora of the country
-which we now find, like the country’s Celtic races of our own species,
-cooped up among the mountains. The fifth or Germanic flora must have
-been introduced, it is held, at a later period, when the climate had
-greatly meliorated. And if we are to hold that the plants of this last
-flora were _developed_ from sea-weed, not propagated across a continuity
-of land from the original centre in Germany, or borne by currents from
-the mouths of the Germanic rivers,—the theory of Mon. C. Martins,—then
-must we also hold that that development took place since the times of
-the boulder clay, and that fucoids and confervæ became dicotyledonous
-and monocotyledonous plants during a brief period, in which the _Purpura
-lapillus_ and _Turritella terebra_ did not alter a single whorl, and
-the _Cyprina islandica_ and _Astarte borealis_ retained unchanged each
-minute projection of their hinges, and each nicer peculiarity of their
-muscular impressions. _Creation_ would be greatly less wonderful than a
-sudden transmutative process such as this, restricted in its operation
-to groupes of English, Irish, and Manx plants, identical with groupes
-in Germany, when all the various organisms around them, such as our
-sea-shells, continued to be exactly what they had been for ages before.
-A process of development from the lowest to the highest forms, rigidly
-restricted to the flora of a country, would be simply the miracle of
-Jonah’s gourd several thousand times repeated.
-
-I must here indulge in a few remarks more, which, though they may seem of
-an incidental character, have a direct bearing on the general subject.
-The geologist infers, in all his reasonings founded on fossils, that a
-race or species has existed from some one certain point in the scale
-to some other certain point, if he find it occurring at both points
-together. He infers on this principle, for instance, that the boulder
-clay, which contains only _recent_ shells, belongs to the _recent_ or
-post-Tertiary period; and that the Oolite and Lias, which contain _no_
-recent shells, represent a period whose existences have all become
-extinct. And all experience serves to show that his principle is a sound
-one. In creation there are many species linked together, from their
-degree of similarity, by the _generic_ tie; but no perfect verisimilitude
-obtains among them, unless hereditarily derived from the one, two, or
-more individuals, of contemporary origin, with which the race began.
-True, there are some races that have spread over very wide circles,—the
-circle of the human family has become identical with that of the globe;
-and there are certain plants and animals that, from peculiar powers of
-adaptation to the varieties of soil and climate,—mayhap also from the
-tenacious vitality of their seeds, and their facilities of transport by
-natural means,—are likewise diffused very widely. There are plants,
-too, such as the common nettle and some of the ordinary grasses, which
-accompany civilized man all over the globe, he scarce knows how, and
-spring up unbidden where-ever he fixes his habitation. He, besides,
-carries with him the common agricultural weeds: there are localities
-in the United States, says Sir Charles Lyell, where these _exotics_
-outnumber the native plants; but these are exceptions to the prevailing
-economy of distribution; and the circles of species generally are
-comparatively limited and well defined. The mountains of the southern
-hemisphere have, like those of Switzerland and the Scotch Highlands,
-their forests of coniferous trees; but they furnish no Swiss pines or
-Scotch firs; nor do the coasts of New Zealand or Van Dieman’s Land
-supply the European shells or fish. True, there may be much to puzzle
-in the identity of what may be termed the exceptional plants, equally
-indigenous, apparently, in circles widely separated by space. It has
-been estimated that there exist about a hundred thousand vegetable
-species, and of these, thirty Antarctic forms have been recognized by
-Dr. Hooker as identical with European ones. Had Robinson Crusoe failed
-to remember that he had shaken the old corn-bag where he found the wheat
-and barley ears springing up on his island, he might have held that he
-had discovered a new centre of the European cerealia. And the process
-analogous to the shaking of the bag is frequently a process _not_ to be
-remembered. There are several minute lochans in the Hebrides and the west
-of Ireland in which there occurs a small plant of the cord-rush family,
-(_Eriocaulon septangulare_,) which, though common in America, is nowhere
-to be found on the European Continent. It is the only British plant
-which belongs to no other part of Europe. How was it transported across
-the Atlantic? Entangled, mayhap, in the form of a single seed,—for its
-seeds are exceedingly light and small,—in the plumage of some water-fowl,
-free of both sea and lake, it had been carried in the germ from the
-weed-skirted edge of some American swamp or mere, to some mossy lochan of
-Connaught or of Skye; and one such seed transported by one such accident,
-unique in its occurrence in thousands of years, would be quite sufficient
-to puzzle all the botanists forever after. I have seen the seed of one
-of our Scotch grasses, that had been originally caught in the matted
-fleece of a sheep reared among the hills of Sutherland, and then wrought
-into a coarse, ill-dressed woollen cloth, carried about for months in a
-piece of underclothing. It might have gone over half the globe in that
-time, and, when cast away with the worn vestment, might have originated
-a new circle for its species in South America or New Holland. There are
-seeds specially contrived by the Great Designer to be carried far from
-their original habitats in the coats of animals,—a mode which admits
-of transport to much greater distances than the mode, also extensively
-operative, of consigning them for conveyance to their stomachs; and when
-we see the work in its effects, we are puzzled by the want of a record
-of an emigratory process, of which, in the circumstances, no record
-could possibly exist. Unable to make out a case for the “shaking of the
-bag,” we bethink us, in the emergency, of repetition of creation. But
-in circles separated by _time_, not space,—by _time_, across whose dim
-gulfs no voyager sails, and no bird flies, and over which there are
-no means of transport from the point where a race once fails, to any
-other point in the future,—we find no repetition of species. If the
-production of perfect duplicates or triplicates in independent centres
-were a law of nature, our works of physical science could scarce fail
-to tell us of identical species found occurring in widely-separated
-systems,—Scotch firs and larches, for instance, among the lignites of
-the Lias, or _Cyprina islandica_ and _Ostrea edulis_ among the shells
-of the Mountain Limestone. But never yet has the geologist found in his
-systems or formations any such evidence as facts such as these might be
-legitimately held to furnish, of the independent _de novo_ production of
-individual members of any single species. On the contrary, the evidence
-lies so entirely the other way, that he reasons on the existence of a
-family relation obtaining between all the members of each species, as
-one of his best established principles. If members of the same species
-may exist through _de novo_ production, without hereditary relationship,
-so thoroughly, in consequence, does the fabric of geological reasoning
-fall to the ground, that we find ourselves incapacitated from regarding
-even the bed of common cockle or mussel shells, which we find lying a few
-feet from the surface on our raised beaches, as of the existing creation
-at all. Nay, even the human remains of our moors may have belonged, if
-our principle of relationship in each species be not a true one, to
-some former creation, cut off from that to which we ourselves belong,
-by a wide period of death. All palæontological reasoning is at an end
-forever, if identical species can originate in independent centres,
-widely separated from each other by periods of time; and if they fail to
-originate in periods separated by time, how or why in centres separated
-by space?
-
-Let the reader remark further, the bearing of those facts from which this
-principle of geological reasoning has been derived, on the development
-hypothesis. We find species restricted to circles and periods; and though
-stragglers are occasionally found outside the circle in the existing
-state of things, never are they found beyond their period among the
-remains of the past. It was profoundly argued by Cuvier, that _life_
-could not possibly have had a chemical origin. “In fact,” we find him
-remarking, “life exercising upon the elements which at every instant
-form part of the living body, and upon those which it attracts to it, an
-action contrary to that which would be produced without it by the usual
-chemical affinities, it is inconsistent to suppose that it can itself
-be produced by these affinities.” And the phenomena of restriction to
-circle and period testify to the same effect. Nothing, on the one hand,
-can be more various in character and aspect than the organized existences
-of the various circles and periods; nothing more invariable, on the
-other, than the results of chemical or electrical experiment. And yet,
-to use almost the words of Cuvier, “we know of no other power in nature
-capable of reuniting previously separated molecules,” than the electric
-and the chemical. To these agents, accordingly, all the assertors of the
-development hypothesis have had recourse for at least the _origination_
-of life. Air, water, earth existing as a saline mucus, and an active
-persistent electricity, are the creative ingredients of Oken. The
-author of the “Vestiges” is rather less explicit on the subject: he
-simply refers to the fact, that the “basis of all vegetable and animal
-substances consists of nucleated cells,—that is, of cells having granules
-within them;” and states that globules of a resembling character “can
-be produced in albumen by electricity;” and that though albumen itself
-has not yet been produced by artificial means,—the only step in the
-process of creation which is wanting,—it is yet known to be a chemical
-composition, the mode of whose production may “be any day discovered in
-the laboratory.” Further, he adopts, as part of the foundation of his
-hypothesis, the pseudo-experiment of Mr. Weekes, who holds that out of
-certain saline preparations, acted upon by electricity, he can produce
-certain living animalcula of the mite family;—the vital and the organized
-out of the inorganic and the dead. In all such cases, electricity, or
-rather, according to Oken, galvanism, is regarded as the vitalizing
-principle. “_Organism_,” says the German, “is _galvanism_ residing in
-a thoroughly homogeneous mass.... A galvanic pile pounded into atoms
-must become alive. In this manner nature brings forth organic bodies.”
-I have even heard it seriously asked whether electricity be not God!
-Alas! could such a god, limited in its capacity of action, like those
-“gods of the plains” in which the old Syrian trusted, have wrought, in
-the character of Creator, with a variety of result so endless, that in
-no geologic period has repetition taken place? In all that purports to
-be experiment on the development side of the question, we see nothing
-else save repetition. The _Acarus Crossi_ of Mr. Weekes is not a new
-species, but the _repetition_ of an old one, which has been long known
-as the _Acarus horridus_, a little bristle-covered creature of the mite
-family, that harbors in damp corners among the debris of outhouses, and
-the dust and dirt of neglected workshops and laboratories. Nay, even a
-change in the chemical portion of the experiment by which he believed the
-creature to be produced, failed to secure variety. A powerful electric
-current had been sent, in the first instance, through a solution of
-silicate of potash, and, after a time, the _Acarus horridus_ crawled out
-of the fluid. The current was then sent through a solution of nitrate of
-copper, and after a due space, the _Acarus horridus_ again creeped out.
-A solution of ferro-cyanate of potash was next subjected to the current,
-and yet again, and in greater numbers than on the two former occasions,
-there appeared, as in virtue, it would seem, of its extraordinary
-appetency, _to be_ the same ever-recurring _Acarus horridus_. How, or
-in what form, the little creature should have been introduced into the
-several experiments, it is not the part of those who question their
-legitimacy to explain; it is enough for us to know, that individuals of
-the family to which the _Acarus_ belongs are so remarkable for their
-powers of life, even in their fully developed state, as to resist, for
-a time, the application of boiling water, and to live long in alcohol.
-We know, further, that the _germs_ of the lower animals are greatly
-more tenacious of vitality than the animals themselves; and that they
-may exist in their state of embryonism in the most unthought of and
-elusive forms; nay,—as the recent discoveries regarding alterations of
-generation have conclusively shown,—that the germ which produced the
-parent may be wholly unlike the germ that produces its offspring, and
-yet identical with that which produced the parent’s parent. Save on
-the theory of a quiescent vitality, maintained by seeds for centuries
-within a few inches of the earth’s surface, we know not how a layer of
-shell, sand, or marl, spread over the bleak moors of Harris, should
-produce crops of white clover, where only heath had grown before; nor
-how brakes of doddered furze burnt down on the slopes of the Cromarty
-Sutors should be so frequently succeeded by thickets of raspberry. We
-are not, however to give up the _unknown_,—that illimitable province in
-which science discovers,—to be a wild region of dream, in which fantasy
-may invent. There are many dark places in the field of human knowledge
-which even the researches of ages may fail wholly to enlighten; but no
-one derives a right from that circumstance to people them with chimeras
-and phantoms. They belong to the philosophers of the future,—not to the
-visionaries of the present. But while it is not our part to explain
-_how_, in the experiments of Mr. Weekes, the chain of life from life has
-been maintained unbroken, we can most conclusively show, that that world
-of organized existence of which we ourselves form part, is, and ever has
-been, a world, not of tame repetition, but of endless variety. It is
-palpably not a world of _Acaridæ_ of one species, nor yet of creatures
-developed from these, under those electric or chemical laws of which
-the grand characteristic is invariability of result. The vast variety
-of its existences speak not of the operation of _unvarying laws_, that
-represent, in their uniformity of result, the unchangeableness of the
-Divinity, but of _creative acts_, that exemplify the infinity of His
-resources.
-
-Let the reader yet further remark, if he has followed me through these
-preliminary observations, what is really involved in the hypothesis of
-the author of the “Vestiges,” regarding the various floras common to
-the British islands and the Continent. If it was upon his scheme that
-England, Ireland, and the mainland of Europe came to possess an identical
-flora, production _de novo_ and by repetition of the same species must
-have taken place in thousands of instances along the shores of each
-island and of the mainland. His hypothesis demands that the sea-weed on
-the coast of Ireland should have been developed, first through lower, and
-then higher forms, into thousands of terrestrial plants,—that exactly
-the same process of development from sea-weed into terrestrial plants of
-the same species should have taken place on the coast of England, and
-again on the coasts of the Continent generally,—and that identically
-the same vegetation should have been originated in this way in at least
-three great centres. And if plants of the same species could have had
-three distinct centres of organization and development, why not three
-hundred, or three thousand, or three hundred thousand? Nor will it do
-to attempt escaping from the difficulty, by alleging that there is the
-groundwork in the case of at least a common marine vegetation to start
-from; and that thus, if we have not properly the existence of the direct
-hereditary tie among the various individuals of each species, we may yet
-recognize at least a sort of collateral relationship among them, derived
-from the relationship of their marine ancestry. For relationship, in even
-the primary stage, the author of the “Vestiges” virtually repudiates, by
-adopting, as one of the foundations of his hypothesis, with, of course,
-all the legitimate consequences, the experiments of Mr. Weekes. The
-animalculæ-making process is instanced as representative of the first
-stage of being,—that in which dead inorganic matter assumes vitality;
-and it corresponds, in the zoological branch, to the production of a
-low marine vegetation in the phytological one. A certain semi-chemical,
-semi-electrical process, originates, time after time, certain numerous
-low forms of life, identical in species, but connected by no tie of
-relationship: such is the presumed result of the Weekes experiment.
-A certain further process of development matures low forms of life,
-thus originated, into higher species, also identical, and also wholly
-unconnected by the family tie: such are the consequences legitimately
-involved in that island-vegetation theory promulgated by the author of
-the “Vestiges.” And be it remembered that Mr. Weekes’ process, so far as
-it is simply electrical and chemical, is a process which is as capable
-of having been gone through in all times and all places, as that other
-process of strewing marl upon a moor, through which certain rustic
-experimenters have held that they produced white clover. It could have
-been gone through during the Carboniferous or the Silurian period; for
-all truly chemical and electrical experiments would have resulted in
-manifestations of the same phenomena then as now:—an acid would have
-effervesced as freely with an alkali; and each fibre of an electrified
-feather—had feathers then existed—would have stood out as decidedly apart
-from all its neighbors. We must therefore hold, if we believe with the
-author of the “Vestiges,” first, from the Weekes experiment, that in all
-times, and in all places, every centre of a certain chemical and electric
-action would have become a new centre of creation to certain _recent_
-species of low, but not _very_ low, organization; and, second, from his
-doctrine regarding the identity of the British and Continental floras,
-that in the course of subsequent development from these low forms, the
-process in each of many widely-separated centres,—widely separated both
-by space and time,—would be so nicely correspondent with the process in
-all the others, that the same higher _recent_ forms would be matured in
-all. And to doctrines such as these, the experience of all Geologists,
-all Phytologists, all Zoologists, is diametrically opposed. If these
-doctrines be true, _their_ sciences are false in their facts, and idle
-and unfounded in their principles.
-
-
-
-
-THE TWO FLORAS, MARINE AND TERRESTRIAL. BEARING OF THE EXPERIENCE
-ARGUMENT.
-
-
-Is the reader acquainted with the graphic verse, and scarce less
-graphic prose, in which Crabbe describes the appearances presented by
-a terrestrial vegetation affected by the waters of the sea? In both
-passages, as in all his purely descriptive writings, there is a solidity
-of truthful observation exhibited, which triumphs over their general
-homeliness of vein.
-
- “On either side
- Is level fen, a prospect wild and wide,
- With dykes on either hand, by ocean self-supplied.
- Far on the right the distant sea is seen,
- And salt the springs that feed the marsh between;
- Beneath an ancient bridge the straitened flood
- Rolls through its sloping banks of slimy mud;
- Near it a sunken boat resists the tide,
- That frets and hurries to the opposing side;
- The rushes sharp, that on the borders grow,
- Bend their brown florets to the stream below,
- Impure in all its course, in all its progress slow.
- Here a grave Flora scarcely deigns to bloom,
- Nor wears a rosy blush, nor sheds perfume.
- The few dull flowers that o’er the place are spread,
- Partake the nature of their fenny bed;
- Here on its wiry stem, in rigid bloom,
- Grows the salt lavender, that lacks perfume;
- Here the dwarf sallows creep, the septfoil harsh,
- And the soft slimy mallow of the marsh.
- Low on the ear the distant billows sound,
- And just in view appears their stony bound.”
-
-“The ditches of a fen so near the ocean,” says the poet, in the note
-which accompanies this passage, “are lined with irregular patches of a
-coarse-stained laver; a muddy sediment rests on the horse-tail and other
-perennial herbs which in part conceal the shallowness of the stream; a
-fat-leaved, pale-flowering scurvy-grass appears early in the year, and
-the razor-edged bullrush in the summer and autumn. The fen itself has a
-dark and saline herbage: there are rushes and _arrow-head_; and in a few
-patches the flakes of the cotton-grass are seen, but more commonly the
-_sea-aster_, the dullest of that numerous and hardy genus; a _thrift_,
-blue in flower, but withering, and remaining withered till the winter
-scatters it; the _salt-wort_, both simple and shrubby; a few kinds of
-grass changed by the soil and atmosphere; and low plants of two or three
-denominations, undistinguished in the general view of scenery;—such is
-the vegetation of the fen where it is at a small distance from the ocean.”
-
-And such are the descriptions of Crabbe, at once a poet and a botanist.
-In referring to the blue tint exhibited in salt-fens by the pink-colored
-flower of the _thrift_, (_Statice Armeria_,) he might have added, that
-the general green of the terrestrial vegetation likewise assumes, when
-subjected to those modified marine influences under which plants of
-the land can continue to live, a decided tinge of blue. It is further
-noticeable, that the general brown of at least the larger algæ presents,
-as they creep upwards upon the beach to meet with these, a marked tinge
-of yellow. The prevailing brown of the one flora approximates towards
-yellow,—the prevailing green of the other towards blue; and thus,
-instead of mutually merging into some neutral tint, they assume at their
-line of meeting directly antagonistic hues.
-
-But what does experience say regarding the transmutative conversion of
-a marine into a terrestrial vegetation,—that experience on which the
-sceptic founds so much? As I walked along the green edge of the Lake
-of Stennis, selvaged by the line of detached weeds with which a recent
-gale had strewed its shores, and marked that for the first few miles the
-accumulation consisted of marine algæ, here and there mixed with tufts
-of stunted reeds or rushes, and that as I receded from the sea it was
-the algæ that became stunted and dwarfish, and that the reeds, aquatic
-grasses, and rushes, grown greatly more bulky in the mass, were also
-more fully developed individually, till at length the marine vegetation
-altogether disappeared, and the vegetable debris of the shore became
-purely lacustrine,—I asked myself whether here, if anywhere, a transition
-flora between lake and sea ought not to be found? For many thousand years
-ere the tall gray obelisks of Stennis, whose forms I saw this morning
-reflected in the water, had been torn from the quarry, or laid down in
-mystic circle on their flat promontories, had this lake admitted the
-waters of the sea, and been salt in its lower reaches and fresh in its
-higher. And during this protracted period had its quiet, well-shattered
-bottom been exposed to no disturbing influences through which the
-delicate process of transmutation could have been marred or arrested.
-Here, then, if in any circumstances, ought we to have had in the broad,
-permanently brackish reaches, at least indications of a vegetation
-intermediate in its nature between the monocotyledons of the lake and the
-algæ of the sea; and yet not a vestige of such an intermediate vegetation
-could I find among the up-piled debris of the mixed floras, marine
-and lacustrine. The lake possesses no such intermediate vegetation. As
-the water freshens in its middle reaches, the algæ become dwarfish and
-ill-developed; one species after another ceases to appear, as the habitat
-becomes wholly unfavorable to it, until at length we find, instead of
-the brown, rootless, flowerless fucoids and confervæ of the ocean, the
-green, rooted, flower-bearing flags, rushes, and aquatic grasses of
-the fresh water. Many thousands of years have failed to originate a
-single intermediate plant. And such, tested by a singularly extensive
-experience, is the general evidence.
-
-There is scarce a chain-length of the shores of Britain and Ireland that
-has not been a hundred and a hundred times explored by the botanist,—keen
-to collect and prompt to register every rarity of the vegetable kingdom;
-but has he ever yet succeeded in transferring to his herbarium a single
-plant caught in the transition state? Nay, are there any of the laws
-under which the vegetable kingdom exists better known than those laws
-which fix certain species of the algæ to certain zones of coast, in which
-each, according to the overlying depth of water and the nature of the
-bottom, finds the only habitat in which it can exist? The rough-stemmed
-tangle (_Laminaria digitata_) can exist no higher on the shore than
-the low line of ebb during stream-tides; the smooth-stemmed tangle
-(_Laminaria saccharina_) flourishes along an inner belt, partially
-uncovered during the ebbs of the larger neaps; the forked and cracker
-kelp-weeds (_Fucus serratus_ and _Fucus nodosus_) thrive in a zone still
-less deeply covered by water, and which even the lower neaps expose. And
-at least one other species of kelp-weed, the _Fucus vesiculosus_, occurs
-in a zone higher still, though, as it creeps upwards on the rocky beach,
-it loses its characteristic bladders, and becomes short and narrow of
-frond. The thick brown tufts of _Fucus canaliculatus_, which in the lower
-and middle reaches of the Lake of Stennis I found heaped up in great
-abundance along the shores, also rises high on rocky beaches,—so high in
-some instances, that during neap-tides it remains uncovered by the water
-for days together. If, as is not uncommon, there be an escape of land
-springs along the beach, there may be found, where the fresh water oozes
-out through the sand and gravel, an upper terminal zone of the confervæ,
-chiefly of a green color, mixed with the ribbon-like green layer, (_Ulva
-latissima_,) the purplish-brown layer, (_Porphyra laciniata_,) and still
-more largely with the green silky Enteromorpha, (_E. compressa_.)[37]
-And then, decidedly within the line of the storm-beaches of winter,—not
-unfrequently in low sheltered bays, such as the Bay of Udale or of
-Nigg, where the ripple of every higher flood washes,—we may find the
-vegetation of the land—represented by the sentinels and picquets of
-its outposts—coming down, as if to meet with the higher-growing plants
-of the sea. In salt marshes the two vegetations may be seen, if I may
-so express myself, _dovetailed_ together at their edges,—at least one
-species of club-rush (_Scirpus maritimus_) and the common saltwort and
-glasswort (_Salsola kali_ and _Salicornia procumbens_) encroaching so far
-upon the sea as to mingle with a thinly-scattered and sorely-diminished
-fucus,—that bladderless variety of the _Fucus vesiculosus_ to which I
-have already referred, and which may be detected in such localities,
-shooting forth its minute brown fronds from the pebbles. On rocky
-coasts, where springs of fresh water come trickling down along the
-fissures of the precipices, the observer may see a variety of _Rhodomenia
-palmata_—the fresh-water dulse of the Moray Frith—creeping upwards from
-the lower limits of production, till just where the common gray balanus
-ceases to grow. And there, short and thick, and of a bleached yellow
-hue, _it_ ceases also; but one of the commoner marine confervæ,—the
-_Conferva arcta_, blent with a dwarfed _Enteromorpha_,—commencing a
-very little below where the dulse ends, and taking its place, clothes
-over the runnels with its covering of green for several feet higher:
-in some cases, where it is frequently washed by the upward dash of the
-waves, it rises above even the flood-line; and in some crevice of the
-rock beside it, often as low as its upper edge, we may detect stunted
-tufts of the sea-pink or of the scurvy-grass. But while there is thus
-a vegetation intermediate _in place_ between the land and the sea, we
-find, as if it had been selected purposely to confound the transmutation
-theory, that it is in no degree intermediate in character. For, while
-it is chiefly marine weeds of the lower division of the confervæ that
-creep upwards from the sea to meet the vegetation of the land, it is
-chiefly terrestrial plants of the higher division of the dicotyledons
-that creep downwards from the land to meet the vegetation of the sea.
-The salt-worts, the glass-worts, the arenaria, the thrift, and the
-scurvy-grass, are all dicotyledonous plants. Nature draws a deeply-marked
-line of division where the requirements of the transmutative hypothesis
-would demand the nicely graduated softness of a shaded one; and,
-addressing the strongly marked floras on either hand, even more sternly
-than the waves themselves, demands that to a certain definite bourne
-should they come, and no farther.
-
-But in what form, it may be asked, or with what limitations, ought the
-Christian controversialist to avail himself, in this question, of the
-experience argument? Much ought to depend, I reply, on the position
-taken up by the opposite side. We find no direct reference made by the
-author of the “Vestiges” to the anti-miracle argument, first broached
-by Hume, in a purely metaphysical shape, in his well-known “Inquiry,”
-and afterwards thrown into the algebraic form by La Place, in his
-_Essai philosophique sur les Probabilités_. But we do not detect its
-influences operative throughout the entire work. It is because of
-some felt impracticability on the part of its author, of attaining
-to the prevailing belief in the _miracle_ of creation, that he has
-recourse, instead, to the so-called _law_ of development. The _law_ and
-the _miracle_ are the alternatives placed before him; and, rejecting
-the _miracle_, he closes with the _law_. Now, in such circumstances,
-he can have no more cause of complaint, if, presenting him with the
-experience argument of Hume and La Place, we demand that he square
-the evidence regarding the existence of his _law_ strictly according
-to its requirements, than the soldier of an army that charged its
-field-pieces with rusty nails would have cause of complaint if he found
-himself wounded by a missile of a similar kind, sent against him by
-the artillery of the enemy. You cannot, it might be fairly said, in
-addressing him, acquiesce in the miracle here, because, as a violation of
-the laws of nature, there are certain objections, founded on invariable
-experience, which bear direct against your belief in it. Well, here
-are the objections, in the strongest form in which they have yet been
-stated; and here is your hypothesis respecting the development of marine
-algæ into terrestrial plants. We hold that against that hypothesis
-the objections bear at least as directly as against any miracle
-whatever,—nay, that not only is it contrary to an invariable experience,
-but opposed also to all testimony. We regard it as a mere idle dream.
-Maillet dreamed it,—and Lamarck dreamed it,—and Oken dreamed it; but none
-of them did more than merely dream it: its existence rests on exactly the
-same basis of evidence as that of Whang the miller’s “monstrous pot of
-gold and diamonds,” of which he dreamed three nights in succession, but
-which he never succeeded in finding. If we are in error in our estimate,
-here is the argument, and here the hypothesis; give us, in support of the
-hypothesis, the amount of evidence, founded on a solid experience, which
-the argument demands.
-
-But to leave the experience argument in exactly the state in which it
-was left by Hume and La Place, would be doing no real justice to our
-subject. It is in that state quite sufficient to establish the fact,
-that there can be no real escape from belief in _acts of creation_ never
-witnessed by man, to _processes of development_ never witnessed by man;
-seeing that a presumed _law_ beyond the cognizance of experience must be
-as certainly rejected, on the principle of the argument, as a presumed
-_miracle_ beyond that cognizance. It places the presumed _law_ and the
-presumed _miracle_ on exactly the same level. But there is a palpable
-flaw in the anti-miracle argument. It does not prove that miracles _may
-not have taken place_, but that miracles, whether they have taken place
-or no, are _not to be credited_, and this simply because they _are_
-miracles, _i. e._ violations of the established laws of nature. And if it
-be possible for events to take place which man, on certain principles,
-is imperatively required not to credit, these principles must of course
-serve merely to establish a discrepancy between the actual _state_ of
-things, and what is to be _believed_ regarding it. And thus, instead of
-serving purposes of truth, they are made to subserve purposes of error;
-for the existence of truth in the mind is neither more nor less than the
-existence of certain conceptions and beliefs, adequately representative
-of what actually _is_, or what really _has taken place_.
-
-I cannot better illustrate this direct tendency of the anti-miracle
-argument to destroy truth in the mind, by bringing the mental beliefs
-into a state of nonconformity with the possible and actual, than by a
-quotation from La Place himself: “We would not,” he says, “give credit
-to a man who would affirm that he saw a hundred dice thrown into the
-air, and that they all fell on the same faces. If we had ourselves been
-spectators of such an event, we would not believe our own eyes till we
-had scrupulously examined all the circumstances, and assured ourselves
-that there was no trick or deception. After such an examination, we would
-not hesitate to admit it, notwithstanding its great improbability; and no
-one would have recourse to an inversion of the laws of vision in order to
-account for it.” Now, here is the principle broadly laid down, that it
-is impossible to communicate by the evidence of testimony, belief in an
-event which _might_ happen, and which, if it happened, _ought_ on certain
-conditions to be credited. No one knew better than La Place himself, that
-the _possibility_ of the event which he instanced could be represented
-with the utmost exactitude by figures. The probability, in throwing a
-single die, that the ace will be presented on its upper face, is as one
-in six,—six being the entire number of sides which the cube can possibly
-present, and the side with the ace being one of these;—the probability
-that in throwing a _pair_ of dice the aces of both will be at once
-presented on their upper faces, is as one in thirty-six, as against the
-one sixth chance of the ace being presented by the one, there are also
-six chances that the ace of the other should not concur with it;—and in
-throwing _three_ dice, the probability that their three aces should be at
-once presented is, of course, on the same principle, as one in six times
-thirty-six, or, in other words, as one in two hundred and sixteen. And
-thus, in ascertaining the exact degree of probability of the hundred aces
-at once turning up, we have to go on multiplying by six, for each die we
-add to the number, the product of the immediately previous calculation.
-Unquestionably, the number of chances _against_, thus balanced with
-the single chance _for_, would be very great; but its existence as a
-definite number would establish, with all the force of arithmetical
-demonstration, the _possibility_ of the event; and if an eternity were
-to be devoted to the throwing into the air of the hundred dice, it would
-occur an _infinite number of times_. And yet the principle of Hume and La
-Place forms, when adopted, an impassable gulf between this possibility
-and human belief. The possibility might be embodied, as we see, in an
-actual occurrence,—an occurrence witnessed by hundreds; and yet the
-anti-miracle argument, as illustrated by La Place, would cut off all
-communication regarding it between these hundreds of witnesses, however
-unexceptionable their character as such, and the rest of mankind. The
-principle, instead of giving us a right rule through which the beliefs
-in the mind are to be rendered correspondent with the reality of things,
-goes merely to establish a certain imperfection of transmission from one
-mind to another, in consequence of which, realities in fact, if very
-extraordinary ones, could not possibly be received as objects of belief,
-nor the mental appreciation of things be rendered adequately concurrent
-with the state in which the things really existed.
-
-Nor is the case different when, for a _possibility_ which the
-arithmetician can represent by figures, we substitute the _miracle_
-proper. Neither Hume nor La Place ever attempted to show that miracles
-could not take place; they merely directed their argument against a
-belief in them. The wildest sceptic must admit, if in any degree a
-reasonable man, that there _may_ exist a God, and that that God _may_
-have given laws to nature. No _demonstration_ of the non-existence of a
-Great First Cause has been ever yet attempted, nor, until the knowledge
-of some sceptic extends over all space, ever _can_ be rationally
-attempted. Merely to _doubt_ the fact of God’s existence, and to give
-reasons for the doubt, must till then form the highest achievements of
-scepticism. And the God who _may_ thus exist, and who _may_ have given
-laws to nature, _may_ also have revealed himself to man, and, in order to
-secure man’s reasonable belief in the reality of the revelation, _may_
-have temporarily suspended in its operation some great natural law,
-and have thus shown himself to be its Author and Master. Such seems to
-be the philosophy of miracles; which are thus evidently not only _not_
-impossibilities, but even not _improbabilities_. Even were we to permit
-the sceptic himself to fix the numbers representative of those several
-_mays_ in the case, which I have just repeated, the chances against
-them, so to speak, would be less by many thousand times than the chances
-against the hundred dice of La Place’s illustration all turning up
-aces. The existence of a Great First Cause is at least as probable—the
-sceptic himself being judge in the matter—as the _non_-existence of a
-Great First Cause; and so the probability in this first stage of the
-argument, instead of being, as in the case of the single die, only one
-to six, is as one to one. Again,—in accordance with an expectation so
-general among the human family as to form one of the great instincts of
-our nature,—an instinct to which every form of religion, true or false,
-bears evidence,—it is in no degree less probable that this God should
-have revealed himself to man, than that he should _not_ have revealed
-himself to man; and here the chances are again as one to one,—not, as in
-the second stage of the calculation on the dice, as one to thirty-six.
-Nor, in the third and last stage, is it less probable that God, in
-revealing himself to man should have given miraculous evidence of the
-truth of the revelation, so that man “might believe in Him for His work’s
-sake,” than that He should _not_ have done so; and here yet again the
-chances are as one to one,—not as one to two hundred and sixteen. No
-rational sceptic could fix the chances lower; nay, no rational sceptic,
-so far as the _existence_ of a Great First Cause is concerned, would be
-inclined to fix them so low: and yet it is in order to annihilate all
-belief in a possibility against which the chances are so few as to be
-represented—scepticism itself being the actuary in the case—by three
-units, that Hume and La Place have framed their argument. Miracles _may_
-have taken place,—the probabilities against them, stated in their most
-extreme and exaggerated form, are by no means many or strong; but we are
-nevertheless not to believe that they _did_ take place, simply because
-miracles they were. Now, the effect of the establishment of a principle
-such as this would be simply, I repeat, the destruction of the ability
-of transmitting certain beliefs, however well founded originally, from
-one set or generation of men to another. These beliefs the first set
-or generation might, on La Place’s own principles, be compelled to
-entertain. The evidence of the senses, however wonderful the event
-which they certified, is not, he himself tells us, to be resisted. But
-the conviction which, on one set of principles, these men were on no
-account to resist, the men that came immediately after them were, on
-quite another set of principles, on no account to entertain. And thus
-the anti-miracle argument, instead of leading, as all true philosophy
-ought, to an exact correspondence between the realities of things and
-the convictions received by the mind regarding them, palpably forms a
-bar to the reception of beliefs, adequate to the possibilities of actual
-occurrence or event, and so constitutes an imperfection or flaw in the
-mental economy, instead of working an improvement. And, in accordance
-with this view, we find that in the economy of minds of the very highest
-order this imperfection or flaw has had no place. Locke studied and wrote
-upon the subject of miracles proper, and exhibited in his “Discourse”
-all the profundity of his extraordinary mind; and yet Locke was a
-believer. Newton studied and wrote on the subject of miracles of another
-kind,—those of prophecy; and he also, as shown by his “Observations on
-the Prophecies of Daniel and the Apocalypse,” was a believer. Butler
-studied and wrote on the subject of miracles, chiefly in connection with
-“Miraculous Revelation;” and he also was a believer. Chalmers studied
-and wrote on the subject of miracles in his “Evidences,” after Hume, La
-Place, and Playfair had all promulgated their peculiar views regarding
-it; and he also was a believer. And in none of the truly distinguished
-men of the present day, though all intimately acquainted with the
-anti-miracle argument, is this flaw or imperfection found to exist: on
-the contrary, they all hold, as becomes the philosophic intellect and
-character, that whatever is possible may occur, and that whatever occurs
-ought, on the proper evidence, to be believed.
-
-But though the experience argument is of no real force, and, as shown by
-the beliefs of the higher order of minds, of no real effect, when brought
-to bear against miracles supported by the proper testimony, _it is_ of
-great force and effect when brought to bear, not against _miracles_,
-but against some presumed _law_. It is experience, and experience only,
-that determines what is or is not law, and it is law, and law only,
-that constitutes the subject-matter of ordinary experience. Experience,
-in determining what is really miracle, does so simply through its
-positive knowledge of law: by knowing law, it knows also what would be a
-violation of it. And so miracle cannot possibly form the subject-matter
-of experience in the sense of Hume. For did miracle constitute the
-subject-matter of experience, the law of which the miracle was a
-violation _could not_: most emphatically, in this case, were there “no
-law” there could be “no transgression;” and so experience would be unable
-to recognize, not only the existence of the law transgressed, but also
-of the miracle, in its character as such, which was a transgression of
-the law. We determine from experience that there exists a certain fixed
-law, known among men as the law of gravitation; and that, in consequence
-of this law, if a human creature attempt standing upon the sea, he will
-sink into it; or if he attempt rising from the earth into the heavens,
-he will remain fixed to the spot on which the attempt is made. Such, in
-these cases, would be the direct effects of this gravitation _law_; and
-any presumed law antagonistic in its character could not be other than a
-law contrary to that invariable experience by which the existence of the
-real law in the case is determined. But certain it is—for the evidence
-regarding the facts cannot be resisted, and by the greatest minds has
-not been resisted—that a man _did_ once walk upon the sea without
-sinking into it, and _did_ once ascend from the earth into the sky; and
-these _miracles_ ought not to be tested—and by earnest inquirers after
-truth really never have been tested—by any experience of the uniformity
-of the law of which they were professed transgressions, seeing it was
-essentially and obviously necessary that, in order to serve the great
-moral purpose which God intended by them, the law which they violated
-should have been a uniform law, and that they should have been palpable
-violations of it. But while the experience argument is thus of no
-value when directed against well-attested _miracle_, it is, as I have
-said, all-potent when directed against presumed _law_. Of law we know
-nothing, I repeat, except what experience tells us. A miracle contrary
-to experience in the sense of Hume is simply a miracle; a presumed law
-contrary to experience is no law at all. For it is from experience, and
-experience only, that we know any thing of natural law. The argument
-of Hume and La Place is perfect, as such, when directed against the
-development visions of the Lamarckian.
-
-
-
-
-THE DEVELOPMENT HYPOTHESIS IN ITS EMBRYONIC STATE. OLDER THAN ITS ALLEGED
-FOUNDATIONS.
-
-
-When Maillet first promulgated his hypothesis, many of the departments
-of natural history existed as mere regions of fable and romance; and,
-in addressing himself to the _Muscadins_ of Paris, in a popular work as
-wild and amusing as a fairy tale, he could safely take the liberty, and
-he did take it very freely, of exaggerating the marvellous, and adding
-fresh fictions to the untrue. And in preparing them for his theory of
-the metamorphoses of a marine into a terrestrial vegetation, he set
-himself, in accordance with his general character, to show that really
-the transmutation did not amount to much. “I know you have resided a
-long time,” his Indian Philosopher is made to say, “at Marseilles. Now,
-you can bear me witness, that the fishermen there daily find in their
-nets, and among their fish, plants of a hundred kinds, with their fruits
-still upon them; and though these fruits are not so large and so well
-nourished as those of our earth, yet the species of these plants is in
-no other respect dubious. They there find clusters of white and black
-grapes, peach-trees, pear-trees, prune-trees, apple-trees, and all sorts
-of flowers. When in that city, I saw, in the cabinet of a curious
-gentleman, a prodigious number of those sea-productions of different
-qualities, especially of rose-trees, which had their roses very red when
-they came out of the sea. I was there presented with a cluster of black
-sea-grapes. It was at the time of the vintage, and there were two grapes
-perfectly ripe.”
-
-Now, all this, and much more of the same nature, addressed to the
-Parisians of the reign of Louis the Fifteenth, passed, I doubt not,
-wonderfully well; but it will not do now, when almost every young girl,
-whether in town or country, is a botanist, and works on the algæ have
-become popular. Since Maillet wrote, Hume promulgated his argument on
-Miracles, and La Place his doctrine of Probabilities. There can be no
-doubt that these have exerted a wholesome influence on the laws of
-evidence; and by these laws, as restricted and amended,—laws to which,
-both in science and religion, we ourselves conform,—we insist on trying
-the Lamarckian hypothesis, and in condemning it,—should it be found to
-have neither standing in experience nor support from testimony,—as a
-mere feverish dream, incoherent in its parts and baseless in its fabric.
-Give, we ask, but one well-attested instance of transmutation from the
-algæ to even the lower forms of terrestrial vegetation common on our
-sea-coasts, and we will keep the question open, in expectation of more.
-It will not do to tell us—as Cuvier was told, when he appealed to the
-fact, determined by the mummy birds and reptiles of Egypt, of the fixity
-of species in all, even the slightest particulars, for at least three
-thousand years—that immensely extended periods of time are necessary to
-effect specific changes, and that human observation has not been spread
-over a period sufficiently ample to furnish the required data regarding
-them. The apology is simply a confession that, in these ages of the
-severe inductive philosophy, you have been dreaming your dream, cut off,
-as if by the state of sleep, from all the tangibilities of the real
-waking-day world, and that you have not a vestige of testimony with which
-to support your ingenious vagaries.
-
-But on another account do we refuse to sustain the excuse. It is
-_not true_ that human observation has not been spread over a period
-sufficiently extended to furnish the necessary data for testing the
-development hypothesis. In one special walk,—that which bears on the
-supposed transmutation of algæ into terrestrial plants,—human observation
-_has_ been spread over what is strictly analogous to _millions_ of years.
-For extent of space in this matter is exactly correspondent with duration
-of time. No man, in this late period of the world’s history, attains to
-the age of five hundred years; and as some of our larger English oaks
-have been known to increase in bulk of trunk and extent of bough for five
-centuries together, no man can possibly have seen the same huge oak pass,
-according to Cowper, through its various stages of “treeship,”—
-
- “First a seedling hid in grass;
- Then twig; then sapling; and, as century rolls
- Slow after century, a giant bulk,
- Of girth enormous, with moss-cushioned root
- Upheaved above the soil, and sides embossed
- With prominent wens globose.”
-
-But though no man lives throughout five hundred years of time, he can
-trace, by passing in some of the English forests through five hundred
-yards of space, the history of the oak in all its stages of growth, as
-correctly as if he _did_ live throughout the five hundred years. Oaks, in
-the space of a few hundred yards, may be seen in every stage of growth,
-from the newly burst acorn, that presents to the light its two fleshy
-lobes, with the first tender rudiments of a leaflet between, up to the
-giant of the forest, in the hollow of whose trunk the red deer may
-shelter, and find ample room for the broad spread of his antlers. The
-fact of the development of the oak, from the minute two-lobed seedling of
-a week’s growth up to the gigantic tree of five centuries, is as capable
-of being demonstrated by observation spread over five hundred yards of
-space, as by observation spread over five hundred years of time. And
-be it remembered, that the sea-coasts of the world are several hundred
-thousand miles in extent. Europe is by far the smallest of the earth’s
-four large divisions, and it is bounded, in proportion to its size, by a
-greater extent of land than any of the others. And yet the sea-coasts of
-Europe alone, including those of its islands, exceed twenty-five thousand
-miles. We have results before us, in this extent of space, identical
-with those of many hundred thousand years of time; and if terrestrial
-plants were as certainly developments of the low plants of the sea as
-the huge oak is a development of the immature seedling, just sprung from
-the acorn, so vast a stretch of sea-coast could not fail to present us
-with the intermediate vegetation in all its stages. But the sea-coasts
-fail to exhibit even a vestige of the intermediate vegetation. Experience
-spread over an extent of space analogous to millions of years of time,
-does not furnish, in this department, a single fact corroborative of the
-development theory, but, on the contrary, many hundreds of facts that
-bear directly against it.
-
-The author of the “Vestiges” is evidently a practised and tasteful
-writer, and his work abounds in ingenious combinations of thought; but
-those powers of abstract reflection on whose vigorous exercise the
-origination of argument depends, nature seems to have denied him. There
-are two things in especial which his work wants,—_original observation_
-and _abstract thought_,—the power of _seeing_ for himself and of
-_reasoning_ for himself; and what we find instead is simply a vivid
-appreciation of the _images_ of things, as these images exist in other
-minds, and a vigorous perception of the various shades of resemblance
-which obtain among them. There is a large amount of analogical power
-exhibited; but that basis of truth which correct observation can alone
-furnish, and that ability of nicely distinguishing differences by
-which the faculty of discerning similarity must be forever regulated
-and governed, are wanting, in what, in a mind of fine general texture
-and quality, must be regarded as an extraordinary degree. And hence an
-ingenious but very unsolid work,—full of images transferred, not from the
-scientific field, but from the field of _scientific mind_, and charged
-with glittering but vague resemblances, stamped in the mint of fancy;
-which, were they to be used as mere counters in some light literary game
-of story-telling or character-sketching, would be in no respect out of
-place, but which, when passed current as the proper coin of philosophic
-argument, are really frauds on the popular understanding. There are,
-however, not a few instances in the “Vestiges” and its “Sequel,” in which
-that defect of reflective power to which I refer rather enhances than
-diminishes the difficulty of reply, by presenting to the controversialist
-mere intangible clouds with which to grapple; that yet, through the
-existence of a certain superstition in the popular mind, as predisposed
-to accept as true whatever takes the form of science, as its predecessor
-the old superstition was inclined a century ago to reject science itself,
-are at least suited to blind and bewilder. Of this kind of difficulty,
-the following passage, in which the author of the work cashiers the
-Creator as such, and substitutes, instead, a mere animal-manufacturing
-piece of clock-work, which bears the name of natural law,[38] furnishes
-us with a remarkable instance.
-
-“Admitting,” he remarks, “that we see not now any such fact as the
-production of new species, we at least know, that while such facts were
-occurring upon earth, there were associated phenomena in progress of
-a character perfectly ordinary. For example, when the earth received
-its first fishes, sandstone and limestone were forming in the manner
-exemplified a few years ago in the ingenious experiments of Sir James
-Hall; basaltic columns rose for the future wonder of man, according to
-the principle which Dr. Gregory Watt showed in operation before the
-eyes of our fathers; and hollows in the igneous rocks were filled with
-crystals, precisely as they could now be by virtue of electric action,
-as shown within the last few years by Crosse and Becquerel. The seas
-obeyed the impulse of gentle breezes, and rippled their sandy bottoms,
-as seas of the present day are doing; the trees grew as now, by favor
-of sun and wind, thriving in good seasons and pining in bad: this
-while the animals above fishes were yet to be created. The movements
-of the sea, the meteorological agencies, the disposition which we see
-in the generality of plants to thrive when heat and moisture were most
-abundant, were kept up in silent serenity, as matters of simply natural
-order, throughout the whole of the ages which saw reptiles enter in
-their various forms upon the sea and land. It was about the time of the
-first mammals that the forest of the Dirt-Bed was sinking in natural
-ruin amidst the sea sludge, as forests of the Plantagenets have been
-doing for several centuries upon the coast of England. In short _all the
-common operations of the physical world were going on in their usual
-simplicity, obeying that order which we still see governing them_; while
-the supposed extraordinary causes were in requisition for the development
-of the animal and vegetable kingdoms. There surely hence arises a strong
-presumption against any such causes. It becomes much more likely that
-the latter phenomena were evolved in the manner of law also, and that we
-only dream of extraordinary causes here, as men once dreamt of a special
-action of Deity in every change of wind and the results of each season,
-merely because they did not know the laws by which the events in question
-were evolved.”
-
-How, let us suppose, would David Hume—the greatest thinker of which
-infidelity can boast—have greeted the auxiliary who could have brought
-him such an _argument_ as a contribution to the cause? “Your objection,
-so far as you have stated it,” the philosopher might have said, “amounts
-simply to this:—Creation by direct act is a miracle; whereas all that
-exists is _propagated_ and _maintained_ by natural law. Natural laws—to
-vary the illustration—were in full operation at the period when the
-Author of the Christian religion was, it is said, engaged in working
-his miracles. When, according to our opponents, he walked upon the
-surface of the sea, Peter, through the operation of the natural law of
-gravitation, was sinking into it; when he withered, by a word, the barren
-fig-tree, there were other trees on the Mount thriving in conformity
-with the vegetative laws, under the influence of sun and shower; when
-he raised the dead Lazarus, there were corpses in the neighboring tombs
-passing, through the natural putrefactive fermentation, into a state
-of utter decomposition. In fine, at the time when he was engaged, as
-Reid and Campbell believe, in working miracles in violation of law, the
-laws of which these were a violation actually existed, and were every
-where actively operative; or, to employ your own words, when the New
-Testament miracles were, it is alleged, in the act of being wrought,
-‘all the common operations of the physical world were going on in their
-usual simplicity, obeying that order which we still see governing them.’
-Such is the portion of your statement already made; what next?” “It is
-surely very unlikely,” replies the auxiliary, “that in such a complex
-mass of phenomena there should have been two totally distinct modes
-of the exercise of the Divine power,—the mode by miracle and the mode
-by law.” “Unlikely!” rejoins the philosopher; “on what grounds?” “O,
-just _unlikely_,” says the auxiliary;—“unlikely that God should be at
-once operating on matter through the agency of natural laws, of which
-_man knows much_, and through the agency of miraculous acts, of the
-nature of which _man knows nothing_. But I have not thought out the
-subject any further: you have, in the statement already made, my entire
-_argument_.” “Ay, I see,” the author of the “Essay on Miracles” would
-probably have remarked; “you deem it unlikely that Deity should not only
-work in part, as he has always done, by means of which _men_,—clever
-fellows like you and me—think they know a great deal but that he should
-also work in part, _as he has always done_, by means of which they know
-nothing at all. Admirably reasoned out! You are, I make no doubt, a
-sound, zealous unbeliever in your private capacity, and your argument
-may have great weight with your own mind, and be, in consequence, worthy
-of encouragement in a small way; but allow me to suggest that, for
-the sake of the general cause, it should be kept out of reach of the
-enemy. There are in the Churches Militant on both sides of the Tweed
-shrewd combatants, who have nearly as much wit as ourselves.” I think I
-understand the reference of the author of the “Vestiges” to the _dream_
-“of a special action of Deity in every change of wind and the results of
-each season.” Taken with what immediately goes before, it means something
-considerably different from those fancies of the “untutored Indian,” who,
-according to the poet,
-
- “Sees God in clouds, or hears him in the wind.”
-
-There is a school of infidelity, tolerably well known in the capital
-of Scotland as by far the most superficial which our country has yet
-seen, that measures mind with a tape-line and the callipers, and, albeit
-not Christian, laudably exemplifies, in a loudly expressed regard for
-science, the Christian grace of loving its enemy. And the belief in a
-special Providence, who watches over and orders all things, and without
-whose permission there falleth not even a “sparrow to the ground,” the
-apostles of this school set wholly aside, substituting, instead, a belief
-in the indiscriminating operation of natural laws; as if, with the broad
-fact before them that even man can work out his will merely by knowing
-and directing these laws, the God by whom they were instituted should
-lack either the power or the wisdom to make them the pliant ministers
-of _his_. It is, I fear, to the distinctive tenet in the creed of this
-hapless school that the author of the “Vestiges” refers. Nor is it in the
-least surprising, that a writer who labors through two carefully written
-volumes,[39] to destroy the existing belief in “God’s works of Creation,”
-should affect to hold that the belief in his “works of Providence” had
-been destroyed already. But faith in a special superintendence of Deity
-is not yet dead: nay, more, He who created the human mind took especial
-care, in its construction, that, save in a few defective specimens of the
-race, the belief should never die.
-
-The author of the “Vestiges” complains of the illiberality with which
-he has been treated. “It has appeared to various critics,” we find
-him saying, “that very sacred principles are threatened by a doctrine
-of universal law. A natural origin of life, and a natural basis in
-organization for the operations of the human mind, speak to them of
-fatalism and materialism. And, strange to say, those who every day give
-views of _physical cosmogony_ altogether discrepant in appearance with
-that of Moses, apply hard names to my book for suggesting an _organic
-cosmogony_ in the same way, liable to inconsiderate odium. I must firmly
-protest against this mode of meeting speculations regarding nature.
-The object of my book, whatever may be said of the manner in which
-it is treated, is purely scientific. The views which I give of the
-history of organization stand exactly on the same ground upon which the
-geological doctrines stood fifty years ago. I am merely endeavoring to
-read aright another chapter of the mystic book which God has placed
-under the attention of his creatures.... The absence of all liberality
-in my reviewers is striking, and especially so in those whose geological
-doctrines have exposed them to similar misconstruction. If the men newly
-emerged from the odium which was thrown upon Newton’s theory of the
-planetary motions had rushed forward to turn that odium upon the patrons
-of the dawning science of Geology, they would have been prefiguring the
-conduct of several of my critics, themselves hardly escaped from the
-rude hands of the narrow-minded, yet eager to join that rabble against
-a new and equally unfriended stranger, as if such were the best means
-of purchasing impunity for themselves. _I trust that a little time will
-enable the public to penetrate this policy._”
-
-Now, there is one very important point to which the author of this
-complaint does not seem to have adverted. The astronomer founded his
-belief in the mobility of the earth and the immobility of the sun, not on
-a mere dream-like hypothesis, founded on nothing, but on a wide and solid
-base of pure induction. Galileo was no mere dreamer;—he was a discoverer
-of great truths, and a profound reasoner regarding them: and on his
-discoveries and his reasonings, compelled by the inexorable laws of his
-mental constitution, did he build up certain deductive beliefs, which had
-no previous existence in his mind. His convictions were consequents, not
-antecedents. Such, also, is the character of geological discovery and
-inference, and of the existing belief,—their joint production,—regarding
-the great antiquity of the globe. No geologist worthy of the name _began_
-with the belief, and then set himself to square geological phenomena
-with its requirements. It is a deduction,—a result;—not the starting
-assumption, or given sum, in a process of calculation, but its ultimate
-finding or answer. Clergymen of the orthodox Churches, such as the
-Sumners, Sedgwicks, Bucklands, Conybeares, and Pye Smiths of England,
-or the Chalmerses, Duncans, and Flemings of our own country, must have
-come to the study of this question of the world’s age with at least no
-bias in favor of the geological estimate. The old, and, as it has proven,
-erroneous reading of the Mosaic account, was by much too general a one
-early in the present century, not to have exerted upon them, in their
-character as ministers of religion, a sensible influence of a directly
-opposite nature. And the fact of the complete reversal of their original
-bias, and of the broad unhesitating finding on the subject which they
-ultimately substituted instead, serves to intimate to the uninitiated the
-strength of the evidence to which they submitted. There can be nothing
-more certain than that it is minds of the same calibre and class, engaged
-in the same inductive track, that yielded in the first instance to the
-astronomical evidence regarding the earth’s motion, and, in the second,
-to the geological evidence regarding the earth’s age.[40]
-
-But how very different the nature and history of the development
-hypothesis, and the character of the intellects with whom it originated,
-or by whom it has been since adopted! In the first place, it existed
-as a wild dream ere Geology had any being as a science. It was an
-antecedent, not a consequent,—a starting assumption, not a result. No
-one will contend that Maillet was a geologist. Geology has no place among
-the sciences in the age in which he lived and even no name. And yet
-there is a translation of his _Telliamed_ now lying before me, bearing
-date 1750, in which I find very nearly the same account given of the
-origin of animals and plants as that in the “Vestiges,” and in which
-the sea is described as that great and fruitful womb of nature in which
-organization and life first began. Lamarck, at the time when Maillet
-wrote, was a boy in his sixth year. He became, comparatively early in
-life, a skilful botanist and conchologist; but not until turned of fifty
-did he set himself to study general zoology; and his greater work on
-the invertebrate animals, on which his fame as a naturalist chiefly
-rests, did not _begin_ to appear—for it was published serially—until
-the year 1815. But his development hypothesis, identical with that
-of the “Vestiges,” was given to the world long before,—in 1802; at
-a time when it had not been ascertained that there existed placoids
-during the Silurian period, or ganoids during the Old Red Sandstone
-period, or enaliosaurs during the Oolitic period; and when, though
-Smith had constructed his “Tabular View of the British Strata,” his map
-had not yet appeared, and there was little more known regarding the
-laws of superposition among the stratified rocks than was to be found
-in the writings of Werner. And if the presumption be strong, in the
-circumstances, that Lamarck originated his development hypothesis ere
-he became in any very great degree skilful as a zoologist, it is no
-mere presumption, but a demonstrable truth, that he originated it ere
-he became a geologist; for a geologist he never became. In common with
-Maillet and Buffon, he held by Leibnitz’s theory of a universal ocean;
-and such, as we have already seen, was his ignorance of fossils, that
-he erected dermal fragments of the Russian _Asterolepis_ into a new
-genus of Polyparia,—an error into which the merest tyro in palæontology
-could not now fall. Such, in relation to these sciences, was the man
-who perfected the dream of development. Nor has the most distinguished
-of its continental assertors now living,—Professor Oken,—any higher
-claim to be regarded as a disciple of the inductive school of Geology
-than Lamarck. In the preface to the recently published translation of
-his “Physio-Philosophy,” we find the following curious confession:—“I
-wrote the first edition of 1810 _in a kind of inspiration_, and on that
-account it was not so well arranged as a systematic work ought to be.
-Now, though this may appear to have been amended in the second and third
-edition, yet still it was not possible for me to completely attain the
-object held in view. The book has therefore remained essentially the
-same as regards its fundamental principles. It is only the empirical
-arrangement into series of plants and animals that has been modified
-from time to time, _in accordance with the scientific elevation of their
-several departments, or just as discoveries and anatomical investigations
-have increased, and rendered some other position of the objects a matter
-of necessity_.” An interesting piece of evidence this; but certainly
-rather simple as a confession. It will be found that while whatever gives
-value to the “Physio-Philosophy” of the German Professor (a work which,
-if divested of all the inspired bits, would be really a good one) was
-acquired either before or since its first appearance in the ordinary way,
-its development hypothesis came direct from the god. Further, as I have
-already had occasion to state, Oken holds, like Lamarck and Maillet, by
-the universal ocean of Leibnitz; he holds, also, that the globe is a vast
-crystal, just a little flawed in the facets: and that the three granitic
-components—quartz, feldspar, and mica—are simply the hail-drops of heavy
-stone showers that shot athwart the original ocean, and accumulated into
-rock at the bottom, as snow or hail shoots athwart the upper atmosphere,
-and accumulates, in the form of ice, on the summits of high hills, or
-in the arctic or antarctic regions. Such, in the present day, are the
-geological notions of Oken! They were doubtless all promulgated in what
-is modestly enough termed “a _kind_ of inspiration;” and there are few
-now so ignorant of Geology as not to know that the _possessing_ agent in
-the case—for _inspiration_ is not quite the proper word—must have been
-at least of kin to that ingenious personage who volunteered of old to
-be a lying spirit in the mouths of the four hundred prophets. And the
-well-known fact, that the most popular contemporary expounder of Oken’s
-hypothesis—the author of the “Vestiges”—has in every edition of his work
-been correcting, modifying, or altogether withdrawing his statements
-regarding both geological and zoological phenomena, and that his gradual
-development as a geologist and zoologist, from the sufficiently low type
-of acquirement to which his first edition bore witness, may be traced, in
-consequence, with a distinctness and certainty which we in vain seek in
-the cases of presumed development which he would so fain establish,—has
-in its bearing exactly the same effect. His development hypothesis was
-complete at a time when his geology and zoology were rudimental and
-imperfect. Give me your facts, said the Frenchman, that I may accommodate
-them to my theory. And no one can look at the progress of the Lamarckian
-hypothesis, with reference to the dates when, and the men by whom, it was
-promulgated, without recognizing in it one of perhaps the most striking
-embodiments of the Frenchman’s principle which the world ever saw. It is
-not the illiberal religionist that rejects and casts it off,—it is the
-inductive philosopher. Science addresses its assertors in the language of
-the possessed to the sons of Sceva the Jew;—“The astronomer I know, and
-the geologist I know; but who are ye?”
-
-One of the strangest passages in the “Sequel to the Vestiges,” is that
-in which its author carries his appeal from the tribunal of science to
-“another tribunal,” indicated but not named, before which “this new
-philosophy” [remarkable chiefly for being neither philosophy nor new] “is
-to be truly and righteously judged.” The principle is obvious, on which,
-were his opponents mere theologians, wholly unable, though they saw
-the mischievous character and tendency of his conclusions, to disprove
-them scientifically, he might appeal from theology to science: “it is
-with scientific truth,” he might urge, “not with moral consequences,
-that I have aught to do.” But on what allowable principle, professing,
-as he does, to found his theory on scientific fact, can he appeal from
-science to the want of it? “After discussing,” he says, “the whole
-arguments on both sides in so ample a manner, it may be hardly necessary
-to advert to the objection arising from the mere fact, that nearly all
-the scientific men are opposed to the theory of the ‘Vestiges.’ As this
-objection, however, is likely to be of some avail with many minds, it
-ought not to be entirely passed over. If I did not think there were
-reasons, independent of judgment, for the scientific class coming so
-generally to this conclusion, I might feel the more embarrassed in
-presenting myself in direct opposition to so many men possessing talents
-and information. As the case really stands, the ability of this class to
-give at the present a true response upon such a subject appears extremely
-challengeable. It is no discredit to them that they are, almost without
-exception, engaged each in his own little department of science, and
-able to give little or no attention to other parts of that vast field.
-From year to year, and from age to age, we see them at work, adding, no
-doubt, much to the known, and advancing many important interests, but
-at the same time doing little for the establishment of comprehensive
-views of nature Experiments in however narrow a walk, facts of whatever
-minuteness, make reputations in scientific societies; all beyond
-is regarded with suspicion and distrust. The consequence is, that
-philosophy, as it exists amongst us, does nothing to raise its votaries
-above the common ideas of their time. There can therefore be nothing
-more conclusive against our hypothesis in the disfavor of the scientific
-class, than in that of any other section of educated men.”
-
-This is surely a very strange statement. Waiving altogether the _general_
-fact, that great original discoverers in any department of knowledge are
-never men of one science or one faculty, but possess, on the contrary,
-breadth of mind and multiplicity of acquirement;—waiving, too, the
-_particular_ fact, that the more distinguished original discoverers of
-the present day rank among at once its most philosophic, most elegant,
-and most extensively informed writers;—granting, for the argument’s sake,
-that our scientific men _are_ men of narrow acquirement, and “exclusively
-engaged, each in his own little department of science;”—it is surely
-rational to hold, notwithstanding, that in at least these little
-departments they have a better right to be heard than any other class of
-persons whatever. We must surely not refuse to the man of science what we
-at once grant to the common mechanic. A cotton-weaver or calico-printer
-may be a very narrow man, “exclusively engaged in his own little
-department;” and yet certain it is that, in a question of cotton-weaving
-or calico-printing, his evidence is justly deemed more conclusive in
-courts of law than that of any other man, however much his superior in
-general breadth and intelligence. And had the author of the “Vestiges”
-founded his hypothesis on certain facts pertaining to the arts of
-cotton-weaving and calico-printing, the cotton-weaver and calico-printer
-would have an indisputable right to be heard on the question of their
-general correctness. Are we to regard the case as different because
-it is on facts pertaining to science, not to cotton-weaving or
-calico-printing, that he professes to found? His hypothesis, unless
-supported by scientific evidence, is a mere dream,—a fiction as baseless
-and wild as any in the “Fairy Tales” or the “Arabian Nights.” And, fully
-sensible of the fact, he calls in as witnesses the physical sciences, and
-professes to take down their evidence. He calls into court Astronomy,
-Geology, Phytology, and Zoology. “Hold!” exclaims the astronomer, as the
-examination goes on; “you are taking the evidence of my special science
-most unfairly; I challenge a right of cross-examining the witness.”
-“Hold!” cries the geologist; “you are putting my science to the question,
-and extorting from it, in its agony, a whole series of fictions: I
-claim the right of examining it fairly and softly, and getting from
-it just the sober truth, and nothing more.” And the phytologist and
-zoologist urge exactly similar claims. “No, gentlemen,” replies the
-author of the “Vestiges,” “you are narrow men, confined each of you to
-his own little department, and so I will not permit you to cross-examine
-the witnesses.” “What!” rejoin the men of science, “not permit us to
-examine our own witnesses!—refuse to us what you would at once concede
-to the cotton-weaver or the calico-printer, were the question one of
-cotton-weaving or of calico-printing! We are surely not much narrower
-men than the man of cotton or the man of calico. It is but in our own
-little departments that we ask to be heard.” “But you shall not be heard,
-gentlemen,” says the author of the “Vestiges;” “at all events, I shall
-not care one farthing for anything you say. For observe, gentlemen, my
-hypothesis is nothing without the evidence of your sciences; and you all
-unite, I see, in taking that evidence from me; and so I confidently raise
-my appeal in this matter to people who know nothing about either you or
-your sciences. It must be before another tribunal that the new philosophy
-is to be truly and righteously judged.” Alas! what can this mean? or
-where are we to seek for that tribunal of last resort to which this
-ingenious man refers with such confidence the consideration of his case?
-Can it mean, that he appeals from the only class of persons qualified to
-judge of his facts, to a class ignorant of these, but disposed by habits
-of previous scepticism to acquiesce in his conclusions, and take his
-premises for granted;—that he appeals from astronomers and geologists to
-low-minded materialists and shallow phrenologers,—from phytologists and
-zoologists to mesmerists and phreno-mesmerists?
-
-I remember being much struck, several years ago, by a remark dropped in
-conversation by the late Rev. Mr. Stewart of Cromarty, one of the most
-original-minded men I ever knew. “In reading in my Greek New Testament
-this morning,” he said, “I was curiously impressed by a thought which,
-simple as it may seem, never occurred to me before. The portion which
-I perused was in the First Epistle of Peter; and as I passed from the
-thinking of the passage to the language in which it is expressed,—‘This
-Greek of the untaught Galilean fisherman,’—I said, ‘so admired by
-scholars and critics for its unaffected dignity and force, was not
-acquired, as that of Paul may have been, in the ordinary way, but formed
-a portion of the Pentecostal gift! Here, then, immediately under my eye,
-on these pages, are there embodied, not, as in many other parts of the
-Scriptures, the mere _details_ of a miracle, but the direct _results_ of
-a miracle. How strange! Had the old tables of stone been placed before
-me, with what an awe-struck feeling would I have looked on the characters
-traced upon them by God’s own finger! How is it that I have failed to
-remember that, in the language of these Epistles, miraculously impressed
-by the Divine power upon the mind, I possessed as significant and
-suggestive a relic as that which the inscription miraculously impressed
-by the Divine power upon the stone could possibly have furnished?” It
-was a striking thought; and in the course of our walk, which led us over
-richly fossiliferous beds of the Old Red Sandstone, to a deposit of the
-Eathie Lias, largely charged with the characteristic remains of that
-formation, I ventured to connect it with another. “In either case,” I
-remarked, as we seated ourselves beside a sea-cliff, sculptured over with
-the impressions of extinct plants and shells, “your relics, whether of
-the Pentecostal Greek or of the characters inscribed on the old tables of
-stone, could address themselves to but previously existing belief. The
-sceptic would see in the Sinaitic characters, were they placed before
-him, merely the work of an ordinary tool; and in the Greek of Peter and
-John, a well-known language, acquired, he would hold, in the common way.
-But what say you to the relics that stand out in such bold relief from
-the rocks beside us, in _their_ character as the results of miracle? The
-perished tribes and races which they represent all _began_ to exist.
-There is no truth which science can more conclusively demonstrate than
-that they had all a beginning. The infidel who, in this late age of
-the world, would attempt falling back on the fiction of an ‘infinite
-series,’ would be laughed to scorn. They all began to be. But how? No
-true geologist holds by the development hypothesis;—it has been resigned
-to sciolists and smatterers;—and there is but one other alternative.
-They began to be, _through the miracle of creation_. From the evidence
-furnished by these rocks we are shut down either to the belief in
-_miracle_, or to the belief in something else infinitely harder of
-reception, and as thoroughly unsupported by testimony as it is contrary
-to experience. Hume is at length answered by the severe truths of the
-stony science. He was not, according to Job, ‘in league with the stones
-of the field,’ and they have risen in irresistible warfare against him in
-the Creator’s behalf.”
-
-
-
-
-FINAL CAUSES.—THEIR BEARING ON GEOLOGIC HISTORY. CONCLUSION.
-
-
-“Natural History has a principle on which to reason,” says Cuvier, “which
-is peculiar to it, and which it employs advantageously on many occasions:
-it is that of the _conditions of existence_, commonly termed _final
-causes_.”
-
-In Geology, which is Natural History extended over all ages,
-this principle has a still wider scope,—embracing not merely the
-characteristics and conditions of the beings which now exist, but of
-all, so far as we can learn regarding them, which have ever existed,
-and involving the consideration of not merely their peculiarities as
-races placed before us without relation to time, but also of the history
-of their rise, increase, decline, and extinction. In studying the
-_biography_, if I may so express myself, of an individual animal, we
-have to acquaint ourselves with the circumstances in which nature has
-placed it,—its adaptation to these, both in structure and instinct,—the
-points of resemblance which it presents to the individuals of other races
-and families, and the laws which determine its terms of development,
-vigorous existence, and decay. And all Natural History, when restricted
-to the passing _now_ of the world’s annals, is simply a congeries of
-biographies. It is when we extend our view into the geological field that
-it passes from _biography_ into _history proper_, and that we have to
-rise from the consideration of the birth and death of individuals, which,
-in all mere biographies, form the great terminal events that constitute
-beginning and end, to a survey of the birth and death of races, and the
-elevation or degradation of dynasties and sub-kingdoms.
-
-We learn from human history that nations are as certainly mortal as men.
-They enjoy a greatly longer term of existence, but they die at last:
-Rollin’s History of Ancient Nations is a history of the dead. And we
-are taught by geological history, in like manner, that _species_ are as
-mortal as individuals and nations, and that even genera and families
-become extinct. There is no _man_ upon earth at the present moment whose
-age greatly exceeds an hundred years;—there is no _nation_ now upon
-earth (if we perhaps except the long-lived Chinese) that also flourished
-three thousand years ago;—there is no _species_ now living upon earth
-that dates beyond the times of the Tertiary deposits. All bear the stamp
-of death,—individuals,—nations,—species; and we may scarce less safely
-predicate, looking upon the past, that it is appointed for nations and
-species to die, than that it “is appointed for _man_ once to die.” Even
-our own species, _as now constituted_,—with instincts that conform to the
-original injunction, “increase and multiply,” and that, in consequence,
-“marry and are given in marriage,”—shall one day cease to exist: a fact
-not less in accordance with beliefs inseparable from the faith of the
-Christian, than with the widely-founded experience of the geologist. Now,
-it is scarce possible for the human mind to become acquainted with the
-fact, that at certain periods species began to exist and then, after the
-lapse of untold ages, ceased to be, without inquiring whether, from the
-“conditions of existence, commonly termed final causes,” we cannot deduce
-a reason for their rise or decline, or why their term of being should
-have been included rather in one certain period of time than another.
-The same faculty which finds employment in tracing to their causes the
-rise and fall of nations, and which it is the merit of the philosophic
-historian judiciously to exercise, will to a certainty seek employment
-in this department of history also; and that there will be an appetency
-for such speculations in the public mind, we may infer from the success,
-as a literary undertaking, of the “Vestiges of Creation,”—a work that
-bears the same sort of relation, in this special field to sober inquiry,
-founded on the true conditions of things, that the legends of the old
-chroniclers bore to authentic history. The progressive state of geologic
-science has hitherto militated against the formation of theory of the
-soberer character. Its facts—still merely in the forming—are necessarily
-imperfect in their classification, and limited in their amount; and
-thus the essential data continues incomplete. Besides, the men best
-acquainted with the basis of fact which already exists, have quite enough
-to engage them in adding to it. But there are limits to the field of
-palæontological discovery, in its relation to what may be termed the
-chronology of organized existence, which, judging from the progress of
-the science in the past, may be well nigh reached in favored localities,
-such as the British islands, in about a quarter of a century from the
-present time; and then, I doubt not, geological history, in legitimate
-conformity with the laws of mind, and from the existence of the pregnant
-principle peculiar, according to Cuvier, to that science of which Geology
-is simply an extension, will assume a very extraordinary form. We cannot
-yet aspire “to the height of this great argument:” our foundations are
-in parts still unconsolidated and incomplete, and unfitted to sustain the
-perfect superstructure which shall one day assuredly rise upon them; but
-from the little which we can now see, “as if in a glass darkly,” enough
-appears from which to
-
- “Assert eternal Providence,
- And justify the ways of God to men.”
-
-The history of the four great monarchies of the world was typified, in
-the prophetic dream of the ancient Babylonish king, by a colossal image,
-“terrible in its form and brightness,” of which the “head was pure gold,”
-the “breast and arms of silver,” the “belly and thighs of brass,” and the
-legs and feet “of iron, and of iron mingled with clay.” The vision in
-which it formed the central object was appropriately that of a puissant
-monarch; and the image itself typified the merely human monarchies of the
-earth. It would require a widely different figure to symbolize the great
-monarchies of creation. And yet Revelation does furnish such a figure.
-It is that which was witnessed by the captive prophet beside “the river
-Chebar,” when “the heavens were opened, and he saw visions of God.” In
-that chariot of Deity, glowing in fire and amber, with its complex wheels
-“so high that they were dreadful,” set round about with eyes, there were
-living creatures, of whose four faces three were brute and one human; and
-high over all sat the Son of Man. It would almost seem as if, in this
-sublime vision,—in which, with features distinct enough to impress the
-imagination, there mingle the elements of an awful incomprehensibility,
-and which even the genius of Raffaelle has failed adequately to
-portray,—the history of all the past and of all the future had been
-symbolized. In the order of Providence intimated in the geologic record,
-the brute faces, as in the vision, outnumber the human;—the human
-dynasty is one, and the dynasties of the inferior animals are three; and
-yet who can doubt that they all equally compose parts of a well-ordered
-and perfect whole, as the four faces formed but one cherubim; that
-they have been moving onward to a definite goal, in the unity of one
-grand harmonious design,—now “lifted up high” over the comprehension of
-earth,—now let down to its humble level; and that the Creator of all has
-been ever seated over them on the throne of his providence,—a “likeness
-in the appearance of a man,”—embodying the perfection of his nature in
-his workings, and determining the end from the beginning?
-
-There is geologic evidence, as has been shown, that in the course of
-creation the higher orders succeeded the lower. We have no good reason to
-believe that the mollusc and crustacean preceded the fish, seeing that
-discovery, in its slow course, has already traced the vertebrata in the
-ichthyic form, down to deposits which only a few years ago were regarded
-as representatives of the first beginnings of organized existence on our
-planet, and that it has at the same time failed to add a lower system
-to that in which their remains occur. But the fish seems most certainly
-to have preceded the reptile and the bird; the reptile and the bird to
-have preceded the mammiferous quadruped; and the mammiferous quadruped
-to have preceded man,—rational, accountable man, whom God created in
-his own image,—the much-loved Benjamin of the family,—last-born of all
-creatures. It is of itself an extraordinary fact, without reference to
-other considerations, that the order adopted by Cuvier, in his animal
-kingdom, as that in which the four great classes of vertebrate animals,
-when marshalled according to their rank and standing, naturally range
-should be also that in which they occur in order of time. The brain
-which bears an average proportion to the spinal cord of not more than
-two to one, came first,—it is the brain of the fish; that which bears to
-the spinal cord an average proportion of two and a half to one succeeded
-it,—it is the brain of the reptile; then came the brain averaging as
-three to one,—it is that of the bird; next in succession came the brain
-that averages as four to one,—it is that of the mammal; and last of all
-there appeared a brain that averages as _twenty-three_ to one,—reasoning,
-calculating man had come upon the scene. All the facts of geological
-science are hostile to the Lamarckian conclusion, that the lower brains
-were developed into the higher. As if with the express intention of
-preventing so gross a mis-reading of the record, we find, in at least two
-classes of animals,—fishes and reptiles,—the higher races placed at the
-beginning: the slope of the inclined plane is laid, if one may so speak,
-in the reverse way, and, instead of rising towards the level of the
-succeeding class, inclines downwards, with at least the effect, if not
-the design, of making the break where they meet exceedingly well marked
-and conspicuous. And yet the record does seem to speak of _development
-and progression_;—not, however, in the province of organized existence,
-but in that of insensate matter, subject to the purely chemical laws.
-It is in the style and character of _the dwelling-place_ that gradual
-improvement seems to have taken place;—not in the functions or the rank
-of any class of its inhabitants; and it is with special reference to this
-gradual improvement in our common mansion-house the earth, in its bearing
-on the “conditions of existence,” that not a few of our reasonings
-regarding the introduction and extinction of species and genera must
-proceed.
-
-That definite period at which man was introduced upon the scene seems
-to have been specially determined by the conditions of correspondence
-which the phenomena of his habitation had at length come to assume with
-the predestined constitution of his mind. The large reasoning brain would
-have been wholly out of place in the earlier ages. It is indubitably the
-nature of man to base the conclusions which regulate all his actions
-on fixed phenomena,—he reasons from cause to effect, or from effect to
-cause; and when placed in circumstances in which, from some lack of the
-necessary basis, he cannot so reason, he becomes a wretched, timid,
-superstitious creature, greatly more helpless and abject than even the
-inferior animals. This unhappy state is strikingly exemplified by that
-deep and peculiar impression made on the mind by a severe earthquake,
-which Humboldt, from his own experience, so powerfully describes.
-“This impression,” he says, “is not, in my opinion, the result of a
-recollection of those fearful pictures of devastation presented to our
-imagination by the historical narratives of the past, but is rather due
-to the sudden revelation of the delusive nature of the inherent faith
-by which we had clung to a belief in the immobility of the solid parts
-of the earth. We are accustomed from early childhood to draw a contrast
-between the mobility of water and the immobility of the soil on which we
-tread; and this feeling is confirmed by the evidence of our senses. When,
-therefore, we suddenly feel the ground move beneath us, a mysterious
-force, with which we were previously unacquainted, is revealed to us as
-an active disturber of stability. A moment destroys the illusion of a
-whole life; our deceptive faith in the repose of nature vanishes; and
-we feel transported into a realm of unknown destructive forces. Every
-sound—the faintest motion of the air—arrests our attention, and we no
-longer trust the ground on which we stand. There is an idea conveyed
-to the mind, of some universal and unlimited danger. We may flee from
-the crater of a volcano in active eruption, or from the dwelling whose
-destruction is threatened by the approach of the lava stream; but in an
-earthquake, direct our flight whithersoever we will, we still feel as
-if we trod upon the very focus of destruction.” Not less striking is
-the testimony of Dr. Tschudi, in his “Travels in Peru,” regarding this
-singular effect of earthquakes on the human mind. “No familiarity with
-the phenomenon can,” he remarks, “blunt the feeling. The inhabitant of
-Lima, who from childhood has frequently witnessed these convulsions
-of nature, is roused from his sleep by the shock, and rushes from his
-apartment with the cry of ‘_Misericordia_!’ The foreigner from the
-north of Europe, who knows nothing of earthquakes but by description,
-waits with impatience to feel the movements of the earth, and longs to
-hear with his own ear the subterranean sounds, which he has hitherto
-considered fabulous. With levity he treats the apprehension of a coming
-convulsion, and laughs at the fears of the natives; but as soon as his
-wish is gratified, he is terror-stricken, and is involuntarily prompted
-to seek safety in flight.”
-
-Now, a partially consolidated planet, tempested by frequent earthquakes
-of such terrible potency, that those of the historic ages would be but
-mere ripples of the earth’s surface in comparison, could be no proper
-home for a creature so constituted. The fish or reptile,—animals of a
-limited range of instinct, exceedingly tenacious of life in most of their
-varieties, oviparous, prolific, and whose young immediately on their
-escape from the egg can provide for themselves, might enjoy existence in
-such circumstances, to the full extent of their narrow capacities; and
-when sudden death fell upon them,—though their remains, scattered over
-wide areas, continue to exhibit that distortion of posture incident to
-violent dissolution, which seems to speak of terror and suffering,—we may
-safely conclude there was but little real suffering on the case: they
-were happy up to a certain point, and unconscious forever after. Fishes
-and reptiles were the proper inhabitants of our planet during the ages of
-the earth-tempests; and when, under the operation of the chemical laws,
-these had become less frequent and terrible, the higher mammals were
-introduced. That prolonged ages of these tempests did exist, and that
-they gradually settled down, until the state of things became at length
-comparatively fixed and stable, few geologists will be disposed to deny.
-The evidence which supports _this_ special theory of the development
-of our planet in its capabilities as a scene of organized and sentient
-being, seems palpable at every step. Look first at these Grauwacke rocks;
-and, after marking how in one place the strata have been upturned on
-their edges for miles together, and how in another the Plutonic rock has
-risen molten from below, pass on to the Old Red Sandstone, and examine
-its significant platforms of violent death,—its faults, displacements,
-and dislocations; see, next, in the Coal Measures, those evidences of
-sinking and ever-sinking strata, for thousands of feet together; mark in
-the Oolite those vast overlying masses of trap, stretching athwart the
-landscape, far as the eye can reach; observe carefully how the signs of
-convulsion and catastrophe gradually lessen as we descend to the times of
-the Tertiary, though even in these ages of the mammiferous quadruped the
-earth must have had its oft-recurring ague fits of frightful intensity;
-and then, on closing the survey, consider how exceedingly partial and
-unfrequent these earth-tempests have become in the recent periods. Yes;
-we find every where marks of at once progression and identity,—of
-progress made, and yet identity maintained; but it is in the habitation
-that we find them,—not in the inhabitants. There is a tract of country in
-Hindustan that contains nearly as many square miles as all Great Britain,
-covered to the depth of hundreds of feet by one vast overflow of trap;
-a track similarly overflown, which exceeds in area all England, occurs
-in Southern Africa. The earth’s surface is roughened with such,—mottled
-as thickly by the Plutonic masses as the skin of the leopard by its
-spots. The trap district which surrounds our Scottish metropolis, and
-imparts so imposing a character to its scenery, is too inconsiderable to
-be marked on geological maps of the world, that we yet see streaked and
-speckled with similar memorials, though on an immensely vaster scale,
-of the eruption and overflow which took place in the earthquake ages.
-What could man have done on the globe at a time when such outbursts
-were comparatively common occurrences? What could he have done where
-Edinburgh now stands during that overflow of trap porphyry of which the
-Pentland range forms but a fragment, or that outburst of greenstone of
-which but a portion remains in the dark ponderous coping of Salisbury
-Craigs, or when the thick floor of rock on which the city stands was
-broken up, like the ice of an arctic sea during a tempest in spring, and
-laid on edge from where it leans against the Castle Hill to beyond the
-quarries at Joppa? The reasoning brain would have been wholly at fault
-in a scene of things in which it could neither foresee the exterminating
-calamity while yet distant, nor control it when it had come; and so the
-reasoning brain was not produced until the scene had undergone a slow
-but thorough process of change, during which, at each progressive stage,
-it had furnished a platform for higher and still higher life. When the
-coniferæ could flourish on the land, and fishes subsist in the seas,
-fishes and cone-bearing plants were created; when the earth became a
-fit habitat for reptiles and birds, reptiles and birds were produced;
-with the dawn of a more stable and mature state of things the sagacious
-quadruped was ushered in; and, last of all, when man’s house was fully
-prepared for him,—when the data on which it is his nature to reason
-and calculate had become fixed and certain,—the reasoning, calculating
-brain was moulded by the creative finger, and man became a living soul.
-Such seems to be the true reading of the wondrous inscription chiselled
-deep in the rocks. It furnishes us with no clue by which to unravel the
-unapproachable mysteries of creation;—these mysteries belong to the
-wondrous Creator, and to Him only. We attempt to theorize upon them,
-and to reduce them to law, and all nature rises up against us in our
-presumptuous rebellion. A stray splinter of cone-bearing wood,—a fish’s
-skull or tooth,—the vertebra of a reptile,—the humerus of a bird,—the jaw
-of a quadruped,—all, any of these things, weak and insignificant as they
-may seem, become in such a quarrel too strong for us and our theory: the
-puny fragment, in the grasp of truth, forms as irresistible a weapon as
-the dry bone did in that of Samson of old; and our slaughtered sophisms
-lie piled up, “heaps upon heaps,” before it.
-
-There is no geological fact nor revealed doctrine with which this special
-scheme of development does not agree. To every truth, too, really such,
-from which the antagonist scheme derives its shadowy analogies, it leaves
-its full value. It has no quarrel with the facts of even the “Vestiges,”
-in their character as realities. There is certainly something very
-extraordinary in that fœtal progress of the human brain on which the
-assertors of the development hypothesis have founded so much. Nature, in
-constructing this curious organ, first lays down a grooved cord, as the
-carpenter lays down the keel of his vessel; and on this narrow base the
-perfect brain, as month after month passes by, is gradually built up,
-like the vessel from the keel. First it grows up into a brain closely
-resembling that of a fish; a few additions more convert it into a brain
-undistinguishable from that of a reptile; a few additions more impart
-to it the perfect appearance of the brain of a bird; it then developes
-into a brain exceedingly like that of a mammiferous quadruped; and,
-finally, expanding atop, and spreading out its deeply corrugated lobes,
-till they project widely over the base, it assumes its unique character
-as a human brain. Radically such from the first, it passes towards its
-full development, through all the inferior forms, from that of the fish
-upwards,—thus comprising, during its fœtal progress, an epitome of
-geologic history, as if each man were in himself, not the _microcosm_ of
-the old fanciful philosopher, but something greatly more wonderful,—a
-compendium of all animated nature, and of kin to every creature that
-lives. Hence the remark, that man is the sum total of all animals,—“the
-animal equivalent,” says Oken, “to the whole animal kingdom.” We are
-perhaps too much in the habit of setting aside real facts, when they
-have been first seized upon by the infidel, and appropriated to the
-purposes of unbelief, as if they had suffered contamination in his
-hands. We forget, like the brother “weak in the faith,” instanced by
-the Apostle, that they are in themselves “creatures of God;” and too
-readily reject the lesson which they teach, simply because they have been
-offered in sacrifice to an idol. And this strange fact of the progress
-of the human brain is assuredly a fact none the less worth looking at
-from the circumstance that infidelity has looked at it first. On no
-principle recognizable in right reason can it be urged in support of the
-development hypothesis;—it is a fact of _fœtal_ development, and of that
-only. But it would be well should it lead our metaphysicians to inquire
-whether they have not been rendering their science too insulated and
-exclusive; and whether the mind that works by a brain thus “fearfully and
-wonderfully made,” ought not to be viewed rather in connection with all
-animated nature, especially as we find nature exemplified in the various
-vertebral forms, than as a thing fundamentally abstract and distinct.
-The brain built up of all the types of _brain_, may be the organ of a
-mind compounded, if I may so express myself, of all the varieties of
-_mind_. It would be perhaps over fanciful to urge that it is the creature
-who has made himself free of all the elements, whose brain has been
-thus in succession that of all their proper denizens; and that there
-is no animal instinct, the function of which cannot be illustrated by
-some art mastered by man: but there can be nothing over fanciful in the
-suggestion, founded on this fact of fœtal development, that possibly some
-of the more obscure signs impressed upon the human character may be best
-read through the spectacles of physical science. The successive phases of
-the fœtal brain give at least fair warning that, in tracing to its first
-principles the moral and intellectual nature of man, what is properly
-his “natural history” should not be overlooked. Oken, after describing
-the human creature in one passage as “equivalent to the whole animal
-kingdom,” designates him in another as “God wholly manifested,” and as
-“God become man;”—a style of expression at which the English reader
-may start, as that of the “big mouth speaking blasphemy,” but which
-has become exceedingly common among the nationalists of the Continent.
-The irreverent naturalist ought surely to have remembered, that the
-sum total of all the animals cannot be different in its nature from the
-various sums of which it is an aggregate,—seeing that _no_ summation ever
-differs in _quality_ from the items summed up, which compose it,—and
-that, though it may amount in this case to man _the animal_,—to man,
-as he may be weighed, and measured, and subjected to the dissecting
-knife,—it cannot possibly amount to God. Is God merely a sum total of
-birds and beasts, reptiles and fishes;—a mere Egyptian deity, composed
-of fantastic hieroglyphics derived from the forms of the brute creation?
-The impieties of the transcendentalist may, however, serve to illustrate
-that mode of seizing on terms which, as the most sacred in the message
-of revelation, have been long coupled in the popular mind with saving
-truths, and forcibly compelling them to bear some visionary and illusive
-meaning, wholly foreign to that with which they were originally invested,
-which has become so remarkable a part of the policy of modern infidelity.
-Rationalism has learned to sacrifice to Deity with a certain measure of
-conformity to the required pattern; but it is a conformity in appearance
-only, not in reality: the sacrifice always resembles that of Prometheus
-of old, who presented to Jupiter what, though it seemed to be an ox
-without blemish, was merely an ox-skin stuffed full of bones and garbage.
-
-There is another very remarkable class of facts in geological history,
-which appear to fall as legitimately within the scope of argument founded
-on final causes, as those which bear on the appearance of man at his
-proper era. The period of the mammiferous quadrupeds seems, like the
-succeeding human period, to have been determined, as I have said, by the
-earth’s fitness at the time as a place of habitation for creatures so
-formed. And the bulk to which, in the more extreme cases, they attained,
-appears to have been regulated, as in the higher mammals now, with
-reference to the force of gravity at the earth’s surface. The Megatherium
-and the Mastodon, the Dinotherium and the extinct elephant, increased
-in bulk, in obedience to the laws of the specific constitution imparted
-to them at their creation; and these laws bore reference, in turn, to
-another law,—that law of gravity which determines that no creature which
-moves in air and treads the surface of the earth should exceed a certain
-weight or size. To very near the limits assigned by this law some of the
-ancient quadrupeds arose. It is even doubtful whether the Dinotherium,
-the most gigantic of mammals, may not have been, like the existing
-sea-lions and morses, mainly an aquatic quadruped;—an inference grounded
-on the circumstance that, in at least portions of its framework, it seems
-to have risen beyond these limits. Now, it does not seem wonderful that,
-with apparent reference to the point at which the gravity of bodies
-at the earth’s surface _bisects_ the conditions of texture and matter
-necessary to existence among the sub-aerial vertebrata, the _reptiles_
-of the Secondary periods should have grown up in some of their species
-and genera to the extreme size. A world of frogs, newts, and lizards
-would have borne stamped upon it the impress of a tame and miserable
-mediocrity, that would have harmonized ill with the extent of the
-earth’s capabilities for supporting life on a large scale. There would
-be no principle of adaptation or rule of proportion maintained between
-an animal kingdom composed of so contemptible a group of beings, and
-either the dynamic laws under which matter exists on our planet, or the
-luxuriant vegetation which it bore during the Secondary ages. And such
-was not the character of the group which composed the reptile dynasty.
-The Iguanodon must have been quite as tall as the elephant,—greatly
-longer, and, it would seem, at least as bulky. The Megalosaurus must have
-at least equalled the rhinoceros; the Hylæosaurus would have outweighed
-the hippopotamus. And when reptiles that rivalled in size our hugest
-mammals inhabited the land, other reptiles,—Ichthyosaurs, Plesiosaurs,
-and Cetiosaurs,—scarce less bulky than the cetacea themselves, possessed
-the sea. Not only was the platform of being occupied in all its
-_breadth_, but also in all its _height_; and it is according to our
-simpler and more obvious ideas of adaptation—simple and obvious because
-gleaned from the very surface of the universe of life—that such should
-have been the case. But it does appear strange, because under the
-regulation, it would seem, of a principle of adaptation more occult,
-and, if I may so speak, more _Providential_, that no sooner are the huge
-mammals introduced _as a group_, than, with but a few exceptions, the
-reptiles appear in greatly diminished proportions. They no longer occupy
-the platform to its full extent of _height_. Even in tropical countries,
-in which certain families of mammals still attain to the maximum size,
-the reptiles, if we except the crocodilean family, a few harmless
-turtles, and the degraded boas and pythons, are a small and comparatively
-unimportant race. Nay, the existing giants of the class—the crocodiles
-and boas—hardly equal in bulk the third-rate reptiles of the ages of
-the Oolite and the Wealden. So far as can be seen, there is no reason
-deduceable from the nature of things, why the country that sustains a
-mammal bulky as the elephant, should not also support a reptile huge
-as the Iguanodon; or why the Megalosaurus, Hylæosaurus, and Dicynodon,
-might not have been contemporary with the lion, tiger, and rhinoceros.
-The change which took place in the reptile group immediately on their
-dethronement at the close of the Secondary period, seems scarce less
-strange than that sung by Milton:—
-
- “Behold a wonder! They but now who seemed
- In bigness to surpass earth’s giant sons,
- Now less than smallest dwarfs, in narrow room
- Thronged numberless; like that pygmean race
- Beyond the Indian mount; or fairy elves,
- Whose midnight revels, by a forest side
- Or fountain, some belated peasant sees,
- Or dreams he sees, while, overhead, the moon
- Sits arbitress, and nearer to the earth
- Wheels her pale course.”
-
-But though we cannot assign a _cause_ for this general reduction of the
-reptile class, save simply the will of the all-wise Creator, the _reason_
-why it should have taken place seems easily assignable. It was a bold
-saying of the old philosophic heathen, that “God is the soul of brutes;”
-but writers on instinct in even our own times have said less warrantable
-things. God _does_ seem to do for many of the inferior animals of the
-lower divisions, which, though devoid of brain and vertebral column, are
-yet skilful chemists and accomplished architects and mathematicians,
-what he enables man, through the exercise of the reasoning faculty,
-to do for himself; and the ancient philosopher meant no more. And in
-clearing away the giants of the reptile dynasty, when their kingdom had
-passed away, and then re-introducing the class as much shrunken in their
-proportions as restricted in their domains, the Creator seems to have
-been doing for the mammals what man, in the character of a “mighty hunter
-before the Lord,” does for himself. There is in nature very little of
-what can be called war. The cities of this country cannot be said to be
-in a state of war, though their cattle-markets are thronged every week
-with animals for slaughter and the butcher and fishmonger find their
-places of business thronged with customers. And such, in the main, is the
-condition of the animal world;—it consists of its two classes,—animals
-of prey, and the animals upon which they prey: its wars are simply those
-of the butcher and fisher, lightened by a dash of the enjoyments of the
-sportsman.
-
- “The creatures see of flood and field,
- And those that travel on the wind,
- With them no strife can last; they live
- In peace and peace of mind.”
-
-Generally speaking, the carnivorous mammalia respect one another: lion
-does not war with tiger, nor the leopard contend with the hyena. But
-the carnivorous reptiles manifest no such respect for the carnivorous
-mammals. There are fierce contests in their native jungles, on the banks
-of the Ganges, between the gavial and the tiger; and in the steaming
-forests of South America, the boa-constrictor casts his terrible coil
-scarce less readily round the puma than the antelope. A world which,
-after it had become a home of the higher herbivorous and more powerful
-carnivorous mammals, continued to retain the gigantic reptiles of
-its earlier ages, would be a world of horrid, exterminating war, and
-altogether rather a place of torment than a scene of intermediate
-character, in which, though it sometimes reëchoes the groans of
-suffering nature, life is, in the main, enjoyment. And so,—save in a few
-exceptional cases, that, while they establish the rule as a fact, serve
-also as a key to unlock that principle of the Divine government on which
-it appears to rest,—no sooner was the reptile removed from his place in
-the fore-front of creation, and creatures of a higher order introduced
-into it the consolidating and fast-ripening planet of which he had been
-so long the monarch, than his bulk shrank and his strength lessened,
-and he assumed a humility of form and aspect at once in keeping with
-his reduced circumstances, and compatible with the general welfare. But
-though the _reason_ of the reduction appears obvious, I know not that it
-can be referred to any other _cause_ than simply the will of the All-Wise
-Creator.
-
-There hangs a mystery greatly more profound over the fact of the
-_degradation_ than over that of the _reduction_ and _diminution_ of
-classes. We can assign what at least _seems_ to be a sufficient _reason_
-why, when reptiles formed as a class the highest representatives of the
-vertebrata, they should be of imposing bulk and strength, and altogether
-worthy of that post of precedence which they then occupied among the
-animals. We can also assign a _reason_ for the strange reduction which
-took place among them in strength and bulk immediately on their removal
-from the first to the second place. But why not only _reduction_,
-but also _degradation_? Why, as division started up in advance of
-division,—first the reptiles in front of the fishes, then the quadrupedal
-mammals in front of the reptiles, and, last of all, man in front of
-the quadrupedal mammals,—should the supplanted classes,—two of them at
-least,—fishes and reptiles,—for there seem to have been no additions
-made to the mammals since man entered upon the scene,—why should they
-have become the receptacles of orders and families of a degraded
-character, which had no place among them in their monarchical state? The
-fishes removed beyond all analogy with the higher vertebrata, by their
-homocercal tails,—the fishes (_Acanthopterygii_ and _Sub-brachiati_) with
-their four limbs slung in a belt round their necks,—the flat fishes,
-(_Pleuronectidæ_,) that, in addition to this deformity, are so twisted
-to a side, that while the one eye occupies a single orbit in the
-middle of the skull, the other is thrust out to its edge,—the irregular
-fishes generally (sun-fishes, frog-fishes, hippocampi, &c.) were not
-introduced into the ichthyic division until after the full development
-of the reptile dynasty; nor did the hand that makes no slips in its
-working “form the crooked serpent,” footless, grovelling, venom-bearing,
-the authorized type of a fallen and degraded creature, until after the
-introduction of the mammals. What can this fact of degradation mean?
-Species and genera seem to be greatly more numerous in the present age
-of the world than in any of the geologic ages. Is it not possible that
-the extension of the chain of being which has thus taken place—not only,
-as we find, through the addition of the higher divisions of animals to
-its upper end, but also through the interpolations of _lower links_
-into the previously existing divisions—may have borne reference to some
-predetermined scheme of well-proportioned gradation, or, according to the
-poet,
-
- “Of general ORDER since the whole began?”
-
-May not, in short, what we term degradation be merely one of the modes
-resorted to for filling up the voids in creation, and thereby perfecting
-a scale which must have been originally not merely a scale of narrow
-compass, but also of innumerable breaks and blanks, hiatuses and chasms?
-Such, certainly, would be the reading of the enigma which a Soame Jenyns
-or a Bolingbroke would suggest; but the geologist has learned from his
-science, that the completion of a chain of at least contemporary being,
-perfect in its gradations, cannot possibly have formed the design of
-Providence. Almost ever since God united vitality to matter, the links in
-this chain of animated nature, as if composed of a material too brittle
-to bear their own weight when stretched across the geologic ages, have
-been dropping one after out, from his hand, and sinking, fractured and
-broken, into the rocks below. It is urged by Pope, that were “we to press
-on superior powers,” and rise from our own assigned place to the place
-immediately above all, we would, in consequence of the transposition,
-
- “In the full creation leave a void,
- Where, one step broken, the great scale’s destroyed.
- From nature’s chain whatever link we strike,
- Tenth or ten thousandth, breaks the chain alike.”
-
-The poet could scarce have anticipated that there was a science then
-sleeping in its cradle, and dreaming the dreams of Whiston, Leibnitz, and
-Burnet, which was one day to rise and demonstrate that both the tenth and
-the ten thousandth link in the chain had been already broken and laid
-by, with all the thousands of links between; and that man might laudably
-“press on superior powers,” and attain to a “new nature,” without in the
-least affecting the symmetry of creation by the void which his elevation
-would necessarily create; that, in fine, voids and blanks in the scale
-are exceedingly common things; and that, if men could, by rising into
-angels, make one blank more, they might do so with perfect impunity.
-Further, even were the graduated chain of Bolingbroke a reality, and not
-what Johnson well designates it, an “absurd hypothesis,” and were what I
-have termed the interpolation of links necessary to its completion, the
-mere filling up of the original blanks and chasms would not necessarily
-involve the fact of degradation, seeing that each blank could be
-filled up, if I may go express myself, from its lower end. Each could
-be as certainly occupied to the full by an elevation of lower forms,
-as by a humiliation of the higher. We might receive the hypothesis of
-Bolingbroke, and yet find the mysterious fact of degradation remain an
-unsolved riddle in our hands.
-
-But though I can assign neither _reason_ nor _cause_ for the fact, I
-cannot avoid the conclusion, that it is associated with certain other
-great facts in the moral government of the universe, by those threads of
-analogical connection which run through the entire tissue of Creation and
-Providence, and impart to it that character of unity which speaks of the
-single producing Mind. The first idea of every religion on earth which
-has arisen out of what may be termed the spiritual instincts of man’s
-nature, is that of a Future State; the second idea is, that in this state
-men shall exist in two separate classes,—the one in advance of their
-present condition, the other far in the rear of it. It is on these two
-great beliefs that conscience every where finds the fulcrum from which
-it acts upon the conduct; and it is, we find, wholly inoperative as a
-force without them. And in that one religion among men that, instead
-of retiring, like the pale ghosts of the others, before the light of
-civilization, brightens and expands in its beams, and in favor of whose
-claim as a revelation from God the highest philosophy has declared,
-we find these two master ideas occupying a still more prominent place
-than in any of those merely indigenous religions that spring up in the
-human mind of themselves. The special lesson which the Adorable Saviour,
-during his ministry on earth, oftenest enforced, and to which all the
-others bore reference, was the lesson of a final separation of mankind
-into two great divisions,—a division of God-like men, of whose high
-Standing and full-orbed happiness man, in the present scene of things,
-can form no adequate conception; and a division of men finally lost, and
-doomed to unutterable misery and hopeless degradation. There is not in
-all Revelation a single doctrine which we find oftener or more clearly
-enforced than that there shall continue to exist, throughout the endless
-cycles of the future, a race of degraded men and of degraded angels.
-
-Now, it is truly wonderful how thoroughly, in its general scope, the
-revealed pieces on to the geologic record. We know, as geologists, that
-the dynasty of the fish was succeeded by that of the reptile,—that
-the dynasty of the reptile was succeeded by that of the mammiferous
-quadruped,—and that the dynasty of the mammiferous quadruped was
-succeeded by that of man as man now exists,—a creature of mixed
-character, and subject, in all conditions, to wide alternations of
-enjoyment and suffering. We know, further—so far at least as we have
-yet succeeded in deciphering the record,—that the several dynasties
-were introduced, not in their lower, but in their higher forms;—that,
-in short, in the imposing programme of creation it was arranged, as a
-general rule, that in each of the great divisions of the procession
-the magnates should walk first. We recognize yet further the fact of
-degradation specially exemplified in the fish and the reptile. And then,
-passing on to the revealed record, we learn that the dynasty of man in
-the mixed state and character is not the final one, but that there is
-to be yet another creation, or, more properly, _re_-creation, known
-theologically as the Resurrection, which shall be connected in its
-physical components, by bonds of mysterious paternity, with the dynasty
-which now reigns, and be bound to it mentally by the chain of identity,
-conscious and actual; but which, in all that constitutes superiority,
-shall be as vastly its superior as the dynasty of responsible man is
-superior to even the lowest of the preliminary dynasties. We are further
-taught, that at the commencement of this last of the dynasties, there
-will be a re-creation of not only elevated, but also of degraded
-beings,—a re-creation of the _lost_. We are taught yet further, that
-though the present dynasty be that of a lapsed race, which at their
-first introduction were placed on higher ground than that on which they
-now stand, and sank by their own act, it was yet part of the original
-design, from the beginning of all things, that they should occupy
-the existing platform; and that Redemption is thus no after-thought,
-rendered necessary by the fall, but, on the contrary, part of a general
-scheme, for which provision had been made from the beginning; so that
-the Divine Man, through whom the work of restoration has been effected,
-was in reality, in reference to the purposes of the Eternal, what he is
-designated in the remarkable text, “_the Lamb slain from the foundations
-of the world_.” Slain from the foundations of the world! Could the
-assertors of the stony science ask for language more express? By piecing
-the two records together,—that revealed in Scripture and that revealed
-in the rocks,—records which, however widely geologists may mistake the
-one, or commentators misunderstand the other, have emanated from the
-same great Author—we learn that in slow and solemn majesty has period
-succeeded period, each in succession ushering in a higher end yet higher
-scene of existence,—that fish, reptiles, mammiferous quadrupeds, have
-reigned in turn,—that responsible man, “made in the image of God,”
-and with dominion over all creatures, ultimately entered into a world
-ripened for his reception; but, further, that this passing scene, in
-which he forms the prominent figure, is not the final one in the long
-series, but merely the last of the _preliminary_ scenes; and that that
-period to which the bygone ages, incalculable in amount, with all their
-well-proportioned gradations of being, form the imposing vestibule, shall
-have perfection for its occupant, and eternity for its duration. I know
-not how it may appear to others; but for my own part, I cannot avoid
-thinking that there would be a lack of proportion in the series of being,
-were the period of perfect and glorified humanity abruptly connected,
-without the introduction of an intermediate creation of _responsible_
-imperfection, with that of the dying irresponsible brute. That scene of
-things in which God became Man, and suffered, _seems_, as it no doubt
-_is_, a necessary link in the chain.
-
-I am aware that I stand on the confines of a mystery which man, since the
-first introduction of sin into the world till now, has “vainly aspired to
-comprehend.” But I have no new reading of the enigma to offer. I know not
-why it is that moral evil exists in the universe of the All-Wise and the
-All-Powerful; nor through what occult law of Deity it is that “perfection
-should come through suffering.” The question, like that satellite, ever
-attendant upon our planet, which presents both its sides to the sun, but
-invariably the same side to the earth, hides one of its faces from man,
-and turns it to but the Eye from which all light emanates. And it is in
-that God-ward phase of the question that the mystery dwells. We can map
-and measure every protuberance and hollow which roughens the nether disk
-of the moon, as, during the shades of night, it looks down upon our path
-to cheer and enlighten; but what can we know of the other? It would,
-however, seem, that even in this field of mystery the extent of the
-inexplicable and the unknown is capable of reduction, and that the human
-understanding is vested in an ability of progressing towards the central
-point of that dark field throughout all time, mayhap all eternity, as
-the asymptote progresses upon its curve. Even though the essence of the
-question should forever remain a mystery, it may yet in its reduced and
-defined state, serve as a key for the laying of other mysteries open.
-The philosophers are still as ignorant as ever respecting the intrinsic
-nature of gravitation; but regarded simply as a force, how many enigmas
-has it not served to unlock! And that moral gravitation towards evil,
-manifested by the only two classes of responsible beings of which there
-is aught known to man, and of which a degradation linked by mysterious
-analogy with a class of facts singularly prominent in geologic history is
-the result, occupies apparently a similar place, as a force, in the moral
-dynamics of the universe, and seems suited to perform a similar part.
-Inexplicable itself, it is yet a key to the solution of all the minor
-inexplicabilities in the scheme of Providence.
-
-In a matter of such extreme niceness and difficulty, shall I dare venture
-on an illustrative example?
-
-So far as both the geologic and the Scriptural evidence extends, no
-species or family of existences seems to have been introduced by creation
-into the present scene of being since the appearance of man. In Scripture
-the formation of the human race is described as the terminal act of a
-series, “good” in all its previous stages, but which became “very good”
-then; and geologists, judging from the modicum of evidence which they
-have hitherto succeeded in collecting on the subject,—evidence still
-meagre, but, so far as it goes, independent and distinct,—pronounce
-“post-Adamic creations” at least “improbable.” The naturalist finds
-certain animal and vegetable species restricted to certain circles,
-and that in certain foci in these circles they attain to their fullest
-development and their maximum number. And these foci he regards as the
-original centres of creation, whence, in each instance in the process
-of increase and multiplication, the plant or creature propagated itself
-outwards in circular wavelets of life, that sank at each stage as they
-widened till at length, at the circumference of the area, they wholly
-ceased. Now we find it argued by Professor Edward Forbes that “since
-man’s appearance, certain geological areas, both of land and water,
-have been formed, presenting such physical conditions as to entitle us
-to expect within their bounds one, or in some instances more than one,
-centre of creation, or _point of maximum of a zoological or botanical
-province_. But a critical examination renders evident,” the Professor
-adds, “that instead of showing distinct foci of creation, they have
-been in all instances peopled by colonization, _i. e._ by migration of
-species from pre-existing, and in every case pre-Adamic, provinces. Among
-the terrestrial areas the British isles may serve as an example; among
-marine, the Baltic, Mediterranean, and Black Seas. The British islands
-have been colonized from various centres of creation in (now) continental
-Europe; the Baltic Sea from the Celtic region, although it runs itself
-into the conditions of the Boreal one; and the Mediterranean, as it
-now appears, from the fauna and flora of the more ancient Lusitanian
-province.” Professor Forbes, it is stated further, in the report of his
-paper to which I owe these details,—a paper read at the Royal Institution
-in March last,—“exhibited, in support of the same view, a map, showing
-the relation which the centres of creation of the air-breathing molluscs
-in Europe bear to the geological history of the respective areas, and
-proving that the whole snail population of its northern and central
-extent (the portion of the Continent of newest and probably post-Adamic
-origin) had been derived from foci of creation seated in pre-Adamic
-lands. And these remarkable facts have induced the Professor,” it was
-added, “to maintain the improbability of post-Adamic creations.”
-
-With the introduction of man into the scene of existence, creation,
-I repeat, seems to have ceased. What is it that now takes its place,
-and performs its work? During the previous dynasties, all elevation
-in the scale was an effect simply of creation. Nature lay dead in a
-waste theatre of rock, vapor, and sea, in which the insensate laws,
-chemical; mechanical, and electric, carried on their blind, unintelligent
-processes: the _creative fiat_ went forth; and, amid waters that
-straightway teemed with life in its lower forms, vegetable and animal,
-the dynasty of the fish was introduced. Many ages passed, during which
-there took place no further elevation: on the contrary, in not a few of
-the newly introduced species of the reigning class there occurred for
-the first time examples of an asymmetrical misplacement of parts, and,
-in at least one family of fishes, instances of defect of parts: there
-was the manifestation of a downward tendency towards the degradation of
-monstrosity, when the elevatory fiat again went forth, and, _through
-an act of creation_, the dynasty of the reptile began. Again many ages
-passed by, marked, apparently, by the introduction of a warm-blooded
-oviparous animal, the bird, and of a few marsupial quadrupeds, but in
-which the prevailing class reigned undeposed, though at least unelevated.
-Yet again, however, the elevatory fiat went forth, and _through an act
-of creation_ the dynasty of the mammiferous quadruped began. And after
-the further lapse of ages, the elevatory fiat went forth yet once more
-_in an act of creation_; and with the human, heaven-aspiring dynasty,
-the moral government of God, in its connection with at least the world
-which we inhabit, “took beginning.” And then creation ceased. Why?
-Simply because God’s moral government _had_ begun,—because in necessary
-conformity with the institution of that government, there was to be a
-thorough identity maintained between the glorified and immortal beings
-of the terminal dynasty, and the dying magnates of the dynasty which now
-is; and because, in consequence of the maintenance of this identity as
-an essential condition of this moral government, mere _acts of creation_
-could no longer carry on the elevatory process. The work analogous in its
-end and object to those _acts of creation_ which gave to our planet its
-successive dynasties of higher and yet higher existences, is the work of
-REDEMPTION. It is the elevatory process of the present time,—the only
-possible provision for that final act of _re_-creation “to everlasting
-life,” which shall usher in the terminal dynasty.
-
-I cannot avoid thinking that many of our theologians attach a too narrow
-meaning to the remarkable reason “annexed to the Fourth Commandment” by
-the Divine Lawgiver. “God rested on the seventh day,” says the text,
-“from all his work which He had created and made; and God blessed the
-seventh day, and sanctified it.” And such is the reason given in the
-Decalogue why man should also rest on the seventh day. God rested on the
-Sabbath, and sanctified it; and therefore man ought also to rest on the
-Sabbath, and keep it holy. But I know not where we shall find grounds
-for the belief that that Sabbath-day during which God rested was merely
-commensurate in its duration with one of the Sabbaths of short-lived
-man,—a brief period, measured by a single revolution of the earth on
-its axis. We have not, as has been shown, a shadow of evidence that
-He resumed his work of creation on the morrow: the geologist finds no
-trace of post-Adamic creation,—the theologian can tell us of none. God’s
-Sabbath of rest may still exist;—_the work of REDEMPTION may be the work
-of his Sabbath day_. That elevatory process through successive acts of
-creation which engaged Him during myriads of ages, was of an ordinary
-week-day character; but in when the term of his moral government began,
-the elevatory process proper to it assumed the Divine character of the
-Sabbath. This special view appears to lend peculiar emphasis to the
-reason embodied in the commandment. The collation of the passage with
-the geologic record seems, as if by a species of re-translation, to make
-it enunciate as its injunction, “Keep this day, not merely as a day of
-memorial related to a past fact, but also as a day of coöperation with
-God in the work of elevation in relation both to a present fact and
-a future purpose. God keeps his Sabbath,” it says, “in order that He
-may save; keep yours also, in order that ye may be saved.” It serves,
-besides, to throw light on the prominence of the Sabbatical command,
-in a digest of law of which no part or tittle can pass away until the
-fulfilment of all things. During the present dynasty of probation and
-trial, that special work of both God and man on which the character of
-the future dynasty depends, is the Sabbath-day work of saving and being
-saved.[41]
-
-It is in this dynasty of the future that man’s moral and intellectual
-faculties will receive their full development The expectation of any
-very great advance in the present scene of things—great, at least, when
-measured by man’s large capacity of conceiving of the good and fair—seems
-to be, like all human hope when restricted to time, an expectation
-doomed to disappointment. There are certain limits within which the race
-improves;—civilization is better than the want of it, and the taught
-superior to the untaught man. There is a change, too, effected in the
-moral nature, through that Spirit which, by working belief in the heart,
-brings its aspirations into harmony with the realities of the unseen
-world, that, in at least its relation to the future state, cannot be
-estimated too highly. But conception can travel very far beyond even its
-best effects in their merely secular bearing; nay, it is peculiarly its
-nature to show the men most truly the subjects of it, how miserably they
-fall short of the high standard of conduct and feeling which it erects,
-and to teach them, more emphatically than by words, that their degree
-of happiness must of necessity be as low as their moral attainments are
-humble. Further,—man, though he has been increasing in knowledge ever
-since his appearance on earth, has not been improving in faculty;—a
-shrewd fact, which they who expect most from the future of this world
-would do well to consider. The ancient masters of mind were in no respect
-inferior in calibre to their predecessors. We have not yet shot ahead
-of the old Greeks in either the perception of the beautiful, or in the
-ability of producing it; there has been no improvement in the inventive
-faculty since the Iliad was written, some three thousand years ago; nor
-has taste become more exquisite, or the perception of the harmony of
-numbers more nice, since the age of the Æneid. Science is cumulative in
-its character; and so its votaries in modern times stand on a higher
-pedestal than their predecessors. But though nature produced a Newton
-some two centuries ago, as she produced a Goliath of Gath at an earlier
-period, the modern philosophers, as a class, do not exceed in actual
-stature the worse informed ancients,—the Euclids, Archimedeses, and
-Aristotles. We would be without excuse if, with the Bacon, Milton, and
-Shakspeare of these latter ages of the world full before us, we recurred
-to the obsolete belief that the human race is deteriorating; but then, on
-the other hand, we have certain evidence, that since genius first began
-unconsciously to register in its works its own bulk and proportions,
-there has been no increase in the mass or improvement in the quality of
-individual mind. As for the dream that there is to be some extraordinary
-elevation of the general platform of the race achieved by means of
-education, it is simply the hallucination of the age,—the world’s present
-alchemical expedient for converting farthings into guineas, sheerly by
-dint of scouring. Not but that education is good; it exercises, and,
-in the ordinary mind, developes, faculty. But it will not anticipate
-the terminal dynasty. Yet further,— man’s average capacity of happiness
-seems to be as limited and as incapable of increase as his average reach
-of intellect: it is a mediocre capacity at best; nor is it greater
-by a shade now, in these days of power-looms and portable manures,
-than in the times of the old patriarchs. So long, too, as the law of
-increase continues, man must be subject to the law of death, with its
-stern attendants, suffering and sorrow; for the two laws go necessarily
-together; and so long as death reigns, human creatures, in even the best
-of times, will continue to quit this scene of being without professing
-much satisfaction at what they have found either in it or themselves. It
-will no doubt be a less miserable world than it is now, when the good
-come, as there is reason to hope they one day shall, to be a majority;
-but it will be felt to be an inferior sort of world even then, and be
-even fuller than now of wishes and longings for a better. Let it improve
-as it may, it will be a scene of probation and trial till the end. And
-so Faith, undeceived by the mirage of the midway desert, whatever form
-or name, political or religious, the phantasmagoria may bear, must
-continue to look beyond its unsolid and tremulous glitter,—its bare rocks
-exaggerated by the vapor into air-drawn castles, and its stunted bushes
-magnified into goodly trees,—and, fixing her gaze upon the re-creation
-yet future,—the terminal dynasty yet unbegun,—she must be content to
-enter upon her final rest—for she will not enter upon it earlier—“at
-return”
-
- “Of Him, the Woman’s Seed,
- Last in the clouds, from heaven to be revealed
- In glory of the Father, to dissolve
- Satan with his perverted world, then raise
- From the conflagrant mass, purged and refined,
- New heavens, new earth, ages of endless date,
- Founded in righteousness, and peace, and love,
- To bring forth fruits,—joy and eternal bliss.”
-
-But it may be judged that I am trespassing on a field into which I have
-no right to enter. Save, however, for its close proximity with that in
-which the geologist expatiates as properly his own, this little volume
-would never have been written. It is the fact that man must believingly
-coöperate with God in the work of preparation for the final dynasty,
-or exist throughout its never-ending cycles as a lost and degraded
-creature, that alone renders the development hypothesis formidable.
-But inculcating that the elevatory process is one of the natural law,
-not of moral endeavor,—by teaching, inferentially at least, that in the
-better state of things which is coming there is to be an identity of
-race with that of the existing dynasty, but no identity of individual
-consciousness,—that, on the contrary, the life after death which we
-are to inherit is to be merely a horrid life of wriggling impurities,
-originated in the putrefactive mucus,—and that thus the men who now
-live possess no real stake in the kingdom of the future,—it is its
-direct tendency, so far as its influence extends, to render the required
-coöperation with God an impossibility. For that coöperation cannot exist
-without belief as its basis. The hypothesis involves a misreading of the
-geologic record, which not merely affects its meaning in relation to the
-mind, and thus, in a question of science, substitutes error for truth,
-but which also threatens to affect the record itself, in relation to the
-destiny of every individual perverted and led astray. It threatens to
-write down among the degraded and the lost, men who, under the influence
-of an unshaken faith, might have risen at the dawn of the terminal
-period, to enjoy the fulness of eternity among the glorified and the
-good.
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-
-[1] Mr. Miller is the author also of _Scenes and Legends of the North of
-Scotland_, one vol. 8vo.; _A Letter from one of the Scotch people to the
-Right Honorable Lord Brougham and Vaux, on the opinions expressed by his
-Lordship in the Auchterarder Case_; and _The Whiggism of the Old School,
-as exemplified in the Past History and Present Position of the Church
-of Scotland_. The second of these works is well characterized by Mr.
-Gladstone as “an able, elegant, and masculine production.”
-
-[2] London, 1847, pp. 409
-
-[3] Since the above sentence was written and set in type, I have learned
-that my ingenious friend, Mr. Charles Peach of the Customs, Fowey,
-so well known for his palæontological discoveries, has just found in
-the Devonian system of Cornwall, fragments of what seem to be dermal
-plates of _Asterolepis_. It is a somewhat curious circumstance, that
-the two farthest removed extremities of Great Britain—Cornwall and
-Caithness—should be tipped by fossiliferous deposits of the same ancient
-system, and that organisms which, when they lived, were contemporary,
-should be found embedded in the rocks which rise over the British Channel
-on the one extremity, and overhang the Pentland Frith on the other.
-
-[4] Figured from a Thurso specimen, slightly different in its proportions
-from the Stromness specimen described.
-
-[5] Dr. George Garson, Stromness, and Mr. William Watt, jun. Skaill.
-
-[6] The Continental assertors of the development hypothesis are greatly
-more frank than those of our own country regarding the “life after
-death,” and what man has to expect from it. The individual, they tell
-us, perishes forever; but, then, out of his remains there spring up
-other vitalities. The immortality of the soul is, it would seem, an idle
-figment, for there really exists no such things as souls; but is there no
-comfort in being taught, instead, that we are to resolve into monads and
-maggots? Job solaced himself with the assurance that, even after worms
-had destroyed his body, he was in the flesh to see God. Had Professor
-Oken been one of his comforters, he would have sought to restrict his
-hopes to the prospect of living in the worms. “If the organic fundamental
-substance _consist_ of infusoria,” says the Professor, “so must the
-whole organic world _originate_ from infusoria. Plants and animals can
-only be metamorphoses of infusoria. This being granted, so also must all
-organizations _consist_ of infusoria, and, during their destruction,
-dissolve into the same. Every plant, every animal, is converted by
-maceration into a mucous mass; this putrefies, and the moisture is
-stocked with infusoria. Putrefaction is nothing else than a division
-of organisms into infusoria,—a reduction of the higher to the primary
-life.... Death is no annihilation, but only a change. One individual
-emerges out of another. Death is only a transition to another life,—not
-into death. This transition from one life to another takes place through
-the primary condition of the organic, or the mucus.”—_Physio-Philosophy_,
-pp. 187-189.
-
-[7] I trust that at least by and by there may be an exception claimed,
-from the general, but, I am sure, well-meant, censure of this passage,
-in favor of the Free Church of Scotland. It has got as its Professor of
-Physical Science—thanks to the sagacity of Chalmers—Dr. John Fleming,
-a man of European reputation, and all that seems further necessary, in
-order to secure the benefits contemplated in the appointment, is, that
-attendance on his course should be rendered imperative on _all_ Free
-Church candidates for the ministry.
-
-[8] Agassiz’s description of the _Pterichthys_, as quoted by Humboldt, in
-his _Cosmos_.
-
-[9] From Murchison’s Silurian System.
-
-[10] These scales, which occur in a detached state, in a stratified clay
-of the Old Red Sandstone, near Cromarty, present for their size a larger
-extent of _cover_ than the scales of any other Ganoid.
-
-[11] A peculiarity which also occurs in the anterior dorsal of the
-_Dipterus_.
-
-[12] From the head of _Raja clavata_.
-
-[13] The darker, upper patch in this figure indicates a portion in which
-the scales of the fins in the fossil still retain their enamel;—the
-lighter, a portion from which the enamel has disappeared.
-
-[14] The Acanths of the Coal Measures possess the cranial buckler.
-
-[15] Professor Owen, in fixing the homologies of the ichthyic head,
-differs considerably from Cuvier; but his view seems to be demonstrably
-the correct one. It will, however, be seen, that in my attempted
-comparison of the divisions of the ancient ganoid cranium with those of
-the craniums of existing fishes, the points at issue between the two
-great naturalists are not involved, otherwise than as mere questions of
-words. The matter to be determined, for instance, is not whether plate A
-in the skulls of the cod and _Coccosteus_ be the homologue of a part of
-the occipital or that of a part of the parietal bones, but whether plate
-A in the _Coccosteus_ be the homologue of plate A in the cod. The letters
-employed I have borrowed from Agassiz’s restoration of the _Coccosteus_;
-whereas the figures intimate divisions which the imperfect keeping of the
-specimens on which the ichthyologist founded did not enable him to detect.
-
-[16] The jaws (10, 10) which exhibit in the print their greatest breadth,
-would have presented in the animal, seen from beneath, their narrow
-under-edges, and have nearly fallen into the line of the sub-opercular
-plates, (13, 13.)
-
-[17] In all probability it is likewise the principle of the placoid
-skull. The numerous osseous points by which the latter is encrusted,
-each capable of increase at the edges, seem the minute bricks of an
-ample dome. It is possible, however, that new points may be formed in
-the interstices between the first formed ones, as what anatomists term
-the _triquetra_ or _Wormiana_ form between the serrated edges of the
-lambdoidal suture in the human skull; and that the osseous surface of the
-cerebral dome may thus extend, as the dome itself increases in size, not
-through the growth of the previously existing pieces,—the minute bricks
-of my illustration,—but through the addition of new ones. Equally, in
-either case, however, that essential difference between the placoid skull
-and the placoid vertebra, to which I have referred, appears to hinge
-on the circumstance, that while the osseous nucleus of each vertebral
-centrum could form, in even its most complicated shape, from a _single_
-point, the osseous walls of the cranium had to be formed from _hundreds_.
-The accompanying diagram serves to show after what manner the vertebral
-centrum in the Ray enlarges with the growth of the animal, by addition of
-bony matter external to the point in the middle, at which ossification
-first begins. The horizontal lines indicate the lines of increment in the
-two internal cones which each centrum comprises, and the vertical ones
-the lines of increment in the lateral pillars.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 23.
-
-SECTION OF VERTEBRAL CENTRUM OF THORNBACK.]
-
-[18] One of the Thurso coprolites in my possession is about one fourth
-longer than the larger of the two specimens figured here, and nearly
-thrice as broad.
-
-[19] In two of these, in a collection of several score, I have failed to
-detect the spiral markings, though their state of keeping is decidedly
-good. There are other appearances which lead me to suspect that the
-_Asterolepis_ was not the only large fish of the Lower Old Red Sandstone;
-but my facts on the subject are too inconclusive to justify aught more
-than sedulous inquiry.
-
-[20] The shaded plate, (_a_,) accidentally presented in this specimen,
-belongs to the upper part of the head. It is the posterior frontal
-plate F, which half-encircled the eye orbit, (see fig. 29;) and I have
-introduced it into the print here, as in none of the other prints, or of
-any other specimens, is its upper surface shown.
-
-[21] The late Mr. John Thurston.
-
-[22] “Mr. Phillips proceeded to describe some remains of a small fish,
-resembling the _Cheiracanthus_ of the Old Red Sandstone, scales and
-spines of which he had found in a quarry at Hales End, on the western
-side of the Malverns. The section presented beds of the Old Red Sandstone
-inclined to the west; beneath these were arenaceous beds of a lighter
-color, forming the junction with Silurian shales; these, again, passing
-on to calcareous beds in the lower part of the quarry, containing the
-corals and shells of the Aymestry Limestone, of their agreement with
-which stronger evidence might be obtained elsewhere. He had found none
-of these scales in the junction beds or in the Upper Ludlow Shales; but
-about sixty or one hundred feet lower, just above the Aymestry Limestone,
-his attention had been attracted to discolored spots on the _surface_ of
-the beds, which, upon microscopic examination, proved to be the minute
-scales and spines before mentioned. These remains were only apparent
-on the surface, whilst the ‘fish-bed’ of the Upper Ludlow rock, as it
-usually occurred, was an inch thick, consisting of innumerable small
-teeth and spines.”—_Report, in “Athenæum” for 1842, of the Proceedings of
-the Twelfth Meeting of British Association, (Manchester.)_
-
-[23] “This is the lowest position” (that of the Onondago Limestone) “in
-the State of New York in which any remains have been found higher in
-the scale of organized beings than _Crustacea_, with the exception of
-an imperfectly preserved fish-bone discovered by Hall in the Oriskany
-Sandstone. That specimen, together with the defensive fish-bone found in
-this part of the New York system, furnishes evidences of the existence of
-animals belonging to the class _vertebrata_ during the deposition of the
-middle part of the protozoic strata.”—_American Journal of Science and
-Arts for 1846_, p. 63.
-
-[24] “The shales _alternating_ with the Wenlock Limestone.” (_Edinburgh
-Review._)
-
-[25] The Silurian Placoids are most adequately represented by the
-_Cestracion_ of the southern hemisphere; but I know not that of the
-peculiar character and instincts of this interesting Placoid,—the last of
-its race,—there is any thing known. For its form and general appearance
-see fig. 49, page 177.
-
-[26] Such as the dog-fishes, picked and spotted.
-
-[27] The twelfth in _Spinax Acanthius_, and the fourteenth in _Scyllium
-Stellare_.
-
-[28] It will scarce be urged against the degradation theory, that those
-races which, tried by the tests of defect or misplacement of parts, we
-deem degraded, are not less fitted for carrying on what in their own
-little spheres is the proper business of life, than the non-degraded
-orders and families. The objection is, however, a possible one, and one
-which a single remark may serve to obviate. It is certainly true that the
-degraded families _are_ thoroughly fitted for the performance of all the
-work given them to do. They greatly increase when placed in favorable
-circumstances, and, when vigorous and thriving, enjoy existence. But then
-the same may be said of all animals, without reference to their place in
-the scale;—the mollusc is as thoroughly adapted to its circumstances and
-as fitted to accomplish the end proper to its being, as the mammiferous
-quadruped, and the mammiferous quadruped as man himself; but the fact of
-perfect adaptation in no degree invalidates the other not less certain
-fact of difference of rank, nor proves that the mollusc is equal to the
-quadruped, or the quadruped to man. And, of course, the remark equally
-bears on the _reduced_ as on the _unelevated_,—on lowness of place when
-a result of degradation in races pertaining to a higher division of
-animals, as on lowness of place when a result of the humble standing of
-the division to which the races belong.
-
-[29] The vertebral column in the genus _Diplopterus_ ran, as in the
-placoid genus _Scyllium_, nearly through the middle of the caudal fin.
-
-[30] In the following diagram a few simple lines serve to exhibit the
-progress of degradation. Fig. _a_ represents the symmetrical Placoids of
-the Silurian period, consisting of head, neck, body, tail, fore limbs and
-hinder limbs; fig. _b_ represents those heterocercal Ganoids of the Old
-Red Sandstone, Coal Measures, and Permian System, in which the neck is
-extinguished, and the fore limbs stuck on to the occiput; fig. _c_, those
-homocercal Ganoids of the Trias Lias, Oolite, and Wealden, whose tails
-spread out into broad terminal processes, without homologue in the higher
-animals; fig. _d_, those Acanthopterygii of the Chalk that, in addition
-to the non-homological processes, have both fore limbs and hinder
-limbs stuck round the head; while fig. _e_ represents the asymmetrical
-Platessa, of the same period, with one of its eyes in the middle of its
-head, and the other thrust out to the side.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-[31] I would, however, respectfully suggest, that that theory of cerebral
-vertebræ, on which, in this question, the comparative anatomists proceed
-as their principle, and which finds as little support in the geologic
-record from the actual history of the fore limbs as from the actual
-history of the bones of the cranium, may be more ingenious than sound. It
-is a shrewd circumstance, that the rocks refuse to testify in its favor.
-Agassiz, I find, decides against it on other than geological grounds;
-and his conclusion is certainly rendered not the less worthy of careful
-consideration by the fact that, yielding to the force of evidence, his
-views on the subject underwent a thorough change. He had first held,
-and then rejected it. “I have shared,” he says, “with a multitude of
-other naturalists, the opinion which regards the cranium as composed of
-vertebræ; and I am consequently in some degree called upon to point out
-the motives which have induced me to reject it.”
-
-“M. Oken,” he continues, “was the first to assign this signification to
-the bones of the cranium. The new doctrine he expounded was received
-in Germany with great enthusiasm by the school of the philosophers of
-nature. The author conceived the cranium to consist of three vertebræ,
-and the basal occipital, the sphenoid, and the ethmoid, were regarded
-as the central parts of these cranial vertebræ. On these alleged bodies
-of vertebræ, the arches enveloping the central parts of the nervous
-system were raised, while on the opposite side were attached the inferior
-pieces, which went to form the vegetative arch destined to embrace the
-intestinal canal and the large vessels. It would be too tedious to
-enumerate in this place the changes which each author introduced, in
-order to modify this matter so as to make it suit his own views. Some
-went the length of affirming that the vertebræ of the head were as
-complete as those of the trunk; and, by means of various dismemberments,
-separations, and combinations, all the forms of the cranium were referred
-to the vertebræ, by admitting that the number of pieces was invariably
-fixed in every head, and that all the vertebrata, whatever might be
-their organization in other respects, had in their heads the same number
-of points of ossification. At a later period, what was erroneous in
-this manner of regarding the subject was detected; but the idea of the
-vertebral composition of the head was still retained. It was admitted as
-a general law, that the cranium was composed of three primitive vertebræ,
-as the embryo is of three blastodermic leaflets; but that these vertebræ,
-like the leaflets, existed only ideally, and that their presence,
-although easily demonstrated in certain cases, could only be slightly
-traced, and with the greatest difficulty, in other instances. The notion
-thus laid down of the virtual existence of cranial vertebræ did not
-encounter very great opposition; it could not be denied that there was a
-certain general resemblance between the osseous case of the brain and the
-rachidian canal; the occipital, in particular, had all the characteristic
-features of a vertebra. But whenever an attempt was made to push the
-analogy further, and to determine rigorously the anterior vertebræ of the
-cranium, the observer found himself arrested by insurmountable obstacles,
-and he was obliged always to revert to the virtual existence.
-
-“In order to explain my idea clearly, let me have recourse to an
-example. It is certain that organized bodies are sometimes endowed with
-virtual qualities, which, at a certain period of the being’s life, elude
-dissection, and all our means of investigation. It is thus that at the
-moment of their origin, the eggs of all animals have such a resemblance
-to each other, that it would be impossible to distinguish, even by the
-aid of the most powerful microscope, the ovarial egg of a craw-fish,
-for example, from that of true fish. And yet who would deny that beings
-in every respect different from each other exist in these eggs? It is
-precisely because the difference manifests itself at a later period,
-in proportion as the embryo develops itself, that we are authorized
-to conclude, that, even from the earliest period, the eggs were
-different,—that each had virtual qualities proper to itself, although
-they could not be discovered by our senses. If, on the contrary, any
-one should find two eggs perfectly alike, and should observe two beings
-perfectly identical issue from them, he would greatly err if he ascribed
-to these eggs different virtual qualities. It is therefore necessary, in
-order to be in a condition to suppose that virtual properties peculiar
-to it are concealed in an animal, that these properties should manifest
-themselves once, in some phase or other of its development. Now, applying
-this principle to the theory of cranial vertebræ, we should say, that
-if these vertebræ virtually exist in the adult, they must needs show
-themselves in reality, at a certain period of development. If, on the
-contrary, they are found neither in the embryo nor the adult, I am of
-opinion that we are entitled likewise to dispute their virtual existence.
-
-“Here, however, an objection may be made to me, drawn from the
-physiological value of the vertebræ, the function of which, as is
-well known, is, on the one hand, to furnish a solid support to the
-muscular contractions which determine the movements of the trunk, and,
-on the other, to protect the centres of the nervous system, by forming
-a more or less solid case completely around them. The bodies of the
-vertebræ are particularly destined to the first of these offices; the
-neurapophyses to the second. What can be more natural than to admit, from
-the consideration of this, that in the head, the bodies of the vertebræ
-diminish in proportion as the moving function becomes lost, while the
-neurapophyses are considerably developed for protecting the brain, the
-volume of which is very considerable, when compared with that of the
-spinal marrow? Have we not an example of this fact in the vertebræ of
-the tail, where the neurapophyses become completely obliterated, and
-a simple cylindrical body alone remains? Now, may it not be the case,
-that in the head, the bodies of the vertebræ have disappeared; and that,
-in consequence, there is a prolongation of the cord only as far as the
-moving functions of the vertebræ extend? There is some truth in this
-argument, and it would be difficult to refute it _a priori_. But it
-loses all its force the moment that we enter upon a detailed examination
-of the bones of the head. Thus, what would we call, according to this
-hypothesis, the principal sphenoid, the great wings of the sphenoid, and
-the ethmoid, which form the floor of the cerebral cavity? It may be said
-they are apophyses. But the apophyses protect the nervous centres only
-on the side and above. It may be said that they are the bodies of the
-vertebræ. But they are formed without the concurrence of the dorsal cord;
-they cannot, therefore, be the bodies of the vertebræ. It must therefore
-be allowed, that these bones at least do not enter into the vertebral
-type; that they are in some measure peculiar. And if this be the case
-with them, why may not the other protective plates be equally independent
-of the vertebral type; the more so, because the relations of the frontals
-and parietals vary so much, that it would be almost impossible to assign
-to them a constant place?”
-
-[32] It is stated by Mr. Witham, that, “except in a few instances, he
-had ineffectually tried, with the aid of the microscope, to obtain some
-insight into the structure of coal. Owing,” he adds, “to its great
-opacity, which is probably due to mechanical pressure, the action of
-chemical affinity, and the percolation of acidulous waters, all traces
-of organization appear to have been obliterated.” I have heard the late
-Mr. Sanderson, who prepared for Mr. Witham most of the specimens figured
-in his well-known work on the “Internal Structure of Fossil Vegetables,”
-and from whom the materials of his statement on this point seem to have
-been derived, make a similar remark. It was rare, he said, to find a
-bit of coal that exhibited the organic structure. The case, however, is
-far otherwise; and the ingenious mechanic and his employer were misled,
-simply by the circumstance, that it is rare to find pieces of coal which
-exhibit the ligneous fibre, existing in a state of keeping solid enough
-to stand the grinding of the lapidary’s wheel. The lignite usually
-occurs in thin layers of a substance resembling soft charcoal, at which,
-from the loose adhesion of the fibres, the coal splits at a stroke; and
-as it cannot be prepared as a transparency, it is best examined by a
-Stanhope lens. It will be found, tried in this manner, that so far is
-vegetable fibre from being of rare occurrence in coal,—our Scotch coal
-at least,—that almost every cubic inch contains its hundreds, nay, its
-thousands, of cells.
-
-[33] On a point of such importance I find it necessary to strengthen my
-testimony by auxiliary evidence. The following is the judgment, on this
-ancient petrifaction, of Mr. Nicol of Edinburgh,—confessedly one of our
-highest living authorities in that division of fossil botany which takes
-cognizance of the internal structure of lignites, and decides, from their
-anatomy, their race and family:—
-
- “Edinburgh, 19th July, 1845.
-
- “DEAR SIR,—I have examined the structure of the fossil wood
- which you found in the Old Red Sandstone at Cromarty, and
- have no hesitation in stating, that the reticulated texture
- of the transverse sections, though somewhat compressed,
- clearly indicates a coniferous origin; but as there is not
- the slightest trace of a disc to be seen in the longitudinal
- sections parallel to the medullary rays, it is impossible to
- say whether it belongs to the Pine or Araucarian division. I
- am, &c.,
-
- “WILLIAM NICOL.”
-
-It will be seen that Mr. Nicol failed to detect what I now deem the discs
-of this conifer,—those stippled markings to which I have referred, and
-which the engraver has indicated in no exaggerated style, in one of the
-longitudinal sections (_b_) of the wood-cut given above. But even were
-this portion of the evidence wholly wanting, we would be left in doubt,
-in consequence, not whether the Old Red lignite formed part of a true
-gymnospermous tree, but whether that tree is now represented by the pines
-of Europe and America, or by the araucarians of Chili and New Zealand.
-Were I to risk an opinion in a department not particularly my province it
-would be in favor of an araucarian relationship.
-
-[34] The following digest from Professor Balfour’s very admirable
-“Manual of Botany,” of what is held on this curious subject, may be
-not unacceptable to the reader. “It is an interesting question to
-determine the mode in which the various species and tribes of plants
-were originally scattered over the globe. Various hypotheses have
-been advanced on the subject. Linnæus entertained the opinion that
-there was at first only one primitive centre of vegetation, from which
-plants were distributed over the globe. Some, avoiding all discussions
-and difficulties, suppose that plants were produced at first in the
-localities where they are now seen vegetating. Others think that each
-species of plant originated in, and was diffused from, a single primitive
-centre; and that there were numerous such centres situated in different
-parts of the world, each centre being the seat of a particular number
-of species. They thus admit great vegetable migrations, similar to
-those of the human races. Those who adopt the latter view recognize in
-the distribution of plants some of the last revolutions of our planet,
-and the action of numerous and varied forces, which impede or favor
-the dissemination of vegetables in the present day. They endeavor to
-ascertain the primitive flora of countries, and to trace the vegetable
-migrations which have taken place. Daubeny says, that analogy favors
-the supposition that each species of plant was originally formed in
-some particular locality, whence it spread itself gradually over a
-certain area, rather than that the earth was at once, by the fiat of the
-Almighty, covered with vegetation in the manner we at present behold it.
-The human race rose from a single pair; and the distribution of plants
-and animals over a certain definite area would seem to imply that the
-same was the general law. Analogy would lead us to believe that the
-extension of species over the earth originally took place on the same
-plan on which it is conducted at present, when a new island starts up in
-the midst of the ocean, produced either by a coral reef or a volcano.
-In these cases the whole surface is not at once overspread with plants,
-but a gradual progress of vegetation is traced from the accidental
-introduction of a single seed, perhaps, of each species, wafted by winds
-or floated by currents. The remarkable limitation of certain species to
-single spots on the globe seems to favor the supposition of specific
-centres.”
-
-[35] _Rhodomenia palmata_ and _Alaria esculenta_.
-
-[36] _Porphyra laciniata_, _Chorda filum_, and _Enteromorpha compressa_.
-
-[37] “Dr. Neill mentions,” says the Rev. Mr. Landsborough, in his
-complete and very interesting “History of British Sea-Weeds,” “that on
-our shores algæ generally occupy zones in the following order, beginning
-from deep water:—_F. Filum_; _F. esculentus_ and _bulbosus_, _F.
-digitatus_, _saccharinus_, and _loreus_; _F. serratus_ and _crispus_; _F.
-nodosus_ and _vesiculosus_; _F. canaliculatus_; and, last of all, _F.
-pygmæus_; which is satisfied if it be within reach of the spray.”
-
-[38] We are supplied with a curious example of that ever-returning
-cycle of speculation in which the human mind operates, by not only the
-introduction of the _principle_ of Epicurus into the “Vestiges,” but also
-by the unconscious employment of even his very _arguments_, slightly
-modified by the floating semi-scientific notions of the time. The
-following passages, taken, the one from the modern work, the other from
-Fénélon’s life of the old Greek philosopher, are not unworthy of being
-studied, as curiously illustrative of the cycle of thought. Epicurus, I
-must, however, first remind the reader, in the words of his biographer,
-“supposed that men, and all other animals, were originally produced by
-the ground. According to him, the primitive earth was fat and nitrous;
-and the sun, gradually warming it, soon covered it with herbage and
-shrubs: there also began to arise on the surface of the ground a great
-number of small tumors like mushrooms, which having in a certain time
-come to maturity, the skin burst, and there came forth little animals,
-which, gradually retiring from the place where they were produced, began
-to respire.” And there can be little doubt, that had the microscope been
-a discovery of early Greece, the passage here would have told us, not of
-mushroom-like tumors, but of monads. Save that the element of microscopic
-fact is awanting in the one and present in the other, the following are
-strictly parallel lines of argument:—
-
-“To the natural objection that the earth does not now produce men,
-lions, and dogs, Epicurus replies that the fecundity of the earth is
-now exhausted. In advanced age a woman ceases to bear children; a piece
-of land never before cultivated produces much more during the few first
-years than it does afterwards; and when a forest is once cut down, the
-soil never produces trees equal to those which have been rooted up.
-Those which are afterwards planted become dwarfish, and are perpetually
-degenerating. We are, however, he argues, by no means certain but there
-may be at present rabbits, hares, foxes, bears, and other animals,
-produced by the earth in their perfect state. The reason why we are
-backward in admitting it is, that it happens in retired places, and
-never falls under our view; and, never seeing rats but such as have
-been produced by other rats, we adopt the opinion that the earth never
-produced any.” (_Fénélon’s Lives of the Ancient Philosophers._)
-
-“In the first place, there is no reason to suppose that, though life had
-been imparted by natural means, after the first cooling of the surface
-to a suitable temperament, it would continue thereafter to be capable of
-being imparted in like manner. The great work of the peopling of this
-globe with living species is mainly a fact accomplished: the highest
-known species came as a crowning effort thousands of years ago. The work
-being thus to all appearance finished, we are not necessarily to expect
-that the origination of life and of species should be conspicuously
-exemplified in the present day. We are rather to expect that the vital
-phenomena presented to our eyes should mainly, if not entirely, be
-limited to a regular and unvarying succession of races by the ordinary
-means of generation. This, however, is no more an argument against a
-time when phenomena of the first kind prevailed, than it would be a
-proof against the fact of a mature man having once been a growing youth,
-that he is now seen growing no longer..... Secondly, it is far from
-being certain that the primitive imparting of life and form to inorganic
-elements is not a fact of our times.” (_Vestiges of Creation._)
-
-[39] “_Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation_,” and “_Explanations,
-being a Sequel to the Vestiges_.”
-
-[40] The chapter in which this passage occurs originally appeared,
-with several of the others, in the _Witness_ newspaper, in a series of
-articles, entitled “Rambles of a Geologist,” and drew forth the following
-letter from a correspondent of the _Scottish Press_, the organ of a
-powerful and thoroughly respectable section of the old Dissenters of
-Scotland. I present it to the reader merely to show, that if, according
-to the author of the “Vestiges,” geologists assailed the development
-hypothesis in the fond hope of “purchasing impunity for themselves,” they
-would succeed in securing only disappointment for their pains:—
-
- “THE PRE-ADAMITE EARTH.
-
- “_To the Editor of the Scottish Press._
-
- “SIR,—I occasionally observe articles in your neighbor and
- contemporary the _Witness_, characteristically headed ‘Rambles
- of a Geologist,’ wherein the writer with great zeal once more
- ‘slays the slain’ heresies of the ‘Vestiges of Creation.’
- This writer (of the ‘Rambles,’ I mean) nevertheless, and at
- the same time, announces his own tenets to be much of the
- same sort, as applied to mere dead matter, that those of the
- ‘Vestiges’ are with regard to living organisms. He maintains
- that the world, during the last million of years, has been of
- itself rising or developing, without the interposition of a
- miracle, from chaos into its present state; and, of course,
- as it is still, as a world, confessedly far below the acme of
- physical perfection, that it must be just now on its passage,
- self-progressing, towards that point, which terminus it may
- reach in another million of years hence.[!!!] The author of
- the ‘Vestiges,’ as quoted by the author of the ‘Rambles,’ in
- the last number of the _Witness_, complains that the latter
- and his allies are not at all so liberal to him as, from their
- present circumstances and position, he had a right to expect.
- He (the author of the ‘Vestiges’) reminds his opponents that
- they have themselves only lately emerged from the antiquated
- scriptural notions that our world was the direct and almost
- immediate construction of its Creator,—as much so, in fact,
- as any of its organized tenants,—and that it was then created
- in a state of physical excellence, the highest possible, to
- render it a suitable habitation for these tenants, and all
- this only about six or seven thousand years ago,—to the new
- light of their present _physico-Lamarckian_ views; and he asks,
- and certainly not without reason, why should _these men_, so
- circumstanced, be so anxious to stop him in his attempt to move
- one step further forward in the very direction they themselves
- have made the last move?—that is, in his endeavor to extend
- their own principles of self-development from mere matter to
- living creatures. Now, Sir, I confess myself to be one of those
- (and possibly you may have more readers similarly constituted)
- who not only cannot see any great difference between merely
- _physical_ and _organic_ development,[!!] but who would be
- inclined to allow the latter, absurd as it is, the advantage in
- point of likelihood.[!!!] The author of the ‘Rambles,’ however,
- in the face of this, assures us that _his_ views of physical
- self-development and long chronology belong to the inductive
- sciences. Now, I could at this stage of his rambles have wished
- very much that, instead of merely _saying_ so, he had given
- his _demonstration_. He refers, indeed, to several great men,
- who, he says, are of his opinion. Most that these men have
- written on the question at issue I have seen, but it appeared
- far from demonstrative, and some of them, I know, had not fully
- made up their mind on the point.[!!!] Perhaps the author of
- the ‘Rambles’ could favor us with the inductive process that
- converted himself; and, as the attainment of truth, and not
- victory, is my object, I promise either to acquiesce in or
- rationally refute it.[?] Till then I hold by my antiquated
- tenets, that our world, nay, the whole material universe, was
- created about six or seven thousand years ago, and that in a
- state of physical excellence of which we have in our present
- fallen world only the ‘vestiges of creation.’ I conclude by
- mentioning that this view I have held now for nearly thirty
- years, and, amidst all the vicissitudes of the philosophical
- world during that period, I have never seen cause to change
- it. Of course, with this view I was, during the interval
- referred to, a constant opponent of the once famous, though now
- exploded, nebular hypothesis of La Place; and I yet expect to
- see _physical development_ and _long chronology_ wither also on
- this earth, now that THEIR ROOT (the said hypothesis) has been
- eradicated from the SKY.[!!!]—I am, Sir, your most obedient
- servant,
-
- “PHILALETHES.”
-
-I am afraid there is little hope of converting a man who has held so
-stoutly by his notions “for nearly thirty years;” especially as, during
-that period, he has been acquainting himself with what writers such as
-Drs. Chalmers, Buckland, and Pye Smith have written on the other side.
-But for the _demonstration_ which he asks, as _I_ have conducted it, I
-beg leave to refer him to the seventeenth chapter of my little work,
-“First Impressions of England and its People.” I am, however, inclined
-to suspect that he is one of a class whose objections are destined to be
-removed rather by the operation of the laws of matter than of those of
-mind. For it is a comfortable consideration, that in this controversy the
-geologists _have_ the laws of matter on their side;—“the stars in their
-courses fight against Sisera.” Their opponents now, like the opponents
-of the astronomer in the ages gone by, are, in most instances, men who
-have been studying the matter “for nearly thirty years.” When they study
-it for a few years longer they disappear; and the men of the same cast
-and calibre who succeed them are exactly the men who throw themselves
-most confidently into the arms of the enemy, and look down upon their
-poor silent predecessors with the loftiest commiseration. It is, however,
-not uninstructive to remark how thoroughly, in some instances, the
-weaker friends and the wilier enemies of Revelation are at one in their
-conclusions respecting natural phenomena. The correspondent of the
-_Scottish Press_ merely regards the views of the author of the “Vestiges”
-as possessing “the advantage, in point of likelihood,” over those of
-the geologists his antagonists: his ally the Dean of York goes greatly
-further, and stands up as stoutly for the transmutation of species as
-Lamarck himself. Descanting, in his _New System of Geology_, on the
-various forms of trilobites, ammonites, belemnites, &c. Dean Cockburn
-says,—
-
-“These creatures appear to have possessed the power of secreting from
-the stone beneath them a limy covering for their backs, and perhaps,
-fed partly on the same solid material. Supposing, now that the first
-trilobites were destroyed by the Llandeilo Slates, some spawn of these
-creatures would arise above these flags, and, after a time, would be
-warmed into existence. These _molluscs_,[!!] then, having a better
-material from which to extract their food and covering, would probably
-expand in a slightly different form, and with a more extensive mantle
-than what belonged to the parent species. The same would be still more
-the case with a new generation, fed upon a new deposit from some deeper
-volcano, such as the Caradoc or Wenlock Limestone, in which lime more
-and more predominates. Now, if any one will examine the various prints
-of trilobites in Sir R. Murchison’s valuable work, he will find but very
-trifling differences in any of them,[!!] and those differences only
-in the stony covering of their backs. I knew two brothers once much
-alike: the one became a curate with a large family; the other a London
-alderman. If the skins of these two pachydermata had been preserved in a
-fossil state, there would have been less resemblance between them than
-between an _Asaphus tyrannus_ and an _Asaphus caudatus_.... A careful
-and laborious investigation has discovered, as in the trilobites, a
-difference in the ammonites of different strata; but such differences,
-as in the former case, exist only in the form of the external shell,
-and may be explained in the same manner.[!!] ... As to the scaphites,
-baculites, belemnites, and all the other _ites_ which learned ingenuity
-has so named, you find them in various strata the same in all important
-particulars, but also differing slightly in their outward coverings, as
-might be expected from the different circumstances in which each variety
-was placed.[!!] The sheep in the warm valleys of Andalusia have a fine
-covering like to hair; but remove them to a northern climate, and in a
-few generations the back is covered with shaggy wool. The animal is the
-same,—the covering only is changed.... The learned have classed those
-shells under the names of terebratula, orthis, atrypa, pecten, &c. They
-are all much alike.[!!!] It requires an experienced eye to distinguish
-them one from another: what little differences have been pointed out may
-readily be ascribed, as before, to difference of situation.”[!!!]
-
-The author of the “Vestiges,” with this, the fundamental portion of his
-case, granted to him by the Dean, will have exceedingly little difficulty
-in making out the rest for himself. The passage is, however, not without
-its value, as illustrative of the darkness, in matters of physical
-science, “even darkness which may be felt,” that is suffered to linger,
-in this the most scientific of ages, in the Church of Buckland, Sedgwick,
-and Conybeare.
-
-[41] The common objection to that special view which regards the _days_
-of creation as immensely protracted periods of time, furnishes a
-specimen, if not of reasoning in a circle, at least of reasoning from a
-mere assumption. It first takes for granted, that the Sabbath day during
-which God rested was a day of but twenty-four hours; and then argues,
-from the supposition, that in order to _keep up the proportion_ between
-the six previous working days and the seventh day of rest, which the
-reason annexed to the fourth commandment demands, these previous days
-must also have been days of twenty-four hours each. It would, I have
-begun to suspect, square better with the ascertained facts, and be at
-least equally in accordance with Scripture, to reverse the process,
-and argue that, _because_ God’s working days were immensely protracted
-periods, _his_ Sabbath must _also_ be an immensely protracted period.
-The reason attached to the law of the Sabbath seems to be simply _a
-reason of proportion_;—the objection to which I refer is an objection
-palpably founded on _considerations_ of proportion. And certainly, were
-the reason to be divested of proportion, it would be divested also of its
-distinctive character as a reason. Were it to run as follows, it could
-not be at all understood:—“Six days shalt thou labor, &c., but on the
-seventh day shalt thou do no labor, &c.; for in six immensely protracted
-periods of many thousand years each did the Lord make the heavens and
-earth, &c., and then rested during a brief day of twenty-four hours;
-therefore the Lord blessed the brief day of twenty-four hours, and
-hallowed it.” This, I repeat, would not be reason. All, however, that
-seems necessary to the integrity of the reason, in its character as such,
-is, that the proportion of six parts to seven should be maintained. God’s
-periods may be periods expressed algebraically by letters symbolical of
-unknown quantity, and man’s periods by letters symbolical of quantities
-well known; but if God’s Sabbath be equal to one of his six working days,
-and man’s Sabbath equal to one of _his_ six working days, the integrity
-of proportion is maintained. When I see the palpable absurdity of such
-a reading of the reason as the one given above, I can see no absurdity
-whatever in the reading which I subjoin:—“Six _periods_ (_a=a=a=a=a=a_)
-shalt thou labor, &c., but on the seventh _period_ (_b=a_) shalt thou do
-no labor, &c.; for in six _periods_ (_x=x=x=x=x=x_) the Lord made heaven
-and earth, &c., and rested the seventh _period_, (_y=x_;) therefore the
-Lord blessed the seventh _period_, and hallowed it” The reason, in its
-character as a reason of proportion, survives here in all its integrity.
-Man, when in his unfallen estate, bore the image of God, but it must have
-been a miniature image at best;—the proportion of man’s week to that of
-his Maker may, for aught that appears, be mathematically just in its
-proportions, and yet be a miniature image too,—the mere scale of a map,
-on which inches represent geographical degrees. All those week days and
-Sabbath days of man which have come and gone since man first entered
-upon this scene of being, with all which shall yet come and go, until
-the resurrection of the dead terminates the work of Redemption, may be
-included, and probably _are_ included, in the one Sabbath day of God.
-
-
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-<body>
-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Foot-prints of the Creator: or, The Asterolepis of Stromness, by Hugh Miller</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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 <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The Foot-prints of the Creator: or, The Asterolepis of Stromness</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Hugh Miller</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Contributor: Louis Agassiz</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: February 28, 2022 [eBook #67527]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Bryan Ness and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from scanned images of public domain material from the Google Books project.)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE FOOT-PRINTS OF THE CREATOR: OR, THE ASTEROLEPIS OF STROMNESS ***</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<img src="images/frontispiece.jpg" width="500" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Engraved by J. Sartain.—From a original Talbotype.</p>
-<p class="caption">Gould &amp; Lincoln, Boston</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="front-matter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_i"></a>[i]</span></p>
-
-<h1><span class="smallest">THE</span><br />
-FOOT-PRINTS OF THE CREATOR:<br />
-<span class="smallest">OR,</span><br />
-<span class="smaller">THE ASTEROLEPIS OF STROMNESS.</span></h1>
-
-<p class="titlepage"><span class="smaller">BY</span><br />
-HUGH MILLER,<br />
-<span class="smaller">AUTHOR OF “THE OLD RED SANDSTONE,” ETC.</span></p>
-
-<p class="smaller">“When I asked him how this earth could have been repeopled if ever it had undergone
-the same fate it was threatened with by the comet of 1680, he answered,—‘that
-required the power of a Creator.’”—<i>Conduit’s “Conversation with Sir Isaac Newton”.</i></p>
-
-<p class="titlepage smaller">FROM THE THIRD LONDON EDITION.</p>
-
-<p class="titlepage">WITH A MEMOIR OF THE AUTHOR<br />
-BY LOUIS AGASSIZ.</p>
-
-<p class="titlepage">BOSTON:<br />
-GOULD AND LINCOLN.<br />
-<span class="smaller">69 WASHINGTON STREET.<br />
-NEW YORK: SHELDON AND COMPANY.<br />
-CINCINNATI: GEO. S. BLANCHARD.</span><br />
-1868.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_ii"></a>[ii]</span></p>
-
-<p class="titlepage smaller">Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1850, by<br />
-<span class="smcap">Gould, Kendall and Lincoln</span>,<br />
-In the Clerk’s Office of the District Court for the District of Massachusetts.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_iii"></a>[iii]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><span class="smaller">TO</span><br />
-SIR PHILIP DE MALPAS GREY EGERTON,<br />
-<span class="smaller">BART. M.P., F.R.S. &amp; G.S.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To you, Sir, as our highest British authority on fossil fishes,
-I take the liberty of dedicating this little volume. In tracing
-the history of Creation, as illustrated in that ichthyic division
-of the vertebrata which is at once the most ancient and the
-most extensively preserved, I have introduced a considerable
-amount of fact and observation, for the general integrity of
-which my appeal must lie, not to the writings of my friends
-the geologists, but to the strangely significant record inscribed
-in the rocks, which it is their highest merit justly to
-interpret and faithfully to transcribe. The ingenious and
-popular author whose views on Creation I attempt controverting,
-virtually carries his appeal from science to the want
-of it. I would fain adopt an opposite course: And my use,
-on this occasion, of your name, may serve to evince the desire
-which I entertain that the collation of my transcripts of
-hitherto uncopied portions of the geologic history with the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_iv"></a>[iv]</span>
-history itself, should be in the hands of men qualified, by
-original vigor of faculty and the patient research of years,
-either to detect the erroneous or to certify the true. Further,
-I feel peculiar pleasure in availing myself of the opportunity
-furnished me, by the publication of this little work,
-of giving expression to my sincere respect for one who, occupying
-a high place in society, and deriving his descent
-from names illustrious in history, has wisely taken up the
-true position of birth and rank in an enlightened country and
-age; and who, in asserting, by his modest, persevering labors,
-his proper standing in the scientific world, has rendered
-himself first among his countrymen in an interesting department
-of Natural Science, to which there is no aristocratic or
-“royal road.”</p>
-
-<p>I have the honor to be, Sir,</p>
-
-<p class="center">With admiration and respect,</p>
-
-<p class="center">Your obedient humble servant,</p>
-
-<p class="right">HUGH MILLER.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_v"></a>[v]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">TO THE READER.</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>There are chapters in this little volume which
-will, I am afraid, be deemed too prolix by the general
-reader, and which yet the geologist would like less
-were there any portion of them away. They refer
-chiefly to organisms not hitherto figured nor described,
-and must owe their modicum of value to that very
-minuteness of detail which, by critics of the merely
-literary type, unacquainted with fossils, and not greatly
-interested in them, may be regarded as a formidable
-defect, suited to overlay the general subject of the
-work. Perhaps the best mode of compromising the
-matter may be to intimate, as if by beacon, at the
-outset, the more repulsive chapters; somewhat in the
-way that the servants of the Humane Society indicate<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_vi"></a>[vi]</span>
-to the skater who frequents in winter the lakes
-in the neighborhood of Edinburgh, those parts of the
-ice on which he might be in danger of losing himself.
-I would recommend, then, readers not particularly
-palæontological, to pass but lightly over the
-whole of my fourth and fifth chapters, with the latter
-half of the third, marking, however, as they skim the
-pages, the conclusions at which I arrive regarding the
-bulk and organization of the extraordinary animal
-described, and the data on which these are founded.
-My book, like an Irish landscape dotted with green
-bogs, has its portions on which it may be perilous for
-the unpractised surveyor to make any considerable
-stand, but across which he may safely take his sights
-and lay down his angles.</p>
-
-<p>It will, I trust, be found, that in dealing with errors
-which, in at least their primary bearing, affect questions
-of science, I have not offended against the courtesies
-of scientific controversy. True, they are errors
-which also involve moral consequences. There is a
-species of superstition which inclines men to take on
-trust whatever assumes the name of science; and
-which seems to be a reaction on the old superstition,
-that had faith in witches, but none in Sir Isaac Newton,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_vii"></a>[vii]</span>
-and believed in ghosts, but failed to credit the
-Gregorian calendar. And, owing mainly to the wide
-diffusion of this credulous spirit of the modern type,
-as little disposed to examine what it receives as its
-ancient unreasoning predecessor, the development
-doctrines are doing much harm on both sides of the
-Atlantic, especially among intelligent mechanics, and
-a class of young men engaged in the subordinate departments
-of trade and the law. And the harm, thus
-considerable in amount, must be necessarily more than
-merely considerable in degree. For it invariably happens,
-that when persons in these walks become materialists,
-they become also turbulent subjects and bad
-men. That belief in the existence after death, which
-forms the distinguishing <i>instinct</i> of humanity, is too
-essential a part of man’s moral constitution not to be
-missed when away; and so, when once fairly eradicated,
-the life and conduct rarely fail to betray its
-absence. But I have not, from any consideration of
-the mischief thus effected, written as if arguments,
-like cannon-balls, could be rendered more formidable
-than in the cool state by being made red-hot. I have
-not even felt, in discussing the question, as if I had
-a man before me as an opponent; for though my<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_viii"></a>[viii]</span>
-work contains numerous references to the author of
-the “Vestiges,” I have invariably thought on these
-occasions, not of the anonymous writer of the volume,
-of whom I know nothing, but simply of an ingenious,
-well-written book, unfortunate in its facts
-and not always very happy in its reasonings. Further,
-I do not think that palæontological fact, in its
-bearing on the points at issue, is of such a doubtful
-complexion as to leave the geologist, however much
-from moral considerations in earnest in the matter,
-any very serious excuse for losing his temper.</p>
-
-<p>In my reference to the three great divisions of the
-geologic scale, I designate as <i>Palæozoic</i> all the fossiliferous
-rocks, from the first appearance of organic existence
-down to the close of the Permian system; all
-as <i>Secondary</i>, from the close of the Permian system
-down to the close of the Cretaceous deposits; and all
-as <i>Tertiary</i>, from the close of the Cretaceous deposits
-down to the introduction of man. The wood-cuts
-of the volume, of which at least nine tenths of the
-whole represent objects never figured before, were
-drawn and cut by Mr. John Adams of Edinburgh,
-(8, Heriot Place,) with a degree of care and skill
-which has left me no reason to regret my distance<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_ix"></a>[ix]</span>
-from the London artists and engravers. So far at
-least as the objects could be adequately represented
-on wood, and in the limited space at Mr. Adams’
-command, their truth is such that I can safely recommend
-them to the palæontologist. In the accompanying
-descriptions, and in my statements of geologic
-fact in general, it will, I hope, be seen that I have
-not exaggerated the peculiar features on which I have
-founded, nor rendered truth partial in order to make
-it serve a purpose. Where I have reasoned and inferred,
-the reader will of course be able to judge for
-himself whether the argument be sound or the deduction
-just; and to weigh, where I have merely speculated,
-the probability of the speculation; but as, in
-at least <i>some</i> of my statements of fact, he might lie
-more at my mercy, I have striven in every instance
-to make these adequately representative of the actualities
-to which they refer. And so, if it be ultimately
-found that on some occasions I have misled
-others, it will, I hope, be also seen to be only in cases
-in which I have been mistaken myself. The first or
-popular title of my work, “Foot-prints of the Creator,”
-I owe to Dr. Hetherington, the well-known
-historian of the Church of Scotland. My other various<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_x"></a>[x]</span>
-obligations to my friends, literary and scientific,
-the reader will find acknowledged in the body of the
-volume, as the occasion occurs of availing myself of
-either the information communicated, or the organism,
-recent or extinct, lent me or given.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xi"></a>[xi]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">HUGH MILLER,<br />
-<span class="smaller">AUTHOR OF</span><br />
-<span class="smallest">“OLD RED SANDSTONE” AND “FOOTPRINTS OF THE CREATOR.”</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The geological works of Hugh Miller have excited the greatest
-interest, not only among scientific men, but also among general readers.
-There is in them a freshness of conception, a power of argumentation,
-a depth of thought, a purity of feelings, rarely met with
-in works of that character, which are well calculated to call forth
-sympathy, and to increase the popularity of a science which has already
-done so much to expand our views of the Plan of Creation.
-The scientific illustrations published by Mr. Miller are most happily
-combined with considerations of a higher order, rendering both
-equally acceptable to the thinking reader. But what is in a great
-degree peculiar to our author, is the successful combination of Christian
-doctrines with pure scientific truths. On that account, his
-works deserve peculiar attention. His generalizations have nothing
-of the vagueness which too often characterize the writings of those
-authors who have attempted to make the results of science subservient
-to the cause of religion. Struck with the beauty of Mr. Miller’s
-works, it has for some time past been my wish to see them more extensively
-circulated in this country; and I have obtained leave from the
-author to publish an American edition of his “Footprints of the
-Creator,” for which he has most liberally furnished the publishers
-with the admirable wood-cuts of the original.</p>
-
-<p>While preparing some additional chapters, and various notes illustrative
-of certain points alluded to incidentally in this work, it was
-deemed advisable to preface it with a short biographical notice of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xii"></a>[xii]</span>
-the author. I had already sketched such a paper, when I became
-acquainted with a full memoir of this remarkable man, containing
-most interesting details of his earlier life, written by that eminent
-historian of the “Martyrs of Science,” the great natural philosopher
-of Scotland. It has occurred to me that, owing to the frequent references
-which I could not avoid to my own researches, I had better
-substitute this ample Biography for my short sketch, with such alterations
-and additions as the connection in which it is brought here
-would require. I therefore proceed to introduce our author with Sir
-David Brewster’s own words:—</p>
-
-<p>Of all the studies which relate to the material universe, there
-is none, perhaps, which appeals so powerfully to our senses, or
-which comes into such close and immediate contact with our wants
-and enjoyments, as that of Geology. In our hourly walks, whether
-on business or for pleasure, we tread with heedless step upon the apparently
-uninteresting objects which it embraces: but could we
-rightly interrogate the rounded pebble at our feet, it would read us
-an exciting chapter on the history of primeval times, and would tell
-us of the convulsions by which it was wrenched from its parent rock,
-and of the floods by which it was abraded and transported to its
-present humble locality. In our visit to the picturesque and the
-sublime in nature, we are brought into closer proximity to the more
-interesting phenomena of geology. In the precipices which protect
-our rock-girt shores, which flank our mountain glens, or which variegate
-our lowland valleys, and in the shapeless fragments at their
-base, which the lichen colors, and round which the ivy twines, we
-see the remnants of uplifted and shattered beds, which once reposed
-in peace at the bottom of the ocean. Nor does the rounded
-boulder, which would have defied the lapidary’s wheel of the Giant
-Age, give forth a less oracular response from its grave of clay, or
-from its lair of sand. Floated by ice from some Alpine summit, or
-hurried along in torrents of mud, and floods of water, it may have
-traversed a quarter of the globe, amid the crash of falling forests,
-and the death shrieks of the noble animals which they sheltered.
-The mountain range, too, with its catacombs below, along which the
-earthquake transmits its terrific sounds, reminds us of the mighty
-power by which it was upheaved;—while the lofty peak, with its
-cap of ice, or its nostrils of fire, places in our view the tremendous
-agencies which have been at work beneath us.</p>
-
-<p>But it is not merely amid the powers of external nature that the
-once hidden things of the Earth are presented to our view. Our<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xiii"></a>[xiii]</span>
-temples and our palaces are formed from the rocks of a primeval age;
-bearing the very ripple-marks of a Pre-Adamite ocean,—grooved by
-the passage of the once moving boulder, and embosoming the relics
-of ancient life, and the plants by which it was sustained. Our
-dwellings, too, are ornamented with the variegated limestones,—the
-indurated tombs of molluscous life,—and our apartments heated
-with the carbon of primeval forests, and lighted with the gaseous
-element which it confines. The obelisk of granite, and the colossal
-bronze which transmit to future ages the deeds of the hero and the
-sage, are equally the production of the Earth’s prolific womb; and
-from the green bed of the ocean has been raised the pure and spotless
-marble, to mould the divine lineaments of beauty, and perpetuate
-the expressions of intellectual power. From a remoter age, and
-a still greater depth, the primary and secondary rocks have yielded a
-rich tribute to the chaplet of rank, and to the processes of art.</p>
-
-<p>Exhibiting, as it peculiarly does, almost all those objects of interest
-and research, Scotland has been diligently studied both by native
-and foreign observers; and she has sent into the geological field
-a distinguished group of inquirers, who have performed a noble feat
-in exploring the general structure of the Earth, in decyphering its
-ancient monuments, and in unlocking those storehouses of mineral
-wealth, from which civilized man derives the elements of that gigantic
-power which his otherwise feeble arm wields over nature.</p>
-
-<p>The occurrence of shells on the highest mountains, and the remains
-of plants and animals, which the most superficial observer
-could not fail to notice, in the rocks around him, have for centuries
-commanded the attention and exercised the ingenuity of every student
-of nature. But though sparks of geological truth were from
-time to time elicited by speculative minds, it was not till the end of
-the last century that its great lights broke forth, and that it took the
-form and character of one of the noblest of the sciences. Without
-undervaluing the labors of Werner, and other illustrious foreigners,
-or those of our southern countrymen, Mitchell and Smith, at the
-close of the last century, we may characterize the commencement of
-the present as the brightest period of geological discovery, and place
-its most active locality in the northern metropolis of our island. It
-was doubtless from the Royal Society of Edinburgh, as a centre, that
-a great geological impulse was propagated southward, and it was by
-the collision of the Wernerian and Huttonian views, the antagonist
-theories of water and of fire, that men of intellectual power were
-summoned from other studies; and that grand truths, which fanaticism<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xiv"></a>[xiv]</span>
-and intolerance had hitherto abjured, rose triumphant over the
-ignorance and bigotry of the age. The Geological Society of London,
-which doubtless sprung from the excitement in the Scottish metropolis,
-entered on the new field of research with a faltering step. The
-prejudices of the English mind had been marshalled with illiberal
-violence against the Huttonian doctrines. Infidelity and Atheism
-were charged against their supporters; and had there been a Protestant
-Inquisition in England at that period of general political excitement,
-the geologists of the north would have been immured in its
-deepest dungeons.</p>
-
-<p>Truth, however, marched apace; and though her simple but majestic
-procession be often solemn and slow, and her votaries few and
-dejected, yet on this, as on every occasion, she triumphed over the
-most inveterate prepossessions, and finally took up her abode in those
-very halls and institutions where she had been persecuted and reviled.
-When their science had been thus acquitted of the charge of
-impiety and irreligion, the members of the Geological Society left
-their humble and timid position of being the collectors only of <i>the
-materials of future generalizations</i>, and became at once the most successful
-observers of geological phenomena, and the boldest asserters
-of geological truth.</p>
-
-<p>In this field of research, in which the physical, as well as the intellectual,
-frame of the philosopher is made tributary to science, two
-of our countrymen—Sir Roderick Murchison and Sir Charles Lyell—have
-been among our most active laborers. From the study of
-their native glens, these distinguished travellers, like the Humboldts
-and the Von Buchs of the continent, have passed into foreign lands,
-exploring the north and the south of Europe, and extending their
-labors to the eastern ranges of the Ural and the Timan, and to the
-Apallachians and the Alleghanies in the far west. But while our
-two countrymen were interrogating the strata of other lands, many
-able and active laborers had been at work in their own.</p>
-
-<p>Among the eminent students of the structure of the earth, Mr.
-Hugh Miller holds a lofty place, not merely from the discovery of
-new and undescribed organisms in the Old Red Sandstone, but from
-the accuracy and beauty of his descriptions, the purity and elegance
-of his composition, and the high tone of philosophy and religion
-which distinguishes all his writings. Mr. Miller is one of the few
-individuals in the history of Scottish science who have raised
-themselves above the labors of an humble profession, by the force
-of their genius and the excellence of their character, to a comparatively<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xv"></a>[xv]</span>
-high place in the social scale. Mr. Telford, like Mr. Miller,
-followed the profession of a stone-mason, before his industry and
-self-tuition qualified him for the higher functions of an architect
-and an engineer. And Mr. Watt and Mr. Rennie rose to wealth
-and fame without the aid of a university education. But, distinguished
-as these individuals were, none of them possessed those
-qualities of mind which Mr. Miller has exhibited in his writings;
-and, with the exception of Burns, the uneducated genius which has
-done honor to Scotland during the last century, has never displayed
-that mental refinement, and classical taste, and intellectual energy,
-which mark all the writings of our author. We wish that we
-could have gratified our readers with an authentic and even detailed
-narrative of the previous history of so remarkable a writer, and of
-the steps by which his knowledge was acquired, and the difficulties
-which he encountered in its pursuit; but though this is not, to any
-great extent, in our power, we shall at least be able, chiefly from
-Mr. Miller’s own writings, to follow him throughout his geological
-career.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Miller was born at Cromarty, of humble but respectable parents,
-whose history would have possessed no inconsiderable interest,
-even if it had not derived one of a higher kind from the genius and
-fortunes of their child. By the paternal side he was descended
-from a race of sea-faring people, whose family burying-ground, if
-we judge from the past, seems to be the sea. Under its green waves
-his father sleeps: his grandfather, his two granduncles, one of whom
-sailed round the world with Anson, lie also there; and the same
-extensive cemetery contains the relics of several of his more distant
-relatives. His father was but an infant of scarcely a year old, at
-the death of our author’s grandfather, and had to commence life as a
-poor ship-boy; but such was the energy of his mind, that, when
-little turned of thirty, he had become the master and owner of a
-fine large sloop, and had built himself a good house, which entitled
-his son to the franchise on the passing of the Reform Bill. Having
-unfortunately lost his sloop in a storm, he had to begin the world
-anew, and he soon became master and owner of another, and would
-have thriven, had he lived; but the hereditary fate was too strong
-for him, and when our author was a little boy of five summers, his
-father’s fine new sloop foundered at sea in a terrible tempest, and
-he and his crew were never more heard of. Mr. Miller had two
-sisters younger than himself, both of whom died ere they attained<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xvi"></a>[xvi]</span>
-to womanhood. His mother experienced the usual difficulties
-which a widow has to encounter in the decent education of her
-family; but she struggled honestly and successfully, and ultimately
-found her reward in the character and fame of her son. It is from
-this excellent woman that Mr. Miller has inherited those sentiments
-and feelings which have given energy to his talents as the defender
-of revealed truth, and the champion of the Church of his fathers.
-She was the great granddaughter of a venerable man, still well
-known to tradition in the north of Scotland as Donald Roy of Nigg,—a
-sort of northern Peden, who is described in the history of our
-Church as the single individual who, at the age of eighty, when the
-presbytery of the district had assembled in the empty church for
-the purpose of inducting an obnoxious presentee, had the courage
-to protest against the intrusion, and to declare “that the blood of
-the people of Nigg would be required at their hands, if they settled
-a man <i>to the walls</i> of that church.” Tradition has represented him
-as a seer of visions, and a prophesier of prophecies; but whatever
-credit may be given to stories of this kind, which have been told
-also of Knox, Welsh, and Rutherford, this ancient champion of
-Non-Intrusion was a man of genuine piety, and the savor of his
-ennobling beliefs and his strict morals has survived in his family
-for generations. If the child of such parents did not receive the best
-education which his native town could afford, it was not their fault,
-nor that of his teacher. The fetters of a gymnasium are not easily
-worn by the adventurous youth who has sought and found his pleasures
-among the hills and on the waters. They chafe the young and
-active limb that has grown vigorous under the blue sky, and never
-known repose but at midnight. The young philosopher of Cromarty
-was a member of this restless community; and he had been the hero
-of adventures and accidents among rocks and woods, which are still
-remembered in his native town. The parish school was therefore
-not the scene of his enjoyments; and while he was a truant, and,
-with reverence be it spoken, a dunce, while under its jurisdiction,
-he was busy in the fields and on the sea-shore in collecting those
-stores of knowledge which he was born to dispense among his fellow-men.
-He escaped, however, from school, with the knowledge of
-reading, writing, and a little arithmetic, and with the credit of uniting
-a great memory with a little scholarship. Unlike his illustrious
-predecessor, Cuvier, he had studied Natural History in the fields and
-among the mountains ere he had sought for it in books; while the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xvii"></a>[xvii]</span>
-French philosopher had become a learned naturalist before he had
-even looked upon the world of Nature. This singular contrast
-is not difficult to explain. With a sickly constitution and a delicate
-frame, the youthful Cuvier wanted that physical activity which the
-observation of Nature demands. Our Scottish geologist, on the contrary,
-in vigorous health, and with an iron frame, rushed to the
-rocks and the sea-shore in search of the instruction which was not
-provided for him at school, and which he could find no books to
-supply.</p>
-
-<p>After receiving this measure of education, Mr. Miller set out in
-February, 1821, with a heavy heart, as he himself confesses, “to
-make his first acquaintance with a life of labor and restraint:”—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“I was but a slim, loose-jointed boy at the time, fond of the pretty
-intangibilities of romance, and of dreaming when broad awake; and woful
-change! I was now going to work at what Burns has instanced in his
-‘Twa Dogs’ as one of the most disagreeable of all employments—to
-work in a quarry. Bating the passing uneasiness occasioned by a few
-gloomy anticipations, the portion of my life which had already gone by
-had been happy beyond the common lot. I had been a wanderer among
-rocks and woods,—a reader of curious books, when I could get them,—a
-gleaner of old traditionary stories,—and now I was going to exchange
-all my day-dreams and all my amusements for the kind of life in which
-men toil every day that they may be enabled to eat, and eat every day
-that they may be enabled to toil. The quarry in which I wrought lay on
-the southern shore of a noble inland bay, or frith, rather, (the Bay of
-Cromarty,) with a little, clear stream on the one side, and a thick fir wood
-on the other. It had been opened in the Old Red Sandstone of the district,
-and was overtopped by a huge bank of diluvial clay, and which rose
-over it in some places to the height of nearly thirty feet.”—<i>Old Red
-Sandstone</i>, p. 4.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>After removing the loose fragments below, picks and wedges and
-levers were applied in vain by our author and his brother workmen
-to tear up and remove the huge strata beneath. Blasting by gunpowder
-became necessary. A mass of the diluvial clay came tumbling
-down, “bearing with it two dead birds, that in a recent storm had
-crept into one of the deeper fissures, to die in the shelter.” While
-admiring the pretty cock goldfinch, and the light-blue and grayish-yellow
-woodpecker, and moralizing on their fate, the workmen were
-ordered to lay aside their tools, and thus ended the first day’s labor
-of our young geologist. The sun was then sinking behind the thick
-fir wood behind him, and the long dark shadows of the trees stretching<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xviii"></a>[xviii]</span>
-to the shore. Notwithstanding his blistered hands, and the
-fatigue which blistered them, he found himself next morning as light
-of heart as his fellow-laborers, and able to enjoy the magnificent
-scenery around him, which he thus so beautifully describes:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“There had been a smart frost during the night, and the rime lay white
-on the grass as we passed onwards through the fields; but the sun rose in
-a clear atmosphere, and the day mellowed as it advanced into one of those
-delightful days of early spring which give so pleasing an earnest of whatever
-is mild and genial in the better half of the year. All the workmen
-rested at midday, and I went to enjoy my half hour alone on a mossy
-knoll in the neighboring wood, which commands through the trees a wide
-prospect of the bay and the opposite shore. There was not a wrinkle on
-the water, nor a cloud in the sky; and the branches were as moveless in
-the calm as if they had been traced on canvas. From a wooded promontory
-that stretched half way across the frith, there ascended a thin column
-of smoke. It rose straight on the line of a plummet for more than a
-thousand yards; and then, as reaching a thinner stratum of air, spread out
-equally on every side, like the foliage of a stately tree. Ben Wevis rose
-to the west, white with the yet unwasted snows of winter, and as sharply
-defined in the clear atmosphere as if all its sunny slopes and blue retiring
-hollows had been chiselled in marble. A line of snow ran along the opposite
-hills; all above was white, and all below was purple.”—<i>Old Red
-Sandstone</i>, pp. 6, 7.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In raising from its bed the large mass of strata which the gunpowder
-had loosened, on the surface of the solid stone, our young quarrier
-descried the ridged and furrowed ripple marks which the tide
-leaves upon every sandy shore, and he wondered what had become
-of the waves that had thus fretted the solid rock, and of what element
-they had been composed. His admiration was equally excited
-by a circular depression in the sandstone, “broken and flawed in
-every direction, as if it had been the bottom of a pool recently dried
-up, which had shrunk and split in the hardening.” And before the
-day closed, a series of large stones had rolled down from the clay,
-“all rounded and water-worn, as if they had been tossed in the sea
-or the bed of a river for hundreds of years.” Was the clay which
-enclosed them created on the rock upon which it lay? No workman
-ever manufactures a half-worn article!—were the ejaculations of
-the geologist at his alphabet.</p>
-
-<p>Our author and his companions were soon removed to an easier
-wrought quarry, and one more pregnant with interest, which had
-been opened “in a lofty wall of cliffs that overhangs the northern<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xix"></a>[xix]</span>
-shore of the Moray Frith.” Here the geology of the district exhibited
-itself in section.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“We see in one place the primary rock, with its veins of granite and
-quartz,—its dizzy precipices of gneiss, and its huge masses of hornblende;
-we find the secondary rock in another, with its bed of sandstone and
-shale,—its spars, its clays, and its nodular limestones. We discover the
-still little known but highly interesting fossils of the Old Red Sandstone
-in one deposition; we find the beautifully preserved shells and lignites
-of the lias in another. There are the remains of two several creations at
-once before us. The shore, too, is heaped with rolled fragments of almost
-every variety of rock,—basalts, ironstones, hypersthenes, porphyries,
-bituminous shales, and micaceous schists. In short, the young geologist,
-had he all Europe before him, could hardly choose for himself a better
-field. I had, however, no one to tell me so at the time, for geology had
-not yet travelled so far north; and so, without guide or vocabulary, I had
-to grope my way as I best might, and find out all its wonders for myself.
-But so slow was the process, and so much was I a seeker in the dark, that
-the facts contained in these few sentences were the patient gatherings of
-years.”—<i>Old Red Sandstone</i>, pp. 9, 10.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In this rich field of inquiry, our author encountered, almost daily,
-new objects of wonder and instruction. In one nodular mass of
-limestone he found the beautiful ammonite, like one of the finely
-sculptured volutes of an Ionic capital. Within others, fish-scales
-and bivalve shells; and in the centre of another he detected a piece
-of decayed wood. Upon quitting the quarry for the building upon
-which the workmen were to be employed, the workmen received
-half a holiday, and our young philosopher devoted this valuable
-interval to search for certain curiously shaped stones, which one of
-the quarriers told him resembled the heads of boarding-pikes, and
-which, under the name of <i>thunder-bolts</i>, were held to be a sovereign
-remedy for cattle that had been bewitched. On the shore two miles
-off, where he expected these remarkable bodies, he found deposits
-quite different either from the sandstone cliffs or the primary rocks
-further to the west. They consisted of “thin strata of limestone,
-alternating with thicker beds of a black slaty substance,” which
-burned with a bright flame and a bituminous odor. Though only
-the eighth part of an inch thick, each layer contained thousands of
-fossils peculiar to the lias,—scallops and gryphites, ammonites, twigs
-and leaves of plants, cones of pine, pieces of charcoal, and scales of
-fishes,—the impressions being of a chalky whiteness, contrasting
-strikingly with their black bituminous lair. Among these fragments
-of animal and vegetable life, he at last detected his <i>thunder-bolt</i> in the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xx"></a>[xx]</span>
-form of a Belemnite, the remains of a kind of cuttle-fish long since
-extinct.</p>
-
-<p>In the exercise of his profession, which “was a wandering one,”
-our author advanced steadily, though slowly and surely, in his geological
-acquirements.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“I remember,” says he, “passing direct on one occasion from the wild
-western coast of Ross-shire, where the Old Red Sandstone leans at a high
-angle against the prevailing quartz rock of the district, to where, on the
-southern skirts of Mid-Lothian, the mountain limestone rises amid the
-coal. I have resided one season on a raised beach on the Moray Frith.
-I have spent the season immediately following amid the ancient granites
-and contorted schists of the central Highlands. In the north, I have laid
-open by thousands the shells and lignites of the Oolite; in the south, I
-have disinterred from their matrices of stone or of shale the huge reeds
-and tree ferns of the carboniferous period.... In the north, there
-occurs a vast gap in the scale. The Lias leans unconformably against
-the Old Red Sandstone; there is no mountain limestone, no coal measures,
-none of the New Red Marls or Sandstones. There are at least
-three entire systems omitted. But the upper portion of the scale is well-nigh
-complete. In one locality we may pass from the Lower to the Upper
-Lias, in another from the Inferior to the Great Oolite, and onward to the
-Oxford Clay and the Coral Rag. We may explore in a third locality beds
-identical in their organisms with the Wealden of Sussex. In a fourth, we
-find the flints and fossils of the chalk. The lower part of the scale is
-also well-nigh complete. The Old Red Sandstone is amply developed in
-Moray, Caithness, and Ross, and the Grauwacke very extensively in
-Banffshire. But to acquaint one’s self with the three missing formations,—to
-complete one’s knowledge of the entire scale, by filling up the
-hiatus,—it is necessary to remove to the south. The geology of the Lothians
-is the geology of at least two thirds of the gap, and perhaps a
-little more;—the geology of Arran wants only a few of the upper beds
-of the New Red Sandstone to fill it entirely.”—<i>Old Red Sandstone</i>,
-pp. 13-17.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>After having spent nearly fifteen years in the profession of a stone-mason,
-Mr. Miller was promoted to a position more suited to his
-genius. When a bank was established in his native town of Cromarty,
-he received the appointment of accountant, and he was thus
-employed, for five years, in keeping ledgers and discounting bills.
-When the contest in the Church of Scotland had come to a close, by
-the decision of the House of Lords in the Auchterurder Case, Mr.
-Miller’s celebrated letter to Lord Brougham attracted the particular
-attention of the party which was about to leave the Establishment,
-and he was selected as the most competent person to conduct<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxi"></a>[xxi]</span>
-the <i>Witness</i> newspaper, the principal metropolitan organ of the Free
-Church. The great success which this journal has met with is owing,
-doubtless, to the fine articles, political, ecclesiastical, and geological,
-which Mr. Miller has written for it. In the few leisure hours which
-so engrossing an occupation has allowed him to enjoy, he has devoted
-himself to the ardent prosecution of scientific inquiries; and we trust
-the time is not far distant when the liberality of his country, to which
-he has done so much honor, will allow him to give his whole time to
-the prosecution of science.</p>
-
-<p>Geologists of high character had believed that the Old Red Sandstone
-was defective in organic remains; and it was not till after ten
-years’ acquaintance with it that Mr. Miller discovered it to be <i>richly
-fossiliferous</i>. The labors of other ten years were required to assign
-to its fossils their exact place in the scale.</p>
-
-<p>Among the fossils discovered by our author, the <i>Pterichthys</i> or
-winged fish is doubtless the most remarkable. He had disinterred it
-so early as 1831, but it was only in 1838 that he “introduced it to
-the acquaintance of geologists.” It was not till 1831 that Mr. Miller
-began to receive assistance in his studies from without. In the appendix
-to Messrs. Anderson of Inverness’s admirable <i>Guide to the
-Highlands and Islands of Scotland</i>, which “he perused with intense
-interest,” he found the most important information respecting the
-geology of the North of Scotland; and during a correspondence with
-the accomplished authors of that work, many of his views were developed,
-and his difficulties removed. In 1838, he communicated to
-Dr. Malcolmson of Madras, then in Paris, a drawing and description
-of the <i>Pterichthys</i>. His letter was submitted to Agassiz, and subsequently
-a restored drawing was communicated to the Elgin Scientific
-Society. The great naturalist, as well as the members of the provincial
-society, were surprised at the new form of life which Mr. Miller had
-disclosed, and some of them, no doubt, regarded it with a sceptical eye.
-“Not many months after, however, a true <i>bona fide Pterichthys</i> was
-turned up in one of the newly-discovered beds of Nairnshire.” In his
-last visit to Scotland, Agassiz found six species of the <i>Pterichthys</i>, three
-of which, and the wings of a fourth, were in Mr. Miller’s collection.</p>
-
-<p>This remarkable animal has less resemblance than any other fossil
-of the Old Red Sandstone to anything that now exists. When first
-brought to view by the single blow of a hammer, there appeared on
-a ground of light-colored limestone the effigy of a creature, fashioned
-apparently out of jet, with a body covered with plates, two
-powerful looking arms articulated at the shoulders, a head as entirely<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxii"></a>[xxii]</span>
-lost in the trunk as that of the ray, (or skate,) and a long
-angular tail, equal in length to a third of the entire figure. Its
-general resemblance is to the letter T,—the upper part of the vertical
-line being swelled out, and the lower part ending in an angular
-point, the two horizontal portions being, in the opinion of Agassiz,
-organs of locomotion. To this remarkable fossil M. Agassiz has
-given the appropriate name of <i>Pterichthys Milleri</i>. An account of it,
-accompanied with two fine specimens, was communicated to the
-Geological Section of the British Association at Glasgow, in September,
-1840; and the most ample details, with accurate drawings,
-were afterwards published, in 1841, in Mr. Miller’s first work, <i>The
-Old Red Sandstone</i>, which was dedicated to Sir Roderick Murchison,
-who was born on the Old Red Sandstone of the North, in the same
-district as Mr. Miller, and whose great acquirements and distinguished
-labors are known all over the world among scientific men.
-This admirable work has already passed through three editions.
-From the originality and accuracy of its descriptions, and the importance
-of the researches which it contains, it has obtained for its
-author a high reputation among geologists; while from the elegance
-and purity of its style, and the force and liveliness of its illustrations,
-it has received the highest praise from its more general readers.<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a></p>
-
-<p>Although we have been obliged, from the information which it
-contains of our author’s early studies, to mention the “Old Red
-Sandstone” as if it had been his first work; yet so early as 1830,
-after he had made his first fossil discoveries at Cromarty, he composed
-a paper on the subject, (his first published production,) which
-appeared as one of the chapters of a small legendary and descriptive
-work, entitled <i>The Traditional History of Cromarty</i>, which did not
-appear till 1835. This chapter, entitled “The Antiquary of the
-World,” possesses a high degree of interest. After describing the
-scene around him in its pictorial aspect, and under the warm associations,
-which link it with existing life, he surveys it with the cool
-eye of an “antiquary of the world,” studying its once buried monuments,
-and decyphering the alphabet of plants and animals, the
-hieroglyphics which embosom the history of past times and of successive<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxiii"></a>[xxiii]</span>
-creations. The gigantic Ben Wevis, with its attendant hills,
-rose abruptly to the west. The distant peaks of Ben Vaichard appeared
-in the south, and far to the north were descried the lofty hills
-of Sutherland, and even the Ord-hill of Caithness. Descending
-from the towers of nature’s lofty edifice he surveys its ruins, its
-broken sculptures, and its half-defaced inscriptions, as exhibited in
-certain Ichthyic remains of the Lower Old Red Sandstone which had
-then no name, and which were unknown to the most accomplished
-geologists. Among these he specially notices “a confused bituminous-looking
-mass that had much the appearance of a toad or frog,”
-thus shadowing forth in the morning twilight the curious <i>Pterichthys</i>,
-which he was able afterwards, in better specimens, to exhibit in open
-day. As we have already referred, with some minuteness, to the
-fossils which our author had at this time discovered in the great
-charnel-house of the old world, we shall indulge our readers with a
-specimen of the noble sentiments which they inspired, and of the
-beautiful language in which these sentiments are clothed.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“But let us quit this wonderful city of the dead, with all its reclining
-obelisks, and all its sculptured tumuli, the memorials of a race that exist
-only in their tombs. And yet, ere we go, it were well, perhaps, to indulge
-in some of those serious thoughts which we so naturally associate
-with the solitary burying-ground and the mutilated remains of the
-departed. Let us once more look around us, and say, whether, of all
-men, the Geologist does not stand most in need of the Bible, however
-much he may contemn it in the pride of speculation. We tread on the
-remains of organized and sentient creatures, which, though more numerous
-at one period than the whole family of man, have long since ceased
-to exist; the individuals perished one after one—their remains served
-only to elevate the floor on which their descendants pursued the various
-instincts of their nature, and then sunk, like the others, to form a still
-higher layer of soil; and now that the whole race has passed from the
-earth, and we see the animals of a different tribe occupying their places,
-what survives of them but a mass of inert and senseless matter, never
-again to be animated by the mysterious spirit of vitality—that spirit
-which, dissipated in the air, or diffused in the ocean, can, like the sweet
-sounds and pleasant odors of the past, be neither gathered up nor recalled!
-And O, how dark the analogy which would lead us to anticipate
-a similar fate for ourselves! As individuals, we are but as yesterday;
-to-morrow we shall be laid in our graves, and the tread of the coming
-generation shall be over our heads. Nay, have we not seen a terrible
-disease sweep away, in a few years, more than eighty millions of the race
-to which we belong; and can we think of this and say that a time may
-not come when, like the fossils of these beds our whole species shall be<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxiv"></a>[xxiv]</span>
-mingled with the soil, and when, though the sun may look down in his
-strength on our pleasant dwellings and our green fields, there shall be
-silence in all our borders, and desolation in all our gates, and we shall
-have no thought of that past which it is now our delight to recall, and no
-portion in that future which it is now our very nature to anticipate.
-Surely it is well to believe that a widely different destiny awaits us—that
-the <i>God</i> who endowed us with those wonderful powers, which enable
-us to live in every departed era, every coming period, has given us to
-possess these powers forever; that not only does he number the hairs
-of our heads, but that his cares are extended to even our very remains;
-that our very bones, instead of being left, like the exuviæ around us, to
-form the rocks and clays of a future world, shall, like those in the valley
-of vision, be again clothed with muscle and sinew, and that our bodies,
-animated by the warmth and vigor of life, shall again connect our souls
-to the matter existing around us, and be obedient to every impulse of the
-will. It is surely no time, when we walk amid the dark cemeteries of a
-departed world, and see the cold blank shadows of the tombs falling
-drearily athwart the way—it is surely no time to extinguish the light
-given us to shine so fully and so cheerfully on our own proper path,
-merely because its beams do not enlighten the recesses that yawn around
-us. And O, what more unworthy of reasonable men than to reject so
-consoling a revelation on no juster quarrel, than when it unveils to us
-much of what could not otherwise be known, and without the knowledge
-of which we could not be other than unhappy, it leaves to the invigorating
-exercises of our own powers whatever, in the wide circle of creation,
-lies fully within their grasp!”—<i>The Antiquary of the World</i>, pp. 56-58.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The next work published by Mr. Miller was entitled “<i>First Impressions
-of England and its People</i>,”<a id="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> a popular and interesting
-volume, which has already gone through two editions, and which
-may be read with equal interest by the geologist, the philanthropist,
-and the general reader. It is full of knowledge and of anecdote, and
-is written in that attractive style which commands the attention even
-of the most incurious readers.</p>
-
-<p>This delightful work, though only in <i>one</i> volume, is equal to <i>three</i>
-of the ordinary type, and cannot fail to be perused with high gratification
-by all classes of readers. It treats of every subject which is
-presented to the notice of an accomplished traveller while he visits
-the great cities and romantic localities of merry England. We know
-of no tour in England written by a native in which so much pleasant
-reading and substantial instruction are combined; and though we
-are occasionally stopped in a very delightful locality by a precipice<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxv"></a>[xxv]</span>
-of the Old Red Sandstone, or frightened by a disinterred skeleton,
-or sobered by the burial-service over Palæozoic graves, we soon
-recover our equanimity, and again enter upon the sunny path to
-which our author never fails to restore us.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Miller’s new work, the “<i>Footprints of the Creator</i>,” of which
-we publish now another edition, authorized by the writer, is very
-appropriately dedicated to Sir Philip Grey Egerton, Bart., M. P. for
-Cheshire—a gentleman who possesses a magnificent collection of
-fossils, and whose skill and acquirements in this department of geology
-is known and appreciated both in Europe and America. The
-work itself is divided into fifteen chapters, in which the author treats
-of the fossil geology of the Orkneys, as exhibited in the vicinity of
-Stromness; of the development hypothesis, and its consequences;
-of the history and structure of that remarkable fish, the Asterolepis;
-of the fishes of the Upper and Lower Silurian rocks; of the progress
-of degradation, and its history; of the Lamarckian hypothesis of the
-origin of plants, and its consequences; of the Marine and Terrestrial
-floras; and of final causes, and their bearing on geological history.
-In the course of these chapters Mr. Miller discusses the development
-hypothesis, or the hypothesis of natural law, as maintained by Lamarck
-and by the author of the Vestiges of Creation, and has subjected
-it, in its geological aspect, to the most rigorous examination.
-Driven by the discoveries of Lord Rosse from the domains of astronomy,
-where it once seemed to hold a plausible position, it might
-have lingered with the appearance of life among the ambiguities of
-the Palæozoic formations; but Mr. Miller has, with an ingenuity and
-patience worthy of a better subject, stripped it even of its semblance
-of truth, and restored to the Creator, as Governor of the universe,
-that power and those functions which he was supposed to have resigned
-at its birth.</p>
-
-<p>Having imposed upon himself the task of examining in detail the
-various fossiliferous formations of Scotland, our author extended his
-inquiries into the mainland of Orkney, and resided for some time in
-the vicinity of the busy seaport town of Stromness, as a central point
-from which the structure of the Orkney group of islands could be
-most advantageously studied. Like that of Caithness, the geology
-of these islands owes its principal interest to the immense development
-of the Lower Old Red Sandstone formation, and to the singular
-abundance of its vertebrate fossils. Though the Orkneys contain
-only the <i>third</i> part of the Old Red Sandstone, which, but a few years
-ago, was supposed to be the least productive in fossils of any of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxvi"></a>[xxvi]</span>
-geological formations, yet it furnishes, according to Mr. Miller, more
-fossil fish than <i>every</i> other geological system in England, Scotland,
-and Wales, from the Coal Measures to the Chalk, inclusive. It is, in
-short, “<i>the land of fish</i>,” and “could supply with ichthyolites, by
-the ton and by the ship-load, the museums of the world.” Its various
-deposits, with the curious organisms which they inclose, have
-been upheaved from their original position against a granitic axis,
-about six miles long and one broad, “forming the great back-bone
-of the western district of the Island Pomona; and on this granitic
-axis, fast jambed in between a steep hill and the sea, stands the town
-of Stromness.”</p>
-
-<p>The mass or pile of strata thus uplifted is described by Mr. Miller
-as a three-barred pyramid resting on its granite base, exhibiting
-three broad tiers—red, black, and gray—sculptured with the hieroglyphics
-in which its history is recorded. The great conglomerate
-base on which it rests, covering from 10,000 to 15,000 square miles,
-from the depth of from 100 to 400 feet, consists of rough sand and
-water-worn pebbles; and above this have been deposited successive
-strata of mud, equal in height to the highest of our mountains, now
-containing the remains of millions and tens of millions of fish which
-had perished in some sudden and mysterious catastrophe.</p>
-
-<p>In the examination of the different beds of the three-barred formation,
-our author discovered a well-marked bone, like a petrified
-large roofing nail, in a grayish-colored layer of hard flag, about 100
-yards over the granite, and about 160 feet over the upper stratum
-of the conglomerate. This singular bone, which Mr. Miller has represented
-in a figure, was probably the oldest vertebrate organism
-yet discovered in Orkney. It was 5⅞ inches long, 2¼ inches across
-the head, and ³⁄₁₀ths of an inch thick in the stem, and formed a
-characteristic feature of the Asterolepis, as yet the most gigantic of
-the ganoid fishes, and probably one of the first of the Old Red Sandstone.
-In his former researches, our author had found that all of the
-many hundred ichthyolites which he had disinterred from the Lower
-Old Red Sandstone were comparatively of a small size, while those in
-the Upper Old Red were of great bulk; and hence he had naturally
-inferred, that vertebrate life had increased towards the close of the
-system—that, in short, it began with an age of dwarfs, and ended
-with an age of giants; but he had thus greatly erred, like the supporters
-of the development system, in founding positive conclusions
-on merely negative evidence; for here, at the very base of the system,
-where no dwarfs were to be found, he had discovered one of the
-most colossal of its giants.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxvii"></a>[xxvii]</span></p>
-
-<p>After this most important discovery, Mr. Miller extended his inquiries
-easterly for several miles along the bare and unwooded Lake
-of Stennis, about fourteen miles in circumference, and divided into
-an upper arm lower sheet of water by two long promontories jutting
-out from each side and nearly meeting in the middle. The sea enters
-this lake through the openings of a long rustic bridge, and hence the
-lower division of the lake “is salt in its nether reaches, and brackish
-in its upper ones; while the higher division is merely brackish
-in its nether reaches, and fresh enough in its upper ones to be potable.”
-The fauna and flora of the lake are therefore of a mixed character,
-the marine and fresh water animals having each their own
-reaches, though each kind makes certain encroachments on the province
-of the other.</p>
-
-<p>In the marine and lacustrine floras of the lake, Mr. Miller observed
-changes still more palpable. At the entrance of the sea, the <i>Fucus
-nodosus</i> and <i>Fucus vesiculosus</i> flourish in their proper form and magnitude.
-A little farther on in the lake, the F. nodosus disappears,
-and the F. vesiculosus, though continuing to exist for mile after
-mile, grows dwarfish and stunted, and finally disappears, giving
-place to rushes and other aquatic grasses, till the lacustrine has entirely
-displaced the marine flora. From these two important facts,
-the existence of the fragment of <i>Asterolepis</i> in the lower flagstones
-of the Orkneys, and of the “curiously mixed semi-marine semi-lacustrine
-vegetation in the Loch of Stennis,” which our author
-regards as bearing directly on the development hypothesis, he takes
-occasion to submit that hypothesis to a severe examination, and to
-point out its consequences—its incompatibility with the great truths
-of morality and revealed religion. According to Professor Oken,
-one of the ablest supporters of the development theory, “There are
-two kinds of generation in the world, the creation proper, and the
-propagation that is sequent thereon, or the <i>original and secondary
-generation</i>. Consequently, no organism has been created of larger
-size than an infusorial point. No organism is, or ever has been
-created, which is not microscopic. Whatever is large has not been
-created, but developed. Man has not been created, but developed.”
-Hence it follows that during the great geological period, when race
-after race was destroyed, and new forms of life called into being,
-“nature had been pregnant with the human race,” and that immortal
-and intellectual Man is but the development of the Brute—itself
-the development of some monad or mollusc, which has been
-smitten into life by the action of electricity upon a portion of gelatinous
-matter.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxviii"></a>[xxviii]</span></p>
-
-<p>If the development theory be true, “the early fossils ought to be
-very small in size,” and “very low in organization.” In the earliest
-strata we ought to find only “mere <i>embryos</i> and <i>fœtuses</i>; and if we
-find instead the <i>full-grown</i> and <i>mature</i>, then must we hold that the
-testimony of geology is not only <i>not in accordance</i> with the theory,
-but in positive opposition to it.” Having laid this down as the
-<i>principle</i> by which the question is to be decided, our author proceeds
-to consider “what are the <i>facts</i>.” The <i>Asterolepis</i> of Stromness <i>seems</i>
-to be the oldest organism yet discovered in the most ancient geological
-system of Scotland, in which vertebrate remains occur. It is
-probably the oldest Cœlacanth that the world has yet produced, for
-there is no certain trace of this family in the great Silurian system,
-which lies underneath, and on which, according to our existing
-knowledge, organic existence first began. “How, then,” asks Mr.
-Miller, “on the two relevant points—bulk and organization—does
-it answer to the demands of the development hypothesis? Was it a
-mere fœtus of the finny tribe, of minute size and imperfect embryonic
-faculty? Or was it of, at least, the ordinary bulk, and, for its
-class, of the average organization?”</p>
-
-<p>In order to answer these questions, Mr. Miller proceeds in his <i>third</i>
-chapter to give the recent history of the Asterolepis; in his <i>fourth</i>,
-to ascertain the cerebral development of the earlier vertebrata; and
-in his <i>fifth</i> chapter to describe the structure, bulk, and aspect of the
-Asterolepis. In the rocks of Russia certain fossil remains had been
-long ago discovered, of such a singular nature as to have perplexed
-Lamarck and other naturalists. Their true place among fishes was
-subsequently ascertained by M. Eichwald, a living naturalist; and
-Sir Roderick Murchison found that they were Ichthyolites of the
-Old Red Sandstone. Agassiz gave them the name of <i>Chelonichthys</i>;
-but in consequence of very fine specimens having been found in the
-Old Red Sandstone of Russia, which Professor Asmus of Dorpat
-sent to the British Museum, and which exhibited star-like markings,
-he abandoned his name of <i>Chelonichthys</i>, and adopted that of <i>Asterolepis</i>,
-or star-scale, which Eichwald had proposed. Many points,
-however, respecting this curious fossil remained to be determined,
-and it was fortunate for science that Mr. Miller was enabled to accomplish
-this object by means of a variety of excellent specimens
-which he received from Mr. Robert Dick, “an intelligent tradesman
-of Thurso, one of those working men of Scotland, of active curiosity
-and well developed intellect, that give character and standing to the
-rest.” Agassiz had inferred, from very imperfect fragments, that
-the <i>Asterolepis</i> was a strongly-helmed fish of the <i>Cœlacanths</i>, or hollow<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxix"></a>[xxix]</span>
-spine family—that it was probably a flat-headed animal, and that
-the discovery of a head or of a jaw might prove that the genus
-Dendrodus did not differ from it. All these conjectures were completely
-confirmed by Mr. Miller, after a careful examination of the
-specimens of Mr. Dick.</p>
-
-<p>Before proceeding to describe the structure of the gigantic Asterolepis,
-Mr. Miller devotes a long and elaborate chapter to the subject
-of the cerebral development of the earlier vertebrata, in order to
-ascertain in what manner their true brains were lodged, and to discover
-the modification which the cranium, as their protecting box,
-received in subsequent periods. This inquiry, which he has conducted
-with great skill and ability, is not only highly interesting in
-itself, but will be found to have a direct bearing on the great question
-which it is his object to discuss and decide.</p>
-
-<p>The facts and reasonings contained in this chapter will, we doubt
-not, shake to its very base the bold theory of Professor Oken, which
-has been so generally received abroad, and which is beginning to
-find supporters even among the solid thinkers of our own country.
-In the <i>Isis</i> of 1818, Professor Lorenz Oken has given the following
-account of the hypothesis to which we allude. “In August, 1806,”
-says he, “I made a journey over the Hartz. I slid down through
-the wood on the south side, and straight before me, at my very feet,
-lay a most beautiful blanched skull of a hind. I picked it up, turned
-it round, regarded it intensely;—the thing was done. ‘It is a vertebral
-column,’ struck me like a flood of lightning, ‘to the marrow
-and bone;’ and since that time the skull has been regarded as a
-vertebral column.”</p>
-
-<p>This remarkable hypothesis was at first received with enthusiasm
-by the naturalists of Germany, and, among others, by Agassiz, who,
-from grounds not of a geological kind, has more recently rejected it.
-It has been adopted by our distinguished countryman, Professor
-Owen, and forms the central idea in his lately published and ingenious
-work “On the Nature of Limbs.” The conclusion at which he
-arrives, that the fore-limbs of the vertebrata are the ribs of the occipital
-bone or vertebra set free, and (in all the vertebrata higher in
-the scale than the ordinary fishes) carried down along the vertebral
-column by a sort of natural dislocation, is a deduction from the idea
-that startled Professor Oken in the forest of the Hartz. Whatever
-support this hypothesis might have expected from Geology, has been
-struck from beneath it by this remarkable chapter of Mr. Miller’s
-work; and though anatomists may for a while maintain it under the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxx"></a>[xxx]</span>
-influence of so high an authority as Professor Owen, we are much
-mistaken if it ever forms a part of the creed of the geologist. Mr.
-Miller indeed has, by a most skilful examination of the heads of the
-earliest vertebrata known to geologists, proved that the hypothesis
-derives no support from the structure which they exhibit, and
-Agassiz has even upon general principles rejected it as untenable.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Miller’s next chapter on the structure, bulk, and aspect of the
-Asterolepis, is, like that which precedes it, the work of a master,
-evincing the highest powers of observation and analysis. Its size in
-the larger specimens must have been very great; and from a comparison
-of the proportion of the head in the Ganoids to the length
-of the body, which is sometimes as one to five, or one to six, or one
-to six and a half, or even one to seven, our author concludes that the
-total length of the specimens in his possession must have been at
-least eight feet three inches, or from nine feet nine to nine feet ten
-inches. The remains of an Asterolepis found by Mr. Dick at Thurso,
-indicate a length of from twelve feet five to thirteen feet eight inches;
-and one of the Russian specimens of Professor Asmus must have
-been from <i>eighteen</i> to <i>twenty-three</i> feet long. “Hence,” says Mr.
-Miller, “in the not unimportant circumstance of size—the most
-ancient Cœlacanths yet known, instead of taking their places agreeably
-to the demands of the development hypothesis among the sprats,
-sticklebacks, and minnows of their class, took their place among its
-huge basking sharks, gigantic sturgeons, and bulky swordfishes.
-They were giants, not dwarfs.” Again, judging by the analogies
-which its structure exhibits to that of fishes of the existing period,
-the Asterolepis must have been a fish high in the scale of organization.</p>
-
-<p>A specimen of Asterolepis, discovered by Mr. Dick, among the
-Thurso rocks, and sent to Mr. Miller, exhibited the singular phenomenon
-of a quantity of thick tar lying beneath it, which stuck to
-the fingers when lifting the pieces of rock. “What had been once
-the nerves, muscles, and blood of this ancient Ganoid, still lay under
-its bones,” a phenomenon which our author had previously seen beneath
-the body of a poor suicide, whose grave in a sandy bank had
-been laid open by the encroachments of a river, the sand beneath it
-having been “consolidated into a dark colored pitchy mass,” extending
-a full yard beneath the body. In like manner, the animal juices
-of the Asterolepis had preserved its remains, by “the pervading bitumen,
-greatly more conservative in its effects than the oil and gum
-of an old Egyptian undertaker.” The bones, though black as pitch<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxxi"></a>[xxxi]</span>
-retained to a considerable degree the peculiar qualities of the original
-substance, in the same manner as the adipocire of wet burying-grounds
-preserves fresh and green the bones which it encloses.</p>
-
-<p>In support of his anti-development views, Mr. Miller devotes his
-next and <i>sixth</i> chapter to the recent history, order, and size of the
-fishes of the Upper and Lower Silurian rocks. Of these ancient
-formations, the bone bed of the Upper Ludlow rocks is the only one
-which, besides defensive spines of fish, contains teeth, fragments of
-jaws, and shagreen points, whereas, in the inferior deposits, defensive
-spates alone are found. The species discovered by Professor Phillips,
-in the Wenlock shale, were microscopic; and the author of the <i>Vestiges</i>
-took advantage of this insulated fact to support his views, by
-pronouncing the little creatures to which the species belonged as
-the fœtal embryos of their class. Mr. Miller has, however, even on
-this ground, defeated his opponent. By comparing the defensive
-spines of the <i>Onchus Murchisoni</i> of the Upper Ludlow bed with
-those of a recent <i>Spinax Acanthias</i>, or dog-fish, and of the <i>Cestracion
-Phillippi</i>, or Port Jackson shark, he arrives at the conclusion, that
-the fishes to which the species belonged must be all of considerable
-size; and in the following chapter <i>on the high standing of the Placoids</i>
-he shews that the same early fishes were high in intelligence and
-organization.</p>
-
-<p>In his <i>ninth</i> chapter on the <i>History and Progress of Degradation</i>,
-our author enters upon a new and interesting subject. The object
-of it is to determine the proper ground on which the standing of the
-earlier vertebrata should be decided, namely, the test of what he
-terms homological symmetry of organization. In nature there are
-monster families, just as there are in families monster individuals—men
-without feet, hands, or eyes, or with them in a wrong place—sheep
-with legs growing from their necks, ducklings with wings on
-their haunches, and dogs and cats with more legs than they require.
-We have thus, according to our author—1, <i>monstrosity through defect
-of parts</i>; 2, <i>monstrosity through redundancy of parts</i>; and 3, <i>monstrosity
-through displacement of parts</i>. This last species, united in some
-cases with the other two, our author finds curiously exemplified in
-the geological history of the fish, which he considers better known
-than that of any other division of the vertebrata; and he is convinced
-that it is from a survey of the progress of degradation in the
-great Ichthyic division that the standing of the kingly fishes of the
-earlier periods is to be determined.</p>
-
-<p>In the earliest vertebrate period, namely, the Silurian, our author<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxxii"></a>[xxxii]</span>
-shews that the fishes were homologically symmetrical in their organization,
-as exhibited in the Placoids. In the second great Ichthyic
-period, that of the Old Red Sandstone, he finds the first example in
-the class of fishes of <i>monstrosity, by displacement of parts</i>. In all the
-Ganoids of the period, there is the same departure from symmetry
-as would take place in man if his neck was annihilated, and the
-arms stuck to the back of the head. In the <i>Coccosteus</i> and <i>Pterichthys</i>
-of the same period, he finds the first example of <i>degradation
-through defect</i>, the former resembling a human monster without hands,
-and the latter one without feet. After ages and centuries have
-passed away, and then after the termination of the Palæozoic period,
-a change takes place in the formation of the fish tail. “Other ages
-and centuries pass away, during which the reptile class attains to its
-fullest development in point of size, organization, and number; and
-then, after the times of the cretaceous deposits have begun, we find
-yet another remarkable monstrosity of displacement introduced
-among all the fishes of one very numerous order, and among no inconsiderable
-proportion of the fishes of another. In the newly-introduced
-Ctenoids (<i>Acanthopterygii</i>,) and in those families of the
-Cycloids which Cuvier erected into the order <i>Malacopterygii sub-brachiati</i>,
-the hinder limbs are brought forward and stuck on to the
-base of the previously misplaced fore limbs. All the four limbs, by
-a strange monstrosity of displacement, are crowded into the place
-of the extinguished neck. And such, in the present day, is the
-prevalent type among fishes. Monstrosity through <i>defect</i> is also
-found to increase; so that the snake-like <i>apoda</i>, or feet-wanting
-fishes, form a numerous order, some of whose genera are devoid, as
-in the common eels and the congers, of only the hinder limbs, while
-in others, as in the genera <i>Muræna</i> and <i>Synbranchus</i>, both hinder and
-fore-limbs are wanting.” From these and other facts, our author
-concludes that as in existing fishes we find many more proofs of the
-monstrosity, both from displacement and defect of parts, than in all
-the other three classes of the vertebrata, and as these monstrosities
-did not appear early, but late, “the progress of the race as a whole,
-though it still retains not a few of the higher forms, has been a
-progress not of development from the low to the high, but of degradation
-from the high to the low.” An extreme example of the
-degradation of distortion, superadded to that of displacement, may
-be seen in the flounder, plaice, halibut, or turbot,—fishes of a family
-of which there is no trace in the earlier periods. The creature is
-twisted half round and laid on its side. The tail, too, is horizontal.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxxiii"></a>[xxxiii]</span>
-Half the features of its head are twisted to one side, and the other
-half to the other, while its wry mouth is in keeping with its squint
-eyes. One jaw is straight, and the other like a bow; and while one
-contains from <i>four</i> to <i>six</i> teeth, the other contains from <i>thirty</i> to
-<i>thirty-five</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Aided by facts like these, an ingenious theorist might, as our author
-remarks, “get up as unexceptionable a theory of degradation
-as of development.” But however this may be, the principle of
-degradation actually exists, and “the history of its progress in creation
-bears directly against the assumption that the earlier vertebrata
-were of a lower type than the vertebrata of the same Ichthyic class
-which exist now.”</p>
-
-<p>In his next and <i>tenth</i> chapter, our author controverts with his
-usual power the argument in favor of the development hypothesis,
-drawn from the predominance of the Brachiopods among the Silurian
-Molluscs. The existence of the highly organized Cephalopods, in
-the same formation, not only neutralizes this argument, but authorizes
-the conclusion that an animal of a very high order of organization
-existed in the earliest formation. It is of no consequence
-whether the Cephalopods, or the Brachiopods were most numerous.
-Had there been only one cuttle fish in the Silurian seas, and a million
-of Brachiopods, the fact would equally have overturned the development
-system.</p>
-
-<p>In the same chapter, Mr. Miller treats of the geological history of
-the Fossil flora, which has been pressed into the service of the development
-hypothesis. On the authority of Adolphe Brongniart, it
-was maintained that, previous to the age of the Lias, “Nature had
-failed to achieve a tree—and that the rich vegetation of the Coal
-Measures had been exclusively composed of magnificent immaturities
-of the vegetable kingdom, of gigantic ferns and club mosses, that
-attained to the size of forest trees, and of thickets of the swamp-loving
-horse-tail family of plants.” True exogenous trees, however,
-do exist of vast size, and in great numbers, in all the coal-fields of
-our own country, as has been proved by Mr. Miller. Nay, he himself
-discovered in the Old Red Sandstone, <i>Lignite</i>, which is proved
-to have formed part of a true gymnospermous tree, represented by
-the pines of Europe and America, or more probably, as Mr. Miller
-believes, by the Araucarians of Chili and New Zealand. This important
-discovery is pregnant with instruction. The ancient Conifer
-must have waved its green foliage over dry land, and it is not probable
-that it was the only tree in the primeval forest. “The ship<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxxiv"></a>[xxxiv]</span>
-carpenter,” as our author observes, “might have hopefully taken
-axe in hand to explore the woods for some such stately pine as the
-one described by Milton,—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">‘Hewn on Norwegian hills, to be the mast</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Of some great admiral.’”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">Viewing this <i>olive leaf</i> of the Old Red Sandstone as not at all devoid
-of poetry, our author invites us to a voyage from the latest formation
-up to the first zone of the Silurian formation,—thus passing
-from ancient to still more ancient scenes of being, and finding, as at
-the commencement of our voyage, a graceful intermixture of land
-and water, continent, river, and sea.</p>
-
-<p>But though the existence of a true Placoid, a real vertebrated fish,
-in the Cambrian limestone of Bala, and of true wood at the base of
-the Old Red Sandstone, are utterly incompatible with the development
-hypothesis, its supporters, thus driven to the wall, may take
-shelter under the vague and unquestioned truth that the lower
-plants and animals preceded the higher, and that the order of creation
-was fish, reptiles, birds, mammalia, quadrumana, and man.
-From this resource, too, our author has cut off his opponents, and
-proceeds to show that such an order of creation, “at once wonderful
-and beautiful,” does not afford even the slightest presumption in
-favor of the hypothesis which it is adduced to support.</p>
-
-<p>This argument is carried on in a popular and amusing dialogue in
-the <i>eleventh</i> chapter. Mr. Miller shows, in the clearest manner, that
-“superposition is not parental relation,” or that an organism lying
-above another gives us no ground for believing that the lower organism
-was the parent of the higher. The theorist, however, looks
-only at those phases of truth which are in unison with his own
-views; and, when truth presents no such favorable aspect, he finally
-wraps himself up in the folds of ignorance and ambiguity—the
-winding-sheet of error refuted and exposed. We have not yet penetrated,
-says he, in feeble accents, to the formations which represent
-the dawn of being, and the simplest organism may yet be detected
-beneath the lowest fossiliferous rocks. This undoubtedly <i>may be</i>,
-and Sir Charles Lyell and Mr. Leonard Horner are of opinion that
-such rocks may yet be discovered; while Sir Roderick Murchison
-and Professor Sedgwick and Mr. Miller are of an opposite opinion.
-But even were such rocks discovered to-morrow, it would not follow
-that their organisms gave the least support to the development hypothesis.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxxv"></a>[xxxv]</span>
-In the year 1837, when fishes were not discovered in the
-Upper Silurian rocks, the theorist would have rightly predicted the
-existence of lower fossiliferous beds; but when they are discovered,
-and their fossils examined, they furnish the strongest argument that
-could be desired against the theory they were expected to sustain.
-This fact, no doubt, is so far in favor of the supposition that there
-may be still lower fossil-bearing strata; but, as Mr. Miller observes,
-“The pyramid of organized existence, as it ascends into the by-past
-eternity, inclines sensibly towards its apex,—that apex of ‘<i>beginning</i>’
-on which, on far other than geological grounds, it is our
-privilege to believe. The broad base of the superstructure planted
-on the existing scene stretches across the entire scale on life, animal
-and vegetable; but it contracts as it rises into the past;—man,—the
-quadrumana,—the quadrupedal man,—the bird and the reptile
-are each in succession struck from off its breadth, till we at
-length see it with the vertebrata, represented by only the fish, narrowing
-as it were to a point; and though the clouds of the upper
-region may hide its apex, we infer, from the declination of its sides,
-that it cannot penetrate much farther into the profound.”</p>
-
-<p>In our author’s next chapter, the <i>twelfth</i> of the series, he proceeds
-to examine the “Lamarckian hypothesis of the origin of plants, and
-its consequences.”</p>
-
-<p>In his <i>thirteenth</i> chapter, on “The two Floras, marine and terrestrial,”
-he has shown that all our experience is opposed to the opinion,
-that the one has been transmuted into the other. If the marine
-had been converted into terrestrial vegetation, we ought to have, in
-the Lake of Stennis, for example, plants of an intermediate character
-between the algæ of the sea, and the monocotyledons of the
-lake. But no such transition-plants are found. The algæ, as our
-author observes, become dwarfish and ill-developed. They cease to
-exist as the water becomes fresher, “until at length we find, instead
-of the brown, rootless, flowerless fucoids and confervæ of the ocean,
-the green, rooted, flowering flags, rushes, and aquatic grasses of the
-fresh water. Many thousands of years have failed to originate a
-single intermediate plant.” The same conclusion may be drawn
-from the character of the vegetation along the extensive shores of
-Britain and Ireland. No botanist has ever found a single plant in
-the transition state.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>fourteenth</i> chapter of the “Footprints” will be perused with
-great interest by the general reader. It is a powerful and argumentative
-exposure of the development hypothesis, and of the manner<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxxvi"></a>[xxxvi]</span>
-in which the subject has been treated in the “Vestiges.” Whether
-we consider it in its nature, in its history, or in the character of the
-intellects with whom it originated, or by whom it has been received
-and supported, Mr. Miller has shown that it has nothing to recommend
-it. It existed as a wild dream before Geology had any being
-as a science. It was broached more than a century ago by De
-Maillet, who knew nothing of the geology even of his day. In a
-translation of his Telhamed, published in 1750, Mr. Miller finds very
-nearly the same account given of the origin of plants and animals,
-as that in the “Vestiges,” and in which the sea is described as that
-“great and fruitful womb of nature, in which organization and life
-first begin.” Lamarck, though a skilful botanist and conchologist,
-was unacquainted with geology; and as he first published his development
-hypothesis in 1802, (an hypothesis identical with that of the
-“Vestiges,”) it is probable that he was not then a very skilful zoologist.
-Nor has Professor Oken any higher claims to geological acquirements.
-He confesses that he wrote the first edition of his work in
-<i>a kind of inspiration!</i> and it is not difficult to estimate the intelligence
-of the inspiring idol that announced to the German sage that
-the globe was a vast crystal, a little flawed in the facets, and that
-quartz, feldspar, and mica, the three constituents of granite, were
-the hail-drops of heavy showers of stone that fell into the original
-ocean, and accumulated into rocks at the bottom!</p>
-
-<p>Such is the unscientific parentage of the theories promulgated in
-the “Vestiges.” But the author of this work appeals in the first
-instance to science. Astronomy, Geology, Botany, and Zoology are
-called upon to give evidence in his favor; but the astronomer, geologist,
-botanist, and the zoologist, all refuse him their testimony, deny
-his premises, and reject his results. “It is not,” as Mr. Miller happily
-observes, “the illiberal religionist that casts him off. It is the
-inductive philosopher.” Science addresses him in the language of
-the possessed: “The astronomer I know, and the geologist I know;
-but who are ye?” Thus left alone in a cloud of star-dust, or in
-brackish water between the marine and terrestrial flora, he “appeals
-from science to the want of it,” casts a stone at our Scientific Institutions,
-and demands a jury of “ordinary readers,” as the only
-“tribunal” by which “the new philosophy is to be truly and righteously
-judged.”</p>
-
-<p>The last and <i>fifteenth</i> chapter of Mr. Miller’s work, “On the Bearing
-of Final Causes on Geologic History,” if read with care and
-thought, will prove at once delightful and instructive. The principle<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxxvii"></a>[xxxvii]</span>
-of <i>final causes</i>, or the conditions of existence, affords a wide scope to
-our reason in Natural History, but especially in Geology. It becomes
-an interesting inquiry, if any reason can be assigned why at
-certain periods species began to exist, and became extinct after the
-lapse of lengthened periods of time, and why the higher classes of
-being succeeded the lower in the order of creation? The incompleteness
-of geological science, however, does not permit us to remove,
-for the present, the veil which hangs over this mysterious
-chronology; but our author is of opinion that in about a quarter of
-a century, in a favored locality like the British Islands, geological
-history “will assume a very extraordinary form.”</p>
-
-<p>It is a singular fact, which will yet lead to singular results, that
-Cuvier’s arrangement of the four classes of vertebrate animals should
-exhibit the same order as that in which they are found in the strata
-of the earth. In the <i>fish</i>, the average proportion of the brain to the
-spinal cord is only as 2 to 1. In the <i>reptile</i>, the ratio is 2½ to 1. In
-the <i>bird</i>, it is as 3 to 1. In the <i>mammalia</i>, it is as 4 to 1; and in <i>man</i>,
-it is as 23 to 1. No less remarkable is the fœtal progress of the
-human brain. It first becomes a brain resembling that of a fish;
-then it grows into the form of that of a reptile; then into that of a
-bird; then into that of a mammiferous quadruped, and finally it
-assumes the form of a human brain, “thus comprising in its fœtal
-progress an epitome of geological history, as if man were in himself
-a compendium of all animated nature, and of kin to every creature
-that lives.”</p>
-
-<p>With these considerations, Mr. Miller has brought his subject to
-the point at which Science in its onward progress now stands. It is
-to embryology we are in future to look for further information upon
-the most intimate relations which exist between all organized beings.
-We may fairly entertain the hope that the time is not far when we
-shall not only fully understand the Plan of Creation, but even lift
-some corner of the veil which has hitherto prevented us from forming
-adequate ideas of the first introduction of animal and vegetable
-life upon earth, and of the changes which both kingdoms have undergone
-in the succession of geological ages.</p>
-
-<p class="right">L. AGASSIZ.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Cambridge</span>, <i>September, 1850</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxxviii"></a>[xxxviii]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxxix"></a>[xxxix]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CONTENTS</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<table summary="Contents">
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="tdpg smaller">PAGE</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>STROMNESS AND ITS ASTEROLEPIS.—THE LAKE OF STENNIS</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_I">21</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THE DEVELOPMENT HYPOTHESIS, AND ITS CONSEQUENCES</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">37</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THE RECENT HISTORY OF THE ASTEROLEPIS.—ITS FAMILY</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">48</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>CEREBRAL DEVELOPMENT OF THE EARLIER VERTEBRATA.—ITS APPARENT PRINCIPLE</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">62</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THE ASTEROLEPIS.—ITS STRUCTURE, BULK, AND ASPECT</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">94</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>FISHES OF THE SILURIAN ROCKS, UPPER AND LOWER.—THEIR RECENT HISTORY, ORDER, AND SIZE</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">130</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>HIGH STANDING OF THE PLACOIDS.—OBJECTIONS CONSIDERED</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">147</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THE PLACOID BRAIN.—EMBRYONIC CHARACTERISTICS NOT NECESSARILY OF A LOW ORDER</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">160</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THE PROGRESS OF DEGRADATION.—ITS HISTORY</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">181</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>EVIDENCE OF THE SILURIAN MOLLUSCS.—OF THE FOSSIL FLORA.—ANCIENT TREE</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_X">205</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>SUPERPOSITION NOT PARENTAL RELATION.—THE BEGINNINGS OF LIFE</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">230</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>LAMARCKIAN HYPOTHESIS OF THE ORIGIN OF PLANTS.—ITS CONSEQUENCES</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XII">243</a><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xl"></a>[xl]</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THE TWO FLORAS, MARINE AND TERRESTRIAL.—BEARING OF THE EXPERIENCE ARGUMENT</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">262</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THE DEVELOPMENT HYPOTHESIS IN ITS EMBRYONIC STATE.—OLDER THAN ITS ALLEGED FOUNDATIONS</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">277</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>FINAL CAUSES—THEIR BEARING ON GEOLOGIC HISTORY—CONCLUSION</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XV">303</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xli"></a>[xli]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">LIST OF WOOD-CUTS</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<table summary="List of wood-cuts">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="tdpg smaller">PAGE</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">1.</td>
- <td>Internal ridge of hyoid plate of <i>Asterolepis</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure1">31</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">2.</td>
- <td>Shagreen of <i>Raja clavata</i>:—of <i>Sphagodus</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure2">54</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">3.</td>
- <td>Scales of <i>Acanthodes sulcatus</i>:—shagreen of <i>Scyllium stellare</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure3">55</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">4.</td>
- <td>Scales of <i>Cheiracanthus microlepidotus</i>:—shagreen of <i>Spinax Acanthias</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure4">56</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">5.</td>
- <td>Section of shagreen of <i>Scyllium stellare</i>:—of scales of <i>Cheiracanthus microlepidotus</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure5">56</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">6.</td>
- <td>Scales of <i>Osteolepis microlepidotus</i>:—of an undescribed species of <i>Glyptolepis</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure6">57</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">7.</td>
- <td>Osseous points Of Placoid Cranium</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure7">65</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">8.</td>
- <td>Osseous centrum of <i>Spinax Acanthias</i>:—of <i>Raja clavata</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure8">67</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">9.</td>
- <td>Portions of caudal fin of <i>Cheiracanthus</i>:—of <i>Cheirolepis</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure9">69</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">10.</td>
- <td>Upper surface of cranium of Cod</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure10">72</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">11.</td>
- <td>Cranial buckler of <i>Coccosteus</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure11">74</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">12.</td>
- <td>Cranial buckler of <i>Osteolepis</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure12">75</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">13.</td>
- <td>Upper surface of head of <i>Osteolepis</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure13">77</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">14.</td>
- <td>Under surface of head of <i>Osteolepis</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure14">79</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">15.</td>
- <td>Head of <i>Osteolepis</i>, seen in profile</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure15">80</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">16.</td>
- <td>Cranial buckler of <i>Diplopterus</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure16">81</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">17.</td>
- <td>Ditto</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure17">82</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">18.</td>
- <td>Palatal dart-head, and group of palatal teeth, of <i>Dipterus</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure18">83</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">19.</td>
- <td>Cranial buckler of <i>Dipterus</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure19">85</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">20.</td>
- <td>Base of cranium of <i>Dipterus</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure20">86</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">21.</td>
- <td>Under jaw of <i>Dipterus</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure21">87</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">22.</td>
- <td>Longitudinal section of head of <i>Dipterus</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure22">88</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">23.</td>
- <td>Section of vertebral centrum of Thornback</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure23">92</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">24.</td>
- <td>Dermal tubercles of <i>Asterolepis</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure24">95</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">25.</td>
- <td>Scales of <i>Asterolepis</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure25">96</a><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xlii"></a>[xlii]</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">26.</td>
- <td>Portion of carved surface of scale</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure26">96</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">27.</td>
- <td>Cranial buckler of <i>Asterolepis</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure27">98</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">28.</td>
- <td>Inner surface of cranial buckler of <i>Asterolepis</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure28">99</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">29.</td>
- <td>Plates of cranial buckler of <i>Asterolepis</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure29">102</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">30.</td>
- <td>Portion of under jaw of <i>Asterolepis</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure30">103</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">31.</td>
- <td>Inner side of portion of under jaw of <i>Asterolepis</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure31">104</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">32.</td>
- <td>Portion of transverse section of reptile tooth of <i>Asterolepis</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure32">105</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">33.</td>
- <td>Section of jaw of <i>Asterolepis</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure33">106</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">34.</td>
- <td>Maxillary bone?</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure34">108</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">35.</td>
- <td>Inner surface of operculum of <i>Asterolepis</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure35">109</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">36.</td>
- <td>Hyoid plate</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure36">110</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">37.</td>
- <td>Nail-like bone of hyoid plate</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure37">111</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">38.</td>
- <td>Shoulder plate of <i>Asterolepis</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure38">112</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">39.</td>
- <td>Dermal bones of <i>Asterolepis</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure39">113</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">40.</td>
- <td>Internal bones of <i>Asterolepis</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure40">114</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">41.</td>
- <td>Ditto</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure41">115</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">42.</td>
- <td>Ischium of <i>Asterolepis</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure42">116</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">43.</td>
- <td>Joint of ray of Thornback:—of <i>Asterolepis</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure43">117</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">44.</td>
- <td>Coprolites of <i>Asterolepis</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure44">118</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">45.</td>
- <td>Hyoid plate of Thurso <i>Asterolepis</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure45">124</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">46.</td>
- <td>Hyoid plate of Russian <i>Asterolepis</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure46">127</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">47.</td>
- <td>Spine of <i>Spinax Acanthias</i>:—fragment of Onondago spine</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure47">143</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">48.</td>
- <td>Tail of <i>Spinax Acanthius</i>:—of <i>Ichthyosaurus tenuirostris</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure48">172</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">49.</td>
- <td>Port Jackson Shark (<i>Cestracion Phillippi</i>)</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure49">177</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">50.</td>
- <td>Tail of <i>Osteolepis</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure50">195</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">51.</td>
- <td>Tail of <i>Lepidosteus osseus</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure51">196</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">52.</td>
- <td>Tail of Perch</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure52">197</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">53.</td>
- <td><i>Altingia excelsa</i> (Norfolk-Island Pine)</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure53">212</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">54.</td>
- <td>Fucoids of the Lower Old Red Sandstone</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure54">216</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">55.</td>
- <td>Two species of Old Red Fucoids</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure55">217</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">56.</td>
- <td>Fern (?) of the Lower Old Red Sandstone</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure56">219</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">57.</td>
- <td>Lignite of the Lower Old Red Sandstone</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure57">221</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">58.</td>
- <td>Internal structure of lignite of Lower Old Red Sandstone</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#figure58">223</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_25"></a>[25]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_I">STROMNESS AND ITS ASTEROLEPIS.<br />
-THE LAKE OF STENNIS.</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<div>
-<img class="dropcap" src="images/dropcap.jpg" width="300" height="300" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="dropcap">When engaged in prosecuting the self-imposed
-task of examining in detail
-the various fossiliferous deposits of
-Scotland, in the hope of ultimately
-acquainting myself with them all, I extended
-my exploratory ramble, about
-two years ago, into the Mainland of Orkney, and resided for
-some time in the vicinity of Stromness.</p>
-
-<p>This busy seaport town forms that special centre, in this
-northern archipelago, from which the structure of the entire
-group can be most advantageously studied. The geology
-of the Orkneys, like that of Caithness, owes its chief
-interest to the immense development which it exhibits of
-one formation,—the Lower Old Red Sandstone,—and to the
-extraordinary abundance of its vertebrate remains. It is
-not too much to affirm, that in the comparatively small
-portion which this cluster of islands contains of the <i>third</i>
-part of a system regarded only a few years ago as the least
-fossiliferous in the geologic scale, there are more fossil fish<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_26"></a>[26]</span>
-enclosed than in <i>every</i> other geologic system in England,
-Scotland, and Wales, from the Coal Measures to the Chalk
-inclusive. Orkney is emphatically, to the geologist, what a
-juvenile Shetland poetess designates her country, in challenging
-for it a standing independent of the “Land of Cakes,”—a
-“Land of Fish;” and, were the trade once fairly opened
-up, could supply with ichthyolites, by the ton and the ship-load,
-the museums of the world. Its various deposits, with
-all their strange organisms, have been uptilted from the bottom
-against a granitic axis, rather more than six miles in
-length by about a mile in breadth, which forms the great
-back-bone of the western district of Pomona; and on this
-granitic axis—fast jammed in between a steep hill and the
-sea—stands the town of Stromness. Situated thus <i>at the
-bottom</i> of the upturned deposits of the island, it occupies exactly
-such a point of observation as that which the curious
-eastern traveller would select, in front of some huge pyramid
-or hieroglyphic-covered obelisk, as a proper site for his
-tent. It presents, besides, not a few facilities for studying
-with the geological phenomena, various interesting points in
-physical science of a cognate character. Resting on its
-granitic base, <i>in front</i> of the strangely sculptured pyramid of
-three broad tiers,—red, black, and gray,—which the Old
-Red Sandstone of these islands may be regarded as forming,
-it is but a short half mile from the Great Conglomerate base
-of the formation, and scarcely a quarter of a mile more from
-the older beds of its central flagstone deposit; while an hour’s
-sail on the one hand opens to the explorer the overlying arenaceous
-deposit of Hoy, and an hour’s walk on the other
-introduces him to the Loch of Stennis, with its curiously
-mixed flora and fauna. But of the Loch of Stennis and its
-productions more anon.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_27"></a>[27]</span></p>
-
-<p>The day was far spent when I reached Stromness: but as
-I had a fine bright evening still before me, longer by some
-three or four degrees of north latitude than the midsummer
-evenings of the south of Scotland, I set out, hammer in
-hand, to examine the junction of the granite and the Great
-Conglomerate, where it has been laid bare by the sea along
-the low promontory which forms the western boundary of
-the harbor. The granite here is a ternary of the usual components,
-somewhat intermediate in grain and color between
-the granites of Peterhead and Aberdeen; and the conglomerate
-consists of materials almost exclusively derived from it,—evidence
-enough of itself, that when this ancient mechanical
-deposit was in course of forming, the granite—exactly
-such a compound then as it is now—was one of the surface
-rocks of the locality, and much exposed to disintegrating influences.
-This conglomerate base of the Lower Old Red Sandstone
-of Scotland—which presents, over an area of many
-thousand square miles, such an identity of character, that
-specimens taken from the neighborhood of Lerwick, in Shetland,
-or of Gamrie, in Banff, can scarce be distinguished
-from specimens detached from the hills which rise over the
-Great Caledonian Valley, or from the cliffs immediately in
-front of the village of Contin—seems to have been formed
-in a vast oceanic basin of primary rock,—a Palæozoic Hudson’s
-or Baffin’s Bay,—partially surrounded, mayhap, by
-primary continents, swept by numerous streams, rapid and
-headlong, and charged with the broken debris of the inhospitable
-regions which they drained. The graptolite bearing
-grauwacke of Banffshire seems to have been the only fossiliferous
-rock that occurred throughout the entire extent of
-this ancient northern basin; and its few organisms now
-serve to open the sole vista through which the geological explorer<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_28"></a>[28]</span>
-to the north of the Grampians can catch a glimpse of
-an earlier period of existence than that represented by the
-ichthyolites of the Lower Old Red Sandstone.</p>
-
-<p>Very many ages must have passed ere, amid waves
-and currents, the water-worn debris which now forms the
-Great Conglomerate could have accumulated over tracts
-of sea-bottom from ten to fifteen thousand square miles in
-area, to its present depth of from one to four hundred feet.
-At length, however, a thorough change took place; but
-we can only doubtfully speculate regarding its nature or
-cause. The bottom of the Palæozoic basin became greatly
-less exposed. Some protecting circle of coast had been
-thrown up around it; or, what is perhaps more probable,
-it had sunk to a profounder depth, and the ancient
-shores and streams had receded, through the depression, to
-much greater distances. And, in consequence, the deposition
-of rough sand and rolled pebbles was followed by a
-deposition of mud. Myriads of fish, of forms the most
-ancient and obsolete, congregated on its banks or sheltered
-in its hollows; generation succeeded generation, millions
-and tens of millions perished mysteriously by sudden
-death; shoals after shoals were annihilated; but the productive
-powers of nature were strong, and the waste was
-kept up. But who among men shall reckon the years or
-centuries during which these races existed, and this muddy
-ocean of the remote past spread out to unknown and nameless
-shores around them? As in those great cities of the desert
-that lie uninhabited and waste, we can but conjecture their
-term of existence from the vast extent of their cemeteries.
-We only know that the dark, finely-grained schists in which
-they so abundantly occur must have been of comparatively
-slow formation, and that yet the thickness of the deposit<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_29"></a>[29]</span>
-more than equals the height of our loftiest Scottish mountains.
-It would seem as if a period equal to that in which
-all human history is comprised might be cut out of a corner
-of the period represented by the Lower Old Red Sandstone,
-and be scarce missed when away; for every year during
-which man has lived upon earth, it is not improbable that the
-<i>Pterichthys</i> and its contemporaries may have lived a century.
-Their last hour, however, at length came. Over the
-dark-colored ichthyolitic schists so immensely developed in
-Caithness and Orkney, there occurs a pale-tinted, unfossiliferous
-sandstone, which in the island of Hoy rises into hills of
-from fourteen to sixteen hundred feet in height; and among
-the organisms of those newer formations of the Old Red
-which overlie this deposit, not a species of ichthyolite identical
-with the species entombed in the lower schists has yet
-been detected. In the blank interval which the arenaceous
-deposit represents, tribes and families perished and disappeared,
-leaving none of their race to succeed them, that other
-tribes and families might be called into being, and fall into
-their vacant places in the onward march of creation.</p>
-
-<p>Such, so far as the various hieroglyphics of the pile have yet
-rendered their meanings to the geologist, is the strange story
-recorded on the three-barred <i>pyramid</i> of Stromness. I traced
-the formation upwards this evening along the edges of the
-upturned strata, from where the Great Conglomerate leans
-against the granite, till where it merges into the ichthyolitic
-flagstones; and then pursued these from older and lower to
-newer and higher layers, desirous of ascertaining at what
-distance over the base of the system its more ancient organisms
-first appear, and what their character and kind. And,
-embedded in a grayish-colored layer of hard flag, somewhat
-less than a hundred yards over the granite, and about a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_30"></a>[30]</span>
-hundred and sixty feet over the upper stratum of the conglomerate,
-I found what I sought,—a well-marked bone,—in
-all probability the oldest vertebrate remain yet discovered in
-Orkney. What, asks the reader, was the character of this
-ancient organism of the Palæozoic basin?</p>
-
-<p>As shown by its cancellated texture, palpable to the naked
-eye, and still more unequivocally by the irregular complexity
-of fabric which it exhibits under the microscope,—by its
-speck-like life-points or canaliculi, that remind one of air-bubbles
-in ice,—its branching channels, like minute veins,
-through which the blood must once have flown,—and its
-general groundwork of irregular lines of corpuscular fibre,
-that wind through the whole like currents in a river studded
-with islands,—it was as truly osseous in its composition
-as the solid bones of any of the reptiles of the Secondary, or
-the quadrupeds of the Tertiary periods. And in form it
-closely resembled a large roofing-nail. With this bone our
-more practised palæontologists are but little acquainted, for
-no remains of the animal to which it belonged have yet been
-discovered in Britain to the south of the Grampians,<a id="FNanchor_3" href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> nor, except
-in the Old Red Sandstone of Russia, has it been detected<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_31"></a>[31]</span>
-any where on the Continent. Nor am I aware that, save in
-the accompanying wood-cut, (fig. 1,) it has ever been figured.
-The amateur geologists of Caithness and Orkney have, however,
-learned to recognize it as the “petrified nail.” The
-length of the entire specimen in this instance was five
-seven eighth inches, the transverse breadth of the head two
-inches and a quarter, and the thickness of the stem nearly
-three tenth parts of an inch. This nail-like bone formed
-a characteristic portion of the <i>Asterolepis</i>,—so far as is yet
-known, the most gigantic ganoid of the Old Red Sandstone,
-and, judging from the <i>place</i> of this fragment, apparently one
-of the first.</p>
-
-<div class="figleft" style="width: 150px;" id="figure1">
-<img src="images/figure1.jpg" width="100" height="250" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 1.</p>
-<p class="caption">INTERNAL RIDGE OF HYOID PLATE OF ASTEROLEPSIS.<a id="FNanchor_4" href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a></p>
-<p class="caption">(One third the natural size, linear.)</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_32"></a>[32]</span></p>
-
-<p>There were various considerations which led me to regard
-the “petrified nail” in this case as one of the most interesting
-fossils I had ever seen; and, before quitting Orkney, to
-pursue my explorations farther to the south, I brought two intelligent
-geologists of the district,<a id="FNanchor_5" href="#Footnote_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> to mark its place and
-character, that they might be able to point it out to geological
-visitors in the future, or, if they preferred removing it
-to their town museum, to indicate to them the stratum in
-which it had lain. It showed me, among other things, how
-unsafe it is for the geologist to base positive conclusions
-on merely negative data. Founding on the fact that, of
-many hundred ichthyolites of the Lower Old Red Sandstone
-which I had disinterred and examined, all were of comparatively
-small size, while in the Upper Old Red many of
-the ichthyolites are of great mass and bulk, I had inferred
-that vertebrate life had been restricted to minuter forms at
-the commencement than at the close of the system. It
-had begun, I had ventured to state in the earlier editions of a
-little work on the “Old Red Sandstone,” with an age of
-dwarfs, and had ended with an age of giants. And now,
-here, at the very base of the system, unaccompanied by
-aught to establish the contemporary existence of its dwarfs,—which
-appear, however, in an overlying bed about a hundred
-feet higher up,—was there unequivocal proof of the existence
-of one of the most colossal of its giants. But not
-unfrequently, in the geologic field, has the practice of basing
-positive conclusions on merely negative grounds led to a misreading
-of the record. From evidence of a kind exactly
-similar to that on which I had built, it was inferred, some two<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_33"></a>[33]</span>
-or three years ago, that there had lived no reptiles during the
-period of the Coal Measures, and no fish in the times of the
-Lower Silurian System.</p>
-
-<p>I extended my researches, a few days after, in an easterly
-direction from the town of Stromness, and walked for several
-miles along the shores of the Loch of Stennis,—a large lake
-about fourteen miles in circumference, bare and treeless, like
-all the other lakes and lochs of Orkney, but picturesque of
-outline, and divided into an upper and lower sheet of water
-by two low, long promontories, that jut out from opposite
-sides, and so nearly meet in the middle as to be connected by
-a thread-like line of road, half mound, half bridge. “The
-Loch of Stennis,” says Mr. David Vedder, the sailor-poet of
-Orkney, “is a beautiful Mediterranean in miniature.” It gives
-admission to the sea by a narrow strait, crossed, like that
-which separates the two promontories in the middle, by a
-long rustic bridge; and, in consequence of this peculiarity,
-the lower division of the lake is salt in its nether reaches
-and brackish in its upper ones, while the higher division
-is merely brackish in its nether reaches, and fresh enough
-in its upper ones to be potable. Viewed from the east,
-in one of the long, clear, sunshiny evenings of the Orkney
-summer, it seems not unworthy the eulogium of Vedder.
-There are moory hills and a few rude cottages in front; and
-in the background, some eight or ten miles away, the bold,
-steep mountain masses of Hoy; while on the promontories
-of the lake, in the middle distance, conspicuous in the landscape,
-from the relief furnished by the blue ground of the
-surrounding waters, stand the tall gray obelisks of Stennis—one
-group on the northern promontory, the other on the
-south,—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Old even beyond tradition’s breath.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_34"></a>[34]</span></p>
-
-<p>The shores of both the upper and lower divisions of the
-lake were strewed, at the time I passed, by a line of <i>wrack</i>,
-consisting, for the first few miles from where the lower loch
-opens to the sea, of only marine plants, then of marine plants
-mixed with those of fresh-water growth, and then, in the
-upper sheet of water, of lacustrine plants exclusively. And
-the fauna of the loch is, I was informed, of as mixed a character
-as its flora,—the marine and fresh-water animals having
-each their own reaches, with certain debatable tracts
-between, in which each kind expatiates with more or less
-freedom, according to its specific nature and constitution,—some
-of the sea-fish advancing far on the fresh water, and
-others, among the proper denizens of the lake, encroaching
-far on the salt. The common fresh-water eel strikes out, I
-was told, farthest into the sea-water; in which, indeed, reversing
-the habits of the salmon, it is known in various places
-to deposit its spawn. It seeks, too, impatient of a low temperature,
-to escape from the cold of winter, by taking refuge
-in water brackish enough, in a climate such as ours, to resist
-the influence of frost. Of the marine fish, on the other hand,
-I found that the flounder got greatly higher than any of
-the others, inhabiting reaches of the lake almost entirely
-fresh. I have had an opportunity elsewhere of observing a
-curious change which fresh water induces in this fish. In the
-brackish water of an estuary, the animal becomes, without
-diminishing in general size, thicker and more fleshy than when
-in its legitimate habitat, the sea: but the flesh loses in quality
-what it gains in quantity;—it grows flabby and insipid, and
-the margin-fin lacks always its strip of transparent fat. But
-the change induced in the two floras of the lake—marine and
-lacustrine—is considerably more palpable and obvious than
-that induced in its two faunas. As I passed along the strait,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_35"></a>[35]</span>
-through which it gives admission to the sea, I found the
-commoner fucoids of our sea-coasts streaming in great luxuriance
-in the tideway, from the stones and rocks of the bottom.
-I marked, among the others, the two species of kelp-weed,
-so well known to our Scotch kelp-burners,—<i>Fucus
-nodosus</i> and <i>Fucus vesiculosus</i>,—flourishing in their uncurtailed
-proportions; and the not inelegant <i>Halidrys siliquosa</i>,
-or “tree in the sea,” presenting its amplest spread of pod and
-frond. A little farther in, <i>Halidrys</i> and <i>Fucus nodosus</i> disappear,
-and <i>Fucus vesiculosus</i> becomes greatly stunted, and
-no longer exhibits its characteristic double rows of bladders.
-But for mile after mile it continues to exist, blent with some
-of the hardier confervæ, until at length it becomes as dwarfish
-and nearly as slim of frond as the confervæ themselves;
-and it is only by tracing it through the intermediate forms
-that we succeed in convincing ourselves that, in the brown
-stunted tufts of from one to three inches in length, which
-continue to fringe the middle reaches of the lake, we have
-in reality the well-known Fucus before us. Rushes, flags,
-and aquatic grasses may now be seen standing in diminutive
-tufts out of the water; and a terrestrial vegetation at least
-continues to exist, though it can scarce be said to thrive, on
-banks covered by the tide at full. The lacustrine flora
-increases, both in extent and luxuriance, as that of the sea
-diminishes; and in the upper reaches we fail to detect all
-trace of marine plants: the algæ, so luxuriant of growth along
-the straits of this “miniature Mediterranean,” altogether
-cease; and a semi-aquatic vegetation attains, in turn, to the
-state of fullest development any where permitted by the temperature
-of this northern locality. A memoir descriptive of
-the Loch of Stennis, and its productions, animal and vegetable,
-such as old Gilbert White of Selborne could have produced,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_36"></a>[36]</span>
-would be at once a very valuable and curious document, important
-to the naturalist, and not without its use to the geological
-student.</p>
-
-<p>I know not how it may be with others; but the special
-phenomena connected with Orkney that most decidedly bore
-fruit in my mind, and to which my thoughts have most frequently
-reverted, were those exhibited in the neighborhood
-of Stromness. I would more particularly refer to the characteristic
-fragment of <i>Asterolepis</i>, which I detected in its lower
-flagstones, and to the curiously mixed, semi-marine, semi-lacustrine
-vegetation of the Loch of Stennis. Both seem to
-bear very directly on that development hypothesis,—fast
-spreading among an active and ingenious order of minds,
-both in Britain and America, and which has been long known
-on the Continent,—that would fain transfer the work of creation
-from the department of miracle to the province of natural
-law, and would strike down, in the process of removal, all the
-old landmarks, ethical and religious.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_37"></a>[37]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_II">THE DEVELOPMENT HYPOTHESIS, AND ITS CONSEQUENCES.</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Every individual, whatever its species or order, begins
-and increases until it attains to its state of fullest development,
-under certain fixed laws, and <i>in consequence</i> of their
-operation. The microscopic monad develops into a fœtus,
-the fœtus into a child, the child into a man; and, however
-marvellous the process, in none of its stages is there the
-slightest mixture of miracle; from beginning to end, all is
-progressive development, according to a determinate order of
-things. Has <i>Nature</i>, during the vast geologic periods, been
-pregnant, in like manner, with the human race? and is the
-species, like the individual, an effect of progressive development,
-induced and regulated by law? The assertors of the
-revived hypothesis of Maillet and Lamarck reply in the affirmative.
-Nor, be it remarked, is there positive atheism
-involved in the belief. God might as certainly have <i>originated</i>
-the species by a law of development, as he <i>maintains</i> it
-by a law of development; the existence of a First Great
-Cause is as perfectly compatible with the one scheme as with
-the other; and it may be necessary thus broadly to state the
-fact, not only in justice to the Lamarckians, but also fairly to
-warn their non-geological opponents, that in this contest
-the old anti-atheistic arguments, whether founded on the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_38"></a>[38]</span>
-evidence of design, or on the preliminary doctrine of final
-causes, cannot be brought to bear.</p>
-
-<p>There are, however, beliefs, in no degree less important
-to the moralist or the Christian than even that in the being of
-a God, which seem wholly incompatible with the development
-hypothesis. It, during a period so vast as to be scarce
-expressible by figures, the creatures now human have been
-rising, by <i>almost</i> infinitesimals, from compound microscopic
-cells,—minute vital globules within globules, begot by electricity
-on dead gelatinous matter,—until they have at length
-become the men and women whom we see around us, we must
-hold either the monstrous belief, that all the vitalities, whether
-those of monads or of mites, of fishes or of reptiles, of birds
-or of beasts, are individually and inherently immortal and
-undying, or that human souls are <i>not</i> so. The difference between
-the dying and the undying,—between the spirit of the
-brute that goeth downward, and the spirit of the man that
-goeth upward,—is not a difference infinitesimally, or even
-atomically <i>small</i>. It possesses all the breadth of the eternity
-to come, and is an <i>infinitely great</i> difference. It cannot, if I
-may so express myself, be shaded off by infinitesimals or
-atoms; for it is a difference which—as there can be no class
-of beings intermediate in their nature between the dying and the
-undying—admits not of gradation at all. What mind, regulated
-by the ordinary principles of human belief, can possibly
-hold that every one of the thousand vital points which swim in
-a drop of stagnant water are inherently fitted to maintain their
-individuality throughout eternity? Or how can it be rationally
-held that a mere progressive step, in itself no greater or more
-important than that effected by the addition of a single brick
-to a house in the building state, or of a single atom to a body
-in the growing state, could ever have produced immortality?<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_39"></a>[39]</span>
-And yet, if the <i>spirit</i> of a monad or of a mollusc be not immortal,
-then must there either have been a point in the history
-of the species at which a dying brute—differing from
-its offspring merely by an inferiority of development, represented
-by a few atoms, mayhap by a single atom—produced
-an undying man, or man in his present state must be a mere
-animal, possessed of no immortal soul, and as irresponsible
-for his actions to the God before whose bar he is, in consequence,
-never to appear, as his presumed relatives and progenitors
-the beasts that perish. Nor will it do to attempt
-escaping from the difficulty, by alleging that God at some
-certain link in the chain <i>might</i> have converted a mortal creature
-into an immortal existence, by breathing into it a “living
-soul;” seeing that a renunciation of any such direct interference
-on the part of Deity in the work of creation forms
-the prominent and characteristic feature of the scheme,—nay,
-that it constitutes the very nucleus round which the
-scheme has originated. And thus, though the development
-theory be not atheistic, it is at least practically tantamount
-to atheism. For, if man be a dying creature, restricted in
-his existence to the present scene of things, what does it really
-matter to him, for any one moral purpose, whether there be a
-God or no? If in reality on the same religious level with
-the dog, wolf, and fox, that are by nature <i>atheists</i>,—a nature
-most properly coupled with irresponsibility,—to what one
-practical purpose should he know or believe in a God whom
-he, as certainly as they, is never to meet as his Judge? or
-why should he square his conduct by the requirements of the
-moral code, farther than a low and convenient expediency
-may chance to demand?<a id="FNanchor_6" href="#Footnote_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_40"></a>[40]</span></p>
-
-<p>Nor does the purely Christian objection to the development
-hypothesis seem less, but even more insuperable than that
-derived from the province of natural theology. The belief
-which is perhaps of all others most fundamentally essential
-to the revealed scheme of salvation, is the belief that “God
-created man upright,” and that man, instead of proceeding
-onward and upward from this high and fair beginning, to a
-yet higher and fairer standing in the scale of creation, sank
-and became morally lost and degraded. And hence the necessity
-for that second dispensation of recovery and restoration
-which forms the entire burden of God’s revealed message
-to man. If, according to the development theory, the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_41"></a>[41]</span>
-progress of the “first Adam” was an upward progress, the
-existence of the “second Adam”—that “happier man,”
-according to Milton, whose special work it is to “restore”
-and “regain the blissful seat” of the lapsed race—is simply
-a meaningless anomaly. Christianity, if the development
-theory be true, is exactly what some of the more extreme
-Moderate divines of the last age used to make it—an idle
-and unsightly excrescence on a code of morals that would be
-perfect were it away.</p>
-
-<p>I may be in error in taking this serious view of the matter;
-and, if so, would feel grateful to the man who could point out
-to me that special link in the chain of inference at which,
-with respect to the bearing of the theory on the two theologies—natural
-and revealed—the mistake has taken place.
-But if I be in error at all, it is an error into which I find
-not a few of the first men of the age,—represented, as a
-class, by our Professor Sedgwicks and Sir David Brewsters,—have
-also fallen; and until it be shown to <i>be</i> an error, and
-that the development theory is in no degree incompatible
-with a belief in the immortality of the soul—in the responsibility
-of man to God as the final Judge—or in the Christian
-scheme of salvation—it is every honest man’s duty to protest
-against any <i>ex parte</i> statement of the question, that would
-insidiously represent it as ethically an indifferent one, or as
-unimportant in its theologic bearing, save to “little religious
-sects and scientific coteries.” In an address on the fossil
-flora, made in September last by a gentleman of Edinburgh
-to the St. Andrew’s Horticultural Society, there occurs the
-following passage on this subject: “Life is governed by
-external conditions, and new conditions imply new races; but
-then as to their creation, that is the ‘<i>mystery of mysteries</i>.’
-Are they created by an immediate fiat and direct act of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_42"></a>[42]</span>
-Almighty? or has He originally impressed life with an elasticity
-and adaptability, so that it shall take upon itself new
-forms and characters, according to the conditions to which it
-shall be subjected? Each opinion has had, and still has, its
-advocates and opponents; but the truth is, that <i>science</i>, so far
-as it knows, or rather so far as it has had the honesty and
-courage to avow, has yet been unable to pronounce a satisfactory
-decision. <i>Either way, it matters little</i>, <i>physically or morally</i>,
-either mode implies the same omnipotence, and wisdom,
-and foresight, and protection; and it is only your little religious
-sects and scientific coteries which make a pother about the
-matter,—sects and coteries of which it may be justly said,
-that they would almost exclude God from the management
-of his own world, if not managed and directed in the way
-that they would have it.” Now, this is surely a most unfair
-representation of the consequences, ethical and religious
-involved in the development hypothesis. It is not its compatibility
-with belief in the existence of a First Great Cause
-that has to be established, in order to prove it harmless; but
-its compatibility with certain other all-important beliefs, without
-which simple Theism is of no moral value whatever—a
-belief in the immortality and responsibility of man, and in
-the scheme of salvation by a Mediator and Redeemer. Dissociated
-from these beliefs, a belief in the existence of a God
-is of as little <i>ethical</i> value as a belief in the existence of the
-great sea-serpent.</p>
-
-<p>Let us see whether we cannot determine what the testimony
-of Geology, on this question of creation by development,
-really is. It is always perilous to under-estimate the strength
-of an enemy; and the danger from the development hypothesis
-to an ingenious order of minds, smitten with the novel
-fascinations of physical science, has been under-estimated very<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_43"></a>[43]</span>
-considerably indeed. Save by a few studious men, who to
-the cultivation of Geology and the cognate branches add some
-acquaintance with metaphysical science, the general correspondence
-of the line of assault taken up by this new school
-of infidelity, with that occupied by the old, and the consequent
-ability of the assailants to bring, not only the recently
-forged, but also the previously employed artillery into full
-play along its front, has not only not been marked, but even
-not so much as suspected. And yet, in order to show that
-there actually is such a correspondence, it can be but necessary
-to state, that the great antagonist points in the array of
-the opposite lines, are simply the <i>law</i> of development <i>versus</i>
-the <i>miracle</i> of creation. The evangelistic Churches cannot,
-in consistency with their character, or with a due regard to
-the interests of their people, slight or overlook a form of error
-at once exceedingly plausible and consummately dangerous,
-and which is telling so widely on society, that one can scarce
-travel by railway or in a steamboat, or encounter a group of
-intelligent mechanics, without finding decided trace of its
-ravages.</p>
-
-<p>But ere the Churches can be prepared competently to
-deal with it, or with the other objections of a similar class
-which the infidelity of an age so largely engaged as the present
-in physical pursuits will be from time to time originating
-they must greatly extend their educational walks into the
-field of physical science. The mighty change which has
-taken place during the present century, in the direction in
-which the minds of the first order are operating, though
-indicated on the face of the country in characters which
-cannot be mistaken, seems to have too much escaped the notice
-of our theologians. Speculative theology and the metaphysics
-are cognate branches of the same science; and when,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_44"></a>[44]</span>
-as in the last and the preceding ages, the higher philosophy of
-the world was metaphysical, the Churches took ready cognizance
-of the fact, and, in due accordance with the requirements
-of the time, the battle of the Evidences was fought on metaphysical
-ground. But, judging from the preparations made in
-their colleges and halls, they do not now seem sufficiently
-aware—though the low thunder of every railway, and the snort
-of every steam engine, and the whistle of the wind amid the
-wires of every electric telegraph, serve to publish the fact—that
-it is in the departments of physics, not of metaphysics,
-that the greater minds of the age are engaged,—that
-the Lockes, Humes, Kants, Berkeleys, Dugald Stewarts, and
-Thomas Browns, belong to the past,—and that the philosophers
-of the present time, tall enough to be seen all the world
-over, are the Humboldts, the Aragos, the Agassizes, the Liebigs,
-the Owens, the Herschels, the Bucklands, and the Brewsters.
-In that educational course through which, in this country,
-candidates for the ministry pass, in preparation for their
-office, I find every group of great minds which has in turn
-influenced and directed the mind of Europe for the last three
-centuries, represented, more or less adequately, save the last.
-It is an epitome of all kinds of learning, with the exception
-of the kind most imperatively required, because most in
-accordance with the genius of the time. The restorers of classic
-literature—the Buchanans and Erasmuses—we see represented
-in our Universities by the Greek and what are termed
-the Humanity courses; the Galileos, Boyles, and Newtons, by
-the Mathematical and Natural Philosophy courses; and the
-Lockes, Kants, Humes, and Berkeleys, by the Metaphysical
-course. But the Cuviers, the Huttons, the Cavendishes, and the
-Watts, with their successors, the practical philosophers of the
-present age,—men whose achievements in physical science<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_45"></a>[45]</span>
-we find marked on the surface of the country in characters
-which might be read from the moon,—are <i>not</i> adequately
-represented. It would be perhaps more correct to say, that
-they are not represented at all;<a id="FNanchor_7" href="#Footnote_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> and the clergy, as a class,
-suffer themselves to linger far in the rear of an intelligent and
-accomplished laity—a full age behind the requirements of
-the time. Let them not shut their eyes to the danger which
-is obviously coming. The battle of the Evidences will have
-as certainly to be fought on the field of physical science, as
-it was contested in the last age on that of the metaphysics.
-And on this new arena the combatants will have to employ
-new weapons, which it will be the privilege of the challenger
-to choose. The old, opposed to these, would prove but of
-little avail. In an age of muskets and artillery, the bows and
-arrows of an obsolete school of warfare would be found
-greatly less than sufficient, in the field of battle, for purposes
-either of assault or defence.</p>
-
-<p>“There are two kinds of generation in the world,” says
-Professor Lorenz Oken, in his “Elements of Physio-philosophy;”
-“the creation proper, and the propagation that is
-sequent thereupon—or the <i>generatio originaria</i> and <i>secundaria</i>.
-Consequently, no organism has been created of larger
-size than an infusorial point. No organism is, nor ever has<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_46"></a>[46]</span>
-one been created, which is not microscopic. Whatever is
-larger has not been created, but developed. Man has not
-been created, but developed.” Such, in a few brief dogmatic
-sentences, is the development theory. What, in order to
-establish its truth, or even to render it in some degree probable,
-ought to be the geological evidence regarding it? The
-reply seems obvious. In the first place, the earlier fossils
-ought to be very <i>small</i> in size; in the second, very <i>low</i> in
-organization. In cutting into the stony womb of nature, in
-order to determine what it contained mayhap millions of ages
-ago, we must expect, if the development theory be true, to
-look upon mere embryos and fœtuses. And if we find, instead,
-the full grown and the mature, then must we hold that
-the testimony of Geology is not only <i>not in accordance</i> with
-the theory, but in positive opposition to it. Such, palpably, is
-the <i>principle</i> on which, in this matter, we ought to decide.
-What are the <i>facts</i>?</p>
-
-<p>The oldest organism yet discovered in the most ancient
-geological system of Scotland in which vertebrate remains
-occur, <i>seems</i> to be the <i>Asterolepis</i> of Stromness. After the
-explorations of many years over a wide area, I have detected
-none other equally low in the system; nor have I ascertained
-that any brother-explorer in the same field has been more
-fortunate. It is, up to the present time, the most ancient
-Scotch witness of the great class of fishes that can in this case
-be brought into court; nay, it is in all probability the oldest
-<i>ganoid</i> witness the world has yet produced; for there appears
-no certain trace of this order of fishes in the great Silurian
-system which lies underneath, and in which, so far as geologists
-yet know, organic existence first began. How, then, on
-the two relevant points—bulk and organization—does it
-answer to the demands of the development hypothesis? Was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_47"></a>[47]</span>
-it a mere fœtus of the finny tribe, of minute size, and imperfect,
-embryonic faculty? Or was it of at least the ordinary
-bulk, and, for its class, of the average organization? May I
-solicit the forbearance of the non-geological reader, should
-my reply to these apparently simple questions seem unnecessarily
-prolix and elaborate? Peculiar opportunities of observation,
-and the possession of a set of unique fossils, enable
-me to submit to our palæontologists a certain amount of information
-regarding this ancient ganoid, which they will deem
-at once interesting and new; and the bearing of my statements
-on the general argument will, I trust, become apparent
-as I proceed.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_48"></a>[48]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_III">THE RECENT HISTORY OF THE ASTEROLEPIS.<br />
-ITS FAMILY.</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>It had been long known to the continental naturalists, that
-in certain Russian deposits, very extensively developed, there
-occur in considerable abundance certain animal organisms;
-but for many years neither their position nor character could
-be satisfactorily determined. By some they were placed too
-high in the scale of organized being; by others too low.
-Kutorga, a writer not very familiarly known in this country,
-described the remains as those of mammals;—the Russian
-rocks contained, he said, bones of quadrupeds, and, in especial,
-the teeth of swine: whereas Lamarck, a better known
-authority, though not invariably a safe one,—for he had
-a trick of dreaming when wide awake, and of calling his
-dreams philosophy,—assigned to them a place among the
-corals. They belonged, he asserted, as shown by certain
-star-like markings with which they are fretted, to the Polyparia.
-He even erected for their reception a new genus of
-Astrea, which he designated, from the little rounded hillock
-which rises in the middle of each star, the genus <i>Monticularia</i>.
-It was left to a living naturalist, M. Eichwald, to fix
-their true position zoologically among the class of fishes, and
-to Sir Roderick Murchison to determine their position geologically
-as ichthyolites of the Old Red Sandstone.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_49"></a>[49]</span></p>
-
-<p>Sir Roderick, on his return from his great Russian campaigns,
-in which he fared far otherwise than Napoleon,
-and accomplished more, submitted to Agassiz a series of
-fragments of these gigantic Ganoids; and the celebrated
-ichthyologist, who had been introduced little more than a
-twelvemonth before to the <i>Pterichthys</i> of Cromarty, was at
-first inclined to regard them as the remains of a large cuirassed
-fish of the Cephalaspian type, but generically new.
-Under this impression he bestowed upon the yet unknown
-ichthyolite of which they had formed part, the name <i>Chelonichthys</i>,
-from the resemblance borne by the broken plates
-to those of the carapace and plastron of some of the Chelonians.
-At this stage, however, the Russian Old Red
-yielded a set of greatly finer remains than it had previously
-furnished; and of these casts were transmitted by Professor
-Asmus, of the University of Dorpat, to the British and
-London Geological Museums, and to Agassiz. “I knew not
-at first what to do,” says the ichthyologist, “with bones
-of so singular a conformation that I could refer them to
-no known type.” Detecting, however, on their exterior
-surfaces the star-like markings which had misled Lamarck,
-and which he had also detected on the lesser fragments submitted
-to him by Sir Roderick, he succeeded in identifying
-both the fragments and bones as remains of the same genus
-and on ascertaining that M. Eichwald had bestowed upon
-it, from these characteristic sculpturings, the generic name
-<i>Asterolepis</i>, or star-scale, he suffered the name which he
-himself had originated to drop. Even this second name,
-however, which the ichthyolite still continues to bear, is
-in some degree founded in error. Its true scales, as I shall
-by and by show, were not stelliferous, but fretted by a peculiar
-style of ornament, consisting of waved anastomosing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_50"></a>[50]</span>
-ridges, breaking atop into angular-shaped dots, scooped out
-internally like the letter V; and were evidently intermediate
-in their character between the scales which cover the
-<i>Glyptolepis</i> and those of the <i>Holoptychius</i>. And the stellate
-markings which M. Eichwald graphically describes as minute
-paps rising out of the middle of star-like wreaths of
-little leaflets, were restricted to the dermal plates of the
-head.</p>
-
-<p>Agassiz ultimately succeeded in classing the bones which
-had at first so puzzled him, into two divisions—interior and
-dermal; and the latter he divided yet further, though not
-without first lodging a precautionary protest, founded on the
-extreme obscurity of the subject, into cranial and opercular.
-Of the interior bones he specified two,—a super-scapular
-bone, (<i>supra-scapulaire</i>,)—that bone which in osseous fishes
-completes the scapular arch or belt, by uniting the scapula to
-the cranium; and a maxillary or upper jaw-bone. But his
-world-wide acquaintance with existing fishes could lend
-him no assistance in determining the places of the dermal
-bones: they formed the mere fragments of a broken puzzle,
-of which the key was lost. Even in their detached and irreducible
-state, however, he succeeded in basing upon them
-several shrewd deductions. He inferred, in the first place,
-that the <i>Asterolepis</i> was not, as had been at first supposed, a
-cuirassed fish, which took its place among the Cephalaspians,
-but a strongly helmed fish of that Cœlacanth family to which
-the <i>Holoptychius</i> and <i>Glyptolepis</i> belong; in the second, that,
-like several of its bulkier cogeners, it was in all probability
-a broad, flat-headed animal; and, in the third, that as its remains
-are found associated in the Russian beds with numerous
-detached teeth of large size,—the boar tusks of Kutorga—which
-present internally that peculiar microscopic<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_51"></a>[51]</span>
-character on which Professor Owen has erected his Dendrodic
-or tree-toothed family of fishes,—it would in all likelihood
-be found that both bones and teeth belonged to the
-same group. “It appears more than probable,” he said,
-“that one day, by the discovery of a head or an entire jaw,
-it will be shown that the genera <i>Dendrodus</i> and <i>Asterolepis</i>
-form but one.” As we proceed, the reader will see how
-justly the ichthyologist assigned to the <i>Asterolepis</i> its place
-among the Cœlacanths, and how entirely his two other conjectures
-regarding it have been confirmed. “I have had in
-general,” he concluded, “but small and mutilated fragments
-of the creature’s bones submitted to me, and of these, even
-the surface ornaments not well preserved; but I hope the
-immense materials with which the Old Red Sandstone of
-Russia has furnished the savans of that country will not be
-lost to science; and that my labors on this interesting genus,
-incomplete as they are, will excite more and more the attention
-of geologists, by showing them how ignorant we are of
-all the essential facts concerning the history of the first inhabitants
-of our globe.”</p>
-
-<p>I know not what the savans of Russia have been doing for
-the last few years; but mainly through the labors of an
-intelligent tradesman of Thurso, Mr. Robert Dick,—one of
-those working men of Scotland of active curiosity and well-developed
-intellect, that give character and standing to the
-rest,—I am enabled to justify the classification and confirm
-the conjectures of Agassiz. Mr. Dick, after acquainting himself,
-in the leisure hours of a laborious profession, with the
-shells, insects, and plants of the northern locality in which
-he resides, had set himself to study its geology; and with
-this view he procured a copy of the little treatise on the Old
-Red Sandstone to which I have already referred, and which<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_52"></a>[52]</span>
-was at that time, as Agassiz’s Monograph of the Old Red
-fishes had not yet appeared, the only work specially devoted
-to the palæontology of the system, so largely developed in
-the neighborhood of Thurso. With perhaps a single exception,—for
-the Thurso rocks do not yet seem to have yielded
-a <i>Pterichthys</i>,—he succeeded in finding specimens, in a state
-of better or worse keeping, of all the various ichthyolites which
-I had described as peculiar to the Lower Old Red Sandstone.
-He found, however, what I had <i>not</i> described,—the remains
-of apparently a very gigantic ichthyolite; and, communicating
-with me through the medium of a common friend, he
-submitted to me, in the first instance, drawings of his new
-set of fossils; and ultimately, as I could arrive at no satisfactory
-conclusion from the drawings, he with great liberality
-made over to me the fossils themselves. Agassiz’s
-Monograph was not yet published; nor had I an opportunity
-of examining, until about a twelvemonth after, the
-casts, in the British Museum, of the fossils of Professor
-Asmus. Besides, all the little information, derived from
-various sources, which I had acquired respecting the Russian
-<i>Chelonichthys</i>,—for such was its name at the time,—referred
-it to the cuirassed type, and served but to mislead.
-I was assured, for instance, that Professor Asmus regarded
-his set of remains as portions of the plates and paddles
-of a gigantic <i>Pterichthys</i>, of from twenty to thirty feet in
-length. And so, as I had recognized in the Thurso fossils
-the peculiarities of the <i>Holoptychian</i> (Cœlacanth) family, I
-at first failed to identify them with the remains of the great
-Russian fish. All the larger bones sent me by Mr. Dick
-were, I found, cerebral; and the scales associated with
-these indicated, not a cuirass-protected, but a scale-covered
-body and exhibited, in their sculptured and broadly imbricated<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_53"></a>[53]</span>
-surfaces, the well-marked Cœlacanth style of disposition
-and ornament. But though I could <i>not</i> recognize in either
-bones or scales the remains of one ichthyolite more of the
-Old Red Sandstone, “that could be regarded as manifesting
-as peculiar a type among fishes as do the Ichthyosauri and
-Plesiosauri among reptiles,”<a id="FNanchor_8" href="#Footnote_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a> I was engaged at the time in
-a course of inquiry regarding the cerebral development of
-the earlier vertebrata, that made me deem them scarce less
-interesting than if I could. Ere, however, I attempt communicating
-to the reader the result of my researches, I must
-introduce him, in order that he may be able to set out with
-me to the examination of the <i>Asterolepis</i> from the same starting-point,
-to the Cœlacanth family,—indisputably one of the
-oldest, and not the least interesting, of its order.</p>
-
-<div class="figleft" style="width: 200px;" id="figure2">
-<img src="images/figure2.jpg" width="200" height="250" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 2.</p>
-<p class="caption">a. <i>Shagreen of the Thornback (Raja clavata.)</i></p>
-<p class="caption">b. <i>Shagreen of Sphagodus,—a placoid of the Upper Silurian.</i><a id="FNanchor_9" href="#Footnote_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>So far as is yet known, all the fish of the earliest fossiliferous
-system belonged to the placoid or “<i>broad plated</i>” order,—a
-great division of fishes, represented in the existing seas
-by the Sharks and Rays,—animals that to an internal skeleton
-of cartilage unite a dermal covering of points, plates, or
-spines of enamelled bone, and have their gills fixed. The
-dermal or cuticular bones of this order vary greatly in
-form, according to the species or family: in some cases they
-even vary, according to their place, on the same individual.
-Those button-like tubercles, for instance, with an enamelled
-thorn, bent like a hook, growing out of the centre of each,
-which run down the back and tail, and stud the pectorals of the
-thorn-back, (<i>Raja clavata</i>,) differ very much from the smaller
-thorns, with star-formed bases, which roughen the other parts
-of the creature’s body; and the bony points which mottle<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_54"></a>[54]</span>
-the back and sides of the sharks are, in most of the known
-species, considerably more elongated and prickly than the
-points which cover their fins, belly, and snout. The extreme
-forms, however, of the shagreen tubercle or plate seem to be
-those of the upright prickle or spine on the one hand, and of
-the slant-laid, rhomboidal, scale-shaped plate on the other.
-The minuter thorns of the ray
-(fig. 2, <i>a</i>) exemplify the extreme
-of the prickly type; the fins, abdomen,
-and anterior part of the
-head of the spotted dog-fish (<i>Scyllium
-stellare</i>) are covered by lozenge-shaped
-little plates, which glisten
-with enamel, and are so thickly set
-that they cover the entire surface of
-the skin, (fig. 3, <i>b</i>,)—and these
-seem equally illustrative of the scale-like
-form. They are shagreen
-points passing into osseous scales,
-without, however, becoming really
-such; though they approach them so nearly in the shape and
-disposition of their upper disks, that the true scales, also osseous,
-of the <i>Acanthodes sulcatus</i>, (fig. 3, <i>a</i>,) a Ganoid of the Coal
-Measures, can scarce be distinguished from them, even when
-microscopically examined. It is only when seen in section
-that the distinctive difference appears. The true scale of the
-Acanthodes, though considerably elevated in the centre, seems
-to have been planted on the skin; whereas the scale-like shagreen
-of the dog-fish is elevated over it on an osseous pedicle or
-footstalk (fig. 5, <i>a</i>) as a mushroom is elevated over the sward<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_55"></a>[55]</span>
-on its stem; and the base of the stalk
-is found to resemble in its stellate character
-that of a shagreen point of the prickly
-type. The apparent scale is, we find, a
-bony prickle bent at right angles a little
-over its base, and flattened into a rhomboidal
-disk atop.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-
-<div class="figmulti" style="width: 200px;" id="figure3">
-<img src="images/figure3.jpg" width="200" height="300" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 3.</p>
-<p class="caption">a. <i>Scales of Acanthodes sulcatus.</i></p>
-<p class="caption">b. <i>Shagreen of Scyllium stellare, (Snout.)</i></p>
-<p class="caption">(Mag. eight diameters.)</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figmulti" style="width: 200px;" id="figure4">
-<img src="images/figure4.jpg" width="200" height="275" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 4.</p>
-<p class="caption">a. <i>Scales of Cheiracanthus microlepidotus.</i></p>
-<p class="caption">b. <i>Shagreen of Spinax Acanthias. (Snout.)</i></p>
-<p class="caption">(Mag. eight diameters.)</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figmulti" style="width: 200px;" id="figure5">
-<img src="images/figure5.jpg" width="200" height="200" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 5.</p>
-<p class="caption">a. <i>Section of shagreen of Scyllium stellare.</i></p>
-<p class="caption">b. <i>Under surface of do.</i></p>
-<p class="caption">c. <i>Section of scales of Cheiracanthus microlepidotus.</i></p>
-<p class="caption">d. <i>Under surface of do.</i></p>
-<p class="caption">(Mag. eight diameters.)</p>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In small fragments of shagreen, (fig.
-2 <i>b</i>) which have been detected in the
-bone-bed of the Upper Ludlow Rocks,
-(Upper Silurian,) and constitute the most
-ancient portions of this substance known
-to the palæontologist, the osseous tubercles
-are, as in the minuter spikes of the ray, of the upright
-thorn-like type; they merely serve to show that the placoids
-of the first period possessed, like those of the existing
-seas, an ability of secreting solid bone on their cuticular
-surfaces; and that, though at least such of them as have
-bequeathed to us specimens of their dermal armature possessed
-it in the form farthest removed from that of their immediate
-successors the ganoid fishes, they resembled them
-not less in the substance of which their dermoskeletal, than
-in that of which their endoskeletal, parts were composed.
-For the internal skeleton in both orders, during these early
-ages, seems to have been equally cartilaginous, and the cuticular
-skeleton equally osseous. In the ichthyolitic formation
-immediately over the Silurians,—that of the Lower Old Red
-Sandstone,—the Ganoids first appear; and the members
-of at least one of the families of the deposit, the Acanths,—a
-family rich in genera and species,—seem to have
-formed connecting links between this second order and
-their placoid predecessors. They were covered with true<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_56"></a>[56]</span>
-scales (fig. 4, <i>a</i>,) and their free gills were protected by gill-covers;
-and so they must be regarded
-as real Ganoids but as the shagreen
-of the spotted dog-fish nearly approaches,
-in form and character, to ganoid
-scales, without being really such,
-the scales of this family, on the other
-hand, approached equally near, without
-changing their nature, to the shagreen
-of the Placoids, especially to that of the
-spiked dogfish, (<i>Spinax Acanthias</i>.)
-(Fig. 4, <i>b</i>.) We even find on their under
-surfaces what seems to be an approximation
-to the characteristic footstalk.
-They so considerably thicken in the
-middle from their edges inwards, (fig.
-5, <i>c</i>,) as to terminate in their centres
-in obtuse points. With these shagreen-like
-scales, the heads, bodies, and
-fins of all the species of at least two
-of the Acanth genera,—<i>Cheiracanthus</i>
-and <i>Diplacanthus</i>,—were as thickly
-covered as the heads, bodies, and
-fins of the sharks are with their shagreen;
-and so slight was the degree
-of imbrication, that the portion of each
-scale overlaid by the two scales in
-immediate advance of it did not exceed
-the one twelfth part of its entire area. In the scale of
-the <i>Cheiracanthus</i> we find the covered portion indicated by a
-smooth, narrow band, that ran along its anterior edges, and
-which the furrows that fretted the exposed surface did not<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_57"></a>[57]</span>
-traverse. It may be added, that both genera had the anterior
-edge of their fins armed with strong spines,—a characteristic
-of several of the Placoid families.</p>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 250px;" id="figure6">
-<img src="images/figure6.jpg" width="250" height="475" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 6.</p>
-<p class="caption">a. <i>Scales of Osteolepis macrolepidotus.</i></p>
-<p class="caption">b. <i>Scales of an undescribed species of Glyptolepis.</i><a id="FNanchor_10" href="#Footnote_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a></p>
-<p class="caption">(The single scales mag. two diameters;—the others nat. size.)</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>In the Dipterian genera <i>Osteolepis</i> and <i>Diplopterus</i> the scales
-were more unequivocally such
-than in the Acanths, and more
-removed from shagreen. The
-under surface of each was
-traversed longitudinally by a
-raised bar, which attached it
-to the skin, and which, in the
-transverse section, serves to
-remind one of the shagreen
-footstalk. They are, besides,
-of a rhomboidal form; and,
-when seen in the finer specimens,
-lying in their proper
-places on what had been once
-the creature’s body, they seem
-merely laid down side by side
-in line, like those rows of
-glazed tiles that pave a cathedral
-floor; but on more careful
-examination, we find that
-each little tile was deeply
-grooved on its higher side and
-end, (for it lay diagonally in relation
-to the head,) like the flags of a stone roof, (fig. 6, <i>a</i>,)—that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_58"></a>[58]</span>
-its lateral and anterior neighbors impinged upon it along
-these grooves to the extent of about one third its area,—and
-that it impinged, in turn, to the same extent on the scales that
-bordered on it posteriorly and latero-posteriorly. Now, in
-the Cœlacanth family, (and on this special point the foregoing
-remarks are intended to bear,) the scales, which were generally
-of a round or irregularly oval form, (fig. 6, <i>b</i>,) overlapped
-each other to as great an extent as in any of the existing
-fishes of the Cycloid or Ctenoid orders,—to as great an
-extent, for instance, as in the carp, salmon, or herring. In a
-slated roof there is no part on which the slates do not lie
-double, and along the lower edge of each tier they lie triple;—there
-is more of slate covered than of slate seen: whereas
-in a tile-roof, the covered portion is restricted to a small
-strip running along the top and one of the edges of each tile,
-and the tiles do not lie double in more than the same degree in
-which the slates lie triple. The scaly cover of the two genera
-of Dipterians to which I have referred was a cover on the
-<i>tile</i>-roof principle; and this is an exceedingly common characteristic
-of the scales of the Ganoids. The scaly cover of the
-Cœlacanths, on the other hand, was a cover on the <i>slate</i>-roof
-principle;—there was in some of their genera about one third
-more of each scale covered than exposed; and this is so rare
-a ganoidal mode of arrangement, that, with the exception of
-the <i>Dipterus</i>,—a genus which, though it gives its name to
-the Dipterian sept, differed greatly from every other Dipterian,—I
-know not, beyond the limits of the ancient Cœlacanth
-family, a single Ganoid that possessed it. The bony
-covering of the Cœlacanths was <i>farthest</i> removed in character
-from shagreen, as that of their contemporaries the Acanths
-approximated to it most nearly; they were, in this respect,
-the two extremes of their order; and did we find the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_59"></a>[59]</span>
-Cœlacanths in but the later geological formations, while the
-Acanths were restricted to the earlier, it might be argued
-by assertors of the development hypothesis, that the amply
-imbricated, slate-like scale of the latter had been developed
-in the lapse of ages from the shagreen tubercle, by passing
-in its downward course—broadening and expanding as it
-descended—through the minute, scarcely imbricated disks
-of the Acanths, and the more amply imbricated tile-like
-rhombs of the Dipterians and Palæonisci, until it had reached
-its full extent of imbrication in the familiar modern type
-exemplified in both the Cœlacanths and the ordinary fishes.
-But such is not the order which nature has observed;—the
-two extremes of the ganoid scale appear together in the same
-early formation: both become extinct at a period geologically
-remote; and the ganoid scales of the existing state of things
-which most nearly resemble those of ancient time are scales
-formed on the intermediate or tile-roof principle.</p>
-
-<p>The scales of the Cœlacanths were, in almost all the
-genera which compose the family, of great size; in some
-species, of the greatest size to which this kind of integument
-ever attained. Of a Cœlacanth of the Coal Measures,
-the <i>Holoptychius Hibberti</i>, the scales in the larger specimens
-were occasionally from five to six inches in diameter.
-Even in the <i>Holoptychius nobilissimus</i>, in an individual
-scarcely exceeding two and a half feet in length, they measured
-from an inch and a half to an inch and three quarters
-each way. In the splendid specimen of this last species, in
-the British Museum, there occur but fourteen scales between
-the ventrals, though these lie low on the creature’s body,
-and the head; and in a specimen of a smaller species,—the
-<i>Holoptychius Andersoni</i>,—but about seventeen. The exposed
-portion of the scale was in most species of the family curiously<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_60"></a>[60]</span>
-fretted by intermingled ridges and furrows, pits and tubercles,
-which were either boldly relieved, as in the <i>Holoptychius</i>,
-or existed, as in the <i>Glyptolepis</i>, as slim, delicately chiselled
-threads, lines, and dots. The head was covered by strong
-plates, which were roughened with tubercles either confluent
-or detached, or hollowed, as in the <i>Bothriolepis</i>, into shallow
-pits. The jaws were thickly set with an outer range of
-true fish teeth, and more thinly with an inner range of what
-seem <i>reptile</i> teeth, that stood up, tall and bulky, behind the
-others, like officers on horseback seen over the heads of their
-foot-soldiers in front. The <i>double</i> fins,—pectorals and ventrals,—were
-characterized each by a thick, angular, scale-covered
-centre, fringed by the rays; and they must have
-borne externally somewhat the form of the sweeping paddles
-of the Ichthyosaurian genus,—a peculiarity shared also by
-the double fins of the <i>Dipterus</i>. The <i>single</i> fins, in all the
-members of the family of which specimens have been found
-sufficiently entire to indicate the fact, were four in number,—an
-anal, a caudal, and two dorsal fins; and, with the exception
-of the anterior dorsal, which was comparatively small,
-and bent downwards along the back, as if its rays had been
-distorted when young,<a id="FNanchor_11" href="#Footnote_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a> they were all of large size. They
-crowded thickly on the posterior portion of the body,—the
-anterior dorsal opposite the ventrals, and the posterior dorsal
-opposite the anal fin. The fin-rays of the various members
-of the family, and such of their spinous processes as have
-been detected, were hollow tubular bones; or rather, like the
-larger pieces in the framework of the Placoids, they were
-cartilaginous within, and covered externally by a thin osseous<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_61"></a>[61]</span>
-crust or shell, which alone survives; and to this peculiarity
-they owe their family name, Cœlacanth, or “hollow-spine.”
-The internal hollow, <i>i. e.</i> cartilaginous centre, was, however,
-equally a characteristic of the spinous processes of the <i>Coccosteus</i>.
-In their general proportions, the Cœlacanths, if we
-perhaps except one species,—the <i>Glyptolepis microlepidotus</i>,—were
-all squat, robust, strongly-built fishes, of the Dirk
-Hatterick or Balfour-of-Burley type; and not only in the
-larger specimens gigantic in their proportions, but remarkable
-for the strength and weight of their armor, even when of but
-moderate stature. The specimen of <i>Holoptychius nobilissimus</i>
-in the British Museum could have measured little more
-than three feet from snout to tail when most entire; but it
-must have been nearly a foot in breadth, and a bullet would
-have rebounded flattened from its scales. And such was that
-ancient Cœlacanth family, of which the oldest of our Scotch
-Ganoids,—the <i>Asterolepis</i> of Stromness,—formed one of
-the members, and which for untold ages has had no living
-representative.</p>
-
-<p>Let us now enter on our proposed inquiry regarding the
-cerebral development of the earlier vertebrata, and see
-whether we cannot ascertain after what manner the first true
-brains were lodged, and what those modifications were which
-their protecting box, the cranium, received in the subsequent
-periods. Independently of its own special interest, the
-inquiry will be found to have a direct bearing on our general
-subject.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_62"></a>[62]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IV">CEREBRAL DEVELOPMENT OF THE EARLIER VERTEBRATA.<br />
-ITS APPARENT PRINCIPLE.</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>It is held by a class of naturalists, some of them of the highest
-standing, that the skulls of the vertebrata consist, like the
-columns to which they are attached, of vertebral joints, composed
-each, in the more typical forms of head, as they are in
-the trunk, of five parts or elements,—the centrum or body,
-the two spinous processes which enclose the spinal cord, and
-the two ribs. These cranial vertebræ, four in number, correspond,
-it is said, to the four senses that have their seat
-in the head: there is the nasal vertebra, the centrum of which
-is the vomer, its spinal processes the nasal and ethmoid
-bones, and its ribs the <i>upper</i> jaws; there is the ocular vertebra,
-the centrum of which is the anterior portion of the
-sphenoid bone, its spinal processes the frontals, and its
-ribs the <i>under</i> jaws; there is the lingual vertebra, the centrum
-of which is the posterior sphenoid bone, its spinal processes
-the parietals, and its ribs the hyoid and branchial
-bones,—portions of the skeleton largely developed in fishes;
-and, lastly, there is the auditory vertebra, the centrum of
-which is the base of the occipital bone, and its spinal processes
-the occipital crest, and which in the osseous fishes
-bears attached to it, as its ribs, the bones of the scapular<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_63"></a>[63]</span>
-ring. And the cerebral segments thus constructed we find
-represented in typical diagrams of the skull, as real vertebræ.
-Professor Owen, in his lately published treatise on
-“The Nature of Limbs,”—work charged with valuable
-fact, and instinct with philosophy,—figures in his draught of
-the archetypal skeleton of the vertebrata, the four vertebræ
-of the head, in a form as unequivocally such as any of the
-vertebræ of the neck or body.</p>
-
-<p>Now, for certain purposes of generalization, I doubt not
-that the conception may have its value. There are in all
-nature and in all philosophy certain central ideas of general
-bearing, round which, at distances less or more remote, the
-subordinate and particular ideas arrange themselves,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Cycle and epicycle, orb in orb.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">In the classifications of the naturalist, for instance, all <i>species</i>
-range round some central <i>generic</i> idea; all genera round some
-central idea, to which we give the name of <i>order</i>; all orders
-round some central idea of <i>class</i>; all classes round some
-central idea of <i>division</i>; and all divisions round the interior
-central idea which constitutes a <i>kingdom</i>. Sir Joshua Reynolds
-forms his theory of beauty on this principle of central
-ideas. “Every species of the animal, as well as of the vegetable
-creation,” he remarks, “may be said to have a fixed or
-determinate form, towards which nature is continually inclining,
-like various lines terminating in a centre; or it may be
-compared to pendulums vibrating in different directions over
-one central point, which they all cross, though only one of
-their number passes through any other point.” He instances,
-in illustrating his theory, the Grecian <i>beau ideal</i>
-of the human nose, as seen in the statues of the Greek deities.
-It formed a straight line; whereas all deformity of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_64"></a>[64]</span>
-nose is of a convex or concave character, and occasioned by
-either a rising above or a sinking below this medial line of
-beauty. And it may be of use, as it is unquestionably of interest,
-to conceive, after this manner, of a certain type of
-skeleton, embodying, as it were, the central or primary type
-of all vertebral skeletons, and consisting of a double range
-of rings, united by the bodies of the vertebræ, as the two
-rings of a figure 8 are united at their point of junction; the
-upper ring forming the enclosure of the brain,—spinal, and
-cephalic; the lower that of the viscera,—respiratory, circulatory,
-and digestive. Such is the idea embodied in Professor
-Owen’s archetypal skeleton. It is a series of vertebræ
-composing double rings,—their <i>brain</i>-rings comparatively
-small in the vertebræ of the trunk, but of much greater size
-in the vertebræ of the head. But it must not be forgotten, that
-central ideas, however necessary to the classification of the
-naturalist, are not historic facts. We may safely hold,
-with the philosophic painter, that the outline of the typical
-human nose is a straight line; but it would be very unsafe
-to hold, as a consequence, that the first men had all
-straight noses. And when we find it urged by at least one
-eminent assertor of the development hypothesis,—Professor
-Oken,—that light was the main agent in developing the substance
-of nerve,—that the nerves, ranged in pairs, in turn
-developed the vertebræ, each vertebra being but “the periphery
-or envelope of a pair of nerves,”—and that the
-nerves of those four senses of smell, sight, taste, and hearing,
-which, according to the Professor, “make up the head,” originated
-the four cranial vertebræ which constitute the skull,—it
-becomes us to test the central idea, thus converted into
-a sort of historic myth, by the realities of actual history.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_65"></a>[65]</span>
-What, then, let us inquire, is the real history of the cerebral
-development of the vertebrata, as recorded in the rocks of the
-earlier geologic periods?</p>
-
-<div class="figleft" style="width: 200px;" id="figure7">
-<img src="images/figure7.jpg" width="200" height="150" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 7.</p>
-<p class="caption"><i>Osseous points of placoid cranium.</i><a id="FNanchor_12" href="#Footnote_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a></p>
-<p class="caption">(Mag. twelve diameters)</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Though the vertebrata existed in the ichthyic form throughout
-the vastly extended Silurian period, we find in that system
-no remains of the cranium: the Silurian fishes <i>seem</i>, as has
-been already said, (<a href="#Page_53">page 53</a>,) to have been exclusively Placoid,
-and the purely cartilaginous box formed by nature for
-the protection of the brain in this order has in no case been
-preserved. Teeth, and, in at least one or two instances, the
-minute jaws over which they were planted have been found,
-but no portion of the skull. We know, however, that in the
-fishes of the same order which now exist, the cranium consists
-of one undivided piece of a cartilaginous substance, set
-thickly over its outer surface with minute polygonal points of
-bone, (fig. 7,) composed internally of
-star-like rays, that radiate from the
-centre of ossification, and that present,
-in consequence, seen through a
-microscope, the appearance of the
-polygonal cells of a coral of the genus
-Astrea. The pattern induced is that
-of stars set within polygons. Along
-the sides or top of this unbroken
-cranial box, that exhibits no mark of suture, we find the
-perforations through which the nerves of smell, sight, taste,
-and hearing passed from the brain outwards, and see that they
-have failed to originate distinct vertebral envelopes for themselves;—they
-all lodge in one undivided mansion-house,
-and have merely separate doors. We find, further, that the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_66"></a>[66]</span>
-homotypal <i>ribs</i> of the entire cranium consist, not of four, but
-simply of a single pair, attached to the occiput, and which
-serves both to suspend the jaws, upper and nether, in their
-place under the middle of the head, and to lend support to
-the hyoid and branchial framework; while the scapular ring
-we find existing, as in the higher vertebrata, not as a cerebral,
-but as a cervical or dorsal appendage. In the wide
-range of the animal kingdom there are scarce any two
-pieces of organization that less resemble one another in
-form than the vertebræ of the placoids resemble their skulls;
-and the difference is not merely external, but extends to
-even their internal construction. In both skull and vertebræ
-we detect an union of bone and cartilage; but the bone of
-each vertebra forms an internal continuous nucleus, round
-which the cartilage is arranged, whereas in the skulls it
-is the cartilage that is internal, and the bone is spread in
-granular points over it. If we dip the body of one of the
-dorsal vertebræ of a herring into melted wax, and then withdraw
-it, we will find it to represent in its crusted state the vertebral
-centrum of a Placoid,—soft without, and osseous within;
-but in order to represent the placoid skull, we would have
-first to mould it out of one unbroken piece of wax, and then
-to cover it over with a priming of bone-dust. And such is
-the effect of this arrangement, that, while the skull of a
-Placoid, exposed to a red heat, falls into dust, from the circumstance
-that the supporting framework on which the granular
-bone was arranged perishes in the fire, the vertebral
-centrum, whose internal framework is itself bone, and so <i>not</i>
-perishable, comes out in a state of beautiful entireness,—resembling
-in the thornback a squat sand-glass, elegantly fenced
-round by the lateral pillars, (fig. 8, <i>b</i>;) and in the dog-fish (<i>a</i>)
-a more elongated sand-glass, in which the lateral pillars are<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_67"></a>[67]</span>
-wanting. Such are the heads and vertebral
-joints of the existing Placoids;
-and such, reasoning from analogy, seem
-to have been the character and construction
-of the heads and vertebral joints
-of the Placoids of the Silurian period,—earliest-born
-of the Vertebrata.</p>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 200px;" id="figure8">
-<img src="images/figure8.jpg" width="200" height="150" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 8.</p>
-<p class="caption">a. <i>Osseous centrum of Spinax Acanthias.</i></p>
-<p class="caption">b. <i>Osseous centrum of Raja clavata.</i></p>
-<p class="caption">(Nat. size.)</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The most ancient brain-bearing craniums
-that have come down to us in
-the fossil state, are those of the Ganoids
-of the Lower Old Red Sandstone; and in these fishes the
-true skull appears to have been as entirely a simple cartilaginous
-box, as that of the Placoids of either the Silurian
-period or of the present time, or of those existing Ganoids,
-the sturgeons. In the Lower Old Red genera <i>Cheiracanthus</i>
-and <i>Diplacanthus</i>, though the heads are frequently preserved
-as amorphous masses of colored matter, we detect no trace
-of internal bone, save perhaps in the gill-covers of the first-named
-genus, which were fringed by from eighteen to twenty
-minute osseous rays. The cranium seems to have been covered,
-as in the shark family, by skin, and the skin by minute
-shagreen-like scales; and all of the interior cerebral framework
-which appears underneath exists simply as faint impressions
-of an undivided body, covered by what seem to be osseous
-points,—the bony molecules, it is probable, which encrusted
-the cartilage. The jaws, in the better specimens, are also
-preserved in the same doubtful style, and this state of keeping
-is the common one in deposits in which every true bone,
-however delicate, presents an outline as sharp as when it occupied
-its place in the living animal. The dermal or skin-skeleton
-of both genera, which consisted, as has been shown
-(<a href="#Page_55">pages 55, 56</a>) of shagreen-like osseous scales and slender<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_68"></a>[68]</span>
-spines, both brilliantly enamelled, is preserved entire; where
-as the interior framework of the head exists as mere point
-speckled impressions; and the inference appears unavoidable
-that parts which so invariably differ in their state of keeping
-now, must have essentially differed in their substance originally.</p>
-
-<div class="figleft" style="width: 200px;" id="figure9">
-<img src="images/figure9.jpg" width="200" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 9.</p>
-<p class="caption">a. <i>Portion of caudal fin of Cheiracanthus.</i><a id="FNanchor_13" href="#Footnote_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a></p>
-<p class="caption">b. <i>Portion of caudal fin of Cheirolepis Cummingiæ.</i></p>
-<p class="caption">(Mag. three diameters.)</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Now, in the <i>Cheiracanthus</i> we detect the first faint indications
-of a peculiar arrangement of the dermal skeleton, in relation
-to certain parts of the skeleton within, which—greatly
-more developed in some of its contemporaries—led to important
-results in the general structure of these Ganoids, and
-furnishes the true key to the character of the early ganoid
-head. In such of the existing Placoids as I have had an opportunity
-of examining, the only portions of the dermal skeleton
-of bone which conform in their arrangement to portions
-of the interior skeleton of cartilage, are the teeth, which are
-always laid on a base of skin right over the jaws: there is
-also an approximation to arrangement of a corresponding
-kind, though a distant one, in those hook-armed tubercles of
-certain species of rays which run along the vertebral column;
-but in the shagreen by which the creatures are covered I have
-been able to detect no such arrangement. Whether it occurs
-on the fins, the body, or the head, or in the scale form, or
-in that of the prickle, it manifests the same careless irregularity.
-And on the head and body of the <i>Cheiracanthus</i>, and
-on all its fins save one, the shagreen-like scales, though
-laid down more symmetrically in lines than true shagreen,
-manifested an equal absence of arrangement in relation
-to the framework within. On that one fin, however;—the
-caudal,—the scales, passing from their ordinary rhomboidal
-to a more rectangular form, ranged themselves in right
-lines over the internal rays, (fig. 9, <i>a</i>,) and imparted to these
-such strength as a splint of wood or whalebone fastened over<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_69"></a>[69]</span>
-a fractured toe or finger imparts to the injured
-digit,—a provision which was probably
-rendered necessary in the case of this important
-organ of motion, from the circumstance
-that it was the only fin which the
-creature possessed that was not strengthened
-and protected anteriorly by a strong spine.
-In the <i>Cheirolepis</i>,—a contemporary fish,
-characterized, like its cogeners the <i>Cheiracanthus</i>
-and <i>Diplacanthus</i>, by shagreen-like scales,
-but in which the spines were wanting,—we
-find a farther development of the provision.
-In all the fins the richly-enamelled dermal-covering
-was arranged in lines over the rays,
-(fig. 9, <i>b</i>;) and the scale, which assumes in
-the fins, like the scales on the tail of the
-<i>Cheiracanthus</i>, though somewhat more irregularly,
-a rectangular shape, is so considerably
-elongated, that it assumes for its normal character
-as a scale, that of the joint of an external
-ray. A similar arrangement of external
-protection takes place in this genus over
-the bones of the head; the cartilaginous jaws receive their
-osseous dermal covering, and, with these, the hyoid bones,
-the opercules, and the cranium. And it is in these dermal
-plates, which covered an interior skull, of which, save
-in one genus,—the <i>Dipterus</i>,—not a vestige remains in any
-of the Old Red fishes thus protected, that we first trace what<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_70"></a>[70]</span>
-seem to be the homologues of the cranial bones of the osseous
-fishes,—at least their homologues so far as the <i>cuticular</i>
-can represent the <i>internal</i>. They appear for the first time,
-not as modified spinous processes, broadened, as in the carapace
-of the Chelonians, into <i>osseous</i> plates, but like those
-<i>corneous</i> external plates of this order of reptiles, (known
-in one species as the tortoise-shell of commerce,) the origin
-of which is purely cuticular, and which evince so little correspondence
-in their divisions with the sutures of the bones
-on which they rest, that they have been instanced, in their
-relation to the joinings beneath, as admirable illustrations of
-the <i>cross-banding</i> of the mechanician.</p>
-
-<p>In the heads of the osseous fishes, the cranium proper,
-though consisting, like the skulls of birds, reptiles, and mammals,
-of several bones, exists from snout to nape, and from
-mastoid to mastoid, as one unbroken box; whereas all the
-other bones of the head, such as the maxillaries and intermaxillaries,
-the lower jaws, the opercular appendages, the
-branchial arches, and the branchiostegous rays, are connected
-but by muscle and ligament, and fall apart under the putrefactive
-influences, or in the process of boiling. This unbroken
-box, which consists, in the cod, of twenty-five bones,
-is the <i>homologue</i> of that cranial box of the Placoids which
-consists of one entire piece, and the <i>homotype</i>, according to
-Oken, of the bodies and spinal processes of four vertebræ;
-while the looser bones which drop away represent their <i>ribs</i>.
-The upper surface of the box,—that extending from the nasal
-bone to the nape,—is the only part over which a dermal
-buckler could be laid, as it is the only part with which the external
-skin comes in contact; and so it is between this upper
-surface and the cranial bucklers of the earlier Ganoids that we
-have to institute comparisons. For it is a curious fact, that,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_71"></a>[71]</span>
-with the exception of the Old Red genera <i>Acanthodus</i>, <i>Cheiracanthus</i>,
-and <i>Diplacanthus</i>,<a id="FNanchor_14" href="#Footnote_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a> all the Ganoids of the period in
-which Ganoids first appear <i>have</i> dermal bucklers placed right
-over their true skulls, and that these, though as united in their
-parts as the bones proper to the cranium in quadrupeds and
-fishes, are composed of several pieces, furnished each with its
-independent centre of ossification. The Dipterians, the Cœlacanths,
-the Cephalaspians, and at least one genus placed
-rather doubtfully among the Acanths,—the genus <i>Cheirolepis</i>,—all
-possessed cranial bucklers extending from the nape to
-the snout, in which the plates, various, in the several genera,
-in form and position, were fast <i>soldered</i> together, though in
-every instance the lines of suture were distinctly marked.</p>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 250px;" id="figure10">
-<img src="images/figure10.jpg" width="250" height="475" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 10.</p>
-<p class="caption">UPPER SURFACE OF CRANIUM OF COD.<a id="FNanchor_15" href="#Footnote_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a></p>
-<p class="caption">A, <i>Occipital bone</i>.
-B, B, <i>Parietals</i>.
-C, C, C, <i>Superior frontal</i>.
-D, D, <i>Anterior frontal</i>.
-I, <i>Nasal bone</i>.
-F, F, <i>Posterior frontals</i>.
-E, E, <i>Mastoid bones</i>.
-2, 2, <i>Eye orbits</i>.
-a, a, <i>Par-occipital bones</i>.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>On each side of this external cranium the various cerebral
-plates, like the corresponding cerebral <i>ribs</i> in the osseous
-fishes, were free, at least not anchylosed together; and some
-of their number unequivocally performed, in part at least,
-the functions of two of these cerebral ribs, viz. the upper
-and under jaws, with the functions of the opercular appendages
-attached to the latter. In the cod, as in most other
-osseous fishes, the upper portion of the cranium consists of
-thirteen bones, which represent, however, only seven bones
-in the human skull,—the nasal, the frontal, the two parietal,
-the occipital, and one-half the two temporal bones. And
-whereas in man, and in most of the mammals, there are four
-of these placed in the medial line,—the four which, according
-to the assertors of the vertebral theory, form the spinal
-crests of the four cerebral vertebræ,—in the cod there are but<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_72"></a>[72]</span>
-three. The super-occipital bone, A, (fig. 10,) pieces on to the
-superior frontal, C, C, C; and the parietals, B, B, which in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_73"></a>[73]</span>
-the human subject from the upper and middle portions of
-the cranial vault, are thrust out laterally and posteriorly, and
-take their places, in a subordinate capacity, on each side
-of the super-occipital. This is not an invariable arrangement
-among fishes;—in the carp genus, for instance, the parietals
-assume their proper medial place between the occipital
-and frontal bones; but so very general is the displacement,
-that Professor Owen regards it as characteristic of the great
-ichthyic class, and as the first example in the vertebrata,
-reckoning from the lower forms upwards, of a sort of natural
-dislocation among the bones,—“a modification,” he
-remarks, “which, sometimes accompanied by great change
-of place, has tended most to obscure the essential nature of
-parts, and their true relations to the archetype.”</p>
-
-<div class="figleft" style="width: 300px;" id="figure11">
-<img src="images/figure11.jpg" width="300" height="250" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 11.</p>
-<p class="caption">CRANIAL BUCKLER OF COCCOSTEUS DECIPIENS.</p>
-<p class="caption">a, a, <i>Points of attachment to the cuirass which covered the upper
-part of the creature’s body</i>.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Of all the cerebral bucklers of the first ganoid period, that
-which best bears comparison with the cranial front of the cod
-is the buckler of the <i>Coccosteus</i>, (fig. 11.) The general proportions
-of this portion of the ancient Cephalaspian head
-differ very considerably from those of the corresponding part
-in the modern cycloid one; but in their larger divisions, the
-modern and the ancient answer bone to bone. Three
-osseous plates in the <i>Coccosteus</i>, A, C, I, the homologues,
-apparently, of the occipital, frontal, and nasal bones,
-range along the medial line. The apparent homologues of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_74"></a>[74]</span>
-the parietals, B, B, occupy the same position of lateral displacement
-as the parietals of the cod and of so many other
-fishes. The posterior frontals, F, and the anterior frontals,
-D, also occupy places relatively the same, though the latter,
-which are of greater proportional size, encroach much further,
-laterally and posteriorly, on the superior frontal C, C, C,
-and sweep entirely round the upper half of the eye orbits, 2, 2.
-The apparent homologue of the mastoid bone, E, which also
-occupies its proper place, joins posteriorly to a little plate, a,
-imperfectly separated in most specimens from the parietal,
-but which seems to represent the par-occipital bone; and it is
-a curious circumstance, that as, in many of the osseous fishes,
-it is to these bones that the forks of the scapular arch
-are attached, they unite in the <i>Coccosteus</i> in furnishing,
-in like manner, a point of attachment to the cuirass which
-covered the upper part of the creature’s body. Of the true
-internal skull of the <i>Coccosteus</i> there remains not a vestige<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_75"></a>[75]</span>
-Like that of the sturgeon, it must have been a perishable
-cartilaginous box.</p>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 200px;" id="figure12">
-<img src="images/figure12.jpg" width="200" height="400" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 12.</p>
-<p class="caption">CRANIAL BUCKLER OF OSTEOLEPIS.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>In the <i>Osteolepis</i>,—an animal the whole of whose external
-head I have, at an expense of some labor, and from the examination
-of many specimens, been enabled to restore,—the
-cranial buckler (fig. 12) was divided in a more arbitrary
-style; and we find that an element of uncertainty mingles
-with our inferences regarding it, from the circumstance that
-some of its lines of division, especially in the frontal half,
-were not real sutures, but formed merely a kind of surface-tatooing,
-resorted to as if for purposes of ornament. The
-cranial buckler of the <i>Asterolepis</i> exhibited, as I shall afterwards
-have occasion to show, a similar peculiarity;—both
-had their pseudo-sutures, resembling those false joints introduced
-by the architect into his rusticated basements, in order
-to impart the necessary aspect of regularity to what is technically<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_76"></a>[76]</span>
-termed the coursing and banding of the fabric. We can
-however, determine, notwithstanding the induced obscurity
-that the buckler of the <i>Osteolepis</i> was divided transversely in
-the middle into two main parts or segments,—an occipital
-part, C, and a frontal part, A; and that the occipital segment
-<i>seems</i> to include also the parietal and mastoid plates, and the
-frontal segment to comprise, with its own proper plates, not
-only the nasal plate, but also the representative of the anterior
-part of the vomer. All, however, is obscure. But in
-our uncertainty regarding the homologies of the divisions of
-this dermal buckler, let us not forget the homology of the
-buckler itself, as a whole, with the upper surface of the
-true cranium in the osseous fishes. Though frequently crushed
-and broken, it exists in all the finer specimens of my collection
-as a symmetrically arranged collocation of enamelled
-plates, as firmly united into one piece, though they all indicate
-their distinct centres of ossification, as the corresponding
-surface of the cranium in the carp or cod. The lateral
-curves in the frontal part immediately opposite the lozenge-shaped
-plate in the centre, show the position of the eyes,
-which were placed in this genus, as in some of the carnivorous
-turtles, immediately over the mouth,—an arrangement
-common to almost all the Ganoids of the Lower Old Red
-Sandstone. The nearly semicircular termination of the
-buckler formed the creature’s snout; and in the <i>Osteolepis</i>, as
-in the <i>Glyptolepis</i> and the <i>Diplopterus</i>, it was armed on the
-under side, like the vomer of so many of the osseous fishes,
-with sharp teeth. Some of my specimens indicate the nasal
-openings a little in advance of the eyes. The nape of the
-creature was covered by three detached plates, (9, 9, 9, fig.
-13,) which rested upon anterior dorsal scales, and whose
-homologies, in the osseous fishes, may possibly be found in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_77"></a>[77]</span>
-those bones which, uniting the shoulder-bones to the head,
-complete the scapular belt or ring. The operculum we find
-represented by a single plate (8) which had attached to
-it, as its sub-operculum, a plate (13) of nearly equal size,
-(see figs. 14 and 15.) Four small plates (2, 4, 5) formed
-the under curve of the eyes, described in many of the osseous
-fishes by a chain of small bones or ossicles; a considerably
-larger plate (6) occupied the place of the preopercular
-bone; while the intermaxillaries had their representatives in
-well-marked plates, (3, 3,) which, in the genera <i>Osteolepis</i>,
-<i>Diplopterus</i>, and <i>Glyptolepis</i>, we find bristling so thickly with
-teeth along their lower edges, as to remind us of the miniature
-saws employed by the joiner in cutting out circular holes.
-These external intermaxillaries did not, as in the perch or cod,
-meet in front of the nasal bone and vomer, but joined on at
-the side, a little in advance of the eyes, leaving the rounded
-termination of the cranial buckler, which, like the intermaxillaries,
-was thickly fringed with teeth, to form, as has been
-already said, the creature’s snout.</p>
-
-<div class="figleft" style="width: 300px;" id="figure13">
-<img src="images/figure13.jpg" width="300" height="275" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 13.</p>
-<p class="caption">UPPER PART OF HEAD OF OSTEOLEPIS.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_78"></a>[78]</span></p>
-
-<p>The under jaws (10)—strongly-marked bones in at least
-all the Dipterian and Cœlacanth genera—we find represented
-externally by massy plates, bearing, like those of the upper
-jaw, their range of teeth. As shown in a well-preserved
-specimen of the lower jaw of <i>Holoptychius</i>, in my possession,
-they were boxes of bone enclosing a bulky nucleus of cartilage,
-which, in approaching towards the condyloid process,
-where great strength was necessary, was thickly traversed by
-osseous cancelli, and passed at the joint into true bone. It is
-in the under jaws of the earlier Ganoids that we first detect
-a true union of the external with the internal skeleton,—of
-the bony plates and teeth, which were <i>mere plates and teeth of
-the skin</i>, with the osseous, granular walls which enclosed at
-least all the larger pieces of the cartilaginous framework of
-the interior. The jaws of the Rays and Sharks, formed of
-cartilage, and fenced round on their sides and edges by their
-thin coverings of polygonal, bony points, are wholly internal
-and skin-covered; whereas the teeth, which rest on
-the soft cuticular integument right over them, are as purely
-dermal as the surrounding shagreen. Teeth and shagreen
-may, we find, be alike stripped off with the skin. Now, in
-the earlier ganoidal jaw, two sides of the osseous box which
-it composed,—its outer and under sides,—were mere
-dermal plates, representative of the skin of the placoids, or
-of their shagreen; while the other two,—its upper and inner
-sides,—seem to have been developments of the interior
-osseous walls which covered the endo-skeletal cartilage. Nor
-is it unworthy of notice, that the reptile fishes of the period
-had their <i>ichthyic</i> teeth ranged along the edge of an exterior
-<i>dermal</i> plate which covered the outer side of the jaw;
-whereas their <i>reptile</i> teeth were planted on a plate, apparently
-of interior development, which covered its upper<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_79"></a>[79]</span>
-edge. It is further worthy of remark, that while the teeth
-of the dermal plate,—themselves also dermal,—seem as if
-they had grown out of it, and formed part of it,—just as the
-teeth of the Placoids grew out of the skin on which they rest,—the
-<i>reptile</i> teeth within rested in shallow pits,—the first
-faint indications of true sockets.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-
-<div class="figmulti" style="width: 250px;" id="figure14">
-<img src="images/figure14.jpg" width="250" height="275" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 14.</p>
-<p class="caption">UNDER PART OF HEAD OF OSTEOLEPIS.<a id="FNanchor_16" href="#Footnote_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figmulti" style="width: 300px;" id="figure15">
-<img src="images/figure15.jpg" width="300" height="200" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 15.</p>
-<p class="caption">HEAD OF OSTEOLEPIS, SEEN IN PROFILE.</p>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>That space included within the arch formed by the sweep
-of the under jaws, which we find occupied in the osseous
-fishes by the hyoid bones and the branchiostegous rays, was
-filled up externally, in the Dipterians and Cœlacanths, and in
-at least two genera of Cephalaspians, by dermal plates; in some
-genera, such as the <i>Diplopterus</i>, by three plates; in others,
-such as the <i>Holoptychius</i> and <i>Glyptolepis</i>, by two; and in the
-<i>Asterolepis</i>, as we shall afterwards see, by but a single plate.
-In the <i>Osteolepis</i> these plates were increased to five in number,
-by the little plates 14, 14, (fig. 14,) which, however, may have<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_80"></a>[80]</span>
-been also present in the <i>Diplopterus</i>, though my specimens
-fail to show them. The general arrangement was of much
-elegance,—an elegance, however, which, in the accompanying
-restorations, the dislocation of the free plates, drawn apart to
-indicate their detached character, somewhat tends to obscure.
-But the position of the eyes must have imparted to the animal
-a sinister reptile-like aspect. The profile, (fig. 15,) the
-result, not of a chance-drawn outline, arbitrarily filled up, but
-produced by the careful arrangement in their proper places
-of actually existing plates, serves to show how perfectly the
-dermo-skeletal parts of the creature were developed. Some
-of the animals with which we are best acquainted, if represented
-by but their cuticular skeleton, would appear
-simply as sets of hoofs and horns. Even the tortoise or
-pengolin would present about the head and limbs their gaps
-and missing portions; but the dermo-skeleton of the <i>Osteolepis</i>,
-composed of solid bone, and burnished with enamel,
-exhibited the outline of the fish entire, and, with the exception
-of the eye, the filling up of all its external parts. Presenting<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_81"></a>[81]</span>
-outside, in its original state, no fragment of skin or
-membrane, and with even its most flexible organs sheathed
-in enamelled bone, the <i>Osteolepis</i> must have very much resembled
-a fish carved in ivory; and, though so effectually
-covered, it would have appeared, from the circumstance, that
-it wore almost all its bone outside, as naked as the human
-teeth.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-
-<div class="figmulti" style="width: 200px;" id="figure16">
-<img src="images/figure16.jpg" width="200" height="350" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 16.</p>
-<p class="caption">CRANIAL BUCKLER OF DIPLOPTERUS.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figmulti" style="width: 200px;" id="figure17">
-<img src="images/figure17.jpg" width="200" height="300" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 17.</p>
-<p class="caption">CRANIAL BUCKLER OF DIPLOPTERUS.</p>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The cranial buckler of the <i>Diplopterus</i> (fig. 16) somewhat
-resembled that of its fellow-dipterian the <i>Osteolepis</i>, but exhibited
-greater elegance of outline. My first perfect specimen,
-which I owe to the kindness of Mr. John Miller, of
-Thurso, an intelligent geologist of the north, reminded me, as
-it glittered in jet-black enamel on its ground of pale gray, of
-those Roman cuirasses which one sees in old prints, impaled
-on stakes, as the central objects in warlike trophies formed
-of spoils taken in battle. The rounded snout represented the
-chest and shoulders, the middle portion the waist, and the expansion
-at the nape the piece of dress attached, which, like
-the Highland kilt, fell adown the thighs. The addition
-of a fragment of a sleeve, suspended a little over the eye<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_82"></a>[82]</span>
-orbits, 2, 2, seemed all that was necessary in order to render
-the resemblance complete. But as I disinterred the buried
-edges of the specimen with a graver, the form, though it
-grew still more elegant, became less that of the ancient
-coat of armor; the snout expanded into a semicircle; the
-eye orbits gradually deepened; and the entire fossil became
-not particularly like any thing but the thing it once was,—the
-cranial buckler of the <i>Diplopterus</i>. The print (fig. 17)
-exhibits its true form. It consists of two main divisions,
-occipital (A) and frontal, (C, fig. 16;) and in each of these
-we find a pair of smaller divisions, with what seem to be indications
-of yet further division, marked, not by lines, but
-by dots; though I have hitherto failed to determine whether
-the plates which these last indicate possess their independent
-centres of ossification. Not unfrequently, however, has
-the comparative anatomist to seek the analogues of two
-bones in one; nor is it at least <i>more</i> difficult to trace in
-the faint divisions of the cranial buckler of the <i>Diplopterus</i>,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_83"></a>[83]</span>
-the homologues of the occipital, frontal, parietal, mastoid,
-and nasal bones, than to recognize the representatives of the
-carpals of the middle and ring finger in man, in the cannon
-bone of the fore leg of the ox. I may mention in passing,
-that the little central plate of the frontal division, (1, fig. 16,)
-which so nearly corresponds with that of the <i>Osteolepis</i>,
-occurred, though with considerable variations of form and
-homology, and some slight difference of position, in all the
-Ganoids of the Old Red Sandstone whose craniums were
-covered with an osseous buckler, and that its place was
-always either immediately between the eyes or a very little
-over them. Its never-failing recurrence shows that it must
-have had <i>some</i> meaning, though it may be difficult to say
-what. In the <i>Coccosteus</i> it takes the form of the male
-dovetail, which united the nasal plate or snout to the plate
-representative of the superior frontal. Of the cartilaginous
-box which formed the interior skull of either <i>Osteolepis</i>,
-or <i>Diplopterus</i>, or, with but one exception,
-of the interior skulls of any of
-their contemporaries, no trace, as I
-have said, has yet been detected. The
-solitary exception in the case is, however,
-one of singular interest.</p>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 200px;" id="figure18">
-<img src="images/figure18.jpg" width="200" height="350" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 18.</p>
-<p class="caption">a. <i>Palatal dart-head.</i></p>
-<p class="caption">b. <i>Group of palatal teeth.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>In a collection of miscellaneous fragments
-sent me by Mr. Dick from the
-rocks of Thurso, I detected patches
-of palatal teeth ranged in nearly the
-quadratures of circles, and which
-radiated outwards from the rectangular
-angle or centre, (fig. 18, <i>b</i>.) And
-with the patches there occurred plates
-exactly resembling the barbed head of a dart, (<i>a</i>,) with which<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_84"></a>[84]</span>
-I had been previously acquainted, though I had failed to
-determine their character or place. The excellent state
-of keeping of some of Mr. Dick’s specimens now enabled me
-to trace the patches with the dart-head, and several other
-plates, to a curious piece of palatal mechanism, ranged along
-the base of a ganoid cranium, covered externally by a brightly
-enamelled buckler, and to ascertain the order in which
-patches and plates occurred. And then, though not without
-some labor, I succeeded in tracing the buckler with which
-they were associated to the <i>Dipterus</i>,—a fish which, though
-it has engaged the attention of both Cuvier and Agassiz, has
-not yet been adequately restored. It is on an ill-preserved
-Orkney specimen of the cranial buckler of this Ganoid that
-the ichthyologist has founded his genus <i>Polyphractus</i>; while
-groupes of its palatal teeth from the Old Red of Russia he
-refers to a supposed Placoid,—the <i>Ctenodus</i>. But in the
-earlier stages of palæontological research, mistakes of this
-character are wholly unavoidable. The palæontologist who
-did avoid them would be either very unobservant, or at once
-very rash and very fortunate in his guesses. If, ere an
-entire skeleton of the <i>Ichthyosaurus</i> had turned up, there had
-been found in different localities, in the Liasic formation, a
-beak like that of a porpoise, teeth like that of a crocodile,
-a head and sternum like that of a lizard, paddles like those
-of a cetacean, and vertebræ like those of a fish, it would
-have been greatly more judicious, and more in accordance
-with the existing analogies, to have erected, provisionally at
-least, places specifically, or even generically separated, in
-which to range the separate pieces, than to hold that they had
-all united in one anomalous genus; though such was actually
-the fact. And Agassiz, in erecting three distinct genera out
-of the fragments of a single genus, has in reality acted at once<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_85"></a>[85]</span>
-more prudently and more intelligently than if he had avoided
-the error by rashly uniting parts which in their separate state
-indicate no tie of connection.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-
-<div class="figmulti" style="width: 300px;" id="figure19">
-<img src="images/figure19.jpg" width="300" height="400" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 19.</p>
-<p class="caption">CRANIAL BUCKLER OF DIPTERUS.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figmulti" style="width: 300px;" id="figure20">
-<img src="images/figure20.jpg" width="300" height="450" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 20.</p>
-<p class="caption">BASE OF CRANIUM OF DIPTERUS.</p>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The cranial buckler of the <i>Dipterus</i> (fig. 19) was, like
-that of the <i>Diplopterus</i>, of great beauty. In some of the
-finer specimens, we find the enamel ornately tatooed, within
-the more strongly-marked divisions, by delicately traced lines,
-waved and bent, as if upon the principle of Hogarth; and
-though the lateral plates are numerous and small, and defy
-the homologies, we may trace in those of the central line,
-from the snout to the nape, what seem to be the representatives
-of the frontal, parietal, and occipital bones,—the
-parietals ranging, as in the skull of the carp and in that of
-most of the mammals, in their proper place in the medial
-line. But the under surface of the cranium, armed, as on
-the upper surface, with plates of bone, exhibited an arrangement<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_86"></a>[86]</span>
-still more peculiar, (fig. 20.) Its rectangular patches
-of palatal teeth, its curious dart-like bone, placed immediately
-behind these, and attached, as the dart-head is attached to
-the handle, to a broad lozenge-shaped plate, with two strong
-osseous processes projecting on either side, forms such a
-<i>tout ensemble</i> as is unique among fishes. Even here, however,
-there may be traced at least a shade of homological resemblance
-to the bones which form the base of the osseous skull.
-The single lozenge-shaped plate, (A,) with its dart-head,
-occupies the place of the basi-occipital bone; the posterior
-portion of the vomer seems represented by a strong bony
-ridge, extending towards the snout; two separate bones, each
-bearing one of the angular patches of teeth, corresponds to
-the sphenoid bone and its alæ; and attached laterally to each
-of these there is the strong projecting bone, on which the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_87"></a>[87]</span>
-lower jaw appears to have hinged, and which apparently represents
-the lower part of the temporal bone. Not less
-singular was the form of the creature’s under jaw, (fig. 21.)
-I know no other fish-jaw, whether of the recent or the extinct
-races, that might be so readily mistaken for that of a
-quadruped. It exhibits not only the condyloid, but also the
-coronoid processes; and, save that it broadens on its upper
-edges, where in mammals the grinders are placed, so as to
-furnish field enough for angular patches of teeth, which
-correspond with the angular patches in the palate, it might
-be regarded, found detached, as at least a reptilian, if not
-mammalian, bone. The disposition of the palatal teeth of the
-<i>Dipterus</i> will scarce fail to remind the mechanist of the style
-of grooving resorted to in the formation of mill-stones for
-the grinding of flour; nor is it wholly improbable that, in
-correspondence with the rotatory motion of the stones to
-which the grooving is specially adapted, jaws so hinged may
-have possessed some such power of lateral motion as that
-exemplified by the human subject in the use of the molar
-teeth.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;" id="figure21">
-<img src="images/figure21.jpg" width="300" height="200" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 21.</p>
-<p class="caption">UNDER JAW OF DIPTERUS.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The protection afforded by the osseous covering of both the
-upper and under surface of the cranium of this ichthyolite has<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_88"></a>[88]</span>
-resulted, in several instances, in the preservation, though always
-in a greatly compressed state, of the cranium itself, and
-the consequent exhibition of two very important cranial cavities,
-the brain-pan proper, and the passage through which the
-spinal cord passed into the brain. In the sturgeon the brain
-occupies nearly the middle of the head; and there is a considerable
-part of the occipital region traversed by the spine in
-a curved channel, which, seen in profile, appears wide at the
-nape, but considerably narrower where it enters the brain-pan,
-and altogether very much resembling the interior of a miniature
-hunting-horn. And such exactly was the arrangement
-of the greater cavities in the head of the <i>Dipterus</i>. The portion
-of the cranium which was overlaid by what may be regarded
-as the occipital plate was traversed by a cavity shaped
-like a Lilliputian bugle-horn; while the hollow in which the
-brain was lodged lay under the two parietal plates, and the
-little elliptical plate in the centre. The accompanying print,
-(fig. 22,) though of but slight show, may be regarded by the
-reader with some little interest, as a not inadequate representation
-of the most ancient brain-pan on which human eye has
-yet looked,—as, in short, the type of cell in which, myriads
-of ages ago, in at least one genus, that mysterious substance
-was lodged, on whose place and development so very much
-in the scheme of creation was destined to depend. The specimen
-from which the figure is taken was laid open laterally by
-chance exposure to the waves on the shores of Thurso,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_89"></a>[89]</span>
-another specimen, cut longitudinally by the saw of the lapidary,
-yields a similar section, but greatly more compressed in
-the cavities; on which, of course, as unsupported hollows, the
-compression to which the entire cranium had been exposed
-chiefly acted. When the top and bottom of a box are
-violently forced together, it is the empty space which the box
-encloses that is annihilated in consequence of the violence.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;" id="figure22">
-<img src="images/figure22.jpg" width="400" height="75" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 22.</p>
-<p class="caption">LONGITUDINAL SECTION OF HEAD OF DIPTERUS</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>It is deserving of notice, that the analogies of the cranial
-cavities in this ancient Ganoid should point so directly on the
-cranial cavities of that special Ganoid of the present time
-which unites a true skull of cartilage to a dermal skull of
-osseous plates,—a circumstance strongly corroborative of the
-general evidence, negative and positive, on which I have concluded
-that the true skulls of the first Ganoids were also cartilaginous.
-It is further worthy of observation, that in all the
-sections of the cranium of <i>Dipterus</i> which I have yet examined,
-the internal line is continuous, as in the Placoids,
-from nape to snout, and that the true skull presents no trace
-of those cerebral vertebræ of which skulls are regarded by
-Oken and his disciples as developments. Historically at
-least, the progress of the ichthyic head seems to have been
-a progress from simple cartilaginous boxes to cartilaginous
-boxes covered with osseous plates, that performed the functions
-whether active or passive, of internal bones; and then
-from external plates to the interior bones which the plates
-had previously represented, and whose proper work they had
-done.</p>
-
-<p>The principle which rendered it necessary that the divisions
-which exist in the dermal skulls of the first Ganoids
-should so closely correspond with the divisions which exist
-in the internal skulls of the osseous fishes of a greatly later
-period, does not seem to lie far from the surface. Of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_90"></a>[90]</span>
-solid parts of the ichthyic head, a certain set of pieces afford
-protection to the brain and cerebral nerves, and to some of the
-organs of the senses, such as those of seeing and hearing;
-while another certain set of pieces constitute the framework
-through which an important class of functions, manducatory
-and respiratory, are performed. The protective bones of
-merely passive function are fixed, whereas the bones of active
-function, such as the jaws, the osseous framework of the
-opercules, and the hyoid bones, are to the necessary extent
-free, <i>i. e.</i> capable of independent motion. Of course, the
-detached character necessary to the free cerebral bones would
-be equally necessary in cerebral plates united dermally to the
-pieces of the cartilaginous framework, which performed in
-the ancient fish the functions of these free bones. And hence
-jaw plates, opercular plates, and hyoid plates, whose homological
-relation with recent jaws and opercular and hyoid bones
-cannot be mistaken. They were operative in performing
-identical mechanical functions, and had to exist, in consequence,
-in identical mechanical conditions. And an equally
-simple, though somewhat different principle, seems to have
-regulated the divisions of the fixed cranial bucklers of the
-Old Red Ganoids, and to have determined their homologies
-with the fixed cerebral bones of the osseous fishes.</p>
-
-<p>These cranial bucklers, extending from nape to snout, protected
-the exposed upper surface of the cartilaginous skull,
-and conformed to it in shape, as a helmet conforms to the
-shape of the head, or a breast-plate to the shape of the chest.
-And as the cartilaginous heads resembled in general outline
-the osseous ones, the buckler which covered their
-upper surface resembled in general outline the upper surface
-of the osseous skull. It was in no case entirely a
-flat plate; but in every species rounded over the snout<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_91"></a>[91]</span>
-and in most species at the sides; and so, in order that its
-characteristic proportions might be preserved throughout the
-various stages of growth in the head which it covered, it had
-to be formed from several distinct centres of ossification, and
-to extend in area around the edges of the plates originated
-from these. The workman finds no difficulty in adding to
-the size of a piece of straight wall, whether by heightening
-or lengthening it; but he cannot add to the size of a
-dome or arch, without first taking it down, and then erecting
-it anew on a larger scale. In the domes and arches of the
-animal kingdom, the problem is solved by building them up of
-distinct pieces, few or many, according to the demands of the
-figure which they compose, and rendering these pieces capable
-of increase along their edges. It is on this principle that the
-Cystidea, the Echinidæ, the Chelonian carapace and plastron,
-and the skulls of the osseous Vertebrata, are constructed. It
-is also the principle on which the cranial bucklers of the
-ancient Ganoids were formed.<a id="FNanchor_17" href="#Footnote_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a> And from the general resemblance
-in figure of these bucklers to the upper surface of
-the osseous skull, the separate parts necessary for the building
-up of the one were anticipated, by many ages, in the building
-up of the other; just as we find external arches of stone<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_92"></a>[92]</span>
-which were erected two thousand years ago, constructed on
-the same principle, and relatively of the same parts, as internal
-arches of brick built in the present age. Doubtless, however,
-with this mechanical necessity for correspondence of parts
-in the formation of corresponding erections, there may have
-mingled that regard for typical resemblance which seems
-so marked a characteristic of the <i>style</i>, if I may so express
-myself, in which the Divine Architect gives expression to
-his ideas. The external osseous buckler He divided after
-the general pattern which was to be exemplified, in latter
-times, in the divisions of the internal osseous skull; as if in
-illustration of that “ideal exemplar” which dwelt in his
-mind from eternity, and on the palpable existence of which
-sober science has based deductions identical in their scope
-and bearing with some of the sublimest doctrines of the theologian.
-“The recognition,” says Professor Owen, “of an
-ideal exemplar for the vertebrated animals, proves that the
-knowledge of such a being as man existed before man appeared;
-for the Divine mind which planned the archetype
-also foreknew all its modifications. The archetypal idea was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_93"></a>[93]</span>
-manifested in the flesh, under divers such modifications, upon
-this planet, long prior to the existence of those animal species
-that actually exemplify it.”</p>
-
-<p>But while we find place in that geological history in which
-every character is an organism, for the “ideal exemplar” of
-Professor Owen, we find <i>no</i> place in it for the vertebræ-developed
-skull of Professor Oken. The true genealogy of the
-head runs in an entirely different line. The nerves of the
-cerebral senses did not, we find, originate cerebral vertebræ,
-seeing that the heads of the first and second geologic
-periods had their cerebral nerves, but <i>not</i> their cerebral vertebræ;
-and that what are regarded as cerebral-vertebræ appear
-for the first time, not in the early fishes, but in the
-reptiles of the Coal formation. The line of succession
-through the fish, indicated by the Continental assertor of the
-development hypothesis, is a line cut off. All the existing
-evidence conspires to show that the placoid heads of the Silurian
-system were, like the placoid heads of the recent
-period, mere cartilaginous boxes; and that in the succeeding
-system there existed ganoidal heads, that to the internal cartilaginous
-box added external plates of bone, the homologues,
-apparently,—so far at least as the merely cuticular could be
-representative of the endo-skeletal,—of the opercular, maxillary,
-frontal, and occipital bones in the osseous fishes of a
-long posterior period,—fishes that were not ushered upon the
-scene until after the appearance of the reptile in its highest
-forms and of even the marsupial quadruped.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_94"></a>[94]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_V">THE ASTEROLEPIS, ITS STRUCTURE, BULK, AND ASPECT.</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>With the reader, if he has accompanied me thus far, I shall
-now pass on to the consideration of the remains of the <i>Asterolepis</i>.
-Our preliminary acquaintance with the cerebral peculiarities
-of a few of its less gigantic contemporaries will be
-found of use in enabling us to determine regarding a class of
-somewhat resembling peculiarities which characterized this
-hugest Ganoid of the Old Red Sandstone.</p>
-
-<div class="figleft" style="width: 250px;" id="figure24">
-<img src="images/figure24.jpg" width="250" height="200" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 24.</p>
-<p class="caption"><i>Dermal tubercles of Asterolepis</i></p>
-<p class="caption">(Mag. two diameters.)</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The head of the <i>Asterolepis</i>, like the heads of all the other
-Cœlacanths, and of all the Dipterians, was covered with osseous
-plates,—its body with osseous scales; and, as I have
-already had occasion to mention, it is from the star-like tubercles
-by which the cerebral plates were fretted that M.
-Eichwald bestowed on the creature its generic name. Agassiz
-has even erected species on certain varieties in the pattern
-of the stars, as exhibited on detached fragments; but
-I am far from being satisfied that we are to seek in their
-peculiarities of style the characters by which the several
-species were distinguished. The stellar form of the tubercle
-seems to have been its normal or most perfect form
-as it was also, with certain modifications, that of the tubercle
-of the <i>Coccosteus</i> and <i>Pterichthys</i>; but its development
-as a complete star was comparatively rare: in most cases the
-tubercles existed without the rays,—frequently in the insulated<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_95"></a>[95]</span>
-pap-like shape, but not rarely confluent, or of an elongated
-or bent form; and when to these the characteristic
-rays were added, the stars produced were of a rather eccentric
-order,—stars somewhat resembling the shadows of stars
-seen in water. Individual specimens have already been
-found, on which, if we recognize the form of the tubercle as
-a specific character, several species
-might be erected. The accompanying
-wood-cut (fig. 24) represents,
-from a Thurso specimen,
-what seems to be the true normal
-pattern of these cerebral carvings.
-Seen in profile (<i>b</i>) the tubercles
-resemble little hillocks, perforated
-at their base by single lines of
-thickly-set caves; while seen from
-above, (<i>a</i>,) the narrow piers of bone by which the caves are
-divided take the form of rays. The reader will scarce fail
-to recognise in this print the coral <i>Monticularia</i> of Lamarck,
-or to detect, in at least the profile, the peculiarity which suggested
-the name.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-
-<div class="figmulti" style="width: 300px;" id="figure25">
-<img src="images/figure25.jpg" width="300" height="400" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 25.</p>
-<p class="caption">SCALES OF ASTEROLEPIS.</p>
-<p class="caption">(Nat. size.)</p>
-<p class="caption">a. <i>Inner surface of scale.</i></p>
-<p class="caption">b. <i>Exterior surface.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figmulti" style="width: 200px;" id="figure26">
-<img src="images/figure26.jpg" width="200" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 26.</p>
-<p class="caption">PORTION OF CARVED SURFACE OF SCALE.</p>
-<p class="caption">(Mag. four diameters.)</p>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The scales which covered the creature’s body (fig. 25)
-were, in proportion to its size, considerably smaller and thinner
-than those of the <i>Holoptychius</i>, which, however, they greatly
-resemble in their general style of sculpture. Each, on the
-lower part of its exposed field, was, we see, fretted by longitudinal
-anastomosing ridges, which, in the upper part, break
-into detached angular tubercles, placed with the apex downwards,
-and hollowed, leaf-like, in the centre; while that covered
-portion which was overlaid by the scales immediately
-above we find thickly pitted by microscopic hollows, that give
-to this part of the field, viewed under a tolerably high<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_96"></a>[96]</span>
-magnifying power, a honeycombed appearance.
-The central and lower parts of the interior surface
-of the scale (<i>a</i>) are in most of the specimens
-irregularly roughened; while a broad,
-smooth band, which runs along the top and
-sides, and seems to have furnished the line of
-attachment to the creature’s body, is comparatively
-smooth. The exterior carvings, though
-they demand the assistance of the lens to see
-them aright, are of singular elegance and
-beauty; as perhaps the accompanying wood-cut,
-(fig. 26,) which gives a magnified view of a
-portion of the scale immediately above (<i>b</i>) from
-the middle of the honeycombed field on the
-right side, to where the anastomosing ridges<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_97"></a>[97]</span>
-bend gracefully in their descent, may in some degree serve to
-show. I have seen a richly inlaid coat of mail, which was
-once worn by the puissant Charles the Fifth; but its elaborate
-carvings, though they belonged to the age of Benvenuto
-Cellini, were rude and unfinished, compared with those which
-fretted the armor of the <i>Asterolepis</i>.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;" id="figure27">
-<img src="images/figure27.jpg" width="300" height="400" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 27.</p>
-<p class="caption">CRANIAL BUCKLER OF ASTEROLEPIS.</p>
-<p class="caption">(One fifth nat. size, linear.)</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The creature’s cranial buckler, which was of great size
-and strength, might well be mistaken for the carapace of some
-Chelonian fish of no inconsiderable bulk. The cranial bucklers
-of the larger Dipterians were ample enough to have covered
-the corresponding part in the skulls of our middle-sized
-market-fish, such as the haddock and whiting; the buckler
-of a <i>Coccosteus</i> of the extreme size would have covered, if a
-little altered in shape, the upper surface of the skull of a cod,
-but the cranial buckler of <i>Asterolepis</i>, from which the accompanying
-wood-cut was taken, (fig. 27,) would have considerably
-more than covered the corresponding part in the skull of a
-large horse; and I have at least one specimen in my collection
-which would have fully covered the front skull of an elephant.
-In the smaller specimens, the buckler somewhat
-resembles a laborer’s shovel divested of its handle, and sorely
-rust-eaten along its lower or cutting edge. It consisted
-of plates, connected at the edges by flat squamous sutures, or,
-as a joiner might perhaps say, <i>glued</i> together in <i>bevelled</i> joints.
-And in consequence of this arrangement, the same plates
-which seem broad on the exterior surface appear comparatively
-narrow on the interior one, and <i>vice versa</i>; the occipital
-plate, (<i>a</i>,) which, running from the nape along the centre
-of the buckler, occupies so considerable a space on its outer
-surface, exhibits inside a superficies reduced at least one half.
-Like nine tenths of its contemporaries, the <i>Asterolepis</i> exhibits
-the little central plate between the eyes; but the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_98"></a>[98]</span>
-eye orbits, unlike those of the <i>Coccosteus</i>, and of all the
-Dipterian genera, which were half-scooped out of the cranial
-buckler, half-encircled by detached plates, were placed completely
-within the field of the buckler,—a circumstance
-in which they resemble the eye orbits of the <i>Pterichthys</i>,
-and, among existing fish, those of the sea-wolf. The
-characteristic is also a distinctive one in Cuvier’s second
-family of the Acanthopterygii,—the “fishes with hard
-cheeks.” A deep line immediately over the eyes, which,
-however, indicated no suture, but seems to have been merely
-ornamental, forms a sort of rudely tatooed eyebrow;
-the marginal lines parallel to the lateral edges of the buckler
-were also mere tatooings; but all the others indicated
-joints which, though more or less anchylosed, had a real<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_99"></a>[99]</span>
-existence. So flat was the surface, that the edge of a ruler
-rests upon it, in my several specimens, both lengthwise and
-across; but it was traversed by two flat ridges, which, stretching
-from the corners of the latero-posterior, <i>i. e.</i> parietal,
-plates, (<i>b</i>, <i>b</i>,) converged at the little plate between the eyes,
-while along the centre of the depressed angle which they
-formed, a third ridge, equally flat with the others, ran towards
-the same point of convergence from the nape. The three
-ridges, when strongly relieved by a slant light, resemble
-not inadequately an impression, on a large scale, of the
-Queen’s broad arrow.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;" id="figure28">
-<img src="images/figure28.jpg" width="300" height="350" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 28.</p>
-<p class="caption">INNER SURFACE OF CRANIAL BUCKLER OF ASTEROLEPIS.</p>
-<p class="caption">(One fifth nat. size, linear.)</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The inner surface of the cranial buckler of <i>Asterolepis</i>, (fig.
-28,)—that which rested on the cartilaginous box which
-formed the creature’s interior skull,—stands out in bolder
-relief from the stone than its outer surface, and forms a more<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_100"></a>[100]</span>
-picturesque object. Like the inner surfaces of the bucklers
-of <i>Coccosteus</i> and <i>Pterichthys</i>, but much more thickly than
-these, it was traversed by minute channelled markings, somewhat
-resembling those striæ which may be detected in the
-flatter bones of the ordinary fishes, and which seem in these
-to be mere interstices between the osseous fibres. And in the
-plates, as in the bones, they radiate from the centres of ossification,
-which are comparatively dense and massy, towards the
-thinner overlapping edges. These radiating lines are equally
-well marked in the cerebral bones of the human fœtus. The
-three converging ridges on the outer surface we find on the
-inner surface also,—the lateral ones a little bent in the middle,
-but so directly opposite those outside, that the thickening
-of the buckler which takes place along their line is at
-least as much a consequence of their inner as of their outer
-elevation over the general platform. A fourth bar ran
-transversely along the nape, and formed the cross beam on
-which the others rested; for the three longitudinal ridges
-may be properly regarded as three strong beams, which, extending
-from the transverse beam at the nape to the front,
-where they converged like the spokes of a wheel at the nave,
-gave to the cranial roof a degree of support of which, from
-its great flatness, it may have stood in need. In cranial
-bucklers in which the average thickness of the plates does
-not exceed three <i>eighth</i> parts of an inch, their thickness in
-the centre of the ridges exceeds three <i>quarters</i>. The head
-of the largest crocodile of the existing period is defended
-by an armature greatly less strong than that worn by the
-<i>Asterolepis</i> of the Lower Old Red Sandstone. Why this
-ancient Ganoid should have been so ponderously helmed
-we can but doubtfully guess; we only know, that when nature
-arms her soldiery, there are assailants to be resisted and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_101"></a>[101]</span>
-a state of war to be maintained. The posterior central plate,
-the homologue apparently of the occipital bone, was curiously
-carved into an ornate massive leaf, like one of the larger
-leaves of a Corinthian capital, and terminated beneath,
-where the stem should have been, in a strong osseous knob,
-fashioned like a pike head. Two plates immediately over it,
-the homologues of the superior frontal bone, with the little
-nasal plate which, perched atop in the middle, lay between the
-creature’s eyes, resembled the head and breast in the female
-figure, at least not less closely than those of the “lady in the
-lobster;” the posterior frontal plates in which the outer and
-nether half of the eye orbits were hollowed formed a pair of
-sweeping wings, and thus in the centre of the buckler we are
-presented with the figure of an angel, robed and winged, and
-of which the large sculptured leaf forms the body, traced in
-a style in no degree more rude than we might expect to see
-exemplified on the lichen-encrusted shield of some ancient
-tombstone of that House of Avenel which bore as its arms the
-effigies of the Spectre Lady. Children have a peculiar knack
-in detecting such resemblances; and the discovery of
-the angel in the cranium of the <i>Asterolepis</i> I owe to one of
-mine.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;" id="figure29">
-<img src="images/figure29.jpg" width="300" height="375" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 29.</p>
-<p class="caption">PLATE OF CRANIAL BUCKLER OF ASTEROLEPIS.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>It is on this inner side of the cranial buckler, where there
-are no such pseudo-joinings indicated as on the external surface,
-that the homologies of the plates of which it is composed
-can be best traced. It might be well, however, ere
-setting one’s self to the work of comparison, to examine the
-skulls of a few of the osseous fishes of our coast, and to mark
-how very considerably they differ from one another in their
-lines of suture and their general form. The cerebral divisions
-of the conger-eel, for instance, are very unlike those of
-the haddock or whiting; and the sutures in the head of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_102"></a>[102]</span>
-gurnard are dissimilarly arranged from those in the head of
-the perch. And after tracing the general type in the more
-anomalous forms, and finding, with Cuvier, that in even these
-the “skull consists of the same bones, though much subdivided,
-as the skulls of the other vertebrata,” we will be the better
-qualified for grappling with the not greater anomalies
-which occur in the cranial buckler of the <i>Asterolepis</i>. The
-occipital plate, <i>A</i>, <i>a</i>, <i>a</i>, (fig. 29,) occupies its ordinary place
-opposite the centre of the nape; the two parietals, B, B, rest
-beside it in their usual ichthyic position of displacement; the
-superior frontal we find existing, as in the young of many animals,
-in two pieces, C, C; the nasal plate I, placed immediately
-in advance of it, is flanked, as in the cod, by the anterior frontals,
-D, D; the posterior frontals, F, F, which, when viewed
-as in the print, from beneath, seem of considerable size, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_103"></a>[103]</span>
-describe laterally and posteriorly about one half the eye
-orbits, have their area on the exterior surface greatly reduced
-by the overriding squamose sutures of the plates to which
-they join; and lastly, two of these overlying plates, E, E,—which,
-occurring in the line of the lateral bar or beam, are
-of great strength and thickness, and lie for two thirds of their
-length along the parietals, and for the remaining third along
-the superior frontals,—represent the mastoid bones. Such,
-so far as I have been yet able to read the cranial buckler
-of the <i>Asterolepis</i>, seem to be the homologies of its component
-plates.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;" id="figure30">
-<img src="images/figure30.jpg" width="400" height="150" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 30.</p>
-<p class="caption">PORTION OF UNDER JAW OF ASTEROLEPIS, (OUTER SIDE.)</p>
-<p class="caption">(One half nat. size.)</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;" id="figure31">
-<img src="images/figure31.jpg" width="400" height="175" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 31.</p>
-<p class="caption">PORTION OF UNDER JAW OF ASTEROLEPIS, (INNER SIDE.)</p>
-<p class="caption">(One half nat. size.)</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>There were no parts of the animal more remarkable than
-its jaws. The under jaws,—for the nether maxillary consisted,
-in this fish, as in the placoid fishes, and in the quadrupeds
-generally, of two pieces joined in the middle,—were,
-like those of the <i>Holoptychius</i>, boxes of bone, which enclosed
-central masses of cartilage. The outer and under sides were
-thickly covered with the characteristic star-like tubercles; and
-along the upper margin or lip there ran a thickly-set row
-of small broadly-based teeth, planted as directly on the edge
-of the exterior plate as iron spikes on the upper edge of a
-gate (fig. 30.) Mr. Parkinson expresses some wonder, in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_104"></a>[104]</span>
-his work on fossils, that, in a fine ichthyolite in the British
-Museum, not only the <i>teeth</i> should have been preserved, but
-also the <i>lips</i>; but we now know enough of the construction
-of the ancient Ganoids to cease wondering. The <i>lips</i> were
-formed of as solid bone as the teeth themselves, and had
-as fair a chance of being preserved entire; just as the
-metallic rim of a <i>cogged</i> wheel has as fair a chance of being
-preserved as the metallic cogs that project from it. Immediately
-behind the front row,—in which the teeth present the
-ordinary ichthyic appearance,—there ran a thinly-set row
-of huge <i>reptile</i> teeth, based on an interior platform of
-bone, which formed the top of the cartilage-enclosing box
-composing the jaw. These were at once bent outwards and
-twisted laterally, somewhat like nails that have been drawn
-out of wood by the claw of a carpenter’s hammer, and bent
-awry with the wrench, (fig. 31.) They were furrowed
-longitudinally from point to base by minute thickly-set striæ
-and were furnished laterally, in most of the specimens
-though not in all, with two sharp cutting edges. The reptile
-had as yet no existence in creation; but we see its future<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_105"></a>[105]</span>
-coming symbolized in the dentition of this ancient Ganoid:
-it, as it were, shows us the <i>crocodile</i> lying entrenched behind
-the fish. The interior structure of these reptile teeth is
-very remarkable. In the longitudinal section we find
-numerous cancelli, ranged lengthwise along the outer
-edges, but much crossed, net-like, within,—greatly more
-open towards the base than at the point,—and giving place
-in the centre to a hollow space, occasionally traversed by a
-few slim osseous partitions. In the transverse section these
-cancelli are found to radiate from the open centre towards
-the circumference, like the spokes of a wheel from the
-nave; and each spoke seems as if, like Aaron’s rod, it had
-become instinct with vegetative life, and had sprouted into
-branch and blossom. Seen in a microscope of limited field,
-that takes in, as in the accompanying print, (fig. 32,) not more<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_106"></a>[106]</span>
-than a fourth part of the section, the appearance presented is
-that of a well-trained wall tree. And hence the generic
-name <i>Dendrodus</i>, given by Professor Owen to teeth found
-detached in the deposits of Moray, when the creatures to
-which they had belonged were still unknown,—a name,
-however, which will, I suspect, be found synonymous rather
-with that of a family than of a genus; for so far as I have
-yet examined, I find that the dendrodic or tree-like tooth, was
-in at least the Old Red Sandstone, a characteristic of all the
-Cœlacanth family. I may mention, however, as a curious
-subject of inquiry, that the Cœlacanths of the Coal Measures
-seem to have had their reptile teeth formed of pure ivory,—a
-substance, which I have not yet detected among the reptile-fish
-of the Old Red. Towards the base of the reptile teeth
-of <i>Asterolepis</i>, the interstices between the branches greatly
-widen, as in the branches of a tree in winter divested of its
-foliage, (fig. 33, <i>c</i>;) the texture also opens towards the
-base in the <i>fish</i>-teeth,
-outside, in which, however,
-the pattern in
-the transverse section
-is greatly less complex
-and ornate than that
-which the reptile teeth
-exhibits. When cut
-across near the point,
-they appear each as
-a thick ring, (<i>b</i>,) traversed
-by lines that
-radiate towards the
-centre; when cut across about half way down, they
-somewhat resemble, seen under a high magnifying power<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_107"></a>[107]</span>
-those cast-iron wheels on which the engineer mounts his
-railway carriages, (<i>a</i>.) In the longitudinal section their line
-of junction with the jaw is marked by numerous openings,
-but by no line of division, and they appear as thickly dotted
-by what were once canaliculi, or life points, as any portion of
-the dermal bone on which they rest.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-
-<div class="figmulti" style="width: 400px;" id="figure32">
-<img src="images/figure32.jpg" width="400" height="400" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 32.</p>
-<p class="caption">PORTION OF TRANSVERSE SECTION OF REPTILE TOOTH OF ASTEROLEPIS</p>
-<p class="caption">a. <i>Nat. size.</i></p>
-<p class="caption">b. <i>Mag. twelve diameters.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figmulti" style="width: 300px;" id="figure33">
-<img src="images/figure33.jpg" width="300" height="175" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 33.</p>
-<p class="caption">A. <i>Section of Jaw of Asterolepis.</i></p>
-<p class="caption">c. <i>Reptile tooth as shown in section.</i></p>
-<p class="caption">a, b, &amp; c. <i>Row of ichthyic teeth in dermal plate of jaw.</i></p>
-<p class="caption">B. <i>Magnified representatives of ichthyic teeth, a and b, in <span class="upright">A</span>.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>It seems truly wonderful, when one considers it, to what
-minute and obscure ramifications that variety of pattern which
-nature so loves to maintain is found to descend. It descends
-in the fishes, both recent and extinct, to even the microscopic
-structure of their teeth; and we find, in consequence, not
-less variety of figure in the sliced fragments of the teeth of
-the ichthyolites of a single formation, than in the carved blocks
-of an extensive calico print-yard. Each <i>species</i> has its own
-distinct pattern, as if, in all the individuals of which it consisted,
-the same block had been employed to stamp it; and
-each <i>genus</i> its own general <i>type</i> of pattern, as if the same
-radical idea, variously altered and modified, had been wrought
-upon in all. In the <i>Dendrodic</i> (Cœlacanth?) family, for instance,
-it is the radical type, that from a central nave there
-should radiate, spoke-like, a number of arborescent branches;
-but in the several genera and species of the family, the
-branches belong, if I may so express myself, to different
-shrubs, and present dissimilar outlines. It has appeared to me,
-that at least a <i>presumption</i> against the transmutation of species
-might be based on those inherent peculiarities of structure
-which are thus found to pervade the entire texture of the
-framework of animals. If we find erections differing from
-one another merely in external form, we have no difficulty in
-conceiving how, by additions and alterations, they might be
-brought to exhibit a perfect uniformity of plan and aspect:
-<i>transmutation</i>,—<i>development</i>,—<i>progression</i>,—(if one may<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_108"></a>[108]</span>
-use such terms,)—seem possible in such circumstances. But
-if the buildings differ from each other, not only in external
-form, but also in every brick and beam, bolt and nail, no mere
-scheme of external alteration could ever induce a real resemblance.
-Every brick would have to be taken down, and every
-beam and bolt removed. The problem could not be wrought
-by the remodelling of an old house: the only mode of solving
-it would be by the erection of a new one.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;" id="figure34">
-<img src="images/figure34.jpg" width="400" height="150" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 34.</p>
-<p class="caption">MAXILLARY BONE?</p>
-<p class="caption">(One fourth nat. size, linear.)</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Of the upper maxillary bones of the <i>Asterolepis</i>, I only
-know that a considerable fragment of one of the pieces,
-recognized as such by Agassiz, has been found in the neighborhood
-of Thurso by Mr. Dick, unaccompanied, however,
-by any evidence respecting its place or function. It exhibits
-none of the characteristic tubercles of the dermal bones, and
-no appearance of teeth; but is simply a long bent bone, resembling
-somewhat less than the half of an ancient bow of
-steel or horn,—such a bow as that which Ulysses bended in
-the presence of the suitors. By some of the Russian geologists
-this bone was at first regarded as a portion of the arm
-or wing of some gigantic <i>Pterichthys</i>. In the accompanying
-print (fig. 34) I have borrowed the general outline from that
-of a specimen of Professor Asmus, of which a cast may be
-seen in the British Museum; while the shaded portion represents<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_109"></a>[109]</span>
-the fragment found by Mr. Dick. The intermaxillary
-bones, like the dermal plates of the lower jaw, were studded
-by star-like tubercles, and bristled thickly along their lower
-edges with the ichthyic teeth, flanked by teeth of the reptilian
-character. The opercules of the animal consisted, as in the
-sturgeon, of single plates (fig. 35) of great massiveness and
-size, thickly tubercled outside, without
-trace of joint or suture, and marked
-on their under surface by channelled
-lines, that radiate, as in the other
-plates, from the centre of ossification.
-That space along the nape
-which intervened between the opercules,
-was occupied, as in the <i>Dipterus</i>
-and <i>Diplopterus</i>, by three plates,
-which covered rather the anterior
-portion of the body than the posterior portion of the head,
-and which, in the restoration of <i>Osteolepis</i>, (fig. 13,) appear
-as the plates, 9, 9, 9. I can say scarce any thing regarding
-the lateral plates which lay between the intermaxillaries and
-the cranial buckler, and which exist in the <i>Osteolepis</i>, fig. 13,
-as the plates 2, 4, 5, 6, and 7; nor do I know how the snout
-terminated, save that in a very imperfect specimen it exhibits,
-as in the <i>Diplopterus</i> and <i>Osteolepis</i>, a rounded outline, and
-was set with teeth.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-
-<div class="figmulti" style="width: 200px;" id="figure35">
-<img src="images/figure35.jpg" width="200" height="200" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 35.</p>
-<p class="caption">INNER SURFACE OF OPERCULUM OF ASTEROLEPIS.</p>
-<p class="caption">(One fifth nat. size, linear.)</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figmulti" style="width: 300px;" id="figure36">
-<img src="images/figure36.jpg" width="300" height="175" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 36.</p>
-<p class="caption">HYOID PLATE.</p>
-<p class="caption">(One ninth nat. size, linear.)</p>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>That space comprised within the arch of the lower jaws, in
-which the hyoid bone and branchiostegous rays of the osseous
-fishes occur, was filled by a single plate of great size and
-strength, and of singular form, (fig. 36;) and to this plate, existing
-as a steep ridge running along the centre of the interior
-surface, and thickening into a massy knob at the anterior termination,
-that nail-shaped organism, which I have described<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_110"></a>[110]</span>
-as one of the most characteristic bones of the <i>Asterolepis</i>,
-belonged. In the <i>Osteolepis</i>, the space corresponding to that
-occupied by this hyoid plate was filled, as shown in fig. 14,
-by five plates of not inelegant form; and the divisions of the
-arch resembled those of a small Gothic window, in which
-the single central mullion parts into two branches atop. In
-the <i>Holoptychius</i> and <i>Glyptolepis</i> there were but two plates;
-for the central mullion, <i>i. e.</i> line of division, did not branch
-atop; and in the <i>Asterolepis</i>, where there was no line of
-division, the strong nail-like bone occupied the place of the
-central mullion. The hyoidal armature of the latter fish
-was strongest in the line in which the others were weakest.
-Each of the five hyoid plates of the <i>Osteolepis</i>, or of the two
-plates of the <i>Glyptolepis</i> or <i>Holoptychius</i>, had its own centre
-of ossification; and in the single plate of <i>Asterolepis</i>, the
-centre of ossification, as shown by the radiations of the fibre,
-was the nail-head. This head, placed in immediate contact
-with the strong boxes of bone which composed the
-under jaw, just where their central joining occurred, seems to
-have lent them a considerable degree of support, which at
-such a juncture may have been not unnecessary. In some of
-the nail-heads, belonging, it is probable, to a different species
-of <i>Asterolepis</i> from that in which the nail figured in <a href="#figure1">page 7</a>,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_111"></a>[111]</span>
-and the plate in the opposite page, occurred,—for its general
-form is different, (fig. 37,)—there appear well-marked
-ligamentary impressions closely resembling
-that little spongy pit in the head of the
-human thigh-bone to which what is termed the
-round ligament is attached. The entire hyoid-plate,
-viewed on its outer side, resembles in form
-the hyoid-bone,—or cartilage rather,—of the
-spotted dog-fish, (<i>Scyllium stellare</i>;) but its area
-was at least a hundred times more extensive
-than in the largest <i>Scyllium</i>, and, like all the
-dermal plates of the <i>Asterolepis</i>, it was thickly
-fretted by the characteristic tubercles. In the
-Ray, as in the Sharks, the piece of thin cartilage
-of which this plate seems the homologue, is a
-flat, semi-transparent disk; and there is no part
-of the animal in which the progress of those
-bony molecules which encrust the internal
-framework may be more distinctly traced, as if in the act of
-creeping over what they cover, in slim threads or shooting
-points,—and much resembling new ice creeping in a frosty
-evening over the surface of a pool.</p>
-
-<div class="figleft" style="width: 150px;" id="figure37">
-<img src="images/figure37.jpg" width="150" height="400" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 37.</p>
-<p class="caption">NAIL-LIKE BONE OF HYOID PLATE.</p>
-<p class="caption">(One half nat. size.)</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>That suite of shoulder-bones that in the osseous fishes
-forms the belt or frame on which the opercules rest, and furnishes
-the base of the pectorals, was represented in the <i>Asterolepis</i>,
-as in the sturgeon, by a ring of strong osseous plates,
-which, in one of the two species of which trace is to be found
-among the rocks of Thurso, were curiously fretted on their
-external surfaces, and in the other species comparatively
-smooth. The largest, or coracoidian plate of the ring, as it
-occurs in the more ornate species, (fig. 38,) might be readily
-enough mistaken, when seen with only its surface exposed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_112"></a>[112]</span>
-for the ichthyodorulite of some large fish, allied, mayhap, to
-the <i>Gyracanthus formosus</i> of the Coal Measures; but when
-detached from the stone, the hollow form and peculiar striæ
-of the inferior surface serve to establish its true character as
-a dermal plate. The diagonal furrowings which traversed
-it, as the twisted flutings traverse a Gothic column moulded
-after the type of the Apprentice Pillar in Roslin chapel, seem
-to have underlaid the edge of the opercule; at least I find a
-similar arrangement in the shoulder-plates of a large species
-of <i>Diplopterus</i>, which are deeply grooved and furrowed where
-the opercule rested, as if with the design of keeping up a
-communication between the branchiæ and the external element,
-even when the gill-cover was pressed closely down
-upon them. And,—as in these shoulder-plates of the <i>Diplopterus</i>
-the furrows yield their place beyond the edge of the
-opercule to the punctulated enamel common to the outer
-surface of all the creature’s external plates and scales,—we
-find them yielding their place, in the shoulder-plates of the
-<i>Asterolepis</i>, to the starred tubercles.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;" id="figure38">
-<img src="images/figure38.jpg" width="400" height="100" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 38.</p>
-<p class="caption">SHOULDER (<i>i. e.</i> CORACOID?) PLATE OF ASTEROLEPIS.</p>
-<p class="caption">(One third nat. size, linear.)</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="figure39">
-<img src="images/figure39.jpg" width="500" height="325" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 39.</p>
-<p class="caption">DERMAL BONES OF ASTEROLEPIS.</p>
-<p class="caption">(One third nat. size, linear.)</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figleft" style="width: 200px;" id="figure40">
-<img src="images/figure40.jpg" width="200" height="250" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 40.</p>
-<p class="caption">INTERNAL BONES OF ASTEROLEPIS.</p>
-<p class="caption">(One half nat. size, linear.)</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>A few detached bones, that bear on their outer surfaces
-the dermal markings, must have belonged to that angular-shaped
-portion of the head which intervened between the
-cranial buckler and the intermaxillary bone; but the key
-for assigning to them their proper place is still to find; and
-I suspect that no amount of skill on the part of the comparative<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_113"></a>[113]</span>
-anatomist will ever qualify him to complete the work
-of restoration without it. I have submitted to the reader the
-cranial bucklers of <i>five</i> several genera of the ganoids of the
-Old Red Sandstone; but no amount of study bestowed on
-these would enable even the most skilful ichthyologist to
-restore a <i>sixth</i>; nor is the lateral area of the head, which
-was, I find, variously occupied in each genus, less difficult
-to restore than the buckler which surmounted it. Two of
-the more entire of these dermal bones I have figured (fig. 39,
-<i>a</i> and <i>b</i>) in the hope of assisting future inquirers, who, were
-they to pick up all the other plates, might yet be unable,
-lacking the figured ones, to complete the whole. The
-curiously-shaped plate <i>a</i>, represented in its various sides by
-the figures 1, 2, 3, is of an acutely angular form in the transverse
-section, (the external surface, 1, forming an angle which
-varies from thirty to forty-five degrees with the base, 3;)
-and as it lay, it is probable when in its original place,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_114"></a>[114]</span>
-immediately under the edge of the cranial buckler, it may
-have served to commence the line of deflection from the flat
-top of the head to the steep descent of the sides, just as what
-are technically termed the <i>spur</i>-stones in a gable-head serve
-to commence the line of deflection from the vertical outline
-of the wall to the inclined line of the roof, or as the spring-stones
-of an arch serve to commence the curve. A few
-internal bones in my possession are curious, but exceedingly
-puzzling. The bone <i>a</i>, fig.
-40, which resembles a rib, or branchiostegous
-ray, of one of the ordinary
-fishes, formed apparently
-part of that osseous <i>style</i> which
-in fishes such as the haddock and
-cod we find attached to the suite
-of shoulder-bones, and which, according
-to Cuvier, is the analogue
-of the coracoidian bone, and, according
-to Professor Owen, the analogue
-of the clavicle. Fig. <i>b</i> is a
-mere fragment, broken at both ends,
-but exhibiting, in a state of good keeping, lateral expansions,
-like those of an ancient halbert. Fig. <i>c</i>, 41, which
-is also a fragment, though a more considerable one, bears
-in its thicker and straighter edge a groove like that of an
-ichthyodorulite, which, however, the bone itself in no
-degree resembles. Fig. <i>d</i> is a flat bone, of a type common
-in the skeleton of fishes, but which, in mammals, we find
-exemplified in but the scapulars. It seems, like these, to
-have furnished the base to which some suite of movable
-bones was articulated,—in all likelihood that proportion of
-the carnal bonelets of the pectoral fins which are attached in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_115"></a>[115]</span>
-the osseous fishes to its apparent homologue, the radius. Fig.
-<i>e</i>, a slim light bone, which narrows and thickens in the centre,
-and flattens and broadens at each end, was probably a scapula
-or shoulder-blade,—a bone which in most fishes <i>splices</i> on,
-as a sailor would say, by squamose jointings, to the coracoidian
-bone at the one end, and the super-scapular bone at the
-other. As indicated by its size, it must have belonged to a
-small individual: it is, however, twice as long, and about six
-times as bulky, as the scapula of a large cod.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;" id="figure41">
-<img src="images/figure41.jpg" width="400" height="375" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 41.</p>
-<p class="caption">INTERNAL BONES OF ASTEROLEPIS.</p>
-<p class="caption">(One third nat. size, linear.)</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 300px;" id="figure42">
-<img src="images/figure42.jpg" width="300" height="125" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 42.</p>
-<p class="caption">ISCHIUM OF ASTEROLEPIS.</p>
-<p class="caption">(One half nat. size, linear.)</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Of the bone represented in fig. 42, I have determined, from
-a Cromarty specimen, the place and use: it formed the interior
-base to which one of the ventral fins was attached. In
-all fishes the bones of the hinder extremities are inadequately
-represented: in none do we find the pelvic arch complete;
-and to that nether portion of it which we do find represented,
-and which Professor Owen regards as the homologue of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_116"></a>[116]</span>
-<i>os ischium</i> or hip-bone, the homologues of the metatarsal and
-toe-bones are attached, to the exclusion of the bones of the
-thigh and leg. In the Abdominales,—fishes such as the
-salmon and carp,—that have the ventrals placed behind the
-abdomen, in the position analogous to that in which the
-hinder legs of the reptiles and mammals occur, the ischiatic
-bones generally exist as flat triangular plates, with their heads
-either turned <i>inwards</i> and downwards, as in the herring, or
-<i>outwards</i> and downwards, as in the pike; whereas in some of
-the cartilaginous fishes, such as the Rays and Sharks, they
-exist as an undivided cartilaginous band, stretched transversely
-from ventral to ventral. And such, with but an upward direction,
-appears to have been their position in the <i>Asterolepis</i>.
-They seem to have united at the narrow neck A, over the
-middle of the lower portion of the abdomen; and to the
-notches of the flat expansion B,—notches which exactly resemble
-those of the immensely developed carpal bones of the
-Ray,—five metatarsal bones were attached, from which the
-fin expanded. It is interesting to find the number in this
-ancient representative of the vertebrata restricted to five,—a
-number greatly exceeded in most of the existing fishes, but
-which is the true normal number of the vertebrate sub-kingdom
-as shown in all the higher examples such as man, the
-<i>quadrumana</i>, and in most of the <i>carnaria</i>. The form of this<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_117"></a>[117]</span>
-bone somewhat resembles that of the analogous bone in those
-fishes, such as the perch and gurnard, cod and haddock, which
-have their ventrals suspended to the scapular belt; but its
-position in the Cromarty specimen, and that of the ventrals
-in the various specimens of the Cœlacanth family in which
-their place is still shown, forbids the supposition that <i>it</i> was
-so suspended,—a circumstance in keeping with all the existing
-geological evidence on the subject, which agrees in indicating,
-that of the low type of fishes that have, monster-like,
-their <i>feet</i> attached to their necks, the Old Red Sandstone does
-not afford a trace. This inferior type, now by far the most
-prevalent in the ichthyic division of the animal kingdom, does
-not seem to have been introduced until near the close of the
-Secondary period, long after the fish had been degraded from
-its primal place in the fore front of creation. In one of my
-specimens a few fragments of the rays are preserved, (fig.
-43, <i>b</i>.) They are about the eighth part
-of an inch in diameter: depressed in
-some cases in the center, as if, over the
-internal hollow formed by the decay of
-the cartilaginous centre, the bony crust
-of which they are composed had given
-way; and, like the rays of the thornback,
-they are thickened at the joints,
-and at the processes by which they were attached to the ischiatic
-base. It may be proper, I should here state, that of some of
-the internal bones figured above I have no better evidence
-that they belonged to the <i>Asterolepis</i>, than that they occur
-in the same beds with the dermal plates which bear the characteristic
-star-like markings,—that they are of very considerable
-size,—and that they formed no part of the known
-fishes of the formation.</p>
-
-<div class="figleft" style="width: 200px;" id="figure43">
-<img src="images/figure43.jpg" width="200" height="125" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 43.</p>
-<p class="caption">a. <i>Single joint of ray of Thornback.</i></p>
-<p class="caption">b. <i>Single joint of ray of Asterolepis.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_118"></a>[118]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 300px;" id="figure44">
-<img src="images/figure44.jpg" width="300" height="450" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 44.</p>
-<p class="caption">COPROLITES OF ASTEROLEPIS.</p>
-<p class="caption">(Nat. Size.<a id="FNanchor_18" href="#Footnote_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>On exactly the same grounds I infer that certain large coprolites
-of common occurrence in the Thurso flagstones, which
-contain the broken scales of Dipterians, and exhibit a curiously
-twisted form, (fig. 44,) also belonged to the <i>Asterolepis</i>;
-and from these, that the creature was carnivorous in its habits,—an
-inference which the character of its teeth fully corroborates;
-and farther, that, like the sharks and rays, and
-some of the extinct Enaliosaurs, it possessed the spiral disposition
-of intestine. Paley, in his chapter on the compensatory
-contrivances palpable in the structure of various animals,
-refers to a peculiar substitutory provision which occurs in a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_119"></a>[119]</span>
-certain amphibious animal described in the Memoirs of the
-French Academy. “The reader will remember,” he says,
-“what we have already observed concerning the <i>intestinal</i>
-canal,—that its length, so many times exceeding that of the
-body, promotes the extraction of the chyle from the aliment,
-by giving room for the lacteal vessels to act upon it through
-a greater space. This long intestine, whenever it occurs, is
-in other animals disposed in the abdomen from side to side,
-in returning folds. But in the animal now under our notice,
-the matter is managed otherwise. The same intention is
-mechanically effectuated, but by a mechanism of a different
-kind. The animal of which I speak is an amphibious
-quadruped, which our authors call the Alopecias or sea-fox.
-The intestine is straight from one end to the other
-but in this straight, and consequently short intestine, is a
-winding, cork-screw, spiral passage, through which the food,
-not without several circumvolutions, and, in fact, by a long
-route, is conducted to its exit. Here the shortness of the
-gut is <i>compensated</i> by the obliquity of the perforation.” This
-structure of intestine, which all the true Placoids possess,
-and at least the Sturiones among existing Ganoids, seems to
-have been an exceedingly common one during both the
-Palæozoic and Secondary periods. It has left its impress
-on all the better preserved coprolites of the Coal Measures,
-so abundant in the shales of Newhaven and Burdie House,
-and on those of the Lias and Chalk. It seems to be equally
-a characteristic of well nigh all the bulkier coprolites of the
-Lower Old Red Sandstone.<a id="FNanchor_19" href="#Footnote_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a> In these, however, it manifests<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_120"></a>[120]</span>
-a peculiar trait, which I have failed to detect in any of the
-recent fishes; nor have I yet seen it indicated, in at least the
-same degree, by the Carboniferous or Secondary coprolitic
-remains. In the bowels which moulded the coprolites of
-Lyme-Regis, of the Chalk, and of the Newhaven and Granton
-beds, a single screw must have winded within the cylindrical
-tube, as a turnpike stair winds within its hollow shaft; and
-such also is the arrangement in the existing Sharks and
-Rays; whereas the bowels which moulded the coprolites of
-the Lower Old Red Sandstone must have been traversed by
-triple or quadruple screws laid closely together, as we find
-the stalk of an old-fashioned wine-glass traversed by its
-thickly-set spiral lines of thread-like china. And so, while
-on the surface of both the Secondary and Carboniferous
-coprolites there is space between the screw-like lines for
-numerous cross markings that correspond to the thickly set
-veiny branches which traverse the sides of the recent placoid
-bowel, the entire surface of the Lower Old Red coprolites is
-traversed by the spiral markings. Is there nothing strange in
-the fact, that after the lapse of mayhap millions of years,—nay,
-it is possible, millions of ages,—we should be thus able
-to detect at once general resemblance and special dissimilarity
-in even the most perishable parts of the most ancient of the
-Ganoids?</p>
-
-<p>I must advert, in passing, to a peculiarity exemplified in
-the state of keeping of the bones of this ancient Ganoid, in at
-least the deposits of Orkney and Caithness. The original
-animal matter has been converted into a dark-colored bitumen,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_121"></a>[121]</span>
-which in some places, where the remains lie thick, pervades
-the crevices of the rocks, and has not unfrequently been
-mistaken for coal. In its more solid state it can hardly be
-distinguished, when used in sealing a letter,—a purpose
-which it serves indifferently well,—from black wax of the
-ordinary quality; when more fluid, it adheres scarce less
-strongly to the hands than the coal-tar of our gas-works and
-dock-yards. Underneath a specimen of <i>Asterolepis</i>, first
-pointed out to me in its bed among the Thurso rocks by Mr.
-Dick, and which, at my request, he afterwards raised and
-sent me to Edinburgh, packed up in a box, there lay a
-quantity of thick tar, which stuck as fast to my fingers, on
-lifting out the pieces of rock, as if I had laid hold of the
-planking of a newly tarred yawl. What had been once the
-nerves, muscles, and blood of this ancient Ganoid still lay
-under its bones, and reminded me of the appearance presented
-by the remains of a poor suicide, whose solitary grave, dug in
-a sandy bank in the north of Scotland, had been laid open by
-the encroachments of a river. The skeleton, with pieces of
-the dress still wrapped round it, lay at length along the section;
-and, for a full yard beneath, the white dry sand was
-consolidated into a dark-colored pitchy mass, by the altered
-animal matter which had escaped from it, percolating downwards,
-in the process of decay.</p>
-
-<p>In consequence of the curious chemical change which has
-thus taken place in the animal juices of the <i>Asterolepis</i>, its
-remains often occur in a state of beautiful preservation: the
-pervading bitumen, greatly more conservative in its effects
-than the oils and gums of an old Egyptian undertaker, has
-maintained, in their original integrity, every scale, plate, and
-bone. They may have been much broken ere they were
-first committed to the keeping of the rock, or in disentangling<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_122"></a>[122]</span>
-them from its rigid embrace; but they have, we find, caught
-no harm when under its care. Ere the skeleton of the
-Bruce, disinterred after the lapse of five centuries, was
-recommitted to the tomb, such measures were taken to secure
-its preservation, that, were it to be again disinterred, even
-after as many more centuries had passed, it might be found
-retaining unbroken its gigantic proportions. There was
-molten pitch poured over the bones, in a state of sufficient
-fluidity to permeate all the pores, and fill up the central
-hollows, and which, soon hardening around them, formed a
-bituminous matrix, in which they may lie unchanged for a
-thousand years. Now, exactly such was the process to
-which nature resorted with these gigantic skeletons of the
-Old Red Sandstone. Like the bones of the Bruce, they are
-bones steeped in pitch; and so thoroughly is every pore and
-hollow still occupied, that, when cast into the fire, they flame
-like torches. Though black as jet, they still retain, too, in a
-considerable degree, the peculiar <i>qualities</i> of the original
-substance. The late Mr. George Sanderson of Edinburgh,
-one of the most ingenious lapidaries in the kingdom, and a
-thoroughly intelligent man, made several preparations for me,
-for microscopic examination, from the teeth and bones; and
-though they were by far the oldest vertebrate remains he had
-ever seen, they exhibited, he informed me, in the working,
-more of the characteristics of recent teeth and bone than any
-other fossils he had ever operated upon. Recent bone
-when in the course of being reduced on the wheel to the
-degree of thinness necessary to secure transparency, is apt,
-under the heat induced by the friction, to acquire a springy
-elasticity, and to start up from the glass slip to which it has
-been cemented; whereas bone in the fossil state usually
-lies as passive, in such circumstances, as the stone which envelopes<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_123"></a>[123]</span>
-it. Mr. Sanderson was, however, surprised to find
-that the bone of the <i>Asterolepis</i> still retained its elasticity,
-and was scarce less liable, when heated, to start from the
-glass,—a peculiarity through which he at first lost several
-preparations. I have seen a human bone that had for ages
-been partially embedded in a mass of adipocere, partially
-enveloped in the common mould of a churchyard, exhibit
-two very different styles of keeping. In the adipocere it was
-as fresh and green as if it had been divested of the integuments
-only a few weeks previous; whereas the portion which
-projected into the mould had become brittle and porous, and
-presented the ordinary appearance of an old churchyard bone.
-And what the adipocere had done for the human bone in this
-case, seems to have been done for the bones of the <i>Asterolepis</i>
-by the animal bitumen.</p>
-
-<div class="figleft" style="width: 300px;" id="figure45">
-<img src="images/figure45.jpg" width="300" height="225" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 45.</p>
-<p class="caption">HYOID PLATE OF THURSO ASTEROLEPIS.<a id="FNanchor_20" href="#Footnote_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a></p>
-<p class="caption">(One fifth the nat. size, linear.)</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The size of the <i>Asterolepis</i> must, in the larger specimens,
-have been very great. In all those ganoidal fishes of the
-Old Red Sandstone that had the head covered with osseous
-plates, we find that the cranial buckler bore a certain definite
-proportion,—various in the several genera and species,—to
-the length of the body. The drawing-master still
-teaches his pupils to regulate the proportions of the human
-figure by the seven head-lengths which it contains; and
-perhaps shows them how an otherwise meritorious draftsman,<a id="FNanchor_21" href="#Footnote_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a>
-much employed half an age ago in drawing for the
-wood-engraver, used to render his figures squat and ungraceful
-by making them a head too short. Now, those ancient Ganoids
-which possessed a cranial buckler may, we find, be also
-measured by head-lengths. Thus, in the <i>Coccosteus decipiens</i>,
-the length of the cranial buckler from nape to snout equalled<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_124"></a>[124]</span>
-one fifth the entire length of the creature from snout to
-tail. The entire length of the <i>Glyptolepis</i> was equal to
-about five one half times that of its cranial buckler. The
-<i>Pterichthys</i> was formed in nearly the same proportions. The
-<i>Diplopterus</i> was fully seven times the length of its buckler:
-and the <i>Osteolepis</i> from six and a half to seven. In all the
-cranial bucklers of the <i>Asterolepis</i> yet found, the snout is
-wanting. The very fine specimen figured in <a href="#figure28">page 99</a> (fig.
-28) terminates abruptly at the little plate between the eyes,
-the specimen figured in <a href="#figure27">page 98</a> (fig. 27) terminates at the
-upper line of the eye. The terminal portion which formed
-the snout is wanting in both, and we thus lack the measure,
-or <i>module</i>, as the architect might say, by which the proportions
-of the rest of the creature were regulated. We can,
-however, very nearly approximate to it. A hyoid plate in
-my collection (fig. 45) is, I find, so exactly proportioned in
-size to the cranial buckler, (fig. 28,) that it might have belonged<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_125"></a>[125]</span>
-to the same individual; and by fitting it in its proper
-place, and then making the necessary allowance for the
-breadth of the nether jaw, which swept two thirds around
-it, and was surmounted by the snout, we ascertain that the
-buckler, when entire, must have been, as nearly as may be, a
-foot in length. If the <i>Asterolepis</i> was formed in the proportions
-of the <i>Coccosteus</i>, the buckler (fig. 28) must have belonged
-to an individual five feet in length; if in the proportions
-of the <i>Pterichthys</i> or <i>Glyptolepis</i>, to an individual five
-and a half feet in length; and if in those of the <i>Diplopterus</i>
-or <i>Osteolepis</i>, to an individual of from six and a half to seven
-feet in length. Now I find that the hyoid plate can be inscribed—such
-is its form—in a semicircle, of which the
-nail-shaped ridge in the middle (if we strike off a minute
-portion of the sharp point, usually wanting in detached specimens)
-forms very nearly the radius, and of which the diameter
-equals the breadth of the cranial buckler, along a line
-drawn across at a distance from the nape, equal to two thirds
-of the distance between the nape and the eyes. Thus, the
-largest diameter of a hyoid plate which belonged to a cranial
-buckler a foot in length is, I find, equal to seven one quarter
-inches, while the length of its nape somewhat exceeds three five
-eighth inches. The nail of the Stromness specimen measures
-five and a half inches. It must have run along a hyoid plate
-eleven inches in transverse breadth, and have been associated
-with a cranial buckler eighteen one eighth inches in length;
-and the <i>Asterolepis</i> to which it belonged must have measured
-from snout to tail, if formed, as it probably was, in the proportions
-of its brother Cœlacanth the <i>Glyptolepis</i>, eight feet
-three inches; and if in those of the <i>Diplopterus</i>, from nine
-feet nine to ten feet six inches. This oldest of Scottish fish—this<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_126"></a>[126]</span>
-earliest-born of the Ganoids yet known—was at least
-as bulky as a large porpoise.</p>
-
-<p>It was small, however, compared with specimens of the
-<i>Asterolepis</i> found elsewhere. The hyoid plate figured in
-<a href="#figure36">page 110</a>, (fig. 36,)—a Thurso specimen which I owe to the
-kindness of Mr. Dick,—measures nearly fourteen inches, and
-the cranial buckler of the same individual, fifteen one fourth
-inches, in breadth. The latter, when entire, must have
-measured twenty-three one half inches in length; and the fish
-to which it belonged, if formed in the proportions of the
-<i>Glyptolepis</i>, ten feet six inches; and if in those of the <i>Diplopterus</i>,
-from twelve feet five to thirteen feet eight inches in
-length. Did the shield still exist in its original state as a
-buckler of tough, enamel-crusted bone, it might be converted
-into a Highland target, nearly broad enough to cover the ample
-chest of a Rob Roy or Allan M’Aulay, and strong enough
-to dash aside the keenest broadsword. Another hyoid plate
-found by Mr. Dick measures sixteen one half inches in
-breadth; and a cast in the British Museum, from one of the
-Russian specimens of Professor Asmus, (fig. 46,) twenty-four
-inches. The individual to which this last plate belonged must,
-if built in the shorter proportions, have measured eighteen,
-and if in the longer, twenty-three feet in length. The two
-hyoid plates of the specimen of <i>Holoptychius</i> in the British
-Museum measure but four and a half inches along that transverse
-line in which the Russian <i>Asterolepis</i> measures two
-feet, and the largest Thurso specimen sixteen inches and a half.
-The maxillary bone of a cod-fish two and a half feet from
-snout to tail measures three inches in length. One of the Russian
-maxillary bones in the possession of Professor Asmus
-measures in length twenty-eight inches. And that space circumscribed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_127"></a>[127]</span>
-by the sweep of the lower jaw which it took, in
-the Russian specimen, a hyoid plate twenty-four inches in
-breadth to fill, could be filled in the two-and-a-half-feet cod
-by a plate whose breadth equalled but an inch and a half.
-Thus, in the not unimportant circumstance of size, the most
-ancient Ganoids yet known, instead of taking their places,
-agreeably to the demands of the development hypothesis,
-among the sprats, sticklebacks, and minnows of their class,
-took their place among its huge basking sharks, gigantic sturgeons,
-and bulky sword-fishes. They were giants, not dwarfs.</p>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 300px;" id="figure46">
-<img src="images/figure46.jpg" width="300" height="200" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 46.</p>
-<p class="caption">HYOID PLATE OF RUSSIAN ASTEROLEPIS.</p>
-<p class="caption">(One twelfth the natural size, linear.)</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>But what of their organization? Were they fishes low or
-high in the scale? On this head we can, of course, determine
-merely by the analogies which their structure exhibits to
-that of fishes of the existing period; and these point in three
-several directions;—in two of the number, directly on genera
-of the high Ganoid order; and in the third, on the still higher
-Placoids and Enaliosaurs. No trace of vertebræ has yet been
-found; and so we infer—lodging, however, a precautionary
-protest, as the evidence is purely negative, and therefore it<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_128"></a>[128]</span>
-some degree inconclusive—that the vertebral column of the
-<i>Asterolepis</i> was, like that of the sturgeon, cartilaginous.
-Respecting its external covering, we positively know, as has
-been already shown, that, like the <i>Lepidosteus</i> of America and
-the <i>Polypterus</i> of the Nile, it was composed of strong plates
-and scales of solid bone; and, regarding its dentition, that, as
-in these last genera, and even more decidedly than in these,
-it was of the mixed ichthyic-reptilian character,—an outer
-row of thickly-set fish-teeth being backed by an inner row of
-thinly-set reptile-teeth. And its form of coprolite indicates
-the spiral disposition of intestine common to the Rays and
-Sharks of the existing period, and of the Ichthyosauri of the
-Secondary ages. Instead of being, as the development hypothesis
-would require, a fish low in its organization, it seems to
-have ranged on the level of the highest ichthyic-reptilian
-families ever called into existence. Had an intelligent being,
-ignorant of what was going on upon earth during the week
-of creation, visited Eden on the morning of the sixth day, he
-would have found in it many of the inferior animals, but no
-trace of man. Had he returned again in the evening, he
-would have seen, installed in the office of keepers of the
-garden, and ruling with no tyrant sway as the humble
-monarchs of its brute inhabitants, two mature human creatures,
-perfect in their organization, and arrived at the full
-stature of their race. The entire evidence regarding them, in
-the absence of all such information as that imparted to Adam
-by Milton’s angel, would amount simply to this, that in the
-morning man <i>was not</i>, and that in the evening he <i>was</i>. There,
-of course, could not exist, in the circumstances, a single appearance
-to sanction the belief that the two human creatures
-whom he saw walking together among the trees at sunset had
-been “developed from infusorial points,” not created mature.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_129"></a>[129]</span>
-The evidence would, on the contrary, lie all the other way.
-And in no degree does the geologic testimony respecting the
-earliest Ganoids differ from what, in the supposed case, would
-be the testimony of Eden regarding the earliest men. Up to
-a certain point in the geologic scale we find that the Ganoids
-<i>are not</i>; and when they at length make their appearance
-upon the stage, they enter large in their stature and high in
-their organization.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_130"></a>[130]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VI">FISHES OF THE SILURIAN ROCKS—UPPER AND LOWER.<br />
-THEIR RECENT HISTORY, ORDER, AND SIZE.</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>But the system of the Old Red Sandstone represents the
-<i>second</i>, not the <i>first</i>, great period of the world’s history.
-There was a preceding period at least equally extended, perhaps
-greatly more so, represented by the Upper and Lower
-Silurian formations. And what is the testimony of this morning
-period of organic existence, in which, so far as can yet
-be shown, vitality, in the planet which man inhabits, and of
-whose history or productions he knows anything, was first associated
-with matter? May not the development hypothesis
-find a standing in the system representative of this earliest
-age of creation, which it fails to find in the system of the Old
-Red Sandstone?</p>
-
-<p>It has been confidently asserted, not merely that it <i>may</i>,
-but that it <i>does</i>. Ever since the publication, in 1839, of Sir
-Roderick Murchison’s great work on the Silurian System, it
-had been known that the remains of fishes occur in a bed of
-the “Ludlow Rock,”—one of the most modern deposits of
-the <i>Upper</i> Silurian division; and subsequent discoveries
-both in England and America, had shown that even the <i>base</i>
-of this division has its ichthyic organisms. But for year<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_131"></a>[131]</span>
-after year, the lower half of the system,—a division more
-than three thousand feet in thickness,—had failed, though
-there were hands and eyes busy among its deposits, to yield
-any vertebrate remains. During the earlier half of the first
-great period of organic existence, though the polyparia, radiata,
-articulata, and mollusca, existed, as their remains testified,
-by myriads, fish had, it was held, not yet entered upon
-the scene; and the assertors of the development theory
-founded largely on the presumed fact of their absence. “It
-is still customary,” says the author of the “Vestiges of Creation,”
-in his volume of “Explanations,” “to speak of the
-earliest fauna as one of an elevated kind. When rigidly
-examined, it is not found to be so. <span class="smcap">In the first place, it
-contains no fish.</span> There were seas supporting crustacean
-and molluscan life, but <i>utterly devoid of a class of tenants who
-seem able to live in every example of that element which supports
-meaner creatures</i>. This single fact, that only invertebrated
-animals now lived, is surely in itself a strong proof that, in
-the course of nature, <i>time</i> was necessary for the creation of
-the superior creatures. And if so, it undoubtedly is a powerful
-evidence of such a theory of development as that which
-I have presented. If not, let me hear an equally plausible
-reason for the great and amazing fact, that seas were for
-numberless ages destitute of fish. I fix my opponents down
-to the consideration of this fact, so that no diversion respecting
-high molluscs shall avail them.” And how is this bold
-challenge to be met?</p>
-
-<p>Most directly, and after a fashion that at once discomfits
-the challenger.</p>
-
-<p>It might be rationally enough argued in the case, that the
-author of the “Vestiges” was building greatly more on a
-piece of purely negative evidence,—the presumed absence<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_132"></a>[132]</span>
-of fish from the Lower Silurian formations,—than purely negative
-evidence is, from its nature as such, suited to bear; that
-only a very few years had passed since it was known that vertebrate
-remains occurred in the <i>Upper</i> Silurian, and only a few
-more since they had been detected in the Old Red Sandstone;
-nay, that within the present century their frequent occurrence
-in even the Coal Measures was scarce suspected; and
-that, as his argument, had it been founded twelve years ago
-on the supposed absence of fishes from the Upper Silurian,
-or twenty years ago on the supposed absence of fishes from
-the Old Red Sandstone, would have been quite as plausible
-in reference to its negative data then as in reference to its
-negative data now, so it might now be quite as erroneous as it
-assuredly would have been then. Or it might be urged, that
-the fact of the absence of fish from the Lower Silurians, even
-were it really a fact, would be in no degree less reconcilable
-with the theory of creation by direct act, than with the hypothesis
-of gradual development. The fact that Adam did not
-exist during the first, second, third, fourth, and fifth days of
-the introductory week of Scripture narrative, furnishes no
-argument whatever against the fact of his creation on the
-sixth day. And the remark would of course equally apply to
-the non-existence of fishes during the Lower Silurian period,
-had they been really non-existent at the time, and to their
-sudden appearance in that of the Upper. But the objection
-admits of a greatly more conclusive answer. “I fix my
-opponents down,” says the author of the “Vestiges,” “to
-the consideration of this fact,” <i>i. e.</i> that of the absence of
-fishes from the earliest fossiliferous formations. And I, in
-turn, fix you down, I reply, to the consideration of the
-antagonist fact, not negative, but positive, and now, in the
-course of geological discovery, fully established, that fishes<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_133"></a>[133]</span>
-were <i>not</i> absent from the earliest fossiliferous formations.
-From none of the great geological formations were fishes absent,—not
-even from the formations of the Cambrian division.
-“The Lower Silurian,” says Sir Roderick Murchison, in
-a communication with which, in 1847, he honored the writer
-of these chapters, “is no longer to be viewed as an invertebrate
-period; for the <i>Onchus</i> (species not yet decided) has
-been found in the Llandeilo Flags and in the Lower Silurian
-rocks of Bala. In one respect I am gratified by the discovery;
-for the form is so very like that of the <i>Onchus Murchisoni</i> of
-the Upper Ludlow rock, that it is clear the Silurian system is
-one great natural-history series, as is proved, indeed, by all its
-other organic remains.” It may be mentioned further, in addition
-to this interesting statement, that the Bala spine was
-detected in its calcareous matrix by the geologists of the Government
-Survey, and described to Sir Roderick as that of an
-<i>Onchus</i>, by a very competent authority in such matters,—Professor
-Edward Forbes, and that the annunciation of the
-existence of spines of fishes in the Llandeilo Flags we owe to
-one of the most cautious and practised geologists of the present
-age,—Professor Sedgwick of Cambridge.</p>
-
-<p>So much for the <i>fact</i> of the existence of vertebrata in the
-Lower Silurian formations, and the <i>argument</i> founded on their
-presumed absence. Let me now refer—their presence being
-determined—to the tests of size and organization. Were
-these Silurian fishes of a bulk so inconsiderable as in any degree
-to sanction the belief that they had been developed shortly
-before from microscopic points? Or were they of a structure
-so low as to render it probable that their development was at
-the time incomplete? Were they, in other words, the embryos
-and fœtuses of their class? or did they, on the contrary, rank
-with the higher and larger fishes of the present time?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_134"></a>[134]</span></p>
-
-<p>It is of importance that not only the direct <i>bearing</i>, but
-also the actual <i>amount</i>, of the evidence in this case, should be
-fairly stated. So far as it extends, the testimony is clear;
-but it does not extend far. All the vertebrate remains
-yet detected in the Silurian System, if we except the debris
-of the Upper Ludlow bone-bed, might be sent through
-the Post-Office in a box scarcely twice the size of a copy
-of the “Vestiges.” The naturalist of an exploring party,
-who, in crossing some unknown lake, had looked down
-over the side of his canoe, and seen a few fish gliding
-through the obscure depths of the water, would be but
-indifferently qualified, from what he had witnessed, to write
-a history of <i>all</i> its fish. Nor, were the some six or eight
-individuals of which he had caught a glimpse to be of
-small size, would it be legitimate for him to infer that only
-small-sized fish lived in the lake; though, were there to be
-some two or three large ones among them, he might safely
-affirm the contrary. Now, the evidence regarding the fishes
-of the Silurian formation very much resembles what that
-of the naturalist would be, in the supposed case, regarding
-the fishes of the unexplored lake; with, however, this difference,
-that as the deposits of the ancient system in which
-they occur have been examined for years in various parts of
-the world, and all its characteristic organisms, save the
-ichthyic ones, found in great abundance and fine keeping,
-we may conclude that the fish of the period were comparatively
-few. The palæontologist, so far as the question of
-number is involved, is in the circumstances, not of the naturalist
-who has only once crossed the unknown lake, but of
-the angler who, day after day, casts his line into some inland
-sea abounding in shell-fish and crustacea, and, after the lapse
-of months, can scarce detect a nibble, and, after the lapse of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_135"></a>[135]</span>
-years, can reckon up all the fish which he has caught as considerably
-under a score. The existence of this great division
-of the animal kingdom, like that of the earlier reptiles during
-the Carboniferous period, did not form a prominent characteristic
-of those ages of the earth’s history in which they
-began to be.</p>
-
-<p>The earliest discovered vertebral remains of the system—those
-of the Upper Ludlow rock—were found in digging the
-foundations of a house at Ludford, on the confines of Shropshire,
-and submitted, in 1838, by Sir Roderick Murchison to
-Agassiz, through the late Dr. Malcolmson of Madras. I
-used at the time to correspond on geological subjects with
-Dr. Malcolmson,—an accomplished geologist and a good
-man, too early lost to science and his friends,—and still remember
-the interest which attached on this occasion to his
-communication bearing the Paris post-mark, from which I
-learned for the first time that there existed ichthyic fragments
-greatly older than even the ichthyolites of the Lower Old
-Red Sandstone, and which made me acquainted with Agassiz’s
-earliest formed decision regarding them. Though existing
-in an exceedingly fragmentary condition,—for the
-materials of the thin dark-colored layer in which they had
-lain seemed as if they had been triturated in a mortar,—the
-ichthyologist succeeded in erecting them into six genera;
-though it may be very possible,—as some of these were
-formed for the reception of detached spines, and others for
-the reception of detached teeth,—that, as in the case of
-<i>Dipterus</i> and <i>Asterolepis</i>, the fragments of but a single
-genus may have been multiplied into two genera or more.
-And minute scale-like markings, which mingled with the general
-mass, and were at first regarded as the impressions of
-real scales, have been since recognized as of the same character<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_136"></a>[136]</span>
-with the scale-like markings of the <i>Seraphim</i> of Forfarshire,
-a huge crustacean. Even admitting, however, that a
-set of teeth and spines, with perhaps the shagreen points
-represented in <a href="#figure2">page 54</a>, fig. 2, <i>b</i>, in addition, may have all
-belonged to but a single species of fish, there seem to be materials
-enough, among the remains found, for the erection of
-two species more. And we have evidence that at least two
-of the three kinds were fishes of the Placoid order, (<i>Onchus
-Murchisoni</i> and <i>Onchus tenuistriatus</i>,) and—as the supposed
-scales must be given up—no good evidence that the
-other kind was not. The ichthyic remains of the Silurian
-System next discovered were first introduced to the notice of
-geologists by Professor Phillips, at the meeting of the British
-Association in 1842.<a id="FNanchor_22" href="#Footnote_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a> They occurred, he stated, in a quarry
-near Hales End, at the base of the Upper Ludlow rock, immediately<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_137"></a>[137]</span>
-over the Aymestry Limestone, and were so exceedingly
-diminutive, that they appeared to the naked eye
-as mere discolored spots; but resolved under the microscope
-into scattered groupes of minute spines, like those of
-the <i>Cheiracanthus</i>, with what seemed to be still more minute
-<i>scales</i>, or, perhaps,—what in such circumstances could scarce
-be distinguished from scales,—shagreen points of the scale-like
-type. The next ichthyic organism detected in the Silurian
-rocks occurred in the Wenlock Limestone, a considerably
-lower and older deposit, and was first described in the
-“Edinburgh Review” for 1845 by a vigorous writer and
-masterly geologist, (generally understood to be Professor
-Sedgwick of Cambridge,) as “a characteristic portion of a
-fish undoubtedly belonging to the Cestraciont family of the
-Placoid order.” In the “American Journal of Science” for
-1846, Professor Silliman figured, from a work of the States’
-Surveyors, the defensive spine of a Placoid found in the
-Onondago Limestone of New York,—a rock which occurs
-near the base of the Upper Silurian System, as developed in
-the western world;<a id="FNanchor_23" href="#Footnote_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a> and in the same passage he made reference
-to a mutilated spine detected in a still lower American
-deposit,—the Oriskany Sandstone. In the Geological
-Journal for 1847, it was announced by Professor Sedgwick,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_138"></a>[138]</span>
-that he had found “<i>defences
-of fishes</i>” in the
-Upper Llandeilo Flags,
-and by Sir Roderick
-Murchison, that the “defence
-of an <i>Onchus</i>” had
-been detected by the
-geologists of the Government
-survey, in the
-Limestone near Bala.
-Sir Roderick referred in
-the same number to the
-remains of a fish found
-by Professor Phillips in
-the Wenlock Shale. And
-such, up to the present
-time, is the actual
-<i>amount</i> of the evidence
-with which we have to
-deal, and the dates of
-its piecemeal production.
-Let us next consider the
-<i>order of its occurrence
-in the geologic scale</i>.</p>
-
-<div class="figleft" style="width: 325px;">
-<img src="images/silurian-system.jpg" width="325" height="700" alt="Diagram of the Silurian System and its divisions" />
-</div>
-
-<p>The better marked
-sub-divisions of the Silurian
-System, as described
-in the great
-work specially devoted
-to it, may be regarded as
-seven in number. An
-eight has since been<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_139"></a>[139]</span>
-added, by the transference of the Tilestones from the lower
-part of the Old Red Sandstone group, to the upper part of the
-Silurian group underneath; but in order the better to show
-how ichthyic discovery has in its slow course penetrated into
-the depths, I shall retain the divisions recognized as those of
-the system when that course began. The highest or most
-modern Silurian deposit, then, (No. 1 of the accompanying
-diagram,) is the <i>Upper</i> Ludlow Rock; and it is in the superior
-strata of this division that the bone-bed discovered in 1838
-occurs; while the exceedingly minute vertebrate remains
-described by Professor Phillips in 1842 occur in its base.
-The division next in the descending order is the Aymestry
-Limestone, (No. 2;) the next (No. 3.) the <i>Lower</i> Ludlow
-rock; then (No. 4.) the Wenlock or Dudley Limestone occurs;
-and then, last and oldest deposit of the <i>Upper</i> Silurian formation,
-the Wenlock shale, (No. 5.) It is in the fourth, or Wenlock
-Limestone division, that the defensive spine described in
-the “Edinburgh Review” for 1845 as the oldest vertebrate
-organism known at the time, was found;<a id="FNanchor_24" href="#Footnote_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a> while the vertebrate
-organism found by Professor Phillips belongs to the fifth,
-or base deposit of the Upper Silurian. Further, the American
-spines of Onondago and Oriskany, described in 1846, occurred
-in rocks deemed contemporary with those of the Wenlock
-division. We next cross the line which separates the base of
-the Upper from the top of the Lower Silurian deposits, and
-find a great arenaceous formation, (No. 6,) known as the
-Caradoc Sandstones; while the Llandeilo Flags, (No. 7,) the
-formation upon which the sandstones rest, compose, according
-to the sections of Sir Roderick, published in 1839, the lowest<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_140"></a>[140]</span>
-deposit of the Lower Silurian rocks. And it is in the upper
-part of this lowest member of the system that the ichthyic
-defences, announced in 1847 by Professor Sedgwick, occur.
-Vertebrate remains have now been detected in the same
-relative position in the <i>seventh</i> and <i>most ancient</i> member of the
-system, that they were found to occupy in its <i>first</i> and <i>most
-modern</i> member ten years ago. But this is not all. Beneath
-the Lower Silurian division there occur vast fossiliferous
-deposits, to which the name “Cambrian System” was given,
-merely provisionally, by Sir Roderick, but which Professor
-Sedgwick still retains as representative of a distinct geologic
-period; and it is in these, greatly below the Lower Silurian
-base line, as drawn in 1839, that the Bala Limestones
-occur. The Plynlimmon rocks (<i>a</i>)—a series of conglomerate,
-grauwacke, and slate beds, several thousand yards in
-thickness—intervene between the Llandeilo Flags and the
-Limestones of Bala, (<i>b</i>.) And, of consequence, the defensive
-spine of the <i>Onchus</i>, announced in 1847 as detected in these
-limestones by the geologists of the Government Survey, must
-have formed part of a fish that perished many ages ere the
-oldest of the Lower Silurian formations <i>began</i> to be deposited.</p>
-
-<p>Let us now, after this survey of both the amount of our
-materials, and the order and time of their occurrence, pass on
-to the question of size, as already stated. Did the ichthyic
-remains of the Silurian System, hitherto examined and
-described, belong to large or to small fishes? The question
-cannot be altogether so conclusively answered as in the case
-of those Ganoids of the Lower Old Red Sandstone whose
-dermal skeletons indicate their original dimensions and form.
-In fishes of the Placoid order, such as the Sharks and Rays,
-the dermal skeleton is greatly less continuous and persistent<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_141"></a>[141]</span>
-than in such Ganoids as the Dipterians and Cœlacanths; and
-when their remains occur in the fossil state, we can reason, in
-most instances, regarding the bulk of the individuals of which
-they formed part, merely from that of detached teeth or spines,
-whose proportion to the entire size of the animals that bore
-them cannot be strictly determined. We can, indeed, do little
-more than infer, that though a large Placoid may have been
-armed with but small spines or teeth, a small Placoid could
-not have borne very large ones. And to this Placoid order all
-the Silurian fish, from the Aymestry Limestone to the Cambrian
-deposits of Bala inclusive, unequivocally belong. Nor,
-as has been already said, is there sufficient evidence to show
-that any of the ichthyic remains of the Upper Ludlow rocks
-do <i>not</i> belong to it. It is peculiarly the order of the system.
-The Ludlow bone-bed contains not only defensive spines, but
-also teeth, fragments of jaws, and shagreen points; whereas,
-in all the inferior deposits which yield any trace of the vertebrata,
-the remains are those of defensive spines exclusively.
-Let us, then, take the defensive spine as the part on which to
-found our comparison.</p>
-
-<p>One of the best marked Placoids of the Upper Ludlow
-bone-bed is that <i>Onchus Murchisoni</i> to which the distinguished
-geologist whose name it bears refers, in his communication,
-as so nearly resembling the oldest Placoid yet known,—that
-of the Bala Limestone. And the living fishes with which the
-<i>Onchus Murchisoni</i> must be compared, says Agassiz, though
-“the affinity,” he adds, “may be rather distant,” are those
-of the genera “<i>Cestracion</i>, <i>Centrina</i>, and <i>Spinax</i>.” I have
-placed before me a specimen of recent <i>Spinax</i>, of a species
-well known to all my readers on the sea-coast, the <i>Spinax
-Acanthias</i>, or common dog-fish, so little a favorite with our
-fishermen. It measures exactly two feet three inches in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_142"></a>[142]</span>
-length; and of the defensive spines of its two dorsals,—these
-spear-like thorns on the creature’s back immediately in
-advance of the fins, which so frequently wound the fisher’s
-hand,—the anterior and smaller measures, from base to
-point, an inch and a half, and the posterior and larger, two
-inches. I have also placed before me a specimen of <i>Cestracion
-Phillippi</i>, (the Port Jackson Shark,) a fish now recognized
-as the truest existing analogue of the Silurian Placoids.
-It measures twenty-two three fourth inches in length, and is
-furnished, like <i>Spinax</i>, with two dorsal spines, of which the
-anterior and larger measures from base to point one one half
-inch, and the posterior and smaller, one one fifth inch. But
-the defensive spine of the <i>Onchus Murchisoni</i>, as exhibited
-in one of the Ludlow specimens, measures, though mutilated
-at both ends, three inches and five eighth parts in length.
-Even though existing but as a fragment, it is as such nearly
-twice the length of the largest spine of the dog-fish, unmutilated
-and entire, and considerably <i>more</i> than twice the length
-of the largest spine of the Port Jackson Shark. The spines
-detected by Professor Phillips, in an inferior stratum of the
-same upper deposit, were, as has been shown, of microscopic
-minuteness; and when they seemed to rest on the extreme
-horizon of ichthyic existence as the most ancient remains of
-their kind, the author of the “Vestiges” availed himself of the
-fact. He regarded the little creatures to which they had
-belonged is the fœtal embryos of their class, or—to employ
-the language of the Edinburgh Reviewer—as “the tokens
-of Nature’s first and half-abortive efforts to make fish out of
-the lower animals.” From the latter editions of his work,
-the paragraph to which the Reviewer refers has, I find, been
-expunged; for the horizon has greatly extended, and what
-seemed to be its line of extreme distance has travelled into the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_143"></a>[143]</span>
-middle of the prospect. But that the passage should have
-at all existed is a not uninstructive circumstance, and shows
-how unsafe it is, in more than external nature, to regard
-the line at which, for the time, the landscape closes, and
-heaven and earth seem to meet, as in reality the world’s end.
-The Wenlock spine, though certainly not microscopic, is, I
-am informed by Sir Philip Egerton, of but small size; whereas
-the contemporary spine of the Onondago Limestone,
-though comparatively more a fragment than the spine of the
-Upper Ludlow <i>Onchus</i>,—for it measures only three inches in
-length,—is at least five times as bulky as the largest spine of
-<i>Spinax Acanthias</i>. Representing one of the massier fishes
-disporting amid the some four or five small ones, of which
-in my illustration, the naturalist catches a glimpse in fording
-the unknown lake, it at least serves to show that all the
-Silurian ichthyolites must not be described as small, seeing
-that not only might many of its undetected fish have been
-large, but that some of those which <i>have</i> been detected were
-actually so. Another American spine, of nearly the same<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_144"></a>[144]</span>
-formation,—for it occurs in a limestone, varying from twenty
-to seventy feet in thickness, which immediately overlies that
-of the Onondago deposit, though still more fragmentary than
-the first, for its length is only two three eighth inches,—maintains
-throughout a nearly equal thickness,—a circumstance
-in itself indicative of considerable size; and in positive
-bulk it almost rivals the Onondago one. Of the Lower
-Silurian and Bala fishes no descriptions or figures have yet
-appeared. And such, up to the present time, is the testimony
-derived from this department of Geology, so far as I
-have been able to determine it, regarding the size of the ancient
-Silurian vertebrata. “No organism,” says Professor
-Oken, “is, nor ever has one been, created, which is not microscopic.”
-The Professor’s pupils and abettors, the assertors
-of the development hypothesis, appeal to the geological
-evidence as altogether on <i>their</i> side in the case; and straightway
-a few witnesses enter court. But, lo! among the expected
-dwarfs, there appear individuals of more than the
-average bulk and stature.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="figure47">
-<img src="images/figure47.jpg" width="500" height="225" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 47.</p>
-<p class="caption">a. <i>Posterior Spine of Spinax Acanthias.</i></p>
-<p class="caption">b. <i>Fragment of Onondago Spine.</i></p>
-<p class="caption">(Natural Size.)</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Still, however, the question of organization remains. Did
-these ancient Placoid fishes stand high or low in the scale?
-According to the poet, “What can we reason but from what
-we know?” We are acquainted with the Placoid fishes of
-the present time; and from these only, taking analogy as our
-guide, can we form any judgment regarding the rank and
-standing of their predecessors, the Placoids of the geologic
-periods. But the consideration of this question, as it is
-specially one on which the later assertors of the development
-hypothesis concentrate themselves, I must, to secure the
-space necessary for its discussion, defer till my next chapter.
-Meanwhile, I am conscious I owe an apology to the reader for
-what he must deem tedious minuteness of description, and a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_145"></a>[145]</span>
-too prolix amplitude of statement. It is only by representing
-things as they actually are, and in the true order of their
-occurrence, that the effect of the partially selected facts and
-exaggerated descriptions of the Lamarckian can be adequately
-met. True, the disadvantages of the more sober mode are
-unavoidably great. He who feels himself at liberty to arrange
-his collected shells, corals, and fish-bones, into artistically designed
-figures, and to select only the pretty ones, will be of
-course able to make of them a much finer show than he who
-is necessitated to represent them in the order and numerical
-proportions in which they occur on some pebbly beach washed
-by the sea. And such is the advantage, in a literary point of
-view, of the ingenious theorist, who, in making figures of his
-geological facts, takes no more of them than suits his purpose,
-over the man who has to communicate the facts as he finds
-them. But the homelier mode is the true one. “Could we
-obtain,” says a distinguished metaphysician, “a distinct and full
-history of all that has passed in the mind of a child, from the
-beginning of life and sensation till it grows up to the use of
-reason,—how its infant faculties began to work, and how
-they brought forth and ripened all the various notions, opinions,
-and sentiments which we find in ourselves when we
-come to be capable of reflection,—this would be a treasure
-of natural history which would probably give more light into
-the human faculties than all the systems of philosophers about
-them since the beginning of the world. But it is in vain,” he
-adds, “to wish for what nature has not put within the reach
-of our power.” In like manner, could we obtain, it may be
-remarked, a full and distinct account of a single class of the
-animal kingdom, from its first appearance till the present
-time, “this would be a treasure of natural history which would
-cast more light” on the origin of living existences, and the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_146"></a>[146]</span>
-true economy of creation, than all the theories of all the philosophers
-“since the beginning of the world.” And in order
-to approximate to such a history as nearly as possible,—and
-it does seem possible to approximate near enough to
-substantiate the true readings of the volume, and to correct the
-false ones,—it is necessary that the real vestiges of creation
-should be carefully investigated, and their order of succession
-ascertained.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_147"></a>[147]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VII">HIGH STANDING OF THE PLACOIDS.—OBJECTIONS CONSIDERED.</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>We have seen that some of the Silurian Placoids were large
-of size: the question still remains, Were they high in intelligence
-and organization?</p>
-
-<p>The Edinburgh Reviewer, in contending with the author of
-the “Vestiges,” replies in the affirmative, by claiming for
-them the first place among fishes. “Taking into account,”
-he says, “the brain and the whole nervous, circulating, and
-generative systems, they stand at the highest point of a natural
-ascending scale.” They are fishes, he again remarks,
-that rank among “the very highest types of their class.”</p>
-
-<p>“The fishes of this early age, and of all other ages previous
-to the Chalk,” says his antagonist, in reply, “are, for
-the most part, cartilaginous. The cartilaginous fishes—<i>Chondropterygii</i>
-of Cuvier—are placed by that naturalist as
-a second series in his descending scale; being, however, he
-says, ‘in some measure <i>parallel to the first</i>.’ How far this is
-different from their being the highest types of the fish class,
-need not be largely insisted upon. Linnæus, again, was so
-impressed by the low characters of many of this order, that
-he actually ranked them with worms. Some of the cartilaginous
-fishes, nevertheless, have certain peculiar features of
-organization, chiefly connected with reproduction, in which<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_148"></a>[148]</span>
-they excel other fish; but such features are partly partaken
-of by families in inferior sub-kingdoms, showing that they
-cannot truly be regarded as marks of grade in their own
-class. When we look to the great fundamental characters
-particularly to the framework for the attachment of the
-muscles, what do we find?—why, that of these Placoids,—‘the
-highest types of their class,’—it is barely possible to
-establish their being vertebrata at all, the back-bone having
-generally been too slight for preservation, although the vertebral
-columns of later fossil fishes are as entire as those
-of any other animals. In many of them traces can be observed
-of the muscles having been attached to the external
-plates, strikingly indicating their low grade as vertebrate
-animals. The Edinburgh Reviewer ‘highest types of their
-class’ are in reality a separate series of that class, generally
-inferior, taking the leading features of organization of structure
-as a criterion, but when details of organization are regarded,
-stretching farther, both downward and upward, than
-the other series; so that, looking at one extremity, we are as
-much entitled to call them the lowest, as the Reviewer, looking
-at another extremity, is to call them the ‘highest of
-their class.’ Of the general inferiority there can be no room
-for doubt. Their cartilaginous structure is, in the first place,
-analogous to the embryonic state of vertebrated animals in
-general. The maxillary and intermaxillary bones are in
-them rudimental. Their tails are finned on the under side
-only,—an admitted feature of the salmon in an embryonic
-stage; and the mouth is placed on the under side of the
-head,—also a mean and embryonic feature of structure.
-These characters are essential and important, whatever the
-Edinburgh Reviewer may say to the contrary; they are the
-characters which, above all, I am chiefly concerned in looking<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_149"></a>[149]</span>
-to, for they are features of embryonic progress, and embryonic
-progress is the grand key to the theory of development.”</p>
-
-<p>Such is the ingenious piece of special pleading which this
-most popular of the Lamarckians directs against the standing
-and organization of the earlier fishes. Let us examine it
-somewhat in detail, and see whether the slight admixture of
-truth which it contains serves to do aught more than to render
-current, like the gilding of a counterfeit guinea spread over
-the base metal, the amount of error which lies beneath. I
-know not a better example than that which it furnishes, of
-the entanglement and perplexity which the meshes of an artificial
-classification, when converted, in argumentative processes,
-into symbols and abstractions, are sure to involve
-subjects simple enough in themselves.</p>
-
-<p>Fishes, according to the classification of a preponderating
-majority of the ichthyologists that have flourished from the
-earliest times down to those of Agassiz, have been divided
-into two great series, the <i>Ordinary</i> or osseous, and the <i>Chondropterygii</i>
-or cartilaginous. And these two divisions of the
-class, instead of being ranged consecutively in a continuous
-line, the one in advance of the other, have been ranged
-in two parallel lines, the one directly abreast of the other.
-There is this further peculiarity in the arrangement, that
-the line of the cartilaginous series, from the circumstance
-that some of its families rise higher and some sink lower
-in the scale than any of the ordinary fishes, outflanks the
-array of the osseous series at both ends. The front which
-it presents contains fewer genera and species than that of
-the osseous division; but, like the front of an army drawn
-out in single file, it extends along a greater length of ground.
-And to this long-fronted series of the cartilaginous, or, according<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_150"></a>[150]</span>
-to Cuvier, <i>chondropterygian</i> fishes, the Placoid families
-of Agassiz belong,—among the rest, the Placoids of the Silurian
-formations, Upper and Lower. But though all the Placoids
-of this latter naturalist be cartilaginous fishes, all cartilaginous
-fishes are not Placoids. The <i>Sturionidæ</i> are cartilaginous,
-and are, as such, ranked by Cuvier among the <i>Chondropterygii</i>,
-whereas Agassiz places them in his Ganoid order.
-Many of the extinct fishes, too, such as the <i>Acanthodei</i>, <i>Dipteridæ</i>,
-<i>Cephalaspidæ</i>, were, as we have seen, cartilaginous
-in their internal framework, and yet true Ganoids notwithstanding.
-The principle of Agassiz’s classification wholly
-differs from that of Cuvier and the older ichthyologists; for
-it is a classification founded, not on the character of the
-internal but on that of the cuticular or dermal skeleton. And
-while to the geologist it possesses great and obvious advantages
-over every other,—for of the earlier fishes very little
-more than the cuticular skeleton survives,—it has this further
-recommendation to the naturalist, that, (in so far at least as
-its author has been true to his own principles,) instead of anomalously
-uniting the highest and lowest specimens of their
-class,—the fishes that most nearly approximate to the reptiles
-on the one hand, and the fishes that sink furthest towards the
-worms on the other,—it gathers into one consistent order all
-the individuals of the higher type, distinguished above their
-fellows by their development of brain, the extensive range
-of their instincts, and the perfection of their generative systems.
-Further, the history of animal existences, as recorded
-in the sedimentary rocks of our planet, reads a recommendation
-of this scheme of classification which it extends
-to no other. We find that in the progress of creation the
-fishes <i>began to be</i> by groupes and septs, arranged according to
-the principle on which it erects its orders. The Placoids<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_151"></a>[151]</span>
-came first, the Ganoids succeeded them, and the Ctenoids and
-Cycloids brought up the rear. The march has been marshalled
-according to an appointed programme, the order of which it
-is peculiarly the merit of Agassiz to have ascertained.</p>
-
-<p>Now, may I request the reader to mark, in the first place
-that what we have specially to deal with at the present stage
-of the argument are the Placoid fishes of the Silurian formations,
-Upper and Lower. May I ask him to take note, in the
-second, that the long-fronted <i>chondropterygian</i> series of
-Cuvier, though it includes, as has already been said, the
-Placoid order of Agassiz,—just as the red-blooded division
-of animals includes the bimana and quadrumana,—is no
-more to be regarded as <i>identical</i> with the Placoids, than the
-red-blooded animals are to be regarded as identical with the
-apes or with the human family. It simply includes them in
-the character of <i>one</i> of the three great divisions into which it
-has been separated,—the division ranged, if I may so express
-myself, on the extreme right of the line; its middle portion,
-or main body, being composed of the <i>Sturiones</i>, a family on
-the general level of the osseous fishes; while, ranged on the
-extreme left, we find the low division of the <i>Suctorii</i>, <i>i. e.</i>
-Cyclostomi, or Lampreys. But with the middle and lower
-divisions we have at present nothing to do; for of neither
-of them, whether <i>Sturiones</i> or <i>Suctorii</i>, does the Silurian
-System exhibit a trace. Further be it remarked, that the
-scheme of classification which gives an abstract standing to
-the <i>Chondropterygii</i>, is in itself merely a certain perception
-of resemblance which existed in certain minds, having <i>cartilage</i>
-for its general idea; just as another certain perception
-of resemblance in one other certain mind had <i>cuticular
-skeleton</i> for its general idea, and as yet another perception
-of resemblance in yet other certain minds had <i>red blood</i> for<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_152"></a>[152]</span>
-its general idea. As shown by the disparities which obtain
-among the section which the scheme serves to separate from
-the others, it no more determines rank or standing than that
-greatly more ancient scheme of classification into “ring-streaked
-and spotted,” which served to distinguish the flocks
-of the patriarch Jacob from those of Laban his father-in-law,
-but which did not distinguish goats from sheep, nor sheep from
-cattle.</p>
-
-<p>The effect of introducing, after this manner, generalizations
-made altogether irrespective of <i>rank</i>, and avowedly without
-reference to it, into what are inherently and specifically <i>questions
-of rank</i>, admits of a simple illustration.</p>
-
-<p>Let us suppose that it was not with the standing of the
-Silurian Placoids that we had to deal, but with that of the
-<i>mammals</i> of the recent period, including the <i>quadrumana</i>, and
-even the <i>bimana</i>, and that we had ventured to describe them,
-in the words of the Edinburgh Reviewer, as “the very
-highest types of their class.” What would be thought of the
-reasoner who, in challenging the justice of the estimate,
-would argue that these creatures, men as well as monkeys,
-belonged simply to that division of red-blooded animals which
-includes, with the bimana and quadrumana, the frog, the gudgeon,
-and the <i>earthworm</i>?—a division, he might add, “which,
-when details of organization are regarded, stretches farther,
-both downward and upward,” than that division of the white-blooded
-animals to which the crab, the spider, the cuttle-fish,
-and the dragon fly belong; “so that, looking at one extremity,
-any one is as much entitled to call the red-blooded animals
-the lowest division, as any other, looking at another extremity,
-is to call them the highest division, of animals.”
-What, it might well be asked in reply, has the earthworm,
-with its red-blood to do in a question respecting the place<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_153"></a>[153]</span>
-and standing of the bimana? Or what, in the parallel case,
-have the <i>Suctorii</i>—the worms of Linnæus—to do in a
-question respecting the place and standing of the real
-Placoids? True it is that, according to one principle of
-classification, now grown somewhat obsolete, men and earthworms
-are equally red-blooded animals; true it is that,
-according to another principle of classification, the Placoids
-of Agassiz and the cartilaginous worms of Linnæus are equally
-<i>Chondropterygii</i>. The bimana and the earthworm have their
-red blood in common; the glutinous hag and the true Placoids
-have as certainly their internal cartilage in common; and
-if the fact of the red blood of the worm lowers in no degree
-the rank of the bimana, then, on the same principle, the
-fact of the internal cartilage of the glutinous hag cannot
-possibly detract from the standing of the true Placoid. In
-both cases they are creatures that entirely differ,—the earthworms
-from the bimana, and the cartilaginous <i>worms</i> from
-the Placoids; and the classification which tags them together,
-whether it be that of Aristotle or that of Cuvier, cannot
-be converted into a sort of minus quantity, of force enough
-to detract from the value and standing of the bimana in
-the one case, or of the true Placoids in the other. It is
-in no degree derogatory to the human family that earthworms
-possess red blood; it is in no degree derogatory to
-the true Placoids that the <i>Suctorii</i> possess cartilaginous
-skeletons.</p>
-
-<p>Let the reader now mark the use which has been made, by
-the author of the “Vestiges,” of the name and authority of
-Linnæus. “Linnæus,” he states, “was so impressed by the
-low character of many of this order, (the <i>Chondropterygii</i>,)
-that he actually ranked them with worms.” Now, what is the
-fact here? Simply that Linnæus had no such general order<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_154"></a>[154]</span>
-as the <i>Chondropterygii</i> in his eye at all. Though chiefly
-remarkable as a naturalist for the artificialness of his classifications,
-his estimate of the cartilaginous fishes was remarkable—though
-carried too far in its extremes, and in some degree
-founded in error—for an opposite quality. It was an estimate
-formed, in the main, on a natural basis. Instead of taking
-their cartilaginous skeleton into account, he looked chiefly at
-their standing as animals; and, struck with that extent of front
-which they present, and with both their superiority on the extreme
-right, and their inferiority on the extreme left, to the
-ordinary fishes, he erected them into two separate orders, the
-one lower and the other higher than the members of the osseous
-line. And so far was he from regarding the true Placoids—those
-<i>Chondropterygii</i> which to an internal skeleton of
-cartilage add external plates, points, or spines of bone—as
-low in the scale, that he actually raised them above fishes altogether,
-by erecting them into an order of reptiles,—the older
-<i>Amphibia Nantes</i>. Surely, if the name of Linnæus was to be
-introduced into this controversy at all, it ought to have been
-in connection with <i>this</i> special fact; seeing that the point to
-be determined in the question under discussion is simply the
-place and standing of that very order which the naturalist
-rated so high,—not the place and standing of the order which
-he degraded. It so happens that there is one of the <i>Chondropterygii</i>
-which, so far from being a true Placoid, does not
-possess a single osseous plate, point, or spine: it is a worm
-like creature, without eyes, without movable jaws, without
-vertebral joints, without scales, always enveloped in slime,
-and greatly abhorred by our Scotch boatmen of the Moray
-Frith, who hold that it burrows, like the grave-worm, in the
-decaying bodies of the dead. And this creature, “the
-glutinous hag,” or, according to north-country fishermen, the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_155"></a>[155]</span>
-“ramper-eel,” or “poison-ramper,” was regarded by Linnæus
-as belonging, not to the class of fishes, but to the
-Vermes. Now, <i>this</i> is the special fact with which, in the
-development controversy, the author of the “Vestiges” connects
-the name of the Swedish naturalist! All the fish of
-the Silurian System belonged to that true Placoid order which
-Linnæus, impressed by its high standing, erected into an
-order, not of worms, but of reptiles. He elevated A, the
-true Placoid, while he degraded B, the glutinous hag. But it
-was necessary to the argument of the author of the “Vestiges”
-that the earliest existing fish should be represented as
-fish low in the scale; and so he has cited the name and
-authority of Linnæus in its bearing against the glutinous hag
-B, as if it had borne against the standing of the true Placoid
-A. The Patagonians are the tallest and bulkiest men in the
-world, whereas their neighbors, the Fuegians are a slim and
-diminutive race. And if, in some controversy raised regarding
-the real size of the more gigantic tribe, they were to be
-described as the “very <i>tallest</i> types of their class,” any statement
-in reply, to the effect that some trustworthy voyager
-had examined certain races of the extreme south of America,
-and had found that they were both short and thin, would be
-neither relevant in its facts nor legitimate in its bearing. But
-if the controversialist who thus strove to strengthen his case
-by the voyager’s authority, was at the same time fully aware
-that the voyager had seen not only the diminutive Fuegians,
-but also the gigantic Patagonians, and that he had described
-these last as very gigantic indeed, the introduction of the
-statement regarding the smaller race, when he wholly sank
-the statement regarding the larger, would be not merely very
-irrelevant in the circumstances, but also very unfair. Such,
-however, is the style of statement to which the author of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_156"></a>[156]</span>
-“Vestiges” has (I trust inadvertently) resorted in this controversy.</p>
-
-<p>It is not uninstructive to mark how slowly and gradually
-the naturalists have been groping their way to a right classification
-in the ichthyic department of their science, and how it
-has been that identical perception of resemblance, having
-<i>cartilage</i> for its general idea, to which the author of the
-“Vestiges” attaches so much importance, that has served
-mainly to retard their progress. Not a few of the more distinguished
-among their number deemed it too important a
-distinction to be regarded as merely secondary; and so long
-as it was retained as a primary characteristic, the fishes failed
-to range themselves in the natural order;—dissimilar tribes
-were brought into close neighborhood, while tribes nearly
-allied were widely separated. It failed, as has been shown,
-to influence Linnæus; and though he no doubt pressed his
-peculiar views too far when he degraded the glutinous hag
-into a worm, and elevated the Sharks and Rays into reptiles,
-it is certainly worthy of remark, that, in the scheme of classification
-which is now regarded as the <i>most natural</i>,—that
-of Professor Muller, modified by Professor Owen,—the
-ichthyic worms of the Swede are placed in the first and
-lowest order of fishes,—the <i>Dermopteri</i>,—and the greater
-part of his ichthyic reptiles, in the eleventh and highest,—the
-<i>Plagiostomi</i>. Cuvier yielded, as has been shown, to the
-idea of resemblance founded on the <i>material</i> of the ichthyic
-framework, and so ranged his fishes into two parallel lines.
-Professor Oken, after first enunciating as law that “the characteristic
-<i>organ</i> of fishes is the osseous system,” confessed
-the “great difficulty” which attaches to the question of skeletal
-“texture or substance,” and finally gave up the distinction
-founded on it as obstinately irreducible to the purposes of a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_157"></a>[157]</span>
-natural classification. “The cartilaginous fishes,” he says, “appear
-to belong to each other, and are also usually arranged together;
-yet amongst them we find those species, such as the
-Lampreys, which obviously occupy the lowest grade of all
-fishes, while the Sharks and Rays remind us of the Reptilia.”
-And so, sinking the consideration of texture altogether, he
-placed the family of the Lamprey, including the glutinous hag,
-at the bottom of the scale, and the Sharks and Rays at the top.
-Agassiz’s system, peculiarly his own, has had the rare merit,
-as I have shown, of furnishing a key to the history of the
-fish in its several dynasties, which we may in vain seek in
-any other. His divisions,—if, retaining his strongly-marked
-Placoids and Ganoids, as orders stamped in the mint of nature,
-we throw his perhaps less obviously divisible Ctenoids and Cycloids
-into one order,—the corneous or horn-covered,—are
-scarcely less representative of periods than those great classes
-of the vertebrata, mammals, birds, reptiles, and fishes, which
-we find not less regularly ranged in their order of succession
-in the geologic record than in the “Animal Kingdom” of
-Cuvier,—a shrewd corroboration, in both cases, I am disposed
-to think, of the rectitude of the arrangement. What
-seems to be the special defect of his system is, that having
-erected his four orders, and then finding a certain number of
-residuary families that, on his principle of cuticular character,
-stubbornly refused to fall into any determinate place, he distributed
-them among the others, with reference chiefly to the
-totally distinct principle of Cuvier. Thus the <i>Suctorii</i>, soft,
-smooth, slimy-skinned fishes, that do not possess a single
-placoid character, and are not true Placoids, he has yet placed
-in his Placoid order, influenced, apparently, by the “perception
-of resemblance that has <i>cartilage</i> for its central
-idea;” and the effect has been a massing into one anomalous<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_158"></a>[158]</span>
-and entangled group the fishes of the first period of geologic
-history, with fishes of which we do not find a trace save in
-the existing scene of things, and of the highest families of
-their class with families that occupy the lowest place. But
-we live in an age in which even the benefactors of the world
-of mind cannot make false steps with impunity; and so,
-while Agassiz’s <i>three</i> ichthyic orders will continue to be
-recognized by the palæontologist as the orders of three great
-geologic periods, the <i>Suctorii</i> have already been struck from
-off his higher fishes by the classification of Muller and Owen,
-and carried to that lowest point in the scale (indicated by
-Linnæus and Oken) which their inferior standing renders so
-obviously the natural one. Some of my readers may perhaps
-remember how finely Bacon, in his “Wisdom of the
-Ancients,” interprets the old mythologic story of Prometheus.
-Prometheus, says the philosopher, had conferred inestimable
-favors on men, by moulding their forms into shape, and bringing
-them fire from heaven; and yet they complained of him
-and his teachings to Jupiter. And the god, instead of censuring
-their ingratitude, was pleased with the complaint, and
-rewarded them with gifts. In putting nature to the question,
-it is eminently wholesome to be doubting, cross-examining,
-complaining; ever demanding of our masters and benefactors
-the philosophers, that they should reign over us, not arbitrarily
-and despotically,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Like the old kings, with high exacting looks,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Sceptred and globed,”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">but like our modern constitutional monarchs, who govern by
-law; and, further, that an appeal from their decisions on all
-subjects within the jurisdiction of Nature should for ever
-be open to Nature herself. The seeming ingratitude of such<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_159"></a>[159]</span>
-a course, if the “complaints” be made in a right spirit and
-on proper grounds, Jupiter always rewards with gifts.</p>
-
-<p>Let us now see for ourselves, in this spirit, whether there
-may not be something absolutely derogatory, in the existence
-of a cartilaginous skeleton, to the creatures possessing it; or
-whether a deficit of internal bone may not be greatly more
-than neutralized, as it assuredly must have been in the view
-of Linnæus, Muller, and Owen, by a larger than ordinary
-share of a vastly more important substance.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_160"></a>[160]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VIII">THE PLACOID BRAIN.<br />
-EMBRYONIC CHARACTERISTICS NOT NECESSARILY OF A LOW ORDER.</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>That special substance, according to whose mass and degree
-of development all the creatures of this world take rank
-in the scale of creation, is not <i>bone</i>, but <i>brain</i>. Were animals
-to be ranged according to the solidity of their bones, the
-class of birds would be assigned the first place; the family
-of the <i>Felidæ</i>, including the tiger and lion, the second; and
-the other terrestrial carnivora the third. Man and the herbivorous
-animals, though tolerably low in the scale, would be
-in advance of at least the reptiles. Most of these, however,
-would take precedence of the sagacious <i>Delphinidæ</i>; the
-osseous fishes would come next in order; the true Placoids
-would follow, succeeded by the <i>Sturiones</i>; and the <i>Suctorii</i>,
-<i>i. e.</i> Cyclostomi or Lampreys, would bring up the rear.
-There would be evidently no order here: the utter confusion
-of such an arrangement, like that of the bits of a dissected
-map flung carelessly out of its box by a child, would of
-itself demonstrate the inadequacy and erroneousness of
-the regulating principle. But how very different the appearance
-presented, when for <i>solidity of bone</i> we substitute
-<i>development of brain</i>! Man takes his proper place<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_161"></a>[161]</span>
-at the head of creation; the lower mammalia follow,—each
-species in due order, according to its modicum of intelligence;
-the birds succeed the mammalia; the reptiles succeed
-the birds; the fishes succeed the reptiles; next in
-the long procession come the invertebrate animals; and
-these, too, take rank, if not according to their development
-of brain proper, at least according to their development of
-the <i>substance</i> of brain. The occipital nervous ganglion of the
-scorpion greatly exceeds in size that of the earthworm; and
-the occipital nervous ring of the lobster, that of the intestinal
-Ascaris. At length, when we reach the lowest or <i>acrite</i>
-division of the animal kingdom, the substance of brain
-altogether disappears. It has been calculated by naturalists,
-that in the vertebrata, the brain in the class of fishes
-bears an average proportion to the spinal cord of about two
-to one; in the class of reptiles, of about two and a half to
-one; in the class of birds, of about three to one; in the class
-of mammals, of about four to one; and in the high-placed,
-sceptre-bearing human family, a proportion of not less than
-<i>twenty-three</i> to one. It is palpably according to development
-of brain, not development of bone, that we are to determine
-points of precedence among the animals,—a fact of which
-no one can be more thoroughly aware than the author of the
-“Vestiges” himself. Of this let me adduce a striking instance,
-of which I shall make further use anon.</p>
-
-<p>“All life,” says Oken, “is from the sea; none from the
-continent. Man also is a child of the warm and shallow
-parts of the sea in the neighborhood of the land.” Such
-also was the hypothesis of Lamarck and Maillet. In following
-up the view of his masters, the author of the “Vestiges”
-fixes on the <i>Delphinidæ</i> as the sea-inhabiting progenitors of
-the simial family, and, through the simial family, of man<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_162"></a>[162]</span>
-For that highest order of the mammalia to which the <i>Simiadæ</i>
-(monkeys) belong, “there remains,” he says, “a
-basis in the <i>Delphinidæ</i>, the last and smallest of the cetacean
-tribes. This affiliation has a special support in the brain of
-the dolphin family, which is distinctly allowed to be, in proportion
-to general bulk, the greatest among mammalia next
-to the orang-outang and man. We learn from Tiedemann,
-that each of the cerebral hemispheres is composed, as in
-man and the monkey tribe, of three lobes,—an anterior, a
-middle, and a posterior; and these hemispheres present
-much more numerous circumvolutions and grooves than those
-of any other animal. Here it might be rash to found any
-thing upon the ancient accounts of the dolphin,—its familiarity
-with man, and its helping him in shipwreck and various
-marine disasters; although it is difficult to believe these stories
-to be altogether without some basis in fact. There is no
-doubt, however, that the dolphin evinces a predilection for
-human society, and charms the mariner by the gambols which
-it performs beside his vessel.”</p>
-
-<p>Here, then, the author of the “Vestiges” palpably founds
-on a large development of brain in the dolphin, and on the
-manifestation of a correspondingly high order of instincts,—and
-this altogether irrespective of the structure or composition
-of the creature’s internal skeleton. The substance to
-which he looks as all-important in the case is <i>brain</i>, not <i>bone</i>.
-For were he to estimate the standing of the dolphin, not by
-its brain, but by its skeleton, he would have to assign to it a
-place, not only <i>not</i> in advance of its brethren the <i>mammalia</i>
-of the sea, but even in the rear of the <i>reptiles</i> of the sea, the
-marine tortoises, or turtles,—and scarce more than abreast
-of the osseous fishes. “Fishes,” says Professor Owen, in his
-“Lectures on the Vertebrate Animals,” “have the least proportion<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_163"></a>[163]</span>
-of earthy matter in their bones; birds the largest.
-The mammalia, especially the active, predatory species, have
-more earth, or harder bones, than reptiles. In each class,
-however, there are differences in the density of bone among
-its several members. For example, in the fresh-water fishes,
-the bones are lighter, and retain more animal matter, than
-in those which swim in the denser sea. And in the <i>dolphin</i>,
-a warm-blooded marine animal, they differ little in this respect
-from those of the sea-fish.” Such being the fact, it is
-surely but fair to inquire of the author of the “Vestiges,”
-why he should determine the rank and standing of the <i>Delphinidæ</i>
-according to one set of principles, and the rank and
-standing of the Placoids according to another and entirely
-different set? If the <i>Delphinidæ</i> are to be placed high in the
-scale, notwithstanding the softness of their skeletons, simply
-because their brains are large, why are the Placoids to be
-placed low in the scale, notwithstanding the largeness of their
-brains, simply because their skeletons are soft? It is not too
-much to demand, that on the principle which he himself recognizes
-as just, he should either degrade the dolphin or elevate
-the Placoid. For it is altogether inadmissible that he
-should reason on one set of laws when the exigencies of his
-hypothesis require that creatures with soft skeletons should
-be raised in the scale, and on another and entirely different
-set when its necessities demand that they should be depressed.</p>
-
-<p>But do the Placoids possess in reality a large development
-of brain? I have examined the brains of almost all the common
-fish of our coast, both osseous and cartilaginous, not,
-I fear, with the skill of a Tiedemann, but all the more intelligently
-in consequence of what Tiedemann had previously
-done and written: and so I can speak with some little confidence<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_164"></a>[164]</span>
-on the subject, so far at least as my modicum of experience,
-thus acquired, extends. Of all the common fish
-of the Scottish seas, the spotted or lesser dog-fish bears, in
-proportion to its size, the largest brain; the gray or picked
-dog-fish ranks next in its degree of development; the Rays,
-in their various species, follow after; and the osseous fishes
-compose at least the great body of the rear; while still
-further behind, there lags a hapless class—the <i>Suctorii</i>, one
-of which, the glutinous hag, has scarce any brain, and one,
-the <i>Amphioxus</i> or lancelet, wants brain altogether. I have
-compared the brain of the spotted dog-fish with that of a
-young alligator, and have found that in scarce any perceptible
-degree was it inferior, in point of bulk, and very slightly
-indeed in point of organization, to the brain of the reptile.
-And the instincts of this Placoid family,—one of the truest
-existing representatives of the Placoids of the Silurian System<a id="FNanchor_25" href="#Footnote_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a>
-to which we can appeal,—correspond, we invariably
-find, with their superior cerebral development. I have
-seen the common dog-fish, <i>Spinax Acanthias</i>, hovering in
-packs in the Moray Frith, some one or two fathoms away
-from the side of the herring boat from which, when the
-fishermen were engaged in hauling their nets, I have watched
-them, and have admired the caution which, with all their
-ferocity of disposition, they rarely failed to manifest;—how
-they kept aloof from the net, even more warily than the
-cetacea themselves,—though both dog-fish and cetacea are
-occasionally entangled;—and how, when a few herrings were<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_165"></a>[165]</span>
-shaken loose from the meshes they at once darted upon them,
-exhibiting for a moment, through the green depths, the pale
-gleam of their abdomens, as they turned upon their sides to
-seize the desired morsels,—a motion rendered necessary by
-the position of the mouth in this family; and how next, their
-object accomplished, they fell back into their old position, and
-waited on as before. And I have been assured by intelligent
-fishermen, that at the deep-sea white-fishing, in which baited
-hooks, not nets, are employed, the degree of shrewd caution
-exercised by these creatures seems more extraordinary still.
-The hatred which the fisher bears to them arises not more
-from the actual amount of mischief which they do him, than
-from the circumstance that in most cases they persist in
-doing it with complete impunity to themselves. I have seen,
-said an observant Cromarty fisherman to the writer of these
-chapters, a pack of dog-fish watching beside our boat, as we
-were hauling our lines, and severing the hooked fish, as
-they passed them, at a bite, just a little above the vent, so that
-they themselves escaped the swallowed hook; and I have
-frequently lost, in this way, no inconsiderable portion of a
-fishing. I have observed, however, he continued, that when
-a fresh pack of hungry dog-fish came up, and joined the
-pack that had been robbing us so coolly, and at their leisure,
-a sudden rashness would seize the whole,—the united packs
-would become a mere heedless mob, and, rushing forward,
-they would swallow our fish entire, and be caught themselves
-by the score and the hundred. We may see something very
-similar to this taking place among even the shrewder mammalia.
-When pig refuses to take his food, his mistress
-straightway calls upon the cat, and, quickened by the dread
-of the coming rival, he gobbles up his rations at once. With
-the comparatively large development of brain, and the corresponding<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_166"></a>[166]</span>
-manifestations of instinct, which the true Placoids
-exhibit, we find other unequivocal marks of a general superiority
-to their class. In their reproductive organs they rank
-not with the common fishes, nor even with the lower reptiles,
-but with the Chelonians and the Sauria. Among the
-Rays, as among the higher animals, there are individual
-attachments formed between male and female: their eggs
-unlike the mere spawn of the osseous fishes, or of even the
-Batrachians, are, like those of the tortoise and the crocodile,
-comparatively few in number, and of considerable size:
-their young, too, like the young of birds and of the higher
-reptiles, pass through no such metamorphosis as those of the
-toad and frog, or of the amphibia generally. And some
-of their number—the common dog-fish for instance—are
-ovoviviparous, bringing forth their young, like the
-common viper and the viviparous lizard, alive and fully
-formed.</p>
-
-<p>“But such features,” says the author of the “Vestiges,”
-referring chiefly to certain provisions connected with the reproductory
-system in the Placoids, “are partly partaken of by
-families in inferior sub-kingdoms, showing that they cannot
-truly be regarded as marks of grade in their own class.”
-Nay, single features do here and there occur in the inferior
-sub-kingdoms, which very nearly resemble single features in
-the placoid character and organization, which even very
-nearly resemble single features in the <i>human</i> character and
-organization; but is there any of the inferior sub-kingdoms
-in which there occurs such a <i>collocation</i> of features? or does
-such a collocation occur in any class of animals—setting the
-Placoids wholly out of view—which is not a high class?
-Nay, further, does there occur in any of the inferior sub-kingdoms—existing
-even as a single feature—that most<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_167"></a>[167]</span>
-prominent, leading characteristic of this series of fishes,—a
-large brain?</p>
-
-<p>But is not the “cartilaginous structure” of the Placoids
-analogous to the embryonic state of vertebrated animals in general?
-Do not the other placoid peculiarities to which the
-author of the “Vestiges” refers,—such as the heterocercal
-or one-sided tail, the position of the mouth on the under side
-of the head, and the rudimental state of the maxillaries and
-intermaxillaries,—bear further analogies with the embryonic
-state of the higher animals? And is not “embryonic progress
-the grand key to the theory of development?” Let us examine
-this matter. “These are the characters,” says this
-ingenious writer, “which, above all, I am chiefly concerned in
-looking to; for they are features of embryonic progress, and
-embryonic progress is the grand key to the theory of development.”
-Bold assertion, certainly; but, then, assertion is not
-argument! The statement is not a reason for the faith that is
-in the author of the “Vestiges,” but simply an avowal of it;
-it is simply a confession, not a defence, of the Lamarckian
-creed; and, instead of being admitted as embodying a first
-principle, it must be put stringently to the question, in order
-to determine whether it contain a principle at all.</p>
-
-<p>In the first place, let us remark, that the cartilaginous
-structure of the Placoids bears no very striking analogy to
-the cartilaginous structure of the higher vertebrata in the
-embryonic state. In the case of the <i>Delphinidæ</i>, with their
-soft skeletons, the analogy is greatly more close. Bone
-consists of animal matter, chiefly gelatinous, hardened by a
-diffusion of inorganic earth. In the bones of young and
-fœtal mammalia, inhabitants of the land, the gelatinous prevails;
-in the old and middle-aged there is a preponderance
-of the earth. Now, in the bones of the dolphin there is<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_168"></a>[168]</span>
-comparatively little earth. The analogies of its internal
-skeleton bear, not on the skeletons of its brethren the mature
-full-grown mammals of the land, but on the skeletons of their
-immature or fœtal offspring. But in the case of the true
-Placoids that analogy is faint indeed. Their skeletons contain
-true bone;—the vertebral joints of the Sharks and Rays
-possess each, as has been shown, an osseous nucleus, which
-retains, when subjected to the heat of a common fire, the
-complete form of the joint; and their cranial framework has
-its surface always covered over with hard osseous points.
-But though their skeletons possess thus their modicum of bone,
-unlike those of embryonic birds or mammals, they contain, in
-what is properly their cartilage, no gelatine. The analogy
-signally fails in the very point in which it has been deemed
-specially to exist. The cartilage of the <i>Chondropterygii</i> is a
-substance so essentially different from that of young or
-embryonic birds and mammals, and so unique in the animal
-kingdom, that the heated water in which the one readily dissolves
-has no effect whatever upon the other. It is, however,
-a curious circumstance, exemplified in some of the Shark
-family,<a id="FNanchor_26" href="#Footnote_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a> though it merely serves, in its exceptive character,
-to establish the general fact, that while the rays of the
-double fins, which answer to the phalanges, are all formed
-of this <i>indissoluble</i> cartilage, those rays which constitute
-their outer framework, with the rays which constitute the
-framework of all the single fins, are composed of a <i>mucoidal</i>
-cartilage, which boils into glue. At certain definite lines
-a change occurs in the texture of the skeleton; and it is
-certainly suggestive of thought, that the difference of
-substance which the change involves distinguishes that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_169"></a>[169]</span>
-part of the skeleton which is homologically representative of
-the skeletons of the higher vertebrata, from that part of it
-which is peculiar to the creature as a fish, viz. the dorsal and
-caudal rays, and the extremities of the double fins. These
-emphatically ichthyic portions of the animal may be dissipated
-by boiling, whereas what Linnæus would perhaps term
-its <i>reptilian</i> portion abides the heat without reduction.</p>
-
-<p>But is not the one-sided tail, so characteristic of the sharks,
-and of almost all the ancient Ganoids, also a characteristic of
-the young salmon just burst from the egg? Yes, assuredly;
-and, so far as research on the subject has yet extended, of
-not only the salmon, but of <i>all</i> the other osseous fishes in
-their fœtal state. The salmon, on its escape from the egg, is
-a little monster of about three quarters of an inch in length,
-with a huge heart-shaped bag, as bulky as all the rest of its
-body, depending from its abdomen. In this bag provident
-nature has packed up for it, in lieu of a nurse, food for five
-weeks; and, moving about every where in its shallow pool,
-with its provision knapsack slung fast to it, it reminds one
-disposed to be fanciful, save that its burden is on the wrong
-side, of Scottish soldiers of the olden time summoned to attend
-their king in war,—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Each on his <i>back</i>, a slender store,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">His forty days’ provision bore,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">As ancient statutes tell.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">Around that terminal part of the creature’s body traversed by
-the caudal portion of the vertebral column, which commences
-in the salmon immediately behind the ventrals, there
-runs at this period, and for the ensuing five weeks in which
-it does not feed, a membranous fringe or fin, which exactly
-resembles that of the tadpole, and which, existing simply as
-an expansion of the skin, exhibits no mark or rays. In the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_170"></a>[170]</span>
-place of the true caudal fin, however, we may detect with
-the assistance of a lens, an internal framework with two
-well-marked lobes, and ascertain, further, that this tail is set
-on awry,—the effect of a slight upward bend in the creature’s
-body. And when viewed in a strong light as a transparency,
-we perceive that the spinal cord takes the same upward bend,
-and, as in the sturgeon, passes in an exceedingly attenuated
-form into the upper lobe. What may be regarded as the
-<i>design</i> of the arrangement is probably to be found in the peculiar
-form given to the little creature by the protuberan
-bag in front. A wise instinct teaches it, from the moment of
-its exclusion from the egg, to avoid its enemies. In the instant
-the human shadow falls upon its pool, we see it darting
-into some recess at the side or bottom, with singular alacrity;
-and in order to enable it to do so, and to steer itself aright,—as,
-like an ill-trimmed vessel, deep in the water ahead, the
-balance of its body is imperfect,—there is, if I may so express
-myself, a heterocercal peculiarity of helm required. It
-has got an irregularly-developed tail to balance an irregularly-developed
-body, as skiffs <i>lean</i> on the one beam and <i>full</i> on
-the other require, in rowing, a cast of the rudder to keep them
-straight in their course.</p>
-
-<p>Sinking altogether, however, the final cause of the peculiarity,
-and regarding it simply as a <i>fœtal</i> one, that indicates a
-certain stage of imperfection in the creature in which it occurs,
-on what principle, I ask, are we to infer that what is a
-sign of immaturity in the young of one set of animals, is a
-mark of inferior organization in the adult forms of another
-set? The want of eyes in any of the animal families, or the
-want of organs of progression, or a fixed and sedentary condition,
-like that of the oyster, are all marks of great inferiority.
-And yet, if we admit the principle, that what are evidences<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_171"></a>[171]</span>
-of immaturity in the young members of one family are signs
-of inferior organization in the fully-grown members of another,
-it could easily be shown that eyes and legs are defects, and
-that the unmoving oyster stands higher in the scale than the
-ever-restless fish or bird. The immature <i>Tubularia</i> possess
-locomotive powers, whereas in their fully developed state they
-remain fixed to one spot in their convoluted tubes. The immature
-<i>Lepas</i> is furnished with members well adapted for
-swimming, and with which it swims freely; as it rises towards
-maturity, these become blighted and weak; and, when
-fully grown,—fixed by its fleshy pedicle to the rock or floating
-log to which it attached itself in its transition state,—it
-is no longer able to swim. The immature <i>Balanus</i> is furnished
-with two eyes: in its state of maturity these are extinguished,
-and it passes its period of full development in
-darkness. Further, it is not generally held that in the human
-family a white skin is a decided mark of degradation, but
-rather the reverse; and yet nothing can be more certain than
-that the Negro fœtus has a white skin. Since eyes, and organs
-of progression, and a power of moving freely, and a
-white skin, are mere embryonic peculiarities in the <i>Balanus</i>,
-the <i>Lepas</i>, the <i>Tubularia</i>, and the Negro, and yet are in themselves,
-when found in the mature animal, evidences of a
-high, not of a low standing, on what principle, I ask are we
-to infer that the peculiarity of a heterocercal tail, embryonic
-in the salmon, is, when found in the mature Placoid, an evidence,
-not of a high standing, but of a low? Every true
-analogy in the case favors an exactly opposite view. In the
-heterocercal or one-sided tail, the vertebral joints gradually
-diminish, as in the tails of the <i>Sauria</i> and <i>Ophidia</i>, till they
-terminate in a point; whereas the homocercal tail common to
-the osseous fishes exhibits no true analogy with the tails<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_172"></a>[172]</span>
-of the higher orders. Its abruptly terminating vertebral column,
-immensely developed posterior processes, and broadly
-expanded osseous rays, seem to be simply a few of the many
-marks of decline and degradation which fishes, the oldest of
-the vertebrata, exhibit in this late age of the world, and which,
-in at least the earlier geologic periods, when they were greatly
-younger as a class, they did not betray.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="figure48">
-<img src="images/figure48.jpg" width="500" height="400" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 48.</p>
-<p class="caption">a. <i>Tail of Spinax Acanthias.</i></p>
-<p class="caption">b. <i>Tail of Ichthyosaurus Tenuirostris</i>, (Buckland.)</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>In illustration of this view, I would fain recommend to the
-reader a simple experiment. Let him procure the tail of a
-common dog-fish, (fig. 48, <i>a</i>,) and cutting it across about half
-an inch above where the caudal fin begins, let him boil it
-smartly for about half an hour. He will first see it swell<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_173"></a>[173]</span>
-and then burst, all around those thinner parts of the fin that
-are traversed by the caudal rays,—wholly mucoidal, as shown
-by this test, in their texture, and which yield to the boiling
-water, as if formed of isinglass. They finally dissolve, and
-drop away, with the surrounding cuticular integument; and
-then there only remains, as the insoluble framework of the
-whole, the bodies of the vertebræ, with their neural and
-hœmal processes. The tail has now lost much of its ichthyic
-character, and has acquired, instead, a considerable degree
-of resemblance to the reptilian tail, as exemplified in the saurians.
-I have introduced into the wood-cut, for the purpose
-of comparison, the tail of the ichthyosaurus, (<i>b</i>.) It consists,
-like the other, of a series of gradually diminishing vertebræ,
-and must have also supported, says Professor Owen, a propelling
-fin, placed vertically, as in the shark, which, however,
-from its perishable nature, has in every instance disappeared
-in the earth, as that of the dog-fish disappears in
-the boiling water. It will be seen that its processes are comparatively
-smaller than those of the fish, and that the bodies
-of its vertebræ are shorter and bulkier; but there is at least
-a general correspondence of the parts; and were the tail of the
-crocodile, of which the vertebral bodies are slender and the
-processes large, to be substituted for that of the enaliosaur here,
-the correspondence would be more marked still. After thus
-<i>developing</i> the tail of the reptile out of that of the fish,—as the
-cauldron-bearing Irish magician of the tale developed young
-ladies out of old women,—simply by <i>boiling</i>, let the reader
-proceed to a second stage of the experiment, and see whether
-he may not be able still further to develope the reptilian tail so
-obtained, into that of the mammal, by <i>burning</i>. Let him spread
-it out on a piece of iron hoop, and thrust it into the fire;
-and then, after exposure for some time to a red heat has<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_174"></a>[174]</span>
-consumed and dissipated its merely cartilaginous portions,
-such as the neural and hœmal processes, with the little pieces
-which form the sides of the neural arch, and left only the
-whitened bodies of the vertebræ, let him say whether the
-bony portion which remains does not present a more exact
-resemblance to the mammiferous tail—that of the dog, for
-example—than any thing else he ever saw. The Lamarckians
-may well deem it an unlucky circumstance, that one special
-portion of their theory should demand the depreciation of
-the heterocercal tail, seeing that it might be represented with
-excellent effect in another, as not merely a connecting link in
-the upward march of progression between the tail of the true
-fish and that of the true reptile, but as actually containing in
-itself—as the caterpillar contains the future pupa and butterfly—the
-elements of the reptilian and mammiferous tail.
-If there be any virtue in analogy, the heterocercal tail is, I
-repeat, of a decidedly higher type than the homocercal one.
-It furnishes the first example in the vertebrata of the coccygeal
-vertebræ diminishing to a point, which characterizes
-not only all the higher reptiles, but also all the higher mammals,
-and which we find represented by the <i>Os coccygis</i> in
-man himself. But to this special point I shall again refer.</p>
-
-<p>With regard to that rudimentary state of the <i>occipital</i>
-framework of the Placoids to which the author of the “Vestiges”
-refers, it may be but necessary to say that, notwithstanding
-the simplicity of their box-like skulls, they bear in
-their character, as cases for the protection of the brain,
-at least as close an analogy to the skulls of the higher animals,
-as those of the osseous fishes, which consist usually
-of the extraordinary number of from sixty to eighty bones,—a
-mark—the author of the “Vestiges” himself being judge
-in the case—rather of inferiority than the reverse. “Elevation<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_175"></a>[175]</span>
-is marked in the scale,” we find him saying, “by an
-animal exchanging a multiplicity of parts serving one end,
-for a smaller number.” The skull of a cod consists of about
-thrice as many separate bones as that of a man. But I do
-not well see that in this case the fact either of <i>simplicity</i> in
-excess or of <i>multiplicity</i> in excess can be insisted upon in
-either direction, as a proper basis for argument. Nearly the
-same remark applies to the maxillaries as to the skull. The
-under jaw in man consists of a single bone; that of the thornback—if
-we do not include the two suspending <i>ribs</i>, which
-belong equally to the upper jaw—of two bones, (the number
-in all the mammiferous quadrupeds:) that of the cod of
-four bones, and, if we include the suspending <i>ribs</i>, of twelve.
-On what principle are we to hold, with <i>one</i> as the representative
-number of the highest type of jaw, that <i>two</i> indicates
-a lower standing than <i>four</i>, or <i>four</i> than <i>twelve</i>? In
-reference to the further statement, that in many of the ancient
-fishes “traces can be observed of the muscles having
-been attached to the external plates, strikingly indicating
-their low grade as vertebrate animals,” it may be
-answer enough to state, that the peculiarity in question was
-not a characteristic of the <i>most</i> ancient fishes,—the Placoids
-of the Silurian system,—but of some Ganoids of the succeeding
-systems. The reader may remember, as a case
-in point, the example furnished by the nail-like bone of
-<i>Asterolepis</i>, figured in <a href="#Page_111">page 111</a>, in which there exists depressions
-resembling that of the round ligament in the head of
-the quadrupedal thigh-bone. And as for the remark that
-the opening of the mouth of the Placoid, “on the under side
-of the head,” is indicative of a low embryonic condition, it
-might be almost sufficient to remark, in turn, that the
-lowest family of fishes—that to which the supposed worms<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_176"></a>[176]</span>
-of Linnæus belong—have the mouth not under, but at the
-anterior termination of the head,—in itself an evidence
-that the position of the mouth at the extremity of the muzzle,
-common to the greater number of the osseous fishes,
-can be no very high character, seeing that the humblest
-of the <i>Suctorii</i> possess it; and that many osseous fishes,
-whose mouths open, not on the under, but the upper side of
-the snout, as in the distorted and asymmetrical genus <i>Platessa</i>,
-are not only in no degree superior to their bony neighbors,
-and far inferior to the placoid ones, but bear, in direct consequence
-of the arrangement, an expression of unmistakable
-stupidity. The objection, however, admits of a greatly more
-conclusive reply.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="figure49">
-<img src="images/figure49.jpg" width="500" height="200" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 49.</p>
-<p class="caption">PORT JACKSON SHARK, (<i>Cestracion Phillippi</i>.)</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>“This fish, to speak in the technical language of Agassiz,”
-says the Edinburgh Reviewer, in reference to the ancient
-ichthyolite of the Wenlock Shale, “undoubtedly belongs to
-the Cestraciont family of the Placoid order,—proving to
-demonstration that the oldest known fossil fish [1845] belongs
-to the highest type of that division of the vertebrata.”
-I may add, that the character and family of this ancient
-specimen was determined by our highest British authority in
-fossil ichthyology, Sir Philip Egerton. And it is in depreciation
-of Professor Sedgwick’s statement regarding its high
-standing that the author of the “Vestiges” refers to the
-supposed inferiority indicated by a mouth opening, not at the
-extremity of the muzzle, but under the head. Let us, then,
-fully grant, for the argument’s sake, that the occurrence of
-the mouth in the muzzle <i>is</i> a sign of superiority, and its occurrence
-under the head a mark of great inferiority, and
-then ascertain how the fact stands with regard to the <i>Cestracion</i>.
-“The Cestracion sub-genus,” says Mr. James Wilson,
-in his admirable treatise on fishes, which forms the article<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_177"></a>[177]</span>
-<span class="smcap">Ichthyology</span> in the “Encyclopædia Britannica,” “has the
-temporal aperture, the anal fin, and rounded teeth, of
-<i>Squalus Mustelus</i>; <i>but the mouth is <span class="smcap">terminal</span>, or <span class="smcap">at the extremity
-of the pointed muzzle</span></i>.” The accompanying
-figure, (fig. 49,) taken from a specimen of <i>Cestracion</i> in the
-collection of Professor John Fleming, may be recorded as of
-some little interest, both from its direct bearing on the point
-in question, and from the circumstance that it represents, not
-inadequately for its size, the sole surviving species (<i>Cestracion
-Phillippi</i>) of the oldest vertebrate family of creation. With
-this family, so far as is yet known, ichthyic existence first began.
-It does not appear that on the globe which we inhabit
-there was ever an ocean tenanted by living creatures at all
-that had not its <i>Cestracion</i>,—a statement which could not be
-made regarding any other vertebrate family. In Agassiz’s
-“Tabular View of the Genealogy of Fishes,” the Cestracionts,
-and they only, sweep across the entire geologic scale. And,
-as shown in the figure, the mouth in this ancient family, instead
-of opening, as in the ordinary sharks, under the middle of the
-head, to expose them to the suspicion of being creatures of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_178"></a>[178]</span>
-low and embryonic character, opened in a broad, honest-looking
-muzzle, very much resembling that of the hog. The
-mouths of the most ancient Placoids of which we know any
-thing, <i>did not</i>, I reiterate, <i>open under their heads</i>.</p>
-
-<p>But why introduce the element of embryonic progress into
-this question at all? It is not a question of embryonic progress.
-The very legerdemain of the sophist—the juggling
-by which he substitutes his white balls for black, or converts
-his pigeons into crows—consists in the art of attaching the
-conclusions founded on the facts or conditions of one subject,
-to some other subject essentially distinct in its nature.
-Gestation is not creation. The history of the young of animals
-in their embryonic state is simply the history of the fœtal
-young; just as the history of insect transformation, in which
-it has been held by good men, but weak reasoners, that there
-exists direct evidence of the doctrine of the resurrection, is
-the history of insect transformation, and of nothing else.
-True, the human mind is so constituted that it converts all
-nature into a storehouse of comparisons and analogies; and
-this fact of the metamorphosis of the creeping caterpillar,
-after first passing through an intermediate period of apparent
-death as an inert aurelia, into a winged image, seemed to
-have seized on the human fancy at a very early age, as wonderfully
-illustrative of life, death, and the future state. The
-Egyptians wrapped up the bodies of their dead in the chrysalis
-form, so that a mummy, in their apprehension, was simply a
-human pupa, waiting the period of its enlargement; and the
-Greeks had but one word in their language for butterfly and
-the soul. But not the less true is it, notwithstanding, that the
-facts of insect transformation furnish no legitimate key to the
-totally distinct facts of a resurrection of the body, and of a
-life after death. And on what principle, then, are we to trace<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_179"></a>[179]</span>
-the origin of past dynasties in the changes of the fœtus if
-not the rise of the future dynasty in the transformations of
-the caterpillar? “These [embryonic] characters [that of
-the heterocercal tail, and of the mouth of the ordinary shark
-type] are essential and important,” remarks the author of the
-“Vestiges,” “whatever the Edinburgh Reviewer may say
-to the contrary;—they are the characters which, above all,
-I am chiefly concerned in looking to, for they are the features
-of embryonic progress, and embryonic progress is the grand
-key to the theory of development.” Yes; the grand key to
-the theory of <i>fœtal</i> development; for embryonic progress <i>is</i>
-fœtal development. But on what is the assertion based that
-they form a key to the history of creation? Aurelia are not
-human bodies laid out for the sepulchre, nor are butterflies
-human souls; as certainly gestation is not creation, nor a
-life of months in the uterus a succession of races for millions
-of ages outside of it. On what grounds, then, is the
-assertion made? Does it embody the result of a discovery
-or announce the message of a revelation? Did the author of
-the “Vestiges” find it out for himself, or did an angel from
-heaven tell it him? If it be a discovery, show us, we ask,
-the steps through which you have been conducted to it; if
-a revolution produce, for our satisfaction, the evidence on
-which it rests. For we are not to accept as data, in a question
-of science, idle comparisons or vague analogies, whether
-produced through the intentional juggling of the sophist, or
-involuntarily conjured up in the dreamy delirium of an excited
-fancy.</p>
-
-<p>It is one of the difficulties incident to the task of replying
-to any dogmatic statement of error, that every mere annunciation
-of a false fact or false principle must be met by elaborate
-counter-statement or carefully constructed argument<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_180"></a>[180]</span>
-and that prolixity is thus unavoidably entailed on the controversialist
-who labors to set right what his antagonist has set
-wrong. The promulgator of error may be lively and entertaining,
-whereas his pains-taking confutator runs no small risk
-of being tedious and dull. May I, however, solicit the forbearance
-of the reader, if, after already spending much time
-in skirmishing on ground taken up by the enemy,—one of
-the disadvantages incident to the mere defendant in a controversy
-of this nature,—I spend a little more in indicating what
-I deem the proper ground on which the standing of the earlier
-vertebrata should be decided. To the test of <i>brain</i> I have
-already referred, as all-important in the question: I would now
-refer to the test of what may be termed <i>homological symmetry
-of organization</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_181"></a>[181]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IX">THE PROGRESS OF DEGRADATION.<br />
-ITS HISTORY.</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Though all animals be fitted by nature for the life which
-their instincts teach them to pursue, naturalists have learned
-to recognize among them certain aberrant and mutilated
-forms, in which the type of the special class to which they
-belong seems distorted and degraded. They exist as the
-monster <i>families</i> of creation, just as among families there appear
-from time to time monster <i>individuals</i>,—men, for instance,
-without feet, or hands, or eyes, or with their feet,
-hands, or eyes grievously misplaced,—sheep with their fore
-legs growing out of their necks, or ducklings with their
-wings attached to their haunches. Among these degraded
-races, that of the footless serpent, which “goeth upon its
-belly,” has been long noted by the theologian as a race typical,
-in its condition and nature, of an order of hopelessly
-degraded beings, borne down to the dust by a clinging curse;
-and, curiously enough, when the first comparative anatomists
-in the world give <i>their</i> readiest and most prominent instance
-of degradation among the denizens of the natural world, it is
-this very order of footless reptiles that they select. So far as
-the geologist yet knows, the Ophidians did not appear during
-the Secondary ages, when the monarchs of creation belonged<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_182"></a>[182]</span>
-to the reptilian division, but were ushered upon the scene
-in the times of the Tertiary deposits, when the mammalian
-dynasty had supplanted that of the Iguanodon and Megalosaurus.
-Their ill omened birth took place when the influence
-of their house was on the wane, as if to set such a stamp of
-utter hopelessness on its fallen condition, as that set by the
-birth of a worthless or idiot heir on the fortunes of a sinking
-family. The degradation of the Ophidians consists in the
-absence of limbs,—an absence total in by much the greater
-number of their families, and represented in others, as in
-the boas and pythons, by mere abortive hinder limbs concealed
-in the skin; but they are thus not only <i>monsters
-through defect of parts</i>, if I may so express myself, but
-also <i>monsters through redundancy</i>, as a vegetative repetition
-of vertebra and ribs, to the number of three or four
-hundred, forms the special contrivance by which the want
-of these is compensated. I am also disposed to regard the
-poison-bag of the venomous snakes as a mark of degradation;—it
-seems, judging from analogy, to be a protective
-provision of a low character, exemplified chiefly in
-the invertebrate families,—ants, centipedes, and mosquitos,—spiders,
-wasps, and scorpions. The higher carnivora
-are, we find, furnished with unpoisoned weapons, which,
-like those of civilized man, are sufficiently effective, simply
-from the excellence of their construction, and the power
-with which they are wielded, for every purpose of assault
-or defence. It is only the squalid savages and degraded
-boschmen of creation that have their feeble teeth and tiny
-stings steeped in venom, and so made formidable. <i>Monstrosity
-through displacement of parts</i> constitutes yet another form
-of degradation; and this form, united, in some instances, to
-the other two, we find curiously exemplified in the geological<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_183"></a>[183]</span>
-history of the fish,—a history which, with all its blanks and
-missing portions, is yet better known than that of any other
-division of the vertebrata. And it is, I am convinced, from
-a survey of the progress of degradation in the great ichthyic
-division,—a progress recorded as “with a pen of iron in
-the rock for ever,”—and not from superficial views founded
-on the cartilaginous or non-cartilaginous texture of the ichthyic
-skeleton, that the standing of the kingly fishes of the earlier
-periods is to be adequately determined. Any other mode of
-survey, save the parallel mode which takes development
-of brain into account, evolves, we find, nothing like principle,
-and lands the inquirer in inextricable difficulties and inconsistencies.</p>
-
-<p>In all the higher non-degraded vertebrata we find a certain
-uniform type of skeleton, consisting of the head, the vertebral
-column, and four limbs; and these last, in the various symmetrical
-forms, whether exemplified in the higher fish, the
-higher reptiles, the higher birds, the higher mammals, or in
-man himself, occur always in a certain determinate order. In
-all the mammals, the scapular bases of the fore limbs begin
-opposite the eighth vertebra from the skull backwards, the
-seven which go before being cervical or neck vertebræ; in
-the birds,—a division of the vertebrata that, from their peculiar
-organization, require longer and more flexible necks than
-the mammals,—the scapulars begin at distances from the
-occiput, varying, according to the species, from opposite the
-thirteenth to opposite the twenty-fourth vertebra; and in the
-reptiles—a division which, according to Cuvier, “presents a
-greater diversity of forms, characters, and modes of gait,
-than any of the other two,”—they occur at almost all points,
-from opposite the second vertebra, as in the frog, to opposite
-the thirty-third or thirty-fourth vertebra, as in some species<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_184"></a>[184]</span>
-of plesiosaurus. But in all,—whether mammals, birds, or
-undegraded reptiles,—they are so placed, that the creatures
-possess <i>necks</i>, of greater or less length, as an essential portion
-of their general type. The hinder limbs have also in all
-these three divisions of the animal kingdom their typical
-place. They occur opposite, or very nearly opposite, the
-posterior termination of the abdominal cavity, and mark the
-line of separation between the vertebræ of the trunk (dorsal,
-lumbar, and sacral) and the third and last, or <i>caudal</i> division
-of the column,—a division represented in man by but four
-vertebræ, and in the crocodile by about thirty-five, but which
-is found to exist, as I have already said, in all the more perfect
-forms. The limbs, then, in all the symmetrical animals
-of the first three classes of the vertebrata, mark the three
-great divisions of the vertebral column,—the division of the
-<i>neck</i>, the division of the <i>trunk</i>, and the division of the <i>tail</i>.
-Let us now inquire how the case stands with the fourth and
-lowest class,—that of the fishes.</p>
-
-<p>In those existing Placoids that represent the fishes of the
-earliest vertebrate period, the places of the double fins,—pectorals
-and ventrals,—which form in the ichthyic class the
-true homologues of the limbs, correspond to the places which
-these occupy in the symmetrical mammals, birds, and reptiles.
-The scapular bases of the fore or pectoral fins ordinarily begin
-opposite the twelfth or fourteenth vertebra;<a id="FNanchor_27" href="#Footnote_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a> but they range,
-as in man and the mammals, in a forward direction, so that the
-fins themselves are opposite the eighth or tenth. The pelvic
-bases of the ventral fins are placed nearly opposite the base of
-the abdomen, so that, as in all the symmetrical animals, the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_185"></a>[185]</span>
-vent opens between, or nearly between, those hinder limbs
-which the bases support. In the Rays, which, so far as is yet
-known, did not appear in creation until the Secondary ages
-had begun, the bases of the fore limbs, <i>i. e.</i> pectoral fins,
-are attached to the lower part of a huge cervical vertebra,
-nearly equal in length to <i>all</i> the trunk vertebræ united; and
-in the Chimeridæ, which also first appear in the Secondary
-division, they are attached, as in the osseous fishes, to the
-hinder part of the head. But in the representatives of all
-those Silurian Placoids yet known, of which the family can
-be determined, or any thing with safety predicated, the cervical
-division is found to occur as a series of vertebræ: they present
-in this, as in the hinder portion of their bodies, the homological
-symmetry of organization typical of that vertebral sub-kingdom
-to which they belong.</p>
-
-<p>In the second great period of ichthyic existence,—that of
-the Old Red Sandstone,—we find the first example, in the
-class of fishes, of “monstrosity through <i>displacement</i> of parts,”
-and apparently also—in at least two genera, though the evidence
-on this head be not yet quite complete—of “monstrosity
-through <i>defect</i> of parts.” In all the Ganoids of the
-period, with (so far as we can determine the point) only two
-exceptions, the scapular bases of the fore limbs are brought
-forward from their typical place opposite the base of the cervical
-vertebræ, and stuck on to the occipital plate. There
-occurs, in consequence, in one great order of the ichthyic
-class, such a departure from the symmetrical type as would
-take place in a monster example of the human family in
-whom the neck had been annihilated, and the arms stuck on
-to the back of the head. And in the genera <i>Coccosteus</i> and
-<i>Pterichthys</i> we find the first example of degradation through
-<i>defect</i>. In the <i>Pterichthys</i> the <i>hinder</i> limbs seem wanting,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_186"></a>[186]</span>
-and in the <i>Coccosteus</i> we find no trace of the <i>fore</i> limbs. The
-one resembles a monster of the human family born without
-hands, and the other a monster born without feet. Ages and
-centuries pass, and long unreckoned periods come to a close;
-and then, after the termination of the Palæozoic period, we
-see that change taking place in the form of the ichthyic tail,
-to which I have already referred, (and to which I must refer
-at least once more,) as singularly illustrative of the progress
-of degradation. Yet other ages and centuries pass away,
-during which the reptile class attains to its fullest development,
-in point of size, organization, and number; and then, after
-the times of the Cretaceous deposits have begun, we find yet
-another remarkable monstrosity of displacement introduced
-among all the fishes of one very numerous order, and among
-no inconsiderable proportion of the fishes of another. In the
-newly-introduced Ctenoids, (<i>Acanthopterygii</i>,) and in those
-families of the Cycloids which Cuvier erected into the order
-<i>Malacopterygii sub-brachiati</i>, the hinder limbs are brought
-forward, and stuck on to the base of the previously misplaced
-fore limbs. All the four limbs, by a strange monstrosity of
-displacement, are crowded into the place of the extinguished
-neck. And such, at the present day, is the prevalent type
-among fishes. Monstrosity through <i>defect</i> is also found to increase;
-so that the snake-like <i>apoda</i>, or feet-wanting fishes,
-form a numerous order, some of whose genera are devoid, as
-in the common eels and the congers, of only the hinder limbs,
-while in others, as in the genera Muræna and Synbranchus,
-both hinder and fore limbs are wanting. In the class of fishes,
-as fishes now exist, we find many more evidences of the monstrosity
-which results from both the misplacement and defect
-of parts, than in the other three classes of the vertebrata united,
-and knowing their geological history better than that of any of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_187"></a>[187]</span>
-the others, we know, in consequence, that the monstrosities
-did not appear <i>early</i>, but <i>late</i>, and that the progress of the
-race as a whole, though it still retains not a few of the higher
-forms, has been a progress, not of development from the low
-to the high, but of degradation from the high to the low.</p>
-
-<p>The reader may mark for himself, in the flounder, plaice,
-halibut, or turbot,—fishes of a family of which there appears
-no trace in the earlier periods,—an extreme example of the
-degradation of distortion superadded to that of displacement.
-At a first glance the <i>limbs</i> seem but to exhibit merely the
-amount of natural misarrangement and misorder common
-to the <i>Acanthopterygii</i> and <i>Sub-brachiati</i>;—the base of the
-pectorals are stuck on to the head, and the base of the ventrals
-attached to that of the pectorals. From the circumstance,
-however, that the creature is twisted half round and
-laid on its side, we find that at least one of the pairs of
-double fins—the pectorals—perform the part of single fins,—one
-projecting from the animal’s superior, the other from
-its inferior side, in the way the anal and dorsal fins project
-from the upper and under surfaces of other fishes; while its
-real dorsal and anal fins, both developed very largely, and—in
-order to preserve its balance—in about an equal degree,
-and wonderfully correspondent in form, perform, from their
-lateral position, the functions of single fins. Indeed, at a first
-glance they seem the analogues of the largely-developed pectorals
-of a very different family of flat fishes,—the Rays.
-It would appear as if single and double fins, by some such
-mutual agreement as that which, according to the old ballad,
-took place between the churl of Auchtermuchty and his
-wife, had agreed to exchange callings, and perform each the
-work of the other. The tail, too, possesses, in consequence
-of the twist, not the vertical position of other fish-tails, but<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_188"></a>[188]</span>
-is spread out horizontally, like the tails of the cetacea. It is
-however, in the head of the flounder and its cogeners that
-we find the more extraordinary distortions exemplified. In
-order to accommodate it to the general twist, which rendered
-lateral what in other fishes is dorsal and abdominal, and dorsal
-and abdominal what in other fishes is lateral, one half its
-features had to be twisted to the one side, and the other half
-to the other. The face and cranium have undergone such a
-change as that which the human face and cranium would undergo,
-were the eyes to be drawn towards the left ear, and the
-mouth towards the right. The skull, in consequence, exhibits,
-in its fixed bones, a strange Cyclopean character, unique
-among the families of creation: it has its one well-marked
-eye orbit opening, like that of Polyphemus, direct in the middle
-of the fore part of its head; while the other, external to the
-cranium altogether, we find placed among the free bones, directly
-over the maxillaries. And the wry mouth—twisted in
-the opposite direction, as if to keep up such a balance of deformity
-as that which the breast-hump of a hunchback forms to
-the hump behind—is in keeping with the squint eyes. The
-jaws are strangely asymmetrical. In symmetrical fishes the
-two bones that compose the anterior half of the lower jaw are
-as perfectly correspondent in form and size as the left hand or
-left foot is correspondent, in the human subject, to the <i>right</i>
-hand or <i>right</i> foot; but not such their character in the flounder.
-The one is a broad, short, nearly straight bone; the other
-is larger, narrower, and bent like a bow; and while the one
-contains only from four to six teeth, the other contains from
-thirty to thirty-five. Scarcely in the entire ichthyic kingdom
-are there any two jaws that less resemble one another than the
-two halves of the jaw of the flounder, turbot, halibut, or plaice.
-The intermaxillary bones are equally ill matched: the one is<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_189"></a>[189]</span>
-fully twice the size of the other, and contains about thrice as
-many teeth. That bilateral symmetry of the skeleton which
-is so <i>invariable</i> a characteristic of the vertebrata, that ordinary
-observers, who have eyes for only the rare and the uncommon,
-fail to remark it, but which a Newton could regard as so
-wonderful, and so thoroughly in harmony with the uniformity
-of the planetary system, has scarce any place in the asymmetrical
-head of the flounder. There exists in some of our north
-country fishing villages an ancient apologue, which, though
-not remarkable for point or meaning, at least serves to show
-that this peculiar example of distortion the rude fishermen of
-a former age were observant enough to detect. Once on a
-time the fishes met, it is said, to elect a king; and their
-choice fell on the herring. “The herring king!” contemptuously
-exclaimed the flounder, a fish of consummate vanity,
-and greatly piqued on this occasion that its own presumed
-claims should have been overlooked; “where, then, am I?”
-And straightway, in punishment of its conceit and rebellion,
-“its eyes turned to the back of its head.” Here is there a
-story palpably founded on the degradation of misplacement
-and distortion, which originated ages ere the naturalist had
-recognized either the term or the principle.</p>
-
-<p>It would be an easy matter for an ingenious theorist, not
-much disposed to distinguish between the minor and the
-master laws of organized being, to get up quite as unexceptionable
-a theory of degradation as of development. The
-one-eyed, one-legged Chelsea pensioner, who had a child, unborn
-at the time, laid to his charge, agreed to recognize his
-relationship to the little creature, if, on its coming into the
-world, it was found to have a green patch over its eye,
-and a wooden leg. And, in order to construct a hypothesis
-of progressive degradation, the theorist has but to take for<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_190"></a>[190]</span>
-granted the transmission to other generations of defects and
-compensating redundancies at once as extreme and accidental
-as the loss of eyes or limbs, and the acquisition of timber
-legs or green patches. The snake, for instance, he might regard
-as a saurian, that, having accidentally lost its limbs, exerted
-itself to such account throughout a series of generations,
-in making up for their absence, as to spin out for itself, by dint
-of writhing and wriggling, rather more than a hundred additional
-vertebræ, and to alter, for purposes of greater flexibility,
-the structure of all the rest. And as fishes, when nearly
-stunned by a blow, swim for a few seconds on their side, he
-might regard the flounders as a race of half-stunned fishes, previously
-degraded by the misplacement of their limbs, that,
-instead of recovering themselves from the blow given to some
-remote parent of the family, had expended all their energies in
-twisting their mouths round to what chanced to be the under
-side on which they were laid, and their eyes to what chanced
-to be the upper, and that made their pectorals serve for anal
-and dorsal fins, and their anal and dorsal fins serve for pectorals.
-But while we must recognize in nature certain laws of
-disturbance, if I may so speak, through which, within certain
-limits, traits which are the result of habit or circumstance in
-the parents are communicated to their offspring, we would
-err as egregiously, did we take only these into account, without
-noting that infinitely stronger antagonist law of reproduction
-and restoration which, by ever gravitating towards the
-original type, preserves the integrity of races, as the astronomer
-would, who, in constructing his orrery, recognized only
-that law of propulsion through which the planets speed
-through the heavens, without taking into account that antagonist
-law of gravitation which, by maintaining them in their
-orbits, insures the regularity of their movements. The law<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_191"></a>[191]</span>
-of restoration would recover and right the stunned fish laid
-on its side; the law of reproduction would give limbs to the
-offspring of the mutilated saurian. We have evidence, in
-the extremeness of the degradation in these cases, that it
-cannot be a degradation hereditarily derived from accident.
-Nature is, we find, active, not in perpetuating the accidental
-wooden legs and green patches of ancestors in their descendants,
-but in restoring to the offspring the true limbs
-and eyes which the parents have lost. It is, however, not
-with a theory of hereditary degradation, but a hypothesis of
-gradual development, that I have at present to deal; and
-what I have to establish as proper to the present stage of my
-argument is, that this principle of degradation really exists,
-and that the history of its progress in creation bears directly
-against the assumption that the earlier vertebrata were of a
-lower type than the vertebrata of the same ichthyic class
-which exist now.<a id="FNanchor_28" href="#Footnote_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_192"></a>[192]</span></p>
-
-<p>The progress of the ichthyic tail, as recorded in geologic
-history, corresponds with that of the ichthyic limbs. And
-as in the existing state of things we find fishes that <i>nearly</i>
-represent, in this respect, all the great geologic periods,—I
-say <i>nearly</i>, not <i>fully</i>, for I am acquainted with no fish adequately
-representative of the period of the Old Red Sandstone,—it
-may be well to cast a glance over the <i>contemporary</i>
-series, as illustrative of the <i>consecutive</i> one. In those Placoids
-of the shark family that to a large brain unite homological
-symmetry of organization, and represent the fishes of the
-first period, we find, as I have already shown, that the vertebræ
-gradually diminish in the caudal division of the
-column, until they terminate in a point,—a circumstance
-in which they resemble not merely the betailed reptiles, but
-also all the higher mammiferous quadrupeds, and even man
-himself. And it is this peculiarity, stamped upon the less destructible
-portions of the framework of the tail,—vertebræ
-and processes,—rather than the one-sided or heterocercal
-form of the surrounding fin, composed of but a mucoidal
-substance, that constitutes its grand characteristic; seeing
-that in some Placoid genera, such as <i>Scyllium Stellare</i>, the
-terminal portion of the fin is scarce less largely developed
-above than below, and that in others, as in most of the Ray
-family, the under lobe of the fin is wholly wanting. In the
-sturgeon,—one of the few Ganoids of the present time,—we
-become sensible of a peculiar modification in this heterocercal<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_193"></a>[193]</span>
-type of tail: the lower lobe is, we find, composed, as in
-<i>Spinax</i> and <i>Scyllium</i>, of rays exclusively; while through the
-centre of the upper lobe there runs an acutely angular patch
-of lozenge-shaped plates, like that which runs through the
-centre of the double fins of <i>Dipterus</i> and the Cœlacanths.
-But while in the sharks the gradually diminishing vertebræ
-stand out in bold relief, and form the thickest portion of the
-tail, that which represents them in the sturgeon (the angular
-patch) is slim and thin,—slimmer in the middle than even at
-the sides;—in part a consequence, no doubt, of the want,
-in this fish, of solid vertebræ, but a consequence also of the
-extreme attenuation of the nervous cord, in its prolongation
-into the lobe of the fin. Further, the rays of the tail—its
-peculiarly ichthyic portion, which are purely mucoidal in
-<i>Spinax</i>, <i>Scyllium</i>, and <i>Cestracion</i>—have become osseous in
-the sturgeon. The <i>fish</i> has <i>set</i> and become <i>fixed</i>, as cement
-sets in a building, or colors are fixed by a mordant. And
-it is worthy of special remark that, correspondent with the
-peculiarly <i>ichthyic</i> development of tail in this fish, we find
-the prevailing ichthyic displacement of the fore limbs.
-Again, in the <i>Lepidosteus</i>, another of the true Ganoids
-which still exist, the internal angle of the upper lobe of the
-tail wholly disappears, and with the internal angle the prolongation
-of the nervous cord. Still, however, it is what the
-tail of the sturgeon would become were the angular patch to
-be obliterated, and rays substituted instead,—it is a tail set on
-awry. And in this fish also we find the ichthyic displacement
-of fore limb. One step more, and we arrive at the homocercal
-or equal-lobed tail, which seems to attain to its
-most extreme type in those fishes in which, as in the perch
-and flounder, the last vertebral joint, either very little or very
-abruptly diminished in size, expands into broad processes<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_194"></a>[194]</span>
-without homologue in the higher animals, on which the caudal
-rays rest as their bases. And in by much the larger
-proportion of these fishes all the four limbs are slung round
-the neck;—they at once exhibit the homocercal tail in its
-broadest type, and displacement of limb in its most extreme
-form.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;" id="figure50">
-<img src="images/figure50.jpg" width="400" height="225" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 50.</p>
-<p class="caption">TAIL OF OSTEOLEPIS.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;" id="figure51">
-<img src="images/figure51.jpg" width="400" height="225" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 51.</p>
-<p class="caption">TAIL OF LEPIDOSTEUS OSSEUS.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Now, in tracing the geologic history of the ichthyic tail,
-we find these several steps or gradations from the heterocercal
-to the homocercal, represented by periods and formations.
-The Siluran periods may be regarded as representative of that
-true heterocercal tail of the Placoids, exemplified in <i>Spinax</i>,
-(<a href="#figure48">page 172</a>, fig. 48,) and <i>Cestracion</i>, (<a href="#figure49">page 177</a>, fig. 49.) The
-whole caudal portion of this latter animal, commencing immediately
-behind the ventrals, is, as becomes a true tail, slim,
-when compared with its trunk; the vertebræ are of very
-considerable solidity; the rays mucoidal; and where the
-spinal column runs into the terminal fin, it takes such an upward
-turn as that which the horse-jockey imparts, by the
-process of <i>nicking</i>, to the tails of the hunter and the racehorse.
-And with the heterocercal tail, so true in its homologies
-to the tails of the higher vertebrata, we find associated,
-as has been shown, the true homological position of the fore
-limbs. With the commencement of the Old Red Sandstone
-the ganoidal tail first presents itself; and we become sensible
-of a change in the structure of the attached fin, similar to that
-exemplified in the caudal rays of the sturgeon. As shown by
-the irregularly-angular patch of scales which in all the true
-Cœlacanths, and almost all the Dipterians,<a id="FNanchor_29" href="#Footnote_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a> runs through the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_195"></a>[195]</span>
-<i>upper</i> lobe of the fin, and terminates in a point, (see fig. 50,)
-it must have possessed the gradually diminishing vertebræ, or
-a diminishing spinal cord, their analogue; but the rays, fairly
-<i>set</i>, as their state of keeping in the rocks certify, exist as narrow
-oblong plates of solid bone; and their anterior edges are
-strengthened by a line of osseous defences, that pass from
-scales into rays. And in harmonious accompaniment with
-this fairly <i>stereotyped</i> edition of the ichthyic tail, we find, in
-the fishes in which it appears, the first instance of displacement
-of <i>limb</i>,—the bases of the pectorals being removed from
-their original position, and stuck on to the nape of the neck.
-It may be remarked, in passing, that in the tails of two ganoidal
-genera of this period,—the <i>Coccosteus</i> and <i>Pterichthys</i>,—the
-analogies traceable lie rather in the direction of the tails
-of the Rays than in those of the Sharks; and that one of
-these, the <i>Coccosteus</i>, seems, as has been already intimated,
-to have had no pectorals, while it is doubtful whether in the
-<i>Pterichthys</i> the pectorals were not attached to the shoulder,
-instead on the head. In the Carboniferous and Permian
-systems there occur, especially among the numerous species
-of the genus <i>Palæoniscus</i>, tails of the type exemplified by the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_196"></a>[196]</span>
-internal angle of the tail of the sturgeon: the lozenge-shaped
-scales run in acutely angular patches through their upper lobes;
-but such is their extreme flatness, as shown by the disposition
-of the enamelled covering, that it appears exceedingly doubtful
-whether any vertebral column ran beneath;—they seem
-but to have covered greatly diminished prolongations of
-the spinal cord. In the base of the Secondary division,—another
-long stage towards the existing state of things,—we
-find, with the homocercal tail, which now appears
-for the first time, numerous tails like that of the <i>Lepidosteus</i>,
-(fig. 51,) of an intermediate type;—they are rather
-tails set on awry than truly heterocercal. The diminished
-cord has disappeared from among the fin rays. In the numerous
-Lepidoid genus, and the genera <i>Semionotus</i> and <i>Tetra
-gonolepis</i>,—all ganoidal fishes of the Secondary period—this
-intermediate style is very marked; while in their
-contemporaries of the genera <i>Uræus</i>, <i>Microdon</i>, and <i>Pycnodus</i>,
-we find the earliest examples of true homocercal tails.
-And in the Ctenoids and Cycloids of the Chalk the homocercal
-tail receives its fullest development. It finds bases for
-its rays in broad non-homological processes, that spread out<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_197"></a>[197]</span>
-behind abruptly-terminating vertebræ, (fig. 52,) in the same
-period in which, by a strange process of degradation, the
-four ichthyic limbs are first gathered into a cluster, and hung
-about the neck.<a id="FNanchor_30" href="#Footnote_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;" id="figure52">
-<img src="images/figure52.jpg" width="300" height="250" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 52.</p>
-<p class="caption">TAIL OF PERCH.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_198"></a>[198]</span></p>
-
-<p>I am aware that by some very distinguished comparative
-anatomists, among the rest Professor Owen, the attachment,
-so common among fishes, of the scapular arch and the fore
-limbs to the occipital bone, is regarded, not as a displacement,
-but as a normal and primary condition of the parts. Recognizing
-in the scapular bones the <i>ribs</i> of the occipital <i>centrum</i>,
-the anatomists of this school of course consider them, when
-found articulated to the occiput, as in their proper and original
-place, and as in a state of natural dislocation when removed,
-as in all the reptiles, birds, and mammals, farther
-down. We find Professor Oken borrowing support to his hypothesis
-from this view. The limbs, he tells us, are simply
-ribs, that in the course of ages have been set free, and have
-become by development what they now are. And it is unquestionably
-a curious and interesting fact, that there are certain
-animals, such as the crocodile, in which every centrum of
-the vertebral column, and of every <i>vertebra</i> of the head, has
-its ribs or rib-like appendages, with the exception of the occipital
-<i>centrum</i>. And it is another equally curious fact, that
-there is another certain class of animals, such as the osseous
-horn-covered fishes, with the Sturionidæ, Salamandroidei, and at
-least one genus among the Placoids, (the Chimæroidei,) in which
-this occipital centrum bears as its <i>ribs</i> the scapular bones,
-with their appendages the fore limbs. It is the <i>centrum</i> without
-<i>ribs</i> that is selected in these animals as the centrum to which the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_199"></a>[199]</span>
-scapular <i>ribs</i> should be attached. Be it remembered, however,
-that while it is unquestionably the part of the comparative
-anatomist to determine the relations and homologies of
-those parts of which all animals are composed, and to interpret
-the significancy in the scale of being of the various
-modes and forms in which they exist, it is as unquestionably
-the part of the geologist to declare their history, and the
-order of their succession <i>in time</i>. The questions which fall
-to be determined by the geologist and anatomist are entirely
-different. It is the function of the anatomist to decide regarding
-the high and the low, the typical and the aberrant;
-and so, beginning at what is lowest or highest in the scale, or
-least or most symmetrical in type, he passes through the intermediate
-forms to the opposite extreme: and such is the
-order natural and proper to his science. It is the vocation of
-the geologist, on the other hand, to decide regarding the early
-and the late. It is with <i>time</i>, not with <i>rank</i>, that he has to
-deal. Nor is it in the least surprising that he should seem at
-issue with the comparative anatomist, when, in classifying his
-groupes of organized being according to the periods of their
-appearance, there is an order of arrangement forced upon
-him, different from that which, on an entirely different principle,
-the anatomist pursues. Nor can there be a better
-illustration of a collision of this kind, than the one furnished
-by the case in point. That peculiarity of structure which, as
-the lowest in the vertebral skeleton, is to the comparative
-anatomist the primary and original one, and which, as such,
-furnishes him with his starting point, is to the geologist not
-primary, but secondary, simply because it was not primary,
-but secondary, in the order of its occurrence. It belongs,
-so far as we yet know, not to the <i>first</i> period of vertebrate
-existence, but to the <i>second</i>; and appears in geologic<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_200"></a>[200]</span>
-history as does that savage state which certain philosophers
-have deemed the original condition of the human species, in
-the history of civilization, when read by the light of the Revealed
-Record, under the shadow of those gigantic ruins of
-the East that date only a few centuries after the Flood. It is
-found to be a <i>degradation</i> first introduced during the lapse of
-an intermediate age,—not the normal condition which obtained
-during the long cycles of the primal one. It indicates, not
-the starting point from which the race of creation began, but the
-stage of retrogradation beyond it at which the pilgrims who set
-out in a direction opposite to that of the goal first arrived.<a id="FNanchor_31" href="#Footnote_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_201"></a>[201]</span></p>
-
-<p>This fact of degradation, strangely indicated in geologic
-history, with reference to all the greater divisions of the
-animal kingdom, has often appeared to me a surpassingly
-wonderful one. We can see but imperfectly, in those twilight
-depths to which all such subjects necessarily belong;
-and yet at times enough does appear to show us what a
-very superficial thing infidelity may be. The general advance
-in creation has been incalculably great. The lower
-divisions of the vertebrata preceded the higher;—the fish<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_202"></a>[202]</span>
-preceded the reptile, the reptile preceded the bird, the bird
-preceded the mammiferous quadruped, and the mammiferous
-quadruped preceded man. And yet, is there one of these
-great divisions in which, in at least some prominent feature,
-the present, through this mysterious element of degradation,
-is not inferior to the past? There was a time in which the
-ichthyic form constituted the highest example of life; but
-the seas during that period did not swarm with fish of the
-degraded type. There was, in like manner, a time when all<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_203"></a>[203]</span>
-the carnivora and all the herbivorous quadrupeds were represented
-by reptiles; but there are no such magnificent reptiles
-on the earth now as reigned over it then. There was an
-after time, when birds seem to have been the sole representatives
-of the warm-blooded animals; but we find, from the
-prints of their feet left in sandstone, that the tallest men
-might have</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Walked under their huge legs, and peeped about.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">Further, there was an age when the quadrupedal mammals<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_204"></a>[204]</span>
-were the magnates of creation; but it was an age in which
-the sagacious elephant, now extinct, save in the comparatively
-small Asiatic and African circles, and restricted to two
-species, was the inhabitant of every country of the Old
-World, from its southern extremity to the frozen shores of
-the northern ocean; and when vast herds of a closely allied
-and equally colossal genus occupied its place in the New.
-And now, in the times of the high-placed human dynasty,—of
-those formally delegated monarchs of creation, whose
-nature it is to look behind them upon the past, and before
-them, with mingled fear and hope, upon the future,—do we
-not as certainly see the elements of a state of ever-sinking
-degradation, which is to exist for ever, as of a state of ever-increasing
-perfectibility, to which there is to be no end?
-Nay, of a higher race, of which we know but little, this
-much we at least know, that they long since separated into
-two great classes,—that of the “elect angels,” and of “angels,
-that kept not their first estate.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_205"></a>[205]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_X">EVIDENCE OF THE SILURIAN MOLLUSCS—OF THE FOSSIL FLORA.<br />
-ANCIENT TREE.</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>After dwelling at such length on the earlier fishes, it may
-seem scarce necessary to advert to their lower contemporaries
-the mollusca,—that great division of the animal kingdom
-which Cuvier places second in the descending order, in his
-survey of the entire series, and first among the invertebrates;
-and which Oken regards as the division out of which
-the immediately preceding class of the vertebral animals have
-been developed. “The fish,” he says, “is to be viewed as a
-mussel, from between whose shells a monstrous abdomen
-has grown out.” There is, however, a peculiarity in the molluscan
-group of the Silurian system, to which I must be permitted
-briefly to refer, as, to employ the figure of Sterne, it
-presents “two handles” of an essentially different kind, and
-as in all such two-handled cases, the mere special pleader is
-sure to avail himself of only the handle which best suits his
-purpose for the time.</p>
-
-<p>Cuvier’s first and highest class of the molluscs is formed
-of what are termed the Cephalopods,—a class of creatures
-possessed of great freedom of motion: they can walk, swim,
-and seize their prey; they have what even the lowest fishes<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_206"></a>[206]</span>
-such as the lancelet, want,—a brain enclosed in a cartilaginous
-cavity in the head, and perfectly formed organs of sight;
-they possess, too, what is found in no other mollusc,—organs
-of hearing; and in sagacity and activity they prove more than
-matches for the smaller fishes, many of which they overmaster
-and devour. With this highest class there contrasts an
-exceedingly low molluscous class at the bottom of the scale,
-or, at least, at what is now the bottom of the scale; for they
-constitute Cuvier’s <i>fifth</i> class; while his <i>sixth</i> and last, the Cirrhopodes,
-has been since withdrawn from the molluscs altogether,
-and placed in a different division of the animal kingdom.
-And this low class, the Brachiopods, are creatures that,
-living in bivalve shells, unfurnished with spring hinges to throw
-them open, and always fast anchored to the same spot, can but
-thrust forth, through the interstitial chinks of their prison-houses,
-spiral arms, covered with cilia, and winnow the water
-for a living. Now, it so happens that the molluscan group of
-the Silurian system is composed chiefly of these two extreme
-classes. It contains some of the other forms; but they are
-few in number, and give no character to the rocks in which
-they occur. There was nothing by which I was more impressed,
-in a visit to a Silurian region, than that in its ancient
-graveyards, as in those of the present day, though in
-a different sense, the high and the low should so invariably
-meet together. It is, however, not impossible that, in even
-the present state of things, a similar union of the extreme
-forms of the marine mollusca may be taking place in deep-sea
-deposits. Most of the intermediate forms provided with
-shells capable of preservation, such as the shelled Gasteropoda
-and the Conchifers, are either littoral, or restricted to
-comparatively small depths; whereas the Brachiopoda are
-deep-sea shells; and the Cephalopoda may be found voyaging<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_207"></a>[207]</span>
-far from land, in the upper strata of the sea above them. Even
-in the seas that surround our own island, the Brachiopodous molluscs—terebratula
-and crania—have been found, ever since
-deep-sea dredging became common, to be not very rare shells;
-and in the Mediterranean, where they are less rare still,
-fleets of Argonauts, the representatives of a highly organized
-family of the Cephalopods, to which it is now believed the
-Bellerophon of the Palæozoic rocks belonged, may be seen
-skimming along the surface, with sail and oar, high over the
-profound depths in which they lie. And, of course, when
-death comes, that comes to high and low, the remains of both
-Argonauts and Brachiopods must lie together at the bottom, in
-beds almost totally devoid of the intermediate forms.</p>
-
-<p>Now, the author of the “Vestiges,” in maintaining his
-hypothesis, suspends it on the handle furnished him by the
-immense abundance of the Silurian Brachiopods. The Silurian
-period, he says, exhibits “a scanty and most defective
-development of life; so much so, that Mr. Lyell calls it, <i>par
-excellence</i>, the age of Brachiopods, with reference to the by
-no means exalted bivalve shell-fish which forms its predominant
-class. Such being the actual state of the case, I
-must persist in describing even the fauna of this age, which
-we now know was not the first, as, generally speaking, such
-a humble exhibition of the animal kingdom as we might expect,
-upon the development theory, to find at an early stage
-of the history of organization.” The reader will at once discern
-the fallacy here. The Silurian period was peculiarly
-an age of Brachiopods, for in no other period were Brachiopods
-so numerous, specifically or individually, or of such size
-or importance; whereas it was not <i>so peculiarly</i> an age of
-Cephalopods, for these we find introduced in still greater numbers
-during the Liasic and Oolitic periods. In 1848, when<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_208"></a>[208]</span>
-Professor Edward Forbes edited the Palæontological map of
-Britain and Ireland, which forms one of the very admirable
-series of “Johnstone’s Physical Atlas,” the Cephalopods of
-the Silurian rocks of England and Wales were estimated at
-forty-eight species, and the Brachiopods at one hundred and
-fifty; whereas at the same date there were two hundred
-and five Cephalopods of the Oolitic formations enumerated,
-and but fifty-four Brachiopods. It is the molluscs of the inferior,
-not those of the superior class, that constitute (with their
-contemporaries the Trilobites) the characteristic fossils of the
-Silurian rocks; and hence the propriety of the distinctive
-name suggested by Sir Charles Lyell. But in the development
-question, what we have specially to consider is, not the
-<i>numbers</i> of the low, but the <i>standing</i> of the high. A country
-may be distinctively a country of flocks and herds, or a country
-of the carnivorous mammalia, or, like New South Wales or
-the Galapagos, a country of marsupial animals or of reptiles.
-Its human inhabitants may be merely a few hunters or shepherds,
-too inconsiderable in numbers, and too much like
-their brethren elsewhere, to give it any peculiar standing as
-a home of men. But in estimating the highest point in the
-scale to which the animal kingdom has attained within its
-limits, it is of its few men, not of its many beasts, that we
-must take note. And the point to be specially decided regarding
-the organisms of the Silurian system, in this question,
-is, not the proportion in <i>number</i> which the lower forms
-bore to the higher, but the exact <i>rank</i> which the higher bore
-in the scale of existence. Did the system furnish but a
-single Cephalopod or a single fish, we would yet have as
-certainly to determine that the chain of being reached as high
-as the Cephalopod or the fish, as if the remains of these creatures
-constituted its most abundant fossils. The chain of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_209"></a>[209]</span>
-animal life reached quite as high on the evening of the sixth
-day of creation, when the human family was restricted to a
-single pair, as it does now, when our statists reckon up by
-millions the inhabitants of the greater capitals of the world;
-and the special pleader who, in asserting the contrary, would
-insist on determining the point, not by the <i>rank</i> of the men
-of Eden, but by the <i>number</i> of minnows or sticklebacks that
-swarmed in its rivers, might be perhaps deemed ingenious in
-his expedients, but certainly not very judicious in the use of
-them. It is worthy of remark, however, that the Brachiopods
-of those Palæozoic periods in which the group occupied such
-large space in creation, consisted of greatly larger and more
-important animals than any which it contains in the present
-day. It has yielded to what geological history shows to be
-the common fate, and sunk into a state of degradation and
-decline.</p>
-
-<p>The geological history of the vegetable, like that of the
-animal kingdom, has been pressed into the service of the
-development hypothesis; and certainly their respective
-courses, both in actual arrangement and in their relation to
-human knowledge, seem wonderfully alike. It is not much
-more than twenty years since it was held that no exogenous
-plant existed during the Carboniferous period. The frequent
-occurrence of Coniferæ in the Secondary deposits had been
-conclusively determined from numerous specimens; but,
-founding on what seemed a large amount of negative evidence,
-it was concluded that, previous to the Liasic age,
-nature had failed to achieve a tree, and that the rich vegetation
-of the Coal Measures had been exclusively composed
-of magnificent immaturities of the vegetable kingdom,—of
-gigantic ferns and club-mosses, that attained to the size of
-forest trees, and of thickets of the swamp-loving horsetail<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_210"></a>[210]</span>
-family of plants, that well nigh rivalled in height those forests
-of masts which darken the rivers of our great commercial
-cities. Such was the view promulgated by M. Adolphe
-Brongniart; and it may be well to remark that, so far as the
-evidence on which it was based was positive, the view was
-sound. It <i>is</i> a fact, that inferior orders of plants were developed
-in those ages in a style which, in their present state
-of degradation, they never exemplify: they took their place,
-not, as now, among the pigmies and abortions of creation, but
-among its tallest and goodliest productions. It is, however,
-<i>not</i> a fact that they were the highest vegetable forms of their
-time. True exogenous trees also existed in great numbers
-and of vast size. In various localities in the coal fields
-of both England and Scotland,—such as Lennel Braes and
-Allan Bank in Berwickshire, High-Heworth, Fellon, Gateshead,
-and Wideopen near Newcastle-upon-Tyne, and in
-quarries to the west of the city of Durham,—the most
-abundant fossils of the system are its true woods. In the
-quarry of Craigleith, near Edinburgh, three huge trunks have
-been laid open during the last twenty years, within the space
-of about a hundred and fifty yards, and two equally massy
-trunks, within half that space, in the neighboring quarry of
-Granton, all low in the Coal Measures. They lie diagonally
-athwart the strata,—at an angle of about thirty,—with the
-nether and weightier portion of their boles below, like snags
-in the Mississippi; and we infer, from their general direction,
-that the stream to which they reclined must have flowed from
-nearly north-east to south-west. The current was probably
-that of a noble river, which reflected on its broad bosom the
-shadow of many a stately tree. With the exception of one
-of the Granton specimens, which still retains its strong-kneed
-roots, they are all mere portions of trees, rounded at both<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_211"></a>[211]</span>
-ends as if by attrition or decay; and yet one of these portions
-measures about six feet in diameter by sixty-one feet in
-length; another four feet in diameter by seventy feet in
-length; and the others, of various thickness, but all bulky
-enough to equal the masts of large vessels, range in length
-from thirty-six to forty-seven feet. It seems strange to one who
-derives his supply of domestic fuel from the Dalkeith and
-Falkirk coal-fields, that the Carboniferous flora could ever have
-been described as devoid of trees. I can scarce take up a piece
-of coal from beside my study fire, without detecting in it fragments
-of carbonized wood, which almost always exhibit the
-characteristic longitudinal fibres, and not unfrequently the
-medullary rays. Even the trap-rocks of the district enclose,
-in some instances, their masses of lignite, which present in
-their transverse sections, when cut by the lapidary, the net-like
-reticulations of the coniferæ. The fossil botanist, who
-devoted himself chiefly to the study of microscopic structure,
-would have to decide, from the facts of the case, not that
-trees were absent during the Carboniferous period, but that,
-in consequence of their having been present in amazing
-numbers, their remains had entered more palpably and extensively
-into the composition of coal than those of any other
-vegetable.<a id="FNanchor_32" href="#Footnote_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a> So far as is yet known, they all belonged to the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_212"></a>[212]</span>
-two great divisions of the coniferous family, araucarians and
-pines. The huge trees of Craigleith and Granton were of the
-former tribe, and approximate more nearly to <i>Altingia excelsa</i>,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_213"></a>[213]</span>
-the Norfolk-Island pine,—a noble araucarian, that rears its
-proud head from a hundred and sixty to two hundred feet
-over the soil, and exhibits a green and luxuriant breadth of
-foliage rare among the Coniferæ,—than any other living tree.</p>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 250px;" id="figure53">
-<img src="images/figure53.jpg" width="250" height="425" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 53.</p>
-<p class="caption">ALTINGIA EXCELSA, (NORFOLK-ISLAND PINE.)</p>
-<p class="caption"><i>From a young specimen in the Botanic Garden, Edinburgh.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Beyond the Coal Measures terrestrial plants become extremely
-rare. The fossil botanist, on taking leave of the
-lower Carboniferous beds, quits the land, and sets out to sea;
-and it seems in no way surprising, that the specimens which
-he there adds to his herbarium should consist mainly of <i>Fucaceæ</i>
-and <i>Conferveæ</i>. The development hypothesis can borrow
-no support from the simple fact, that while a high terrestrial
-vegetation grows upon dry land, only algæ grow in the sea;
-and even did the Old Red Sandstone and Silurian systems furnish,
-as their vegetable organisms, fucoids exclusively, the
-evidence would amount to no more than simply this, that the
-land of the Palæozoic periods produced plants of the land, and
-the sea of the Palæozoic periods produced plants of the sea.</p>
-
-<p>In the Upper Old Red Sandstone,—the formation of the
-<i>Holoptychius</i> and the <i>Stagonolepis</i>,—the only vegetable remains
-which I have yet seen are of a character so exceedingly
-obscure and doubtful, that all I could venture to premise regarding
-them is, that they <i>seem</i> to be the fragments of sorely
-comminuted fucoids. In the formation of the Middle Old
-Red,—that of the Cephalaspis and the gigantic lobster of Carmylie,—the
-vegetable remains are at once more numerous and
-better defined. I have detected among the gray micaceous
-sandstones of Forfarshire a fucoid furnished with a thick,
-squat stem, that branches into numerous divergent leaflets or
-fronds, of a slim parallelogrammical, grass-like form, and
-which, as a whole, somewhat resembles the scourge of cords
-attached to a handle with which a boy whips his top. And<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_214"></a>[214]</span>
-Professor Fleming describes a still more remarkable vegetable
-organism of the same formation, “which, occurring in
-the form of circular, flat patches, composed each of numerous
-smaller contiguous circular pieces, is altogether not unlike
-what might be expected to result from a compressed berry,
-such as the bramble or rasp.” In the Lower Old Red,—the
-formation of the <i>Coccosteus</i> and <i>Cheiracanthus</i>,—the remains
-of fucoids are more numerous still. There are gray
-slaty beds among the rocks of Navity, that owe their fissile
-character mainly to their layers of carbonized weed; and
-“among the rocks of Sandy-Bay, near Thurso,” says Mr.
-Dick, “the dark impressions of large fucoids are so numerous,
-that they remind one of the interlaced boughs and less
-bulky pine-trunks that lie deep in our mosses.” A portion of
-a stem from the last locality, which I owe to Mr. Dick, measures
-three inches in diameter; but the ill-compacted cellular
-tissue of the algæ is but indifferently suited for preservation;
-and so it exists as a mere coaly film, scarcely half a line in
-thickness.</p>
-
-<p>The most considerable collection of the Lower Old Red
-fucoids which I have yet seen is that of the Rev. Charles
-Clouston of Sandwick, in Orkney,—a skilful cultivator of
-geological science, who has specially directed his palæontological
-inquiries on the vegetable remains of the flagstones of
-his district, as the department in which most remained to be
-done; but his numerous specimens only serve to show what
-a poverty-stricken flora that of the ocean of the Lower Old
-Red Sandstone must have been. I could detect among them
-but two species of plants;—the one an imperfectly preserved
-vegetable, more nearly resembling a club-moss than
-aught else which I have seen, but which bore on its surface,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_215"></a>[215]</span>
-instead of the well-marked scales of the <i>Lycopodiaceæ</i>, irregular
-rows of tubercles, that, when elongated in the profile,
-as sometimes happens, might be mistaken for minute, ill-defined
-leaves; the other, a smooth-stemmed fucoid, existing
-on the stone in most cases as a mere film, in which, however,
-thickly-set longitudinal fibres are occasionally traceable, and
-which may be always distinguished from the other by its
-sharp-edged outline, and from the circumstance that its stems
-continue to retain the same diameter for considerable distances,
-after throwing off at acute angles numerous branches nearly
-as bulky as themselves. In a Thurso specimen, about two
-feet in length, which I owe to the kindness of Mr. Dick, there
-are stems continuous throughout, that, though they ramify
-in that space into from six to eight branches, are nearly as
-thick atop as at bottom. They are the remains, in all probability,
-of a long, flexible weed, that may have somewhat
-resembled those fucoids of the intertropical seas, which,
-streaming slantwise in the tide, rise not unfrequently to the
-surface in from fifteen to twenty fathoms of water; and
-as, notwithstanding their obscurity, they are among the most
-perfect specimens of their class yet found, and contrast with
-the stately araucarians of the Coal Measures, in a style which
-cannot fail to delight the heart of every assertor of the development
-hypothesis, I present them to the reader from Mr.
-Dick’s specimen, in a figure (fig. 54) which, however
-slight its interest, has at least the merit of being true.
-The stone exhibits specimens of the two species of Mr.
-Clouston’s collection,—the sharp-edged, finely-striated
-weed, <i>a</i>, and that roughened by tubercles, <i>b</i>; which, besides
-the distinctive character manifested on its surface, differs
-from the other in rapidly losing breath with every
-branch which it throws off, and, in consequence, runs soon<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_216"></a>[216]</span>
-to a point. The cut on the opposite page (fig. 55) represents
-not inadequately the cortical peculiarities of the two<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_217"></a>[217]</span>
-species when best preserved. The surface of the tubercled one
-will perhaps remind the Algologist of the knobbed surface of
-the thong or receptacle of <i>Himanthalia lorea</i>, a recent fucoid,
-common on the western coast of Scotland, but rare on the
-east. An Orkney specimen lately sent me by Mr. William
-Watt, from a quarry at Skaill, has much the appearance
-of one of the smaller ferns, such as the moor-worts, sea
-spleen-worts, or maiden-hairs. It exists as an impression
-in diluted black, on a ground of dark gray, and has so little
-sharpness of outline, that, like minute figures in oil-paintings,
-it seems more distinct when viewed at arm’s length than
-when microscopically examined; but enough remains to show
-that it must have been a terrestrial, not a marine plant. The
-accompanying print (fig. 56) may be regarded as no unfaithful
-representation of this unique fossil its state of
-imperfect keeping. The vegetation of the Silurian system,
-from its upper beds down till where we reach the zero of life,
-is, like that of the Old Red Sandstone, almost exclusively
-fucoidal. In the older fossiliferous deposits of the system in
-Sweden, Russia, the Lake Districts of England, Canada, and
-the United States, fucoids occur, to the exclusion, so far as is<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_218"></a>[218]</span>
-yet known, of every other vegetable form; and such is their
-abundance in some localities, that they render the argillaceous
-rocks in which they lie diffused, capable of being fired
-as an alum slate, and exist in others as seams of a compact
-anthracite, occasionally used as fuel. They also occur in
-those districts of Wales in which the place and sequence
-of the various Silurian formations were first determined,
-though apparently in a state of keeping from which little can
-be premised regarding their original forms. Sir Roderick
-Murchison sums up his notice of the vegetable remains of the
-system in the province whence it derives its name, by stating
-that he had submitted his specimens to “Mr. Robert Brown
-and Dr. Greville, and that neither of these eminent botanists
-were able to say much more regarding them than that they
-were fucoid-like bodies.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;" id="figure54">
-<img src="images/figure54.jpg" width="300" height="575" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 54.</p>
-<p class="caption">FUCOIDS OF THE LOWER OLD RED SANDSTONE.</p>
-<p class="caption">a. <i>Smooth-stemmed species.</i></p>
-<p class="caption">b. <i>Tubercled species.</i></p>
-<p class="caption">(One sixth nat. size, linear.)</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 300px;" id="figure55">
-<img src="images/figure55.jpg" width="300" height="225" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 55.</p>
-<p class="caption">a. <i>Smooth-stemmed species.</i></p>
-<p class="caption">b. <i>Tubercled species.</i></p>
-<p class="caption">(Natural size.)</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Such are the vegetable organisms of the Old Red Sandstone
-and Silurian systems: they are the remains of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_219"></a>[219]</span>
-ancient marine plants of ancient marine deposits and, as such,
-lend quite as little support to the development hypothesis as
-the recent algæ of our existing seas. The case, stated in its
-most favorable form, amounts simply to this,—that at certain
-early periods,—represented by the Upper and Lower Silurian
-and the Old Red deposits,—the seas produced sea-plants;
-and that, at a certain later period,—that of the Carboniferous
-system,—the land produced land-plants. But even this, did
-it stand alone, would be a <i>too</i> favorable statement. I have
-seen, on one occasion, the fisherman bring up with his nets,
-far in the open sea, a wild rose-bush, that, though it still bore
-its characteristic thorns, was encrusted with serpula, and
-laden with pendulous lobularia. It had been swept from its
-original habitat by some river in flood, that had undermined
-and torn down the bank on which it grew; and after floating
-about, mayhap for months, had become so saturated
-with water, that it could float no longer. And in that single
-rose-bush, dragged up to the light and air from its place
-among Sertularia, Flustra, Serpula, and the deep-sea fucoids,
-I had as certain an evidence of the existence of the dicotyledonous
-plant, as if I had all the families of the Rosaecæ
-before me. Now, we are furnished by the more ancient formations
-with evidence regarding the existence of a terrestrial
-vegetation, such as that which the rose-bush in this case
-supplied. We cannot expect that the proofs should be numerous.
-In the chart of the Pacific attached to the better
-editions of “Cook’s Voyages,” there are several notes along
-the tract of the great navigator, that indicate where, in mid
-ocean, trees or fragments of trees had been picked up.
-These entries, however, are but few, though they belong to
-all the three voyages together: if I remember aright, there
-are only five entries in all,—two in the Northern, and three<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_220"></a>[220]</span>
-in the Southern Pacific. The floating shrub or tree, at a
-great distance from land, is of rare occurrence in even the
-present scene of things, though the breadth of land be great,
-and trees numerous; and in the times of the Silurian and Old
-Red Sandstone systems, when the breadth of land was apparently
-<i>not</i> great, and trees and shrubs, in consequence, <i>not</i>
-numerous, it must have been of rarer occurrence still. We
-learn, however, from Sir Charles Lyell, that in the “Hamilton
-group of the United States,—a series of beds that corresponds
-in many of its fossils with the Ludlow rocks of
-England,—plants allied to the <i>Lepidodendra</i> of the Carboniferous
-type are abundant; and that in the lower Devonian
-strata of New York the same plants occur associated with
-ferns.” And I am able to demonstrate, from an interesting
-fossil at present before me, that there existed in the period
-of the Lower Old Red Sandstone vegetable forms of a class
-greatly higher than either <i>Lepidodendra</i> or ferns.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-
-<div class="figmulti" style="width: 300px;" id="figure56">
-<img src="images/figure56.jpg" width="300" height="375" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 56.</p>
-<p class="caption">FERN? OF THE LOWER OLD RED SANDSTONE.</p>
-<p class="caption">(Natural size.)</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figmulti" style="width: 300px;" id="figure57">
-<img src="images/figure57.jpg" width="300" height="325" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 57.</p>
-<p class="caption">LIGNITE OF THE LOWER OLD RED SANDSTONE.</p>
-<p class="caption">(One third nat. size, linear.)</p>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In my little work on the Old Red Sandstone, I have referred
-to an apparent lignite of the Lower Old Red of Cromarty,
-which presented, when viewed by the microscope, marks of
-the internal fibre. The surface, when under the glass, resembled,
-I said, a bundle of horse-hairs lying stretched in parallel
-lines: and in this specimen alone, it was added, had I
-found aught in the Lower Old Red Sandstone approaching to
-proof of the existence of dry land. About four years ago I had
-this lignite put stringently to the question by Mr. Sanderson,
-and deeply interesting was the result. I must first mention,
-however, that there cannot rest the shadow of a doubt regarding
-the place of the organism in the geologic scale. It is unequivocally
-a fossil of the Lower Old Red Sandstone. I found it
-partially embedded, with many other nodules half-disinterred
-by the sea, in an ichthyolitic deposit, a few hundred yards to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_221"></a>[221]</span>
-the east of the town of Cromarty, which occurs more than
-four hundred feet over the Great Conglomerate base of the
-system. A nodule that lay immediately beside it contained a
-well-preserved specimen of the <i>Coccosteus Decipiens</i>; and in
-the nodule in which the lignite itself is contained, (fig. 57,)
-the practised eye may detect a scattered group of scales of
-<i>Diplacanthus</i>, a scarce less characteristic organism of the lower
-formation. And what, asks the reader, is the character of
-this very ancient vegetable,—the most ancient, by three
-whole formations, that has presented its internal structure
-to the microscope? Is it as low in the scale of development
-as in the geological scale? Does this venerable Adam of the
-forest appear, like the Adam of the infidel, as a squalid, ill-formed
-savage, with a rugged shaggy nature, which it would
-require the suggestive necessities of many ages painfully to
-lick into civilization? Or does it appear rather like the Adam<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_222"></a>[222]</span>
-of the poet and the theologian, independent, in its instantaneously-derived
-perfection, of all after development?</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Adam, the goodliest man of men since born</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">His sons.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">Is its tissue vascular or cellular, or, like that of some of the
-cryptogamia, intermediate? Or what, in fine, is the nature
-and bearing of its mute but emphatic testimony, on that doctrine
-of progressive development of late so strangely resuscitated?</p>
-
-<p>In the first place, then, this ancient fossil is a true wood,—a
-Dicotyledonous or Polycotyledonous <i>Gymnosperm</i>, that, like
-the pines and larches of our existing forests, bore naked seeds,
-which, in their state of germination, developed either double
-lobes to shelter the embryo within, or shot out a fringe of verticillate
-spikes, which performed the same protective functions,
-and that, as it increased in bulk year after year, received
-its accessions of growth in outside layers. In the transverse
-section the cells bear the reticulated appearance which distinguish
-the coniferæ, (fig. 58, <i>a</i>;) the lignite had been exposed
-in its bed to a considerable degree of pressure; and so the openings
-somewhat resemble the meshes of a net that has been
-drawn a little awry; but no general obliteration of their original
-character has taken place, save in minute patches, where
-they have been injured by compression or the bituminizing
-process. All the tubes indicated by the openings are, as in recent
-coniferæ, of nearly the same size; and though, as in
-many of the more ancient lignites, there are no indications of
-annual rings, the direction of the medullary rays is distinctly
-traceable. The longitudinal sections are rather less distinct
-than the transverse one; in the section parallel to the radius
-of the stem or bole the circular disks of the coniferæ<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_223"></a>[223]</span>
-were at first not at all detected; and, as since shown by a
-very fine microscope, they appear simply as double and triple
-lines of undefined dots, (<i>b</i>,) that somewhat resemble the stippled
-markings of the miniature painter; nor are the openings
-of the medullary rays frequent in the tangental section
-(<i>i. e.</i> that parallel to the bark,) (<i>c</i>;) but nothing can be better
-defined than the peculiar arrangement of the woody fibre,
-and the longitudinal form of the cells. Such is the character
-of this, the most ancient of lignites yet found, that yields to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_224"></a>[224]</span>
-the microscope the peculiarities of its original structure. We
-find in it an unfallen <i>Adam</i>,—not a half-developed savage.<a id="FNanchor_33" href="#Footnote_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;" id="figure58">
-<img src="images/figure58.jpg" width="300" height="450" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 58.</p>
-<p class="caption">INTERNAL STRUCTURE OF LIGNITE OF LOWER OLD RED SANDSTONE.</p>
-<p class="caption">a. <i>Transverse section.</i></p>
-<p class="caption">b. <i>Longitudinal section, (parallel to radius, or medullary rays.)</i></p>
-<p class="caption">c. <i>Longitudinal section, (tangental, or parallel to the bark.)</i></p>
-<p class="caption">(Mag. forty diameters.)</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The olive leaf which the dove brought to Noah established
-at least three important facts, and indicated a few more.
-It showed most conclusively that there was dry land, that
-there were olive trees, and that the climate of the surrounding
-region, whatever change it might have undergone,
-was still favorable to the development of vegetable life.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_225"></a>[225]</span>
-And, further, it might be very safely inferred from it, that if
-olive trees had survived, other trees and plants must have
-survived also; and that the dark muddy prominences round
-which the ebbing currents were fast sweeping to lower levels,
-would soon present, as in antediluvian times, their coverings of
-cheerful green. The olive leaf spoke not of merely a partial,
-but of a general vegetation. Now, the coniferous lignite of
-the Lower Old Red Sandstone we find charged, like the olive
-leaf, with a various and singularly interesting evidence. It is
-something to know, that in the times of the <i>Coccosteus</i> and
-<i>Asterolepis</i> there existed dry land, and that that land wore, as
-at after periods, its soft, gay mantle of green. It is something
-also to know, that the verdant tint was not owing to a
-profuse development of the mere immaturities of the vegetable
-kingdom,—crisp, slow-growing lichens, or watery spore-propagated
-fungi that shoot up to their full size in a night,—nor
-even to an abundance of the more highly organized families
-of the liverworts and the mosses. These may have
-abounded then, as now; though we have not a shadow of
-evidence that they did. But while we have no proof whatever
-of <i>their</i> existence, we have conclusive proof that there
-existed orders and families of a rank far above them. On
-the dry land of the Lower Old Red Sandstone, on which,
-according to the theory of Adolphe Brogniart, nothing higher
-than a lichen or a moss could have been expected, the ship-carpenter
-might have hopefully taken axe in hand, to explore
-the woods for some such stately pine as the one described by
-Milton,—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Hewn on Norwegian hills, to be the mast</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Of some great admiral.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Viewed simply in its picturesque aspect, this <i>olive leaf</i> of
-the Old Red seems not at all devoid of poetry. We sail<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_226"></a>[226]</span>
-upwards into the high geologic zones, passing from ancient
-to still more ancient scenes of being; and, as we voyage
-along, find ever in the surrounding prospect, as in the existing
-scene from which we set out, a graceful intermixture of land
-and water, continent, river, and sea. We first coast along
-the land of the Tertiary, inhabited by the strange quadrupeds
-of Cuvier, and waving with the reeds and palms of the Paris
-Basin; the land of the Wealden, with its gigantic iguanodon
-rustling amid its tree ferns and its cycadeæ, comes next;
-then comes the green land of the Oolite, with its little pouched
-insectivorous quadruped, its flying reptiles, its vast jungles of
-the Brora equisetum, and its forests of the Helmsdale pine;
-and then, dimly as through a haze, we mark, as we speed on,
-the thinly scattered islands of the New Red Sandstone, and
-pick up in our course a large floating leaf, veined like that of
-a cabbage, which not a little puzzles the botanists of the expedition.
-And now we near the vast Carboniferous continent,
-and see along the undulating outline, between us and the sky,
-the strange forms of a vegetation, compared with which that
-of every previously seen land seems stunted and poor. We
-speed day after day along endless forests, in which gigantic
-club-mosses wave in air a hundred feet over head, and skirt
-interminable marshes, in which thickets of reeds overtop the
-mast-head. And, where mighty rivers come rolling to the
-sea, we mark, through the long-retiring vistas which they open
-into the interior, the higher grounds of the country covered
-with coniferous trees, and see doddered trunks of vast size,
-like those of Granton and Craigleith, reclining under the banks
-in deep muddy reaches, with their decaying tops turned adown
-the current. At length the furthermost promontory of this
-long range of coast comes full in view: we near it,—we
-have come up abreast of it: we see the shells of the Mountain<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_227"></a>[227]</span>
-Limestone glittering white along its further shore, and
-the green depths under our keel lightened by the flush of
-innumerable corals; and then, bidding farewell to the land
-forever,—for so the geologists of but five years ago would
-have advised,—we launch into the unmeasured ocean of the
-Old Red, with its three consecutive zones of animal life.
-Not a single patch of land more do those geologic charts
-exhibit which we still regard as new. The zones of the
-Silurian and Cambrian succeed the zones of the Old Red;
-and, darkly fringed by an obscure bank of cloud ranged
-along the last zone in the series, a night that never dissipates
-settles down upon the deep. Our voyage, like that of the old
-fabulous navigators of five centuries ago, terminates on the
-sea in a thick darkness, beyond which there lies no shore and
-there dawns no light. And it is in the middle of this vast
-ocean, just where the last zone of the Old Red leans against
-the first zone of the Silurian, that we have succeeded in discovering
-a solitary island unseen before,—a shrub-bearing
-land, much enveloped in fog, but with hills that at least look
-green in the distance. There are patches of floating sea-weed
-much comminuted by the surf all around it; and on
-one projecting headland we see clear through our glasses a
-cone-bearing tree.</p>
-
-<p>This certainly is not the sort of arrangement demanded
-by the exigencies of the development hypothesis. A true
-wood at the base of the Old Red Sandstone, or a true Placoid
-in the Limestones of Bala, very considerably beneath the base
-of the Lower Silurian system, are untoward misplacements
-for the purposes of the Lamarckian; and who that has
-watched the progress of discovery for the last twenty years,
-and seen the place of the earliest ichthyolite transferred from
-the Carboniferous to the Cambrian system, and that of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_228"></a>[228]</span>
-earliest exogenous lignite from the Lias to the Lower Devonian,
-will now venture to say that fossil wood may not
-yet be detected as low in the scale as any vegetable organism
-whatever, or fossil fish as low as the remains of any animal?
-But though the response of the earlier geologic systems be
-thus unfavorable to the development hypothesis, may not
-men such as the author of the “Vestiges” urge, that the
-geologic evidence, taken as a whole, and in its bearing on
-groupes and periods, establishes the general fact that the
-lower plants and animals preceded the higher,—that the
-conifera, for instance, preceded our true forest trees, such as
-the oak and elm,—that, in like manner, the fish preceded
-the reptile, that the reptile preceded the bird, that the bird
-preceded the mammiferous quadruped and the quadrumana,
-and that the mammiferous quadruped and the quadrumana
-preceded man? Assuredly yes! They may and do urge
-that Geology furnishes evidence of such a succession of existences;
-and the arrangement seems at once a very wonderful
-and very beautiful one. Of that great and imposing
-procession of being of which this world has been the scene,
-the programme has been admirably marshalled. But the
-order of the arrangement in no degree justifies the inference
-based upon it by the Lamarckian. The fact that fishes and
-reptiles were created on an earlier day than the beasts of the
-field and the human family, gives no ground whatever for
-the belief that “the peopling of the earth was one of a
-natural kind, requiring time,” or that the reptiles and fishes
-have been not only the predecessors, but also the progenitors
-of the beasts and of man. The geological phenomena,
-even had the author of the “Vestiges” been consulted
-in their arrangement, and permitted to determine their sequence,
-would yet have failed to furnish, not merely an<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_229"></a>[229]</span>
-adequate foundation for the development hypothesis, but even
-the slightest presumption in its favor. In making good the
-assertion, may I ask the reader to follow me through the
-details of a simple though somewhat lengthened illustration?</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_230"></a>[230]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XI">SUPERPOSITION NOT PARENTAL RELATION.<br />
-THE BEGINNINGS OF LIFE.</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Several thousand years ago, ere the upheaval of the last
-of our raised beaches, there existed somewhere on the British
-coast a submarine bed, rich in sea-weed and the less destructible
-zoophytes, and inhabited by the commoner crustaceæ
-and molluscs. Shoals of herrings frequented it every autumn,
-haunted by their usual enemies the dog-fish, the cod, and the
-porpoise; and, during the other seasons of the year, it was
-swum over by the ling, the hake, and the turbot. A considerable
-stream, that traversed a wide extent of marshy
-country, waving with flags and reeds, and in which the frog
-and the newt bred by millions, entered the sea a few hundred
-yards away, and bore down, when in flood, its modicum
-of reptilian remains, some of which, sinking over the submarine
-bed, found a lodgment at the bottom. Portions of
-reeds and flags were also occasionally entombed, with now
-and then boughs of the pine and juniper, swept from the
-higher grounds. Through frequent depositions of earthy
-matter brought down by the streamlet, and of sand thrown
-up by the sea, a gradual elevation of the bottom went on,
-till at length the deep-sea bed came to exist as a shallow
-bank, over which birds of the wader family stalked mid-leg<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_231"></a>[231]</span>
-deep when plying for food; and on one occasion a small porpoise,
-losing his way, and getting entangled amid its shoals,
-perished on it, and left his carcass to be covered up by its
-mud and silt. That elevation of the land, or recession of the
-sea, to which the country owes its last acquired marginal strip
-of soil, took place, and the shallow bank became a flat
-meadow, raised some six or eight feet above the sea-level.
-Herbs, shrubs, and trees, in course of time covered it over;
-and then, as century succeeded century, it gathered atop a
-thick stratum of peaty mould, embedding portions of birch
-and hazel bushes, and a few doddered oaks. When in this
-state, at a comparatively recent period, an Italian boy, accompanied
-by his monkey, was passing over it, when the poor
-monkey, hard-wrought and ill-fed, and withal but indifferently
-suited originally for braving the rigors of a keen northern
-climate, lay down and died, and his sorrowing master
-covered up the remains. Not many years after, the mutilated
-corpse of a poor shipwrecked sailor was thrown up, during a
-night-storm, on the neighboring beach: it was a mere fragment
-of the human frame,—a mouldering unsightly mass, decomposing
-in the sun; and a humane herd-boy, scooping out a
-shallow grave for it, immediately over that of the monkey,
-buried it up. Last of all, a farmer, bent on agricultural improvement,
-furrowed the flat meadow to the depth of some
-six or eight feet, by a broad ditch, that laid open its organic
-contents from top to bottom. And then a philosopher of the
-school of Maillet and Lamarck, chancing to come that way,
-stepped aside to examine the phenomena, and square them
-with his theory.</p>
-
-<p>First, along the bottom of the deep ditch he detects marine
-organisms of a low order, and generally of a small size<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_232"></a>[232]</span>
-There are dark indistinct markings traversing the gray silt
-which he correctly enough regards as the remains of fucoids
-and blent with these, he finds the stony cells of flustra, the
-calcareous spindles of the sea-pen, the spines of echinus,
-and the thin granular plates of the crustacea. Layers of mussel
-and pecten shells come next, mixed up with the shells of
-buccinum, natica, and trochus. Over the shells there occur
-defensive spines of the dog-fish, blent with the button-like,
-thornset boucles of the ray. And the minute skeletons of herrings,
-with the vertebral and cerebral bones of cod, rest over
-these in turn. He finds, also, well-preserved bits of reed, and
-a fragment of pine. Higher up, the well-marked bones of
-the frog occur, and the minute skeleton of a newt; higher
-still, the bones of birds of the diver family; higher still, the
-skeleton of a porpoise; and still higher, he discovers that of a
-monkey, resting amid the decayed boles and branches of dicotyledonous
-plants and trees. He pursues his search, vastly
-delighted to find his doctrine of progressive development so
-beautifully illustrated; and last of all he detects, only a few
-inches from the surface, the broken remains of the poor sailor.
-And having thus collected his facts, he sets himself to collate
-them with his hypothesis. To hold that the zoophytes had
-been created zoophytes, the molluscs molluscs, the fishes
-fishes, the reptiles reptiles, or the man a man, would be, according
-to our philosopher, alike derogatory to the Divine wisdom
-and to the acumen and vigor of the human intellect:
-it would be “<i>distressing to him to be compelled to picture the
-power of God, as put forth in any other manner than in those
-slow, mysterious, universal laws, which have so plainly an
-eternity to work in</i>;” nor, with so large an amount of evidence
-before him as that which the ditch furnishes,—evidence<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_233"></a>[233]</span>
-conclusive to the effect that creation is but development,—does
-he find it necessary either to cramp his faculties or outrage his
-taste, by a weak yielding to the requirements of any such belief.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the farmer,—a plain, observant, elderly man,
-comes up, and he and the philosopher enter into conversation.
-“I have been reading the history of creation in the
-side of your deep ditch,” says the philosopher, “and find the
-record really very complete. Look there,” he adds, pointing
-to the unfossiliferous strip that runs along the bottom of the
-bank; “there, life, both vegetable and animal, first began.
-It began, struck by electricity out of albumen, as a congeries
-of minute globe-shaped atoms,—each a hollow
-sphere within a sphere, as in the well-known Chinese puzzle;
-and from these living atoms were all the higher forms
-progressively developed. The ditch, of course, exhibits none
-of the atoms with which being first commenced; for the
-atoms don’t keep;—we merely see their place indicated by
-that unfossiliferous band at the bottom; but we may detect
-immediately over it almost the first organisms into which—parting
-thus early into the two great branches of organic being—they
-were developed. <i>There</i> are the fucoids, first-born
-among vegetables,—and <i>there</i> the zoophytes, well nigh the
-lowest of the animal forms. The fucoids are marine plants;
-for, according to Oken, ‘all life is from the sea,—none from
-the continent;’ but <i>there</i>, a few feet higher, we may see the
-remains of reeds and flags,—semi-aqueous, semi-aerial plants
-of the comparatively low monocotyledonous order into which
-the fucoids were developed; higher still we detect fragments
-of pines, and, I think, juniper,—trees and shrubs of the land
-of an intermediate order, into which the reeds and flags were
-developed in turn; and in that peaty layer immediately beneath
-the vegetable mould, there occur boughs and trunks<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_234"></a>[234]</span>
-of blackened oak,—a noble tree of the dicotyledonous
-division,—the highest to which vegetation in its upward course
-has yet attained. Nor is the progress of the other great branch
-of organized being—that of the animal kingdom—less distinctly
-traceable. The zoophytes became crustacea and molluscs,—the
-crustacea and molluscs, dog-fishes and herrings,—the
-dog-fish, a low placoid, shot up chiefly into turbot, cod,
-and ling; but the smaller osseous fish was gradually converted
-into a batrachian reptile; in short, the herring became a
-frog,—an animal that still testifies to its ichthyological
-origin, by commencing life as a fish. Gradually, in the
-course of years, the reptile, expanding in size and improving
-in faculty, passed into a warm-blooded porpoise; the porpoise
-at length, tiring of the water as he began to know better,
-quitted it altogether, and became a monkey, and the monkey
-by slow degrees improved into man,—yes, into man, my
-friend, who has still a tendency, especially when just shooting
-up to his full stature, and studying the ‘Vestiges,’ to resume
-the monkey. Such, Sir, is the true history of creation, as
-clearly recorded in the section of earth, moss, and silt, which
-you have so opportunely laid bare. Where that ditch now
-opens, the generations of the man atop lived, died, and were
-developed. <i>There</i> flourished and decayed his great-great-great-great-grandfather
-the sea-pen,—his great-great-great-grandfather
-the mussel,—his great-great-grandfather the herring,—his
-great-grandfather the frog,—his grandfather the
-porpoise,—and his father the monkey. And <i>there</i> also lived,
-died, and were developed, the generations of the oak, from the
-kelp-weed and tangle to the reed and the flag, and from the
-reed and the flag, to the pine, the juniper, the hazel, and the
-birch.”</p>
-
-<p>“Master,” replies the farmer, “I see you are a scholar<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_235"></a>[235]</span>
-and, I suspect, a wag. It would take a great deal of believing
-to believe all that. In the days of my poor old neighbor
-the infidel weaver, who died of <i>delirium tremens</i> thirty
-years ago, I used to read Tom Paine; and, as I was a little
-wild at the time, I was, I am afraid, a bit of a sceptic. It
-wasn’t easy work always to be as unbelieving as Tom, especially
-when the conscience within got queasy; but it would
-be a vast deal easier, Master, to <i>doubt</i> with Tom than to
-<i>believe</i> with you. I am a plain man, but not quite a fool;
-and as I have now been looking about me in this neighborhood
-for the last forty years, I have come to know
-that it gives no assurance that any one thing grew out of
-any other thing because it chances to be found atop of it,
-Master. See, yonder is Dobbin lying lazily atop of his
-bundle of hay; and yonder little Jack, with bridle in hand,
-and he in a few minutes will be atop of Dobbin. And all I
-see in that ditch, Master, from top to bottom, is neither more
-nor less than a certain top-upon-bottom order of things. I see
-sets of bones and dead plants lying on the top of other sets
-of bones and dead plants,—things lying atop of things, as I
-say, like Dobbin on the hay and Jack upon Dobbin. I
-doubt not the sea was once here, Master, just as it was once
-where you see the low-lying field yonder, which I won from
-it ten years ago. I have carted tangle and kelp-weed where
-I now cut clover and rye-grass, and have gathered periwinkles
-where I now see snails. But it is <i>clean against experience</i>, as
-my poor old neighbor the weaver used to say,—against <i>my</i>
-experience, Master,—that it was the kelp-weed that became
-the rye-grass, or that the periwinkles freshened into snails.
-The kelp-weed and periwinkles belong to those plants and
-animals of the sea that we find growing in <i>only</i> the sea; the
-rye-grass and snails, to those plants and animals of the land<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_236"></a>[236]</span>
-that we find growing on <i>only</i> the land. It is contrary to all
-experience, and all testimony too, that the one passed into
-the other, and so I cannot believe it; but I do and must believe,
-instead,—for it is not contrary to experience, and much
-according to testimony,—that the Author of all created both
-land productions and sea productions at the ‘times before appointed,’
-and ‘determined the bounds of their habitation.’
-‘By faith we understand that the worlds were framed by the
-word of God;’ and I find I can be a believer on God’s
-terms at a much less expense of credulity than an infidel on
-yours.”</p>
-
-<p>But in this form at least it can be scarce necessary that the
-argument should be prolonged.</p>
-
-<p>The geological phenomena, I repeat, even had the author
-of the “Vestiges” been consulted in their arrangement, and
-permitted to determine their sequence, would fail to furnish
-a single presumption in favor of the development hypothesis.
-Does the ditch-side of my illustration furnish it with a
-single favoring presumption? The arrangement and sequence
-of the various organisms are complete in both the
-zoological and phytological branch. The flag and reed succeed
-the fucoid; the fir and juniper succeed the flag and reed; and
-the hazel, birch, and oak succeed the fir and juniper. In like
-manner, and with equal regularity, zoophytes, the radiata, the
-articulata, mollusca, fishes, reptiles, birds, and mammals, are
-ranged, the superior in succession over the inferior classes, in
-the true ascending order; and yet we at once see that the
-evidence of the ditch-side, amounting in the aggregate to no
-more than this, that the remains of the higher lie over those
-of the lower organisms, gives not a shadow of support to the
-hypothesis that the lower produced the higher. For, according
-to the honest farmer, the fact that any one thing is<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_237"></a>[237]</span>
-found lying on the top of any other thing, furnishes no presumption
-whatever that the thing below stands in the relation
-of parent to the thing above. And the evidence which
-the well-ranged organisms of the ditch-side do not furnish,
-the organisms of the entire geologic scale, even were they
-equally well ranged, would fail to supply. The fossiliferous
-portion of the ditch-side of my illustration may be, let us suppose,
-some five or six <i>feet</i> in thickness; the fossiliferous
-portion of the earth’s crust must be some five or six <i>miles</i> in
-thickness. But the mere circumstance of space introduces no
-new element into the question. Equally in both cases the
-fact of superposition is not <i>identical</i> with the fact of parental
-relation, nor even in any degree an <i>analogous</i> fact.</p>
-
-<p>As, however, the succession of remains in the fossiliferous
-series of rocks is infinitely less favorable to the development
-hypothesis than that of the organisms of the ditch-side,
-it is not very surprising that the disciples of the development
-school should be now evincing a disposition to escape from
-the ascertained facts of Geology, and the legitimate conclusions
-based upon these, unto unknown and unexplored provinces
-of the science; or that they should be found virtually
-urging, that though some of the ascertained facts may seem
-to bear against them, the facts not yet ascertained may be
-found telling in their favor. Such, in effect, is the course
-taken by the author of the “Vestiges,” in his “Explanations,”
-when, availing himself of a difference of opinion which exists
-among some of our most accomplished geologists regarding
-the first epochs of organized existence, he takes part
-with the section who hold that we have not yet penetrated
-to the deposits representative of the dawn of being, and that
-fossil-charged formations may yet be detected beneath the
-oldest rocks of what is now regarded as the lowest fossiliferous<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_238"></a>[238]</span>
-system. Sir Charles Lyell and Mr. Leonard Hornet
-represent the abler and better-known assertors of this last
-view; while Sir Roderick Murchison and Professor Sedgwick
-rank among the more distinguished assertors of the antagonist
-one. It would be of course utterly presumptuous in
-the writer of these pages to attempt deciding a question
-regarding which such men differ; but in forming a judgment
-for myself, various considerations incline me to hold,
-that the point is now very nearly determined at which,
-to employ the language of Sir Roderick, “life was first
-breathed into the waters.” The pyramid of organized existence,
-as it ascends in the by-past eternity, inclines sensibly
-towards its apex,—that apex of “<i>beginning</i>” in which,
-on far other than geological grounds, it is our privilege to
-believe. The broad base of the superstructure, planted on
-the existing <i>now</i>, stretches across the entire scale of life,
-animal and vegetable; but it contracts as it rises into the
-past;—man—the quadrumana—the quadrupedal mammal—the
-bird—and the reptile—are each in succession struck
-from off its breadth, till we at length see it with the vertebrata,
-represented by only the fish, narrowing, as it were,
-to a point; and though the clouds of the upper region may
-hide its extreme apex, we infer from the declination of its
-sides, that it cannot penetrate much farther into the profound.
-When Steele and Addison were engaged in breaking
-up, piecemeal, their Spectator Club,—killing off good
-Sir Roger de Coverly with a defluction, marrying Will
-Honeycomb to his tenant’s daughter, and sending away
-Captain Sentry and Sir Andrew Freeport to their estates
-to the country,—it was shrewdly inferred that the “Spectator”
-himself was very soon to quit the field; and the
-sudden discontinuance of his lucubrations justified the inference.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_239"></a>[239]</span>
-And a corresponding style of reasoning, based
-on the corresponding fact of the breaking up and piecemeal
-disappearance of the group of organized being, seems
-equally admissible. It is somewhat difficult to conceive how
-at least <i>many</i> more volumes of the geologic record than the
-known ones could be got up without the <i>club</i>. Further,—so far
-as yet appears, the fish must have lived in advance of the reptile
-during the three protracted periods of the Old Red
-Sandstone, the two still more protracted periods of the Upper
-and Lower Silurians, and the perhaps more protracted
-period still of the Cambrian deposits;—in all, apparently, a
-greatly more extended space than that in which the reptile
-lived in advance of the quadrupedal mammal, or the
-quadrupedal mammal lived in advance of man. On principles
-somewhat similar to those on which, with reference to
-the average term of life, the genealogist fixes the probable
-period of some birth in his chain of succession of which he
-cannot determine the exact date, it seems natural to infer
-that the <i>birth</i> of the fish should have taken place at least not
-earlier than the times of the Cambrian system.</p>
-
-<p>There is another consideration, of at least equal, if not greater
-weight. A general correspondence is found to obtain in widely-separated
-localities, in the organic contents of that lowest
-band of the Lower Silurian or Cambrian system in which fossils
-have been detected. In Russia, in Sweden, in Norway, in the
-Lake district of England, and in the United States, there are
-certain rocks which occupy relatively the same place, and enclose
-what may be described generally as the same remains.
-They occur in Scandinavia as that “fucoidal band” of Sir Roderick
-Murchison which forms the base of the vast Palæozoic
-basin of the Baltic; they exist in Cumberland and Westmoreland
-as the Skiddaw slates of Professor Sedgwick, and bear<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_240"></a>[240]</span>
-also their fucoidal impressions, blent with graptolites; they
-are present in North America as those Potsdam sandstones of
-the States’ geologists in which fucoids so abound, mixed with
-a minute lingula, that they impart to some portions of the
-strata a carboniferous character. But with these deep-lying
-beds in all the several localities, thousands of miles apart, in
-which their passage into the inferior deposits has been traced,
-fossils cease. And why cease with them? In one locality
-the ancient ocean may have been of such a depth in the
-period immediately <i>previous</i>, and represented, in consequence,
-by the strata immediately <i>beneath</i>, that no animal could have
-<i>lived</i> at its bottom,—though I do not well see why the remains
-of those animals who, like the shark and pilot-fish, are
-frequently seen swimming over the profoundest depths, might
-not, did such exist at the time, be notwithstanding <i>found</i> at its
-bottom; or in another locality every trace of organization in
-the nether rocks may have been obliterated, at some posterior
-period, by fire. But it is difficult to imagine that that uniform
-cessation of organized life at one point, which seems to have
-conducted Sir Roderick Murchison and Professor Sedgwick to
-their conclusion, should have been thus a mere effect of accident.
-Accident has its laws, but uniformity is not one of
-them; and should the experience be invariable, as it already
-seems extensive, that immediately beneath the fucoidal beds
-organic remains cease, I do not see how the conclusion is to
-be avoided, that they represent the period in which at least
-<i>existences capable of preservation</i> were first introduced. Every
-case of coincident cessation which has occurred since the
-determination of the second case, must be reckoned, not
-simply as an additional unit in evidence, but, on the principles
-which determine mathematical probability, as a unit
-multiplied first by the chances against its occurrence, regarded<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_241"></a>[241]</span>
-as a mere contingency in that exact formation, and
-second, by the sum of all the previous occurrences at the
-same point.</p>
-
-<p>In this curious question, however, which it must be the part
-of future explorers in the geological field definitely to settle,
-the Lamarckian can have no legitimate stake. It is but natural
-that, in his anxiety to secure an ultimate retreat for his
-hypothesis, he should desire to see that darkness in which
-ghosts love to walk settling down on the extreme verge of the
-geological horizon, and enveloping in its folds the first beginnings
-of life. But even did the cloud exist, it is, if I
-may so express myself, on its nearer side, where there is light,—not
-within nor beyond it, where there is none,—that the
-battle must be fought. It is to Geology <i>as it is known to be</i>,
-that the Lamarckian has appealed,—not to Geology as it is
-<i>not</i> known to be. He has summoned into court <i>existing</i> witnesses;
-and, finding their testimony unfavorable, he seeks to
-neutralize their evidence by calling from the “vasty deep,”
-of the unexamined and the obscure, witnesses that “won’t
-come,”—that by the legitimate authorities are not known
-even to exist,—and with which he himself is, on his own
-confession, wholly unacquainted, save in the old scholastic
-character of mere possibilities. The <i>possible</i> fossil can have
-no more standing in this controversy than the “<i>possible angel</i>.”
-He tells us that we have not yet got down to that base-line
-of all the fossiliferous systems at which life first began; and
-very possibly we have not. But what of that? He has
-carried his appeal to Geology <i>as it is</i>;—he has referred his
-case to the testimony of the <i>known</i> witnesses, for in no case
-can the <i>unknown</i> ones be summoned or produced. It is on
-the evidence of the known, and the known only, that the
-exact value of his claims must be determined; and his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_242"></a>[242]</span>
-appeal to the unknown serves but to show how thoroughly he
-himself feels that the actually ascertained evidence bears
-against him. The severe censure of Johnson on reasoners of
-this class is in no degree over-severe. “He who will determine,”
-said the moralist, “against that which he knows, because
-there may be something which he knows not,—he that
-can set hypothetical possibility against acknowledged certainty,—is
-not to be admitted among reasonable beings.”</p>
-
-<p>But the honest farmer’s reminiscences of his deceased
-neighbor the weaver, and his use at second-hand of Hume’s
-experience-argument, naturally lead me to another branch of
-the subject.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_243"></a>[243]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XII">LAMARCKIAN HYPOTHESIS OF THE ORIGIN OF PLANTS.<br />
-ITS CONSEQUENCES.</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>I have said that the curiously-mixed, semi-marine, semi-lacustrine
-flora of the Lake of Stennis became associated
-in my mind, like the ancient <i>Asterolepis</i> of Stromness, with
-the development hypothesis. The fossil, as has been shown,
-represents not inadequately the geologic evidence in the
-question,—the mixed vegetation of the lake may be regarded
-as forming a portion of the phytological evidence.</p>
-
-<p>“All life,” says Oken, “is from the sea. Where the sea
-organism, by self-elevation, succeeds in attaining into form,
-there issues forth from it a higher organism. Love arose out
-of the sea-foam. The primary mucus (that in which electricity
-originates life) was, and is still, generated in those very
-parts of the sea where the water is in contact with earth and
-air, and thus upon the shores. The first creation of the organic
-took place where the first mountain summits projected
-out of the water,—indeed, without doubt, in India, if the
-Himalaya be the highest mountain. <i>The first organic forms,
-whether plants or animals, emerged from the shallow parts of
-the sea.</i>” Maillet wrote to exactly the same effect a full century
-ago. “In a word,” we find him saying, in his “Telliamed,”<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_244"></a>[244]</span>
-“do not herbs, plants, roots, grains, and all of this kind that
-the earth produces and nourishes, come from the sea? Is it
-not at least natural to think so, since we are certain that all
-our habitable lands came originally from the sea? Besides,
-in small islands far from the continent, which have appeared
-but a few ages ago at most, and where it is manifest that
-never any man had been, we find shrubs, herbs, roots, and
-sometimes animals. Now, you must be forced to own either
-that these productions owed their origin to the sea, or to a
-new creation, which is absurd.”</p>
-
-<p>It is a curious fact, to which, in the passing, I must be
-permitted to call the attention of the reader, that all the
-leading assertors of the development hypothesis have been
-bad geologists. Maillet had for his errors and deficiencies
-the excellent apology that he wrote more than a hundred
-years ago, when the theory of a universal ocean, promulgated
-by Leibnitz nearly a century earlier, was quite as
-good as any of the other theories of the time, and when
-Geology, as a science, had no existence. And so we do
-not wonder at an ignorance which was simply that of his
-age, when we find him telling his readers that plants <i>must</i>
-have originated in the sea, seeing that “all our habitable
-lands came originally from the sea;” meaning, of course,
-by the statement, not at all what the modern geologist
-would mean were he to employ even the same words, but
-simply that there was a time when the universal ocean covered
-the whole globe, and that, as the waters gradually diminished,
-the loftier mountain summits and higher table-lands,
-in appearing in their new character as islands and
-continents, derived their flora from what, in a universal
-ocean could be the only possible existing flora,—that of the
-sea. But what shall we say of the equally profound ignorance<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_245"></a>[245]</span>
-manifested by Professor Oken, a living authority, whom we
-find prefacing for the Ray Society, in 1847, the English
-translation of his “Elements of Physio-philosophy?” “The
-first creation of the organic took place,” we find him saying,
-“where the first mountain summits projected out of the
-sea,—<i>indeed, without doubt, in India, if the Himalaya be
-the highest mountain</i>.” Here, evidently, in this late age of the
-world, in which Geology <i>does</i> exist as a science, do we find
-the ghost of the universal ocean of Leibnitz walking once
-more, as if it had never been laid. Is there now in all Britain
-even a tyro geologist so unacquainted with geological
-fact as not to know that the richest flora which the globe
-ever saw had existed for myriads of ages, and then, becoming
-extinct, had slept in the fossil state for myriads of ages
-more, ere the highest summits of the Himalayan range rose
-over the surface of the deep? The Himalayas disturbed, and
-bore up along with them in their upheaval, vast beds of the
-Oolitic system. Belemnites and ammonites have been dug
-out of their sides along the line of perpetual snow, seventeen
-thousand feet over the level of the sea. What in the recent
-period form the loftiest mountains of the globe, existed as
-portions of a deep-sea bottom, swum over by the fishes
-and reptiles of the great Secondary period, when what is
-now Scotland had its dark forests of stately pine,—represented
-in the present age of the world by the lignites of Helmsdale,
-Eathie, and Eigg,—and when the plants of a former
-creation lay dead and buried deep beneath, in shales and fire-clay,—existing
-as vast beds of coal, or entombed in solid
-rock, as the brown massy trunks of Granton and Craigleith.
-And even ere these last existed as living trees, the coniferous
-lignite of the Lower Old Red Sandstone found at Cromarty
-had passed into the fossil state, and lay as a semi-calcareous,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_246"></a>[246]</span>
-semi-bituminous mass, amid perished <i>Dipterians</i>
-and extinct <i>Coccostei</i>. So much for the Geology of the German
-Professor. And be it remarked, that the <i>actualities</i> in
-this question can be determined by only the geologist. The
-mere naturalist may indicate from the analogies of his science,
-what possibly <i>might</i> have taken place, but what really <i>did</i>
-take place, and the true order in which the events occurred,
-it is the part of the geologist to determine. It cannot be out
-of place to remark, further, that geological discovery is in no
-degree responsible for the infidelity of the development
-hypothesis; seeing that, in the first place, the hypothesis
-<i>is greatly more ancient than the discoveries</i>, and, in the second,
-that its more prominent assertors are <i>exactly the men who
-know least of geological fact</i>. But to this special point I
-shall again refer.</p>
-
-<p>The author of the “Vestiges” is at one, regarding the supposed
-marine origin of terrestrial plants, with Maillet and
-Oken; and he regards the theory, we find him stating in his
-“Explanations,” as the true key to the well-established fact,
-that the vegetation of groupes of islands generally corresponds
-with that of the larger masses of land in their neighborhood.
-Marine plants of the same kinds crept out of the
-sea, it would seem, upon the islands on the one hand, and
-upon the larger masses of land on the other, and thus produced
-the same flora in each; just as tadpoles, after passing
-their transition state, creep out of their canal or river on the
-opposite banks, and thus give to the fields or meadows on the
-right-hand side a supply of frogs, of the same appearance
-and size as those poured out upon the fields and meadows of
-the left. “Thus, for example,” we find him saying, “the
-Galapagos exhibit general characters in common with South
-America; and the Cape de Verd islands, with Africa. They<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_247"></a>[247]</span>
-are, in Mr. Darwin’s happy phrase, satellites to those continents,
-in respect of natural history. Again,” he continues, “when
-masses of land are only divided from each other by narrow
-seas, there is usually a community of forms. The European
-and African shores of the Mediterranean present an example.
-Our own islands afford another of far higher value. It appears
-that the flora of Ireland and Great Britain is various, or
-rather that we have five floras or distinct sets of plants, and
-that each of these is partaken of by a portion of the opposite
-continent. There are, first, a flora confined to the west of
-Ireland, and imparted likewise to the north-west of Spain;
-second, a flora in the south-west promontory of England and
-of Ireland, extending across the Channel to the north-west
-coast of France; third, one common to the south-east of England
-and north of France; fourth, an Alpine flora developed
-in the Scottish and Welsh Highlands, and intimately related
-to that of the Norwegian Alps; fifth, a flora which prevails
-over a large part of England and Ireland, ‘mingled with
-other floras, and diminishing slightly as we proceed westward:’
-this bears intimate relation with the flora of Germany.
-Facts so remarkable would force the meanest fact-collector
-or species-demonstrator into generalization. The
-really ingenious man who lately brought them under notice
-(Professor Edward Forbes) could only surmise, as their explanation,
-that the spaces now occupied by the intermediate
-seas must have been dry land at the time when these floras
-were created. In that case, either the original arrangement
-of the floras, or the selection of land for submergence, must
-have been apposite to the case in a degree far from usual.
-The necessity for a simpler cause is obvious, and it is found in
-the hypothesis of a <i>spread of terrestrial vegetation from the sea
-into the lands adjacent</i>. The community of forms in the various<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_248"></a>[248]</span>
-regions opposed to each other merely indicates a distinct
-marine creation in each of the oceanic areas respectively
-interposed, and which would naturally advance into the lands
-nearest to it, as far as circumstances of soil and climate were
-found agreeable.”</p>
-
-<p>Such, regarding the origin of terrestrial vegetation, are the
-views of Maillet, Oken, and the author of the “Vestiges.”
-They all agree in holding that the plants of the land existed
-in their first condition as weeds of the sea.</p>
-
-<p>Let me request the reader at this stage, ere we pass on to
-the consideration of the experience-argument, to remark a
-few incidental, but by no means unimportant, consequences
-of the belief. And, first, let him weigh for a moment the
-comparative demands on his credulity of the theory by which
-Professor Forbes accounts for the various floras of the British
-Islands, and that hypothesis of transmutation which
-the author of the “Vestiges” would so fain put in its place, as
-greatly more simple, and, of course, more in accordance with
-the principles of human belief. In order to the reception of
-the Professor’s theory, it is necessary to hold, in the first place,
-that the creation of each species of plant took place, not by
-repetition of production in various widely-separated centres,
-but in some single centre, from which the species propagated
-itself by seed, bud, or scion, across the special area
-which it is now found to occupy. And this, in the first instance,
-is of course as much an assumption as any of those
-assumed numbers or assumed lines with which, in algebra
-and the mathematics, it is necessary in so many calculations
-to set out, in quest of some required number or line, which,
-without the assistance of the assumed ones, we might despair
-of ever finding. But the assumption is in itself neither
-unnatural nor violent; there are various very remarkable analogies<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_249"></a>[249]</span>
-which lend it support; the facts which seem least to
-harmonize with it are not wholly irreconcilable, and are,
-besides, of a merely exceptional character; and, further, it
-has been adopted by botanists of the highest standing.<a id="FNanchor_34" href="#Footnote_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a> It<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_250"></a>[250]</span>
-is necessary to hold, in the second place, in order to the reception
-of the theory, that the area of the earth’s surface
-occupied by the British Islands and the neighboring coasts
-of the Continent once stood fifty fathoms higher, in relation
-to the existing sea-level, than it does now,—a belief which,
-whatever its specific grounds or standing in this particular
-case, is at least in strict accordance with the general geological
-phenomena of subsidence and elevation, and which, so far
-from outraging any experience founded on observation or
-testimony, runs in the same track with what is known of
-wide areas now in the course of sinking, like that on the
-Italian coast, in which the Bay of Baiæ and the ruins of the
-temple of Serapis occur, or that in Asia, which includes the
-Run of Cutch; or of what is known of areas in the course of
-rising, like part of the coast of Sweden, or part of the coast
-of South America, or in Asia along the western shores of
-Aracan. Whereas, in order to close with the <i>simpler</i> antagonistic
-belief of the author of the “Vestiges,” it is necessary
-to hold, <i>contrary</i> to all experience, that <i>dulce</i> and <i>henware</i><a id="FNanchor_35" href="#Footnote_35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a>
-became, through a very wonderful metamorphosis,
-cabbage and spinnage; that kelp-weed and tangle bourgeoned
-into oaks and willows; and that <i>slack</i>, <i>rope-weed</i>, and
-<i>green-raw</i>,<a id="FNanchor_36" href="#Footnote_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a> shot up into mangel-wurzel, rye-grass, and clover.
-<i>Simple</i>, certainly! An infidel on terms such as these could
-with no propriety be regarded as an <i>unbeliever</i>. It is well<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_251"></a>[251]</span>
-that the New Testament makes no such extraordinary demands
-on human credulity.</p>
-
-<p>Let us remark further, at this stage, that, judging from the
-generally received geological evidence in the case, very little
-time seems to be allowed by the author of the “Vestiges”
-for that miraculous process of transmutation through which
-the low algæ of our sea-shores are held to have passed into
-high orders of plants which constitute the prevailing British
-flora. The boulder clay, which rises so high along our hills, and
-which, as shown by its inferior position on the lower grounds,
-is decidedly the most ancient of the country’s superficial deposits,
-is yet so modern, geologically, that it contains only
-recent shells. It belongs to that cold, glacial, post-Tertiary
-period, in which what is now Britain existed as a few
-groupes of insulated hill-tops, bearing the semi-arctic vegetation
-of our fourth flora,—that true <i>Celtic</i> flora of the country
-which we now find, like the country’s Celtic races of our
-own species, cooped up among the mountains. The fifth or
-Germanic flora must have been introduced, it is held, at a
-later period, when the climate had greatly meliorated. And
-if we are to hold that the plants of this last flora were <i>developed</i>
-from sea-weed, not propagated across a continuity of
-land from the original centre in Germany, or borne by currents
-from the mouths of the Germanic rivers,—the theory
-of Mon. C. Martins,—then must we also hold that that development
-took place since the times of the boulder clay, and
-that fucoids and confervæ became dicotyledonous and monocotyledonous
-plants during a brief period, in which the <i>Purpura
-lapillus</i> and <i>Turritella terebra</i> did not alter a single
-whorl, and the <i>Cyprina islandica</i> and <i>Astarte borealis</i> retained
-unchanged each minute projection of their hinges, and
-each nicer peculiarity of their muscular impressions. <i>Creation</i><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_252"></a>[252]</span>
-would be greatly less wonderful than a sudden transmutative
-process such as this, restricted in its operation to groupes
-of English, Irish, and Manx plants, identical with groupes in
-Germany, when all the various organisms around them, such
-as our sea-shells, continued to be exactly what they had been
-for ages before. A process of development from the lowest
-to the highest forms, rigidly restricted to the flora of a country,
-would be simply the miracle of Jonah’s gourd several
-thousand times repeated.</p>
-
-<p>I must here indulge in a few remarks more, which, though
-they may seem of an incidental character, have a direct bearing
-on the general subject. The geologist infers, in all his
-reasonings founded on fossils, that a race or species has existed
-from some one certain point in the scale to some other
-certain point, if he find it occurring at both points together.
-He infers on this principle, for instance, that the boulder clay,
-which contains only <i>recent</i> shells, belongs to the <i>recent</i> or
-post-Tertiary period; and that the Oolite and Lias, which
-contain <i>no</i> recent shells, represent a period whose existences
-have all become extinct. And all experience serves to show
-that his principle is a sound one. In creation there are many
-species linked together, from their degree of similarity, by
-the <i>generic</i> tie; but no perfect verisimilitude obtains among
-them, unless hereditarily derived from the one, two, or more
-individuals, of contemporary origin, with which the race began.
-True, there are some races that have spread over very
-wide circles,—the circle of the human family has become
-identical with that of the globe; and there are certain plants
-and animals that, from peculiar powers of adaptation to the
-varieties of soil and climate,—mayhap also from the tenacious
-vitality of their seeds, and their facilities of transport by
-natural means,—are likewise diffused very widely. There<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_253"></a>[253]</span>
-are plants, too, such as the common nettle and some of the
-ordinary grasses, which accompany civilized man all over the
-globe, he scarce knows how, and spring up unbidden where-ever
-he fixes his habitation. He, besides, carries with him
-the common agricultural weeds: there are localities in the
-United States, says Sir Charles Lyell, where these <i>exotics</i> outnumber
-the native plants; but these are exceptions to the
-prevailing economy of distribution; and the circles of species
-generally are comparatively limited and well defined. The
-mountains of the southern hemisphere have, like those of
-Switzerland and the Scotch Highlands, their forests of coniferous
-trees; but they furnish no Swiss pines or Scotch firs; nor do
-the coasts of New Zealand or Van Dieman’s Land supply
-the European shells or fish. True, there may be much to
-puzzle in the identity of what may be termed the exceptional
-plants, equally indigenous, apparently, in circles widely separated
-by space. It has been estimated that there exist
-about a hundred thousand vegetable species, and of these,
-thirty Antarctic forms have been recognized by Dr. Hooker
-as identical with European ones. Had Robinson Crusoe failed
-to remember that he had shaken the old corn-bag where he
-found the wheat and barley ears springing up on his island,
-he might have held that he had discovered a new centre of
-the European cerealia. And the process analogous to the
-shaking of the bag is frequently a process <i>not</i> to be remembered.
-There are several minute lochans in the Hebrides
-and the west of Ireland in which there occurs a small plant
-of the cord-rush family, (<i>Eriocaulon septangulare</i>,) which,
-though common in America, is nowhere to be found on the
-European Continent. It is the only British plant which belongs
-to no other part of Europe. How was it transported
-across the Atlantic? Entangled, mayhap, in the form of a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_254"></a>[254]</span>
-single seed,—for its seeds are exceedingly light and small,—in
-the plumage of some water-fowl, free of both sea and
-lake, it had been carried in the germ from the weed-skirted
-edge of some American swamp or mere, to some mossy
-lochan of Connaught or of Skye; and one such seed transported
-by one such accident, unique in its occurrence in
-thousands of years, would be quite sufficient to puzzle all the
-botanists forever after. I have seen the seed of one of our
-Scotch grasses, that had been originally caught in the matted
-fleece of a sheep reared among the hills of Sutherland, and
-then wrought into a coarse, ill-dressed woollen cloth, carried
-about for months in a piece of underclothing. It might have
-gone over half the globe in that time, and, when cast away
-with the worn vestment, might have originated a new circle
-for its species in South America or New Holland. There are
-seeds specially contrived by the Great Designer to be carried
-far from their original habitats in the coats of animals,—a
-mode which admits of transport to much greater distances
-than the mode, also extensively operative, of consigning
-them for conveyance to their stomachs; and when we see
-the work in its effects, we are puzzled by the want of a
-record of an emigratory process, of which, in the circumstances,
-no record could possibly exist. Unable to make out
-a case for the “shaking of the bag,” we bethink us, in the
-emergency, of repetition of creation. But in circles separated
-by <i>time</i>, not space,—by <i>time</i>, across whose dim gulfs no
-voyager sails, and no bird flies, and over which there are no
-means of transport from the point where a race once fails,
-to any other point in the future,—we find no repetition of
-species. If the production of perfect duplicates or triplicates
-in independent centres were a law of nature, our works
-of physical science could scarce fail to tell us of identical<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_255"></a>[255]</span>
-species found occurring in widely-separated systems,—Scotch
-firs and larches, for instance, among the lignites of the Lias,
-or <i>Cyprina islandica</i> and <i>Ostrea edulis</i> among the shells of
-the Mountain Limestone. But never yet has the geologist
-found in his systems or formations any such evidence as facts
-such as these might be legitimately held to furnish, of the
-independent <i>de novo</i> production of individual members of
-any single species. On the contrary, the evidence lies so entirely
-the other way, that he reasons on the existence of a
-family relation obtaining between all the members of each
-species, as one of his best established principles. If members
-of the same species may exist through <i>de novo</i> production,
-without hereditary relationship, so thoroughly, in consequence,
-does the fabric of geological reasoning fall to the
-ground, that we find ourselves incapacitated from regarding
-even the bed of common cockle or mussel shells, which we
-find lying a few feet from the surface on our raised beaches,
-as of the existing creation at all. Nay, even the human remains
-of our moors may have belonged, if our principle of
-relationship in each species be not a true one, to some former
-creation, cut off from that to which we ourselves belong,
-by a wide period of death. All palæontological reasoning is
-at an end forever, if identical species can originate in independent
-centres, widely separated from each other by periods
-of time; and if they fail to originate in periods separated
-by time, how or why in centres separated by space?</p>
-
-<p>Let the reader remark further, the bearing of those facts
-from which this principle of geological reasoning has been
-derived, on the development hypothesis. We find species
-restricted to circles and periods; and though stragglers are
-occasionally found outside the circle in the existing state
-of things, never are they found beyond their period among<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_256"></a>[256]</span>
-the remains of the past. It was profoundly argued by Cuvier,
-that <i>life</i> could not possibly have had a chemical origin.
-“In fact,” we find him remarking, “life exercising upon the
-elements which at every instant form part of the living body,
-and upon those which it attracts to it, an action contrary to
-that which would be produced without it by the usual chemical
-affinities, it is inconsistent to suppose that it can itself
-be produced by these affinities.” And the phenomena of restriction
-to circle and period testify to the same effect. Nothing,
-on the one hand, can be more various in character and
-aspect than the organized existences of the various circles
-and periods; nothing more invariable, on the other, than the
-results of chemical or electrical experiment. And yet, to use
-almost the words of Cuvier, “we know of no other power in
-nature capable of reuniting previously separated molecules,”
-than the electric and the chemical. To these agents, accordingly,
-all the assertors of the development hypothesis have had
-recourse for at least the <i>origination</i> of life. Air, water, earth
-existing as a saline mucus, and an active persistent electricity,
-are the creative ingredients of Oken. The author of the
-“Vestiges” is rather less explicit on the subject: he simply
-refers to the fact, that the “basis of all vegetable and animal
-substances consists of nucleated cells,—that is, of cells having
-granules within them;” and states that globules of a resembling
-character “can be produced in albumen by electricity;”
-and that though albumen itself has not yet been produced
-by artificial means,—the only step in the process of
-creation which is wanting,—it is yet known to be a chemical
-composition, the mode of whose production may “be any
-day discovered in the laboratory.” Further, he adopts, as
-part of the foundation of his hypothesis, the pseudo-experiment
-of Mr. Weekes, who holds that out of certain saline<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_257"></a>[257]</span>
-preparations, acted upon by electricity, he can produce certain
-living animalcula of the mite family;—the vital and the
-organized out of the inorganic and the dead. In all such
-cases, electricity, or rather, according to Oken, galvanism, is
-regarded as the vitalizing principle. “<i>Organism</i>,” says the
-German, “is <i>galvanism</i> residing in a thoroughly homogeneous
-mass.... A galvanic pile pounded into atoms
-must become alive. In this manner nature brings forth organic
-bodies.” I have even heard it seriously asked whether
-electricity be not God! Alas! could such a god, limited
-in its capacity of action, like those “gods of the plains” in
-which the old Syrian trusted, have wrought, in the character
-of Creator, with a variety of result so endless, that in no geologic
-period has repetition taken place? In all that purports
-to be experiment on the development side of the question, we
-see nothing else save repetition. The <i>Acarus Crossi</i> of Mr.
-Weekes is not a new species, but the <i>repetition</i> of an old
-one, which has been long known as the <i>Acarus horridus</i>, a
-little bristle-covered creature of the mite family, that harbors
-in damp corners among the debris of outhouses, and the dust
-and dirt of neglected workshops and laboratories. Nay, even
-a change in the chemical portion of the experiment by which
-he believed the creature to be produced, failed to secure variety.
-A powerful electric current had been sent, in the first
-instance, through a solution of silicate of potash, and, after a
-time, the <i>Acarus horridus</i> crawled out of the fluid. The current
-was then sent through a solution of nitrate of copper, and
-after a due space, the <i>Acarus horridus</i> again creeped out. A
-solution of ferro-cyanate of potash was next subjected to the
-current, and yet again, and in greater numbers than on the
-two former occasions, there appeared, as in virtue, it would
-seem, of its extraordinary appetency, <i>to be</i> the same ever-recurring<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_258"></a>[258]</span>
-<i>Acarus horridus</i>. How, or in what form, the little
-creature should have been introduced into the several experiments,
-it is not the part of those who question their legitimacy
-to explain; it is enough for us to know, that individuals
-of the family to which the <i>Acarus</i> belongs are so remarkable
-for their powers of life, even in their fully developed
-state, as to resist, for a time, the application of boiling water,
-and to live long in alcohol. We know, further, that the
-<i>germs</i> of the lower animals are greatly more tenacious of vitality
-than the animals themselves; and that they may exist
-in their state of embryonism in the most unthought of and
-elusive forms; nay,—as the recent discoveries regarding alterations
-of generation have conclusively shown,—that the
-germ which produced the parent may be wholly unlike the
-germ that produces its offspring, and yet identical with that
-which produced the parent’s parent. Save on the theory of
-a quiescent vitality, maintained by seeds for centuries within
-a few inches of the earth’s surface, we know not how a layer
-of shell, sand, or marl, spread over the bleak moors of Harris,
-should produce crops of white clover, where only heath
-had grown before; nor how brakes of doddered furze burnt
-down on the slopes of the Cromarty Sutors should be so frequently
-succeeded by thickets of raspberry. We are not,
-however to give up the <i>unknown</i>,—that illimitable province in
-which science discovers,—to be a wild region of dream, in
-which fantasy may invent. There are many dark places in the
-field of human knowledge which even the researches of ages
-may fail wholly to enlighten; but no one derives a right
-from that circumstance to people them with chimeras and
-phantoms. They belong to the philosophers of the future,—not
-to the visionaries of the present. But while it is not our
-part to explain <i>how</i>, in the experiments of Mr. Weekes, the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_259"></a>[259]</span>
-chain of life from life has been maintained unbroken, we
-can most conclusively show, that that world of organized
-existence of which we ourselves form part, is, and ever has
-been, a world, not of tame repetition, but of endless variety.
-It is palpably not a world of <i>Acaridæ</i> of one species, nor
-yet of creatures developed from these, under those electric
-or chemical laws of which the grand characteristic is invariability
-of result. The vast variety of its existences speak
-not of the operation of <i>unvarying laws</i>, that represent, in
-their uniformity of result, the unchangeableness of the Divinity,
-but of <i>creative acts</i>, that exemplify the infinity of His
-resources.</p>
-
-<p>Let the reader yet further remark, if he has followed me
-through these preliminary observations, what is really involved
-in the hypothesis of the author of the “Vestiges,” regarding
-the various floras common to the British islands and
-the Continent. If it was upon his scheme that England, Ireland,
-and the mainland of Europe came to possess an identical
-flora, production <i>de novo</i> and by repetition of the same
-species must have taken place in thousands of instances along
-the shores of each island and of the mainland. His hypothesis
-demands that the sea-weed on the coast of Ireland should
-have been developed, first through lower, and then higher
-forms, into thousands of terrestrial plants,—that exactly
-the same process of development from sea-weed into terrestrial
-plants of the same species should have taken place on
-the coast of England, and again on the coasts of the Continent
-generally,—and that identically the same vegetation
-should have been originated in this way in at least three great
-centres. And if plants of the same species could have had
-three distinct centres of organization and development, why
-not three hundred, or three thousand, or three hundred thousand?<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_260"></a>[260]</span>
-Nor will it do to attempt escaping from the difficulty,
-by alleging that there is the groundwork in the case of at
-least a common marine vegetation to start from; and that
-thus, if we have not properly the existence of the direct
-hereditary tie among the various individuals of each species,
-we may yet recognize at least a sort of collateral relationship
-among them, derived from the relationship of their marine
-ancestry. For relationship, in even the primary stage, the
-author of the “Vestiges” virtually repudiates, by adopting,
-as one of the foundations of his hypothesis, with, of course,
-all the legitimate consequences, the experiments of Mr.
-Weekes. The animalculæ-making process is instanced as
-representative of the first stage of being,—that in which
-dead inorganic matter assumes vitality; and it corresponds,
-in the zoological branch, to the production of a low marine
-vegetation in the phytological one. A certain semi-chemical,
-semi-electrical process, originates, time after time, certain
-numerous low forms of life, identical in species, but connected
-by no tie of relationship: such is the presumed result
-of the Weekes experiment. A certain further process of
-development matures low forms of life, thus originated, into
-higher species, also identical, and also wholly unconnected
-by the family tie: such are the consequences legitimately
-involved in that island-vegetation theory promulgated by the
-author of the “Vestiges.” And be it remembered that Mr.
-Weekes’ process, so far as it is simply electrical and chemical,
-is a process which is as capable of having been gone through
-in all times and all places, as that other process of strewing
-marl upon a moor, through which certain rustic experimenters
-have held that they produced white clover. It could have
-been gone through during the Carboniferous or the Silurian
-period; for all truly chemical and electrical experiments<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_261"></a>[261]</span>
-would have resulted in manifestations of the same phenomena
-then as now:—an acid would have effervesced as freely
-with an alkali; and each fibre of an electrified feather—had
-feathers then existed—would have stood out as decidedly
-apart from all its neighbors. We must therefore hold, if
-we believe with the author of the “Vestiges,” first, from the
-Weekes experiment, that in all times, and in all places, every
-centre of a certain chemical and electric action would have
-become a new centre of creation to certain <i>recent</i> species of
-low, but not <i>very</i> low, organization; and, second, from his
-doctrine regarding the identity of the British and Continental
-floras, that in the course of subsequent development from
-these low forms, the process in each of many widely-separated
-centres,—widely separated both by space and time,—would
-be so nicely correspondent with the process in all
-the others, that the same higher <i>recent</i> forms would be matured
-in all. And to doctrines such as these, the experience
-of all Geologists, all Phytologists, all Zoologists, is diametrically
-opposed. If these doctrines be true, <i>their</i> sciences are
-false in their facts, and idle and unfounded in their principles.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_262"></a>[262]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIII">THE TWO FLORAS, MARINE AND TERRESTRIAL.<br />
-BEARING OF THE EXPERIENCE ARGUMENT.</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Is the reader acquainted with the graphic verse, and scarce
-less graphic prose, in which Crabbe describes the appearances
-presented by a terrestrial vegetation affected by the
-waters of the sea? In both passages, as in all his purely
-descriptive writings, there is a solidity of truthful observation
-exhibited, which triumphs over their general homeliness
-of vein.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent18">“On either side</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Is level fen, a prospect wild and wide,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">With dykes on either hand, by ocean self-supplied.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Far on the right the distant sea is seen,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And salt the springs that feed the marsh between;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Beneath an ancient bridge the straitened flood</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Rolls through its sloping banks of slimy mud;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Near it a sunken boat resists the tide,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">That frets and hurries to the opposing side;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The rushes sharp, that on the borders grow,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Bend their brown florets to the stream below,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Impure in all its course, in all its progress slow.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Here a grave Flora scarcely deigns to bloom,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Nor wears a rosy blush, nor sheds perfume.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The few dull flowers that o’er the place are spread,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Partake the nature of their fenny bed;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Here on its wiry stem, in rigid bloom,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Grows the salt lavender, that lacks perfume;</div><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_263"></a>[263]</span>
- <div class="verse indent0">Here the dwarf sallows creep, the septfoil harsh,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And the soft slimy mallow of the marsh.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Low on the ear the distant billows sound,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And just in view appears their stony bound.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“The ditches of a fen so near the ocean,” says the poet, in
-the note which accompanies this passage, “are lined with
-irregular patches of a coarse-stained laver; a muddy sediment
-rests on the horse-tail and other perennial herbs which
-in part conceal the shallowness of the stream; a fat-leaved,
-pale-flowering scurvy-grass appears early in the year, and
-the razor-edged bullrush in the summer and autumn. The
-fen itself has a dark and saline herbage: there are rushes
-and <i>arrow-head</i>; and in a few patches the flakes of the cotton-grass
-are seen, but more commonly the <i>sea-aster</i>, the dullest
-of that numerous and hardy genus; a <i>thrift</i>, blue in
-flower, but withering, and remaining withered till the winter
-scatters it; the <i>salt-wort</i>, both simple and shrubby; a few
-kinds of grass changed by the soil and atmosphere; and low
-plants of two or three denominations, undistinguished in the
-general view of scenery;—such is the vegetation of the fen
-where it is at a small distance from the ocean.”</p>
-
-<p>And such are the descriptions of Crabbe, at once a poet
-and a botanist. In referring to the blue tint exhibited in
-salt-fens by the pink-colored flower of the <i>thrift</i>, (<i>Statice
-Armeria</i>,) he might have added, that the general green of
-the terrestrial vegetation likewise assumes, when subjected
-to those modified marine influences under which plants of the
-land can continue to live, a decided tinge of blue. It is further
-noticeable, that the general brown of at least the larger algæ
-presents, as they creep upwards upon the beach to meet with
-these, a marked tinge of yellow. The prevailing brown of
-the one flora approximates towards yellow,—the prevailing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_264"></a>[264]</span>
-green of the other towards blue; and thus, instead of mutually
-merging into some neutral tint, they assume at their
-line of meeting directly antagonistic hues.</p>
-
-<p>But what does experience say regarding the transmutative
-conversion of a marine into a terrestrial vegetation,—that
-experience on which the sceptic founds so much? As I
-walked along the green edge of the Lake of Stennis, selvaged
-by the line of detached weeds with which a recent gale had
-strewed its shores, and marked that for the first few miles
-the accumulation consisted of marine algæ, here and there
-mixed with tufts of stunted reeds or rushes, and that as I receded
-from the sea it was the algæ that became stunted and
-dwarfish, and that the reeds, aquatic grasses, and rushes,
-grown greatly more bulky in the mass, were also more fully
-developed individually, till at length the marine vegetation
-altogether disappeared, and the vegetable debris of the shore
-became purely lacustrine,—I asked myself whether here, if
-anywhere, a transition flora between lake and sea ought not to
-be found? For many thousand years ere the tall gray obelisks
-of Stennis, whose forms I saw this morning reflected in the
-water, had been torn from the quarry, or laid down in mystic
-circle on their flat promontories, had this lake admitted
-the waters of the sea, and been salt in its lower reaches
-and fresh in its higher. And during this protracted period had
-its quiet, well-shattered bottom been exposed to no disturbing
-influences through which the delicate process of transmutation
-could have been marred or arrested. Here, then, if
-in any circumstances, ought we to have had in the broad,
-permanently brackish reaches, at least indications of a vegetation
-intermediate in its nature between the monocotyledons
-of the lake and the algæ of the sea; and yet not a
-vestige of such an intermediate vegetation could I find<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_265"></a>[265]</span>
-among the up-piled debris of the mixed floras, marine and
-lacustrine. The lake possesses no such intermediate vegetation.
-As the water freshens in its middle reaches, the
-algæ become dwarfish and ill-developed; one species after
-another ceases to appear, as the habitat becomes wholly unfavorable
-to it, until at length we find, instead of the
-brown, rootless, flowerless fucoids and confervæ of the ocean,
-the green, rooted, flower-bearing flags, rushes, and aquatic
-grasses of the fresh water. Many thousands of years have
-failed to originate a single intermediate plant. And such,
-tested by a singularly extensive experience, is the general
-evidence.</p>
-
-<p>There is scarce a chain-length of the shores of Britain and
-Ireland that has not been a hundred and a hundred times
-explored by the botanist,—keen to collect and prompt to
-register every rarity of the vegetable kingdom; but has he
-ever yet succeeded in transferring to his herbarium a single
-plant caught in the transition state? Nay, are there any of
-the laws under which the vegetable kingdom exists better
-known than those laws which fix certain species of the algæ to
-certain zones of coast, in which each, according to the overlying
-depth of water and the nature of the bottom, finds the only
-habitat in which it can exist? The rough-stemmed tangle
-(<i>Laminaria digitata</i>) can exist no higher on the shore than
-the low line of ebb during stream-tides; the smooth-stemmed
-tangle (<i>Laminaria saccharina</i>) flourishes along an inner belt,
-partially uncovered during the ebbs of the larger neaps;
-the forked and cracker kelp-weeds (<i>Fucus serratus</i> and <i>Fucus
-nodosus</i>) thrive in a zone still less deeply covered by water,
-and which even the lower neaps expose. And at least one
-other species of kelp-weed, the <i>Fucus vesiculosus</i>, occurs in a
-zone higher still, though, as it creeps upwards on the rocky<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_266"></a>[266]</span>
-beach, it loses its characteristic bladders, and becomes short
-and narrow of frond. The thick brown tufts of <i>Fucus canaliculatus</i>,
-which in the lower and middle reaches of the Lake
-of Stennis I found heaped up in great abundance along the
-shores, also rises high on rocky beaches,—so high in some
-instances, that during neap-tides it remains uncovered by
-the water for days together. If, as is not uncommon, there
-be an escape of land springs along the beach, there may be
-found, where the fresh water oozes out through the sand
-and gravel, an upper terminal zone of the confervæ, chiefly
-of a green color, mixed with the ribbon-like green layer,
-(<i>Ulva latissima</i>,) the purplish-brown layer, (<i>Porphyra laciniata</i>,)
-and still more largely with the green silky Enteromorpha,
-(<i>E. compressa</i>.)<a id="FNanchor_37" href="#Footnote_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a> And then, decidedly within
-the line of the storm-beaches of winter,—not unfrequently
-in low sheltered bays, such as the Bay of Udale or of Nigg,
-where the ripple of every higher flood washes,—we may
-find the vegetation of the land—represented by the sentinels
-and picquets of its outposts—coming down, as if to
-meet with the higher-growing plants of the sea. In salt
-marshes the two vegetations may be seen, if I may so express
-myself, <i>dovetailed</i> together at their edges,—at least one
-species of club-rush (<i>Scirpus maritimus</i>) and the common saltwort
-and glasswort (<i>Salsola kali</i> and <i>Salicornia procumbens</i>)
-encroaching so far upon the sea as to mingle with a thinly-scattered<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_267"></a>[267]</span>
-and sorely-diminished fucus,—that bladderless variety
-of the <i>Fucus vesiculosus</i> to which I have already referred,
-and which may be detected in such localities, shooting forth
-its minute brown fronds from the pebbles. On rocky coasts,
-where springs of fresh water come trickling down along the
-fissures of the precipices, the observer may see a variety of
-<i>Rhodomenia palmata</i>—the fresh-water dulse of the Moray
-Frith—creeping upwards from the lower limits of production,
-till just where the common gray balanus ceases to
-grow. And there, short and thick, and of a bleached yellow
-hue, <i>it</i> ceases also; but one of the commoner marine
-confervæ,—the <i>Conferva arcta</i>, blent with a dwarfed <i>Enteromorpha</i>,—commencing
-a very little below where the
-dulse ends, and taking its place, clothes over the runnels
-with its covering of green for several feet higher: in some
-cases, where it is frequently washed by the upward dash of
-the waves, it rises above even the flood-line; and in some
-crevice of the rock beside it, often as low as its upper edge,
-we may detect stunted tufts of the sea-pink or of the scurvy-grass.
-But while there is thus a vegetation intermediate <i>in
-place</i> between the land and the sea, we find, as if it had been
-selected purposely to confound the transmutation theory,
-that it is in no degree intermediate in character. For, while
-it is chiefly marine weeds of the lower division of the confervæ
-that creep upwards from the sea to meet the vegetation
-of the land, it is chiefly terrestrial plants of the higher
-division of the dicotyledons that creep downwards from the
-land to meet the vegetation of the sea. The salt-worts, the
-glass-worts, the arenaria, the thrift, and the scurvy-grass, are
-all dicotyledonous plants. Nature draws a deeply-marked
-line of division where the requirements of the transmutative
-hypothesis would demand the nicely graduated softness of a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_268"></a>[268]</span>
-shaded one; and, addressing the strongly marked floras on
-either hand, even more sternly than the waves themselves,
-demands that to a certain definite bourne should they come,
-and no farther.</p>
-
-<p>But in what form, it may be asked, or with what limitations,
-ought the Christian controversialist to avail himself, in
-this question, of the experience argument? Much ought to
-depend, I reply, on the position taken up by the opposite
-side. We find no direct reference made by the author of
-the “Vestiges” to the anti-miracle argument, first broached
-by Hume, in a purely metaphysical shape, in his well-known
-“Inquiry,” and afterwards thrown into the algebraic form by
-La Place, in his <i>Essai philosophique sur les Probabilités</i>. But
-we do not detect its influences operative throughout the entire
-work. It is because of some felt impracticability on the part
-of its author, of attaining to the prevailing belief in the <i>miracle</i>
-of creation, that he has recourse, instead, to the so-called <i>law</i>
-of development. The <i>law</i> and the <i>miracle</i> are the alternatives
-placed before him; and, rejecting the <i>miracle</i>, he closes with
-the <i>law</i>. Now, in such circumstances, he can have no more
-cause of complaint, if, presenting him with the experience
-argument of Hume and La Place, we demand that he square
-the evidence regarding the existence of his <i>law</i> strictly according
-to its requirements, than the soldier of an army that
-charged its field-pieces with rusty nails would have cause of
-complaint if he found himself wounded by a missile of a
-similar kind, sent against him by the artillery of the enemy.
-You cannot, it might be fairly said, in addressing him, acquiesce
-in the miracle here, because, as a violation of the laws
-of nature, there are certain objections, founded on invariable
-experience, which bear direct against your belief in it. Well,
-here are the objections, in the strongest form in which they<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_269"></a>[269]</span>
-have yet been stated; and here is your hypothesis respecting
-the development of marine algæ into terrestrial plants. We
-hold that against that hypothesis the objections bear at least
-as directly as against any miracle whatever,—nay, that not
-only is it contrary to an invariable experience, but opposed
-also to all testimony. We regard it as a mere idle dream.
-Maillet dreamed it,—and Lamarck dreamed it,—and Oken
-dreamed it; but none of them did more than merely dream
-it: its existence rests on exactly the same basis of evidence
-as that of Whang the miller’s “monstrous pot of gold and
-diamonds,” of which he dreamed three nights in succession,
-but which he never succeeded in finding. If we are in error
-in our estimate, here is the argument, and here the hypothesis;
-give us, in support of the hypothesis, the amount of evidence,
-founded on a solid experience, which the argument demands.</p>
-
-<p>But to leave the experience argument in exactly the state
-in which it was left by Hume and La Place, would be doing
-no real justice to our subject. It is in that state quite sufficient
-to establish the fact, that there can be no real escape
-from belief in <i>acts of creation</i> never witnessed by man, to
-<i>processes of development</i> never witnessed by man; seeing
-that a presumed <i>law</i> beyond the cognizance of experience
-must be as certainly rejected, on the principle of the argument,
-as a presumed <i>miracle</i> beyond that cognizance. It
-places the presumed <i>law</i> and the presumed <i>miracle</i> on exactly
-the same level. But there is a palpable flaw in the anti-miracle
-argument. It does not prove that miracles <i>may not have
-taken place</i>, but that miracles, whether they have taken place
-or no, are <i>not to be credited</i>, and this simply because they <i>are</i>
-miracles, <i>i. e.</i> violations of the established laws of nature.
-And if it be possible for events to take place which man, on
-certain principles, is imperatively required not to credit, these<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_270"></a>[270]</span>
-principles must of course serve merely to establish a discrepancy
-between the actual <i>state</i> of things, and what is to be
-<i>believed</i> regarding it. And thus, instead of serving purposes
-of truth, they are made to subserve purposes of error; for
-the existence of truth in the mind is neither more nor less
-than the existence of certain conceptions and beliefs, adequately
-representative of what actually <i>is</i>, or what really <i>has
-taken place</i>.</p>
-
-<p>I cannot better illustrate this direct tendency of the anti-miracle
-argument to destroy truth in the mind, by bringing
-the mental beliefs into a state of nonconformity with the possible
-and actual, than by a quotation from La Place himself:
-“We would not,” he says, “give credit to a man who would
-affirm that he saw a hundred dice thrown into the air, and that
-they all fell on the same faces. If we had ourselves been
-spectators of such an event, we would not believe our own
-eyes till we had scrupulously examined all the circumstances,
-and assured ourselves that there was no trick or deception.
-After such an examination, we would not hesitate to admit
-it, notwithstanding its great improbability; and no one
-would have recourse to an inversion of the laws of vision
-in order to account for it.” Now, here is the principle broadly
-laid down, that it is impossible to communicate by the
-evidence of testimony, belief in an event which <i>might</i>
-happen, and which, if it happened, <i>ought</i> on certain conditions
-to be credited. No one knew better than La Place
-himself, that the <i>possibility</i> of the event which he instanced
-could be represented with the utmost exactitude by figures.
-The probability, in throwing a single die, that the ace will
-be presented on its upper face, is as one in six,—six being
-the entire number of sides which the cube can possibly present,
-and the side with the ace being one of these;—the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_271"></a>[271]</span>
-probability that in throwing a <i>pair</i> of dice the aces of both
-will be at once presented on their upper faces, is as one in
-thirty-six, as against the one sixth chance of the ace being
-presented by the one, there are also six chances that the ace
-of the other should not concur with it;—and in throwing
-<i>three</i> dice, the probability that their three aces should be at
-once presented is, of course, on the same principle, as one in
-six times thirty-six, or, in other words, as one in two hundred
-and sixteen. And thus, in ascertaining the exact degree of
-probability of the hundred aces at once turning up, we have
-to go on multiplying by six, for each die we add to the number,
-the product of the immediately previous calculation.
-Unquestionably, the number of chances <i>against</i>, thus balanced
-with the single chance <i>for</i>, would be very great; but its existence
-as a definite number would establish, with all the force of
-arithmetical demonstration, the <i>possibility</i> of the event; and
-if an eternity were to be devoted to the throwing into the air
-of the hundred dice, it would occur an <i>infinite number of times</i>.
-And yet the principle of Hume and La Place forms, when
-adopted, an impassable gulf between this possibility and human
-belief. The possibility might be embodied, as we see, in
-an actual occurrence,—an occurrence witnessed by hundreds;
-and yet the anti-miracle argument, as illustrated by
-La Place, would cut off all communication regarding it between
-these hundreds of witnesses, however unexceptionable
-their character as such, and the rest of mankind. The principle,
-instead of giving us a right rule through which the
-beliefs in the mind are to be rendered correspondent with the
-reality of things, goes merely to establish a certain imperfection
-of transmission from one mind to another, in consequence
-of which, realities in fact, if very extraordinary ones, could
-not possibly be received as objects of belief, nor the mental<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_272"></a>[272]</span>
-appreciation of things be rendered adequately concurrent with
-the state in which the things really existed.</p>
-
-<p>Nor is the case different when, for a <i>possibility</i> which the
-arithmetician can represent by figures, we substitute the
-<i>miracle</i> proper. Neither Hume nor La Place ever attempted
-to show that miracles could not take place; they merely directed
-their argument against a belief in them. The wildest
-sceptic must admit, if in any degree a reasonable man, that
-there <i>may</i> exist a God, and that that God <i>may</i> have given laws
-to nature. No <i>demonstration</i> of the non-existence of a Great
-First Cause has been ever yet attempted, nor, until the knowledge
-of some sceptic extends over all space, ever <i>can</i> be
-rationally attempted. Merely to <i>doubt</i> the fact of God’s existence,
-and to give reasons for the doubt, must till then form
-the highest achievements of scepticism. And the God who
-<i>may</i> thus exist, and who <i>may</i> have given laws to nature, <i>may</i>
-also have revealed himself to man, and, in order to secure man’s
-reasonable belief in the reality of the revelation, <i>may</i> have
-temporarily suspended in its operation some great natural
-law, and have thus shown himself to be its Author and
-Master. Such seems to be the philosophy of miracles; which
-are thus evidently not only <i>not</i> impossibilities, but even not
-<i>improbabilities</i>. Even were we to permit the sceptic himself
-to fix the numbers representative of those several <i>mays</i> in
-the case, which I have just repeated, the chances against them,
-so to speak, would be less by many thousand times than the
-chances against the hundred dice of La Place’s illustration
-all turning up aces. The existence of a Great First Cause
-is at least as probable—the sceptic himself being judge
-in the matter—as the <i>non</i>-existence of a Great First
-Cause; and so the probability in this first stage of the argument,
-instead of being, as in the case of the single die,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_273"></a>[273]</span>
-only one to six, is as one to one. Again,—in accordance
-with an expectation so general among the human family as to
-form one of the great instincts of our nature,—an instinct
-to which every form of religion, true or false, bears evidence,—it
-is in no degree less probable that this God should have
-revealed himself to man, than that he should <i>not</i> have revealed
-himself to man; and here the chances are again as
-one to one,—not, as in the second stage of the calculation
-on the dice, as one to thirty-six. Nor, in the third and last
-stage, is it less probable that God, in revealing himself to man
-should have given miraculous evidence of the truth of the
-revelation, so that man “might believe in Him for His work’s
-sake,” than that He should <i>not</i> have done so; and here yet
-again the chances are as one to one,—not as one to two hundred
-and sixteen. No rational sceptic could fix the chances
-lower; nay, no rational sceptic, so far as the <i>existence</i> of a
-Great First Cause is concerned, would be inclined to fix
-them so low: and yet it is in order to annihilate all belief in
-a possibility against which the chances are so few as to be
-represented—scepticism itself being the actuary in the case—by
-three units, that Hume and La Place have framed their
-argument. Miracles <i>may</i> have taken place,—the probabilities
-against them, stated in their most extreme and exaggerated
-form, are by no means many or strong; but we are
-nevertheless not to believe that they <i>did</i> take place, simply
-because miracles they were. Now, the effect of the establishment
-of a principle such as this would be simply, I repeat, the
-destruction of the ability of transmitting certain beliefs, however
-well founded originally, from one set or generation of
-men to another. These beliefs the first set or generation
-might, on La Place’s own principles, be compelled to entertain.
-The evidence of the senses, however wonderful the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_274"></a>[274]</span>
-event which they certified, is not, he himself tells us, to be
-resisted. But the conviction which, on one set of principles,
-these men were on no account to resist, the men that came
-immediately after them were, on quite another set of principles,
-on no account to entertain. And thus the anti-miracle
-argument, instead of leading, as all true philosophy ought, to
-an exact correspondence between the realities of things and
-the convictions received by the mind regarding them, palpably
-forms a bar to the reception of beliefs, adequate to the possibilities
-of actual occurrence or event, and so constitutes an
-imperfection or flaw in the mental economy, instead of working
-an improvement. And, in accordance with this view,
-we find that in the economy of minds of the very highest
-order this imperfection or flaw has had no place. Locke
-studied and wrote upon the subject of miracles proper, and
-exhibited in his “Discourse” all the profundity of his extraordinary
-mind; and yet Locke was a believer. Newton
-studied and wrote on the subject of miracles of another kind,—those
-of prophecy; and he also, as shown by his “Observations
-on the Prophecies of Daniel and the Apocalypse,”
-was a believer. Butler studied and wrote on the subject of
-miracles, chiefly in connection with “Miraculous Revelation;”
-and he also was a believer. Chalmers studied and
-wrote on the subject of miracles in his “Evidences,” after
-Hume, La Place, and Playfair had all promulgated their peculiar
-views regarding it; and he also was a believer. And
-in none of the truly distinguished men of the present day,
-though all intimately acquainted with the anti-miracle argument,
-is this flaw or imperfection found to exist: on the contrary,
-they all hold, as becomes the philosophic intellect and
-character, that whatever is possible may occur, and that whatever
-occurs ought, on the proper evidence, to be believed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_275"></a>[275]</span></p>
-
-<p>But though the experience argument is of no real force,
-and, as shown by the beliefs of the higher order of minds, of
-no real effect, when brought to bear against miracles supported
-by the proper testimony, <i>it is</i> of great force and effect
-when brought to bear, not against <i>miracles</i>, but against some
-presumed <i>law</i>. It is experience, and experience only, that
-determines what is or is not law, and it is law, and law only,
-that constitutes the subject-matter of ordinary experience.
-Experience, in determining what is really miracle, does so
-simply through its positive knowledge of law: by knowing
-law, it knows also what would be a violation of it. And
-so miracle cannot possibly form the subject-matter of experience
-in the sense of Hume. For did miracle constitute
-the subject-matter of experience, the law of which the
-miracle was a violation <i>could not</i>: most emphatically, in this
-case, were there “no law” there could be “no transgression;”
-and so experience would be unable to recognize, not
-only the existence of the law transgressed, but also of the
-miracle, in its character as such, which was a transgression
-of the law. We determine from experience that there
-exists a certain fixed law, known among men as the law
-of gravitation; and that, in consequence of this law, if a
-human creature attempt standing upon the sea, he will sink
-into it; or if he attempt rising from the earth into the heavens,
-he will remain fixed to the spot on which the attempt is
-made. Such, in these cases, would be the direct effects of
-this gravitation <i>law</i>; and any presumed law antagonistic in
-its character could not be other than a law contrary to that
-invariable experience by which the existence of the real law
-in the case is determined. But certain it is—for the evidence
-regarding the facts cannot be resisted, and by the
-greatest minds has not been resisted—that a man <i>did</i> once<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_276"></a>[276]</span>
-walk upon the sea without sinking into it, and <i>did</i> once
-ascend from the earth into the sky; and these <i>miracles</i>
-ought not to be tested—and by earnest inquirers after truth
-really never have been tested—by any experience of the
-uniformity of the law of which they were professed transgressions,
-seeing it was essentially and obviously necessary
-that, in order to serve the great moral purpose which God
-intended by them, the law which they violated should have
-been a uniform law, and that they should have been palpable
-violations of it. But while the experience argument is thus
-of no value when directed against well-attested <i>miracle</i>, it is,
-as I have said, all-potent when directed against presumed
-<i>law</i>. Of law we know nothing, I repeat, except what experience
-tells us. A miracle contrary to experience in the
-sense of Hume is simply a miracle; a presumed law contrary
-to experience is no law at all. For it is from experience,
-and experience only, that we know any thing of natural
-law. The argument of Hume and La Place is perfect, as
-such, when directed against the development visions of the
-Lamarckian.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_277"></a>[277]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIV">THE DEVELOPMENT HYPOTHESIS IN ITS EMBRYONIC STATE.<br />
-OLDER THAN ITS ALLEGED FOUNDATIONS.</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>When Maillet first promulgated his hypothesis, many of the
-departments of natural history existed as mere regions of
-fable and romance; and, in addressing himself to the <i>Muscadins</i>
-of Paris, in a popular work as wild and amusing as a
-fairy tale, he could safely take the liberty, and he did take it
-very freely, of exaggerating the marvellous, and adding fresh
-fictions to the untrue. And in preparing them for his theory
-of the metamorphoses of a marine into a terrestrial vegetation,
-he set himself, in accordance with his general character,
-to show that really the transmutation did not amount to
-much. “I know you have resided a long time,” his Indian
-Philosopher is made to say, “at Marseilles. Now, you can
-bear me witness, that the fishermen there daily find in their
-nets, and among their fish, plants of a hundred kinds, with
-their fruits still upon them; and though these fruits are not
-so large and so well nourished as those of our earth, yet
-the species of these plants is in no other respect dubious.
-They there find clusters of white and black grapes, peach-trees,
-pear-trees, prune-trees, apple-trees, and all sorts of
-flowers. When in that city, I saw, in the cabinet of a curious<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_278"></a>[278]</span>
-gentleman, a prodigious number of those sea-productions of
-different qualities, especially of rose-trees, which had their
-roses very red when they came out of the sea. I was there
-presented with a cluster of black sea-grapes. It was at the
-time of the vintage, and there were two grapes perfectly
-ripe.”</p>
-
-<p>Now, all this, and much more of the same nature, addressed
-to the Parisians of the reign of Louis the Fifteenth,
-passed, I doubt not, wonderfully well; but it will not do now,
-when almost every young girl, whether in town or country, is
-a botanist, and works on the algæ have become popular. Since
-Maillet wrote, Hume promulgated his argument on Miracles,
-and La Place his doctrine of Probabilities. There can be no
-doubt that these have exerted a wholesome influence on the
-laws of evidence; and by these laws, as restricted and
-amended,—laws to which, both in science and religion, we
-ourselves conform,—we insist on trying the Lamarckian
-hypothesis, and in condemning it,—should it be found to have
-neither standing in experience nor support from testimony,—as
-a mere feverish dream, incoherent in its parts and baseless
-in its fabric. Give, we ask, but one well-attested instance
-of transmutation from the algæ to even the lower
-forms of terrestrial vegetation common on our sea-coasts,
-and we will keep the question open, in expectation of more.
-It will not do to tell us—as Cuvier was told, when he appealed
-to the fact, determined by the mummy birds and reptiles
-of Egypt, of the fixity of species in all, even the slightest
-particulars, for at least three thousand years—that immensely
-extended periods of time are necessary to effect specific
-changes, and that human observation has not been spread over
-a period sufficiently ample to furnish the required data regarding
-them. The apology is simply a confession that, in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_279"></a>[279]</span>
-these ages of the severe inductive philosophy, you have been
-dreaming your dream, cut off, as if by the state of sleep, from
-all the tangibilities of the real waking-day world, and that you
-have not a vestige of testimony with which to support your
-ingenious vagaries.</p>
-
-<p>But on another account do we refuse to sustain the excuse.
-It is <i>not true</i> that human observation has not been spread
-over a period sufficiently extended to furnish the necessary
-data for testing the development hypothesis. In one special
-walk,—that which bears on the supposed transmutation
-of algæ into terrestrial plants,—human observation <i>has</i>
-been spread over what is strictly analogous to <i>millions</i> of
-years. For extent of space in this matter is exactly correspondent
-with duration of time. No man, in this late period
-of the world’s history, attains to the age of five hundred
-years; and as some of our larger English oaks have been
-known to increase in bulk of trunk and extent of bough for
-five centuries together, no man can possibly have seen the
-same huge oak pass, according to Cowper, through its various
-stages of “treeship,”—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“First a seedling hid in grass;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Then twig; then sapling; and, as century rolls</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Slow after century, a giant bulk,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Of girth enormous, with moss-cushioned root</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Upheaved above the soil, and sides embossed</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">With prominent wens globose.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">But though no man lives throughout five hundred years of
-time, he can trace, by passing in some of the English forests
-through five hundred yards of space, the history of the oak
-in all its stages of growth, as correctly as if he <i>did</i> live
-throughout the five hundred years. Oaks, in the space of a
-few hundred yards, may be seen in every stage of growth,
-from the newly burst acorn, that presents to the light its<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_280"></a>[280]</span>
-two fleshy lobes, with the first tender rudiments of a leaflet
-between, up to the giant of the forest, in the hollow of whose
-trunk the red deer may shelter, and find ample room for the
-broad spread of his antlers. The fact of the development of
-the oak, from the minute two-lobed seedling of a week’s
-growth up to the gigantic tree of five centuries, is as capable
-of being demonstrated by observation spread over five hundred
-yards of space, as by observation spread over five hundred
-years of time. And be it remembered, that the sea-coasts
-of the world are several hundred thousand miles in extent.
-Europe is by far the smallest of the earth’s four large
-divisions, and it is bounded, in proportion to its size, by a
-greater extent of land than any of the others. And yet the
-sea-coasts of Europe alone, including those of its islands,
-exceed twenty-five thousand miles. We have results before
-us, in this extent of space, identical with those of many hundred
-thousand years of time; and if terrestrial plants were
-as certainly developments of the low plants of the sea as the
-huge oak is a development of the immature seedling, just
-sprung from the acorn, so vast a stretch of sea-coast could not
-fail to present us with the intermediate vegetation in all its
-stages. But the sea-coasts fail to exhibit even a vestige of
-the intermediate vegetation. Experience spread over an extent
-of space analogous to millions of years of time, does
-not furnish, in this department, a single fact corroborative
-of the development theory, but, on the contrary, many hundreds
-of facts that bear directly against it.</p>
-
-<p>The author of the “Vestiges” is evidently a practised and
-tasteful writer, and his work abounds in ingenious combinations
-of thought; but those powers of abstract reflection
-on whose vigorous exercise the origination of argument depends,
-nature seems to have denied him. There are two<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_281"></a>[281]</span>
-things in especial which his work wants,—<i>original observation</i>
-and <i>abstract thought</i>,—the power of <i>seeing</i> for himself
-and of <i>reasoning</i> for himself; and what we find instead is
-simply a vivid appreciation of the <i>images</i> of things, as these
-images exist in other minds, and a vigorous perception of the
-various shades of resemblance which obtain among them.
-There is a large amount of analogical power exhibited; but
-that basis of truth which correct observation can alone furnish,
-and that ability of nicely distinguishing differences by which
-the faculty of discerning similarity must be forever regulated
-and governed, are wanting, in what, in a mind of fine
-general texture and quality, must be regarded as an extraordinary
-degree. And hence an ingenious but very unsolid
-work,—full of images transferred, not from the scientific
-field, but from the field of <i>scientific mind</i>, and charged with
-glittering but vague resemblances, stamped in the mint of
-fancy; which, were they to be used as mere counters in some
-light literary game of story-telling or character-sketching,
-would be in no respect out of place, but which, when passed
-current as the proper coin of philosophic argument, are really
-frauds on the popular understanding. There are, however,
-not a few instances in the “Vestiges” and its “Sequel,” in
-which that defect of reflective power to which I refer rather
-enhances than diminishes the difficulty of reply, by presenting
-to the controversialist mere intangible clouds with which to
-grapple; that yet, through the existence of a certain superstition
-in the popular mind, as predisposed to accept as true
-whatever takes the form of science, as its predecessor the old
-superstition was inclined a century ago to reject science itself,
-are at least suited to blind and bewilder. Of this kind of
-difficulty, the following passage, in which the author of the
-work cashiers the Creator as such, and substitutes, instead, a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_282"></a>[282]</span>
-mere animal-manufacturing piece of clock-work, which bears
-the name of natural law,<a id="FNanchor_38" href="#Footnote_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a> furnishes us with a remarkable instance.</p>
-
-<p>“Admitting,” he remarks, “that we see not now any such<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_283"></a>[283]</span>
-fact as the production of new species, we at least know, that
-while such facts were occurring upon earth, there were associated
-phenomena in progress of a character perfectly ordinary.
-For example, when the earth received its first fishes, sandstone
-and limestone were forming in the manner exemplified a few
-years ago in the ingenious experiments of Sir James Hall; basaltic
-columns rose for the future wonder of man, according
-to the principle which Dr. Gregory Watt showed in operation
-before the eyes of our fathers; and hollows in the igneous
-rocks were filled with crystals, precisely as they could now<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_284"></a>[284]</span>
-be by virtue of electric action, as shown within the last few
-years by Crosse and Becquerel. The seas obeyed the impulse
-of gentle breezes, and rippled their sandy bottoms, as
-seas of the present day are doing; the trees grew as now,
-by favor of sun and wind, thriving in good seasons and
-pining in bad: this while the animals above fishes were yet
-to be created. The movements of the sea, the meteorological
-agencies, the disposition which we see in the generality
-of plants to thrive when heat and moisture were most abundant,
-were kept up in silent serenity, as matters of simply
-natural order, throughout the whole of the ages which saw
-reptiles enter in their various forms upon the sea and land.
-It was about the time of the first mammals that the forest
-of the Dirt-Bed was sinking in natural ruin amidst the sea
-sludge, as forests of the Plantagenets have been doing for
-several centuries upon the coast of England. In short <i>all
-the common operations of the physical world were going on in
-their usual simplicity, obeying that order which we still see
-governing them</i>; while the supposed extraordinary causes
-were in requisition for the development of the animal and
-vegetable kingdoms. There surely hence arises a strong presumption
-against any such causes. It becomes much more
-likely that the latter phenomena were evolved in the manner
-of law also, and that we only dream of extraordinary causes
-here, as men once dreamt of a special action of Deity in
-every change of wind and the results of each season, merely
-because they did not know the laws by which the events in
-question were evolved.”</p>
-
-<p>How, let us suppose, would David Hume—the greatest
-thinker of which infidelity can boast—have greeted the
-auxiliary who could have brought him such an <i>argument</i> as a
-contribution to the cause? “Your objection, so far as you have<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_285"></a>[285]</span>
-stated it,” the philosopher might have said, “amounts simply
-to this:—Creation by direct act is a miracle; whereas all
-that exists is <i>propagated</i> and <i>maintained</i> by natural law. Natural
-laws—to vary the illustration—were in full operation at
-the period when the Author of the Christian religion was, it
-is said, engaged in working his miracles. When, according to
-our opponents, he walked upon the surface of the sea, Peter,
-through the operation of the natural law of gravitation, was
-sinking into it; when he withered, by a word, the barren
-fig-tree, there were other trees on the Mount thriving in
-conformity with the vegetative laws, under the influence of
-sun and shower; when he raised the dead Lazarus, there
-were corpses in the neighboring tombs passing, through the
-natural putrefactive fermentation, into a state of utter decomposition.
-In fine, at the time when he was engaged,
-as Reid and Campbell believe, in working miracles in violation
-of law, the laws of which these were a violation
-actually existed, and were every where actively operative;
-or, to employ your own words, when the New Testament
-miracles were, it is alleged, in the act of being
-wrought, ‘all the common operations of the physical world
-were going on in their usual simplicity, obeying that order
-which we still see governing them.’ Such is the portion of
-your statement already made; what next?” “It is surely
-very unlikely,” replies the auxiliary, “that in such a complex
-mass of phenomena there should have been two totally
-distinct modes of the exercise of the Divine power,—the
-mode by miracle and the mode by law.” “Unlikely!” rejoins
-the philosopher; “on what grounds?” “O, just <i>unlikely</i>,”
-says the auxiliary;—“unlikely that God should be at
-once operating on matter through the agency of natural laws,
-of which <i>man knows much</i>, and through the agency of miraculous<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_286"></a>[286]</span>
-acts, of the nature of which <i>man knows nothing</i>. But I
-have not thought out the subject any further: you have, in the
-statement already made, my entire <i>argument</i>.” “Ay, I see,”
-the author of the “Essay on Miracles” would probably have
-remarked; “you deem it unlikely that Deity should not only
-work in part, as he has always done, by means of which <i>men</i>,—clever
-fellows like you and me—think they know a great
-deal but that he should also work in part, <i>as he has always
-done</i>, by means of which they know nothing at all. Admirably
-reasoned out! You are, I make no doubt, a sound, zealous
-unbeliever in your private capacity, and your argument may
-have great weight with your own mind, and be, in consequence,
-worthy of encouragement in a small way; but allow
-me to suggest that, for the sake of the general cause, it
-should be kept out of reach of the enemy. There are in the
-Churches Militant on both sides of the Tweed shrewd combatants,
-who have nearly as much wit as ourselves.” I think
-I understand the reference of the author of the “Vestiges”
-to the <i>dream</i> “of a special action of Deity in every change
-of wind and the results of each season.” Taken with what
-immediately goes before, it means something considerably
-different from those fancies of the “untutored Indian,” who,
-according to the poet,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Sees God in clouds, or hears him in the wind.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">There is a school of infidelity, tolerably well known in the
-capital of Scotland as by far the most superficial which our
-country has yet seen, that measures mind with a tape-line
-and the callipers, and, albeit not Christian, laudably exemplifies,
-in a loudly expressed regard for science, the Christian
-grace of loving its enemy. And the belief in a special Providence,
-who watches over and orders all things, and without
-whose permission there falleth not even a “sparrow to the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_287"></a>[287]</span>
-ground,” the apostles of this school set wholly aside, substituting,
-instead, a belief in the indiscriminating operation
-of natural laws; as if, with the broad fact before them that
-even man can work out his will merely by knowing and directing
-these laws, the God by whom they were instituted
-should lack either the power or the wisdom to make them
-the pliant ministers of <i>his</i>. It is, I fear, to the distinctive
-tenet in the creed of this hapless school that the author of
-the “Vestiges” refers. Nor is it in the least surprising,
-that a writer who labors through two carefully written volumes,<a id="FNanchor_39" href="#Footnote_39" class="fnanchor">[39]</a>
-to destroy the existing belief in “God’s works of
-Creation,” should affect to hold that the belief in his “works
-of Providence” had been destroyed already. But faith in a
-special superintendence of Deity is not yet dead: nay, more,
-He who created the human mind took especial care, in its construction,
-that, save in a few defective specimens of the race,
-the belief should never die.</p>
-
-<p>The author of the “Vestiges” complains of the illiberality
-with which he has been treated. “It has appeared to various
-critics,” we find him saying, “that very sacred principles
-are threatened by a doctrine of universal law. A natural
-origin of life, and a natural basis in organization for the
-operations of the human mind, speak to them of fatalism and
-materialism. And, strange to say, those who every day give
-views of <i>physical cosmogony</i> altogether discrepant in appearance
-with that of Moses, apply hard names to my book for
-suggesting an <i>organic cosmogony</i> in the same way, liable to
-inconsiderate odium. I must firmly protest against this mode
-of meeting speculations regarding nature. The object of my<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_288"></a>[288]</span>
-book, whatever may be said of the manner in which it is
-treated, is purely scientific. The views which I give of the
-history of organization stand exactly on the same ground
-upon which the geological doctrines stood fifty years ago.
-I am merely endeavoring to read aright another chapter of
-the mystic book which God has placed under the attention
-of his creatures.... The absence of all liberality in my
-reviewers is striking, and especially so in those whose geological
-doctrines have exposed them to similar misconstruction.
-If the men newly emerged from the odium which was thrown
-upon Newton’s theory of the planetary motions had rushed
-forward to turn that odium upon the patrons of the dawning
-science of Geology, they would have been prefiguring the
-conduct of several of my critics, themselves hardly escaped
-from the rude hands of the narrow-minded, yet eager to join
-that rabble against a new and equally unfriended stranger, as
-if such were the best means of purchasing impunity for themselves.
-<i>I trust that a little time will enable the public to penetrate
-this policy.</i>”</p>
-
-<p>Now, there is one very important point to which the author
-of this complaint does not seem to have adverted. The astronomer
-founded his belief in the mobility of the earth and
-the immobility of the sun, not on a mere dream-like hypothesis,
-founded on nothing, but on a wide and solid base of
-pure induction. Galileo was no mere dreamer;—he was a
-discoverer of great truths, and a profound reasoner regarding
-them: and on his discoveries and his reasonings, compelled
-by the inexorable laws of his mental constitution, did
-he build up certain deductive beliefs, which had no previous
-existence in his mind. His convictions were consequents,
-not antecedents. Such, also, is the character of geological
-discovery and inference, and of the existing belief,—their<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_289"></a>[289]</span>
-joint production,—regarding the great antiquity of the globe.
-No geologist worthy of the name <i>began</i> with the belief, and then
-set himself to square geological phenomena with its requirements.
-It is a deduction,—a result;—not the starting assumption,
-or given sum, in a process of calculation, but its ultimate
-finding or answer. Clergymen of the orthodox Churches,
-such as the Sumners, Sedgwicks, Bucklands, Conybeares, and
-Pye Smiths of England, or the Chalmerses, Duncans, and Flemings
-of our own country, must have come to the study of
-this question of the world’s age with at least no bias in favor
-of the geological estimate. The old, and, as it has proven,
-erroneous reading of the Mosaic account, was by much too
-general a one early in the present century, not to have exerted
-upon them, in their character as ministers of religion, a
-sensible influence of a directly opposite nature. And the fact
-of the complete reversal of their original bias, and of the
-broad unhesitating finding on the subject which they ultimately
-substituted instead, serves to intimate to the uninitiated
-the strength of the evidence to which they submitted.
-There can be nothing more certain than that it is minds of
-the same calibre and class, engaged in the same inductive
-track, that yielded in the first instance to the astronomical
-evidence regarding the earth’s motion, and, in the second, to
-the geological evidence regarding the earth’s age.<a id="FNanchor_40" href="#Footnote_40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_290"></a>[290]</span></p>
-
-<p>But how very different the nature and history of the development
-hypothesis, and the character of the intellects
-with whom it originated, or by whom it has been since<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_291"></a>[291]</span>
-adopted! In the first place, it existed as a wild dream ere
-Geology had any being as a science. It was an antecedent,
-not a consequent,—a starting assumption, not a result. No<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_292"></a>[292]</span>
-one will contend that Maillet was a geologist. Geology has
-no place among the sciences in the age in which he lived
-and even no name. And yet there is a translation of his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_293"></a>[293]</span>
-<i>Telliamed</i> now lying before me, bearing date 1750, in which
-I find very nearly the same account given of the origin of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_294"></a>[294]</span>
-animals and plants as that in the “Vestiges,” and in which
-the sea is described as that great and fruitful womb of nature
-in which organization and life first began. Lamarck,
-at the time when Maillet wrote, was a boy in his sixth
-year. He became, comparatively early in life, a skilful botanist
-and conchologist; but not until turned of fifty did he
-set himself to study general zoology; and his greater work
-on the invertebrate animals, on which his fame as a naturalist
-chiefly rests, did not <i>begin</i> to appear—for it was published
-serially—until the year 1815. But his development hypothesis,
-identical with that of the “Vestiges,” was given to the
-world long before,—in 1802; at a time when it had not been
-ascertained that there existed placoids during the Silurian
-period, or ganoids during the Old Red Sandstone period, or
-enaliosaurs during the Oolitic period; and when, though
-Smith had constructed his “Tabular View of the British
-Strata,” his map had not yet appeared, and there was little
-more known regarding the laws of superposition among the
-stratified rocks than was to be found in the writings of
-Werner. And if the presumption be strong, in the circumstances,
-that Lamarck originated his development hypothesis
-ere he became in any very great degree skilful as a zoologist,
-it is no mere presumption, but a demonstrable truth,
-that he originated it ere he became a geologist; for a geologist
-he never became. In common with Maillet and Buffon,
-he held by Leibnitz’s theory of a universal ocean; and such,
-as we have already seen, was his ignorance of fossils, that
-he erected dermal fragments of the Russian <i>Asterolepis</i> into
-a new genus of Polyparia,—an error into which the merest
-tyro in palæontology could not now fall. Such, in relation
-to these sciences, was the man who perfected the dream of
-development. Nor has the most distinguished of its continental<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_295"></a>[295]</span>
-assertors now living,—Professor Oken,—any higher
-claim to be regarded as a disciple of the inductive school of
-Geology than Lamarck. In the preface to the recently published
-translation of his “Physio-Philosophy,” we find the
-following curious confession:—“I wrote the first edition of
-1810 <i>in a kind of inspiration</i>, and on that account it was
-not so well arranged as a systematic work ought to be. Now,
-though this may appear to have been amended in the second and
-third edition, yet still it was not possible for me to completely
-attain the object held in view. The book has therefore remained
-essentially the same as regards its fundamental principles.
-It is only the empirical arrangement into series of
-plants and animals that has been modified from time to time,
-<i>in accordance with the scientific elevation of their several departments,
-or just as discoveries and anatomical investigations
-have increased, and rendered some other position of the objects
-a matter of necessity</i>.” An interesting piece of evidence
-this; but certainly rather simple as a confession. It will be
-found that while whatever gives value to the “Physio-Philosophy”
-of the German Professor (a work which, if divested of
-all the inspired bits, would be really a good one) was acquired
-either before or since its first appearance in the ordinary way,
-its development hypothesis came direct from the god. Further,
-as I have already had occasion to state, Oken holds, like
-Lamarck and Maillet, by the universal ocean of Leibnitz; he
-holds, also, that the globe is a vast crystal, just a little flawed
-in the facets: and that the three granitic components—quartz,
-feldspar, and mica—are simply the hail-drops of
-heavy stone showers that shot athwart the original ocean, and
-accumulated into rock at the bottom, as snow or hail shoots
-athwart the upper atmosphere, and accumulates, in the form
-of ice, on the summits of high hills, or in the arctic or antarctic<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_296"></a>[296]</span>
-regions. Such, in the present day, are the geological notions
-of Oken! They were doubtless all promulgated in what
-is modestly enough termed “a <i>kind</i> of inspiration;” and
-there are few now so ignorant of Geology as not to know that
-the <i>possessing</i> agent in the case—for <i>inspiration</i> is not quite
-the proper word—must have been at least of kin to that
-ingenious personage who volunteered of old to be a lying
-spirit in the mouths of the four hundred prophets. And the
-well-known fact, that the most popular contemporary expounder
-of Oken’s hypothesis—the author of the “Vestiges”—has
-in every edition of his work been correcting, modifying,
-or altogether withdrawing his statements regarding both
-geological and zoological phenomena, and that his gradual
-development as a geologist and zoologist, from the sufficiently
-low type of acquirement to which his first edition bore witness,
-may be traced, in consequence, with a distinctness and certainty
-which we in vain seek in the cases of presumed development
-which he would so fain establish,—has in its bearing
-exactly the same effect. His development hypothesis was
-complete at a time when his geology and zoology were rudimental
-and imperfect. Give me your facts, said the Frenchman,
-that I may accommodate them to my theory. And no one
-can look at the progress of the Lamarckian hypothesis, with
-reference to the dates when, and the men by whom, it was promulgated,
-without recognizing in it one of perhaps the most
-striking embodiments of the Frenchman’s principle which the
-world ever saw. It is not the illiberal religionist that rejects
-and casts it off,—it is the inductive philosopher. Science
-addresses its assertors in the language of the possessed to the
-sons of Sceva the Jew;—“The astronomer I know, and the
-geologist I know; but who are ye?”</p>
-
-<p>One of the strangest passages in the “Sequel to the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_297"></a>[297]</span>
-Vestiges,” is that in which its author carries his appeal from
-the tribunal of science to “another tribunal,” indicated but
-not named, before which “this new philosophy” [remarkable
-chiefly for being neither philosophy nor new] “is to be truly
-and righteously judged.” The principle is obvious, on which,
-were his opponents mere theologians, wholly unable, though
-they saw the mischievous character and tendency of his conclusions,
-to disprove them scientifically, he might appeal from
-theology to science: “it is with scientific truth,” he might
-urge, “not with moral consequences, that I have aught to do.”
-But on what allowable principle, professing, as he does, to
-found his theory on scientific fact, can he appeal from science
-to the want of it? “After discussing,” he says, “the whole
-arguments on both sides in so ample a manner, it may be
-hardly necessary to advert to the objection arising from the
-mere fact, that nearly all the scientific men are opposed to the
-theory of the ‘Vestiges.’ As this objection, however, is likely
-to be of some avail with many minds, it ought not to be
-entirely passed over. If I did not think there were reasons,
-independent of judgment, for the scientific class coming so
-generally to this conclusion, I might feel the more embarrassed
-in presenting myself in direct opposition to so many men
-possessing talents and information. As the case really stands,
-the ability of this class to give at the present a true response
-upon such a subject appears extremely challengeable. It is
-no discredit to them that they are, almost without exception,
-engaged each in his own little department of science, and
-able to give little or no attention to other parts of that vast
-field. From year to year, and from age to age, we see them
-at work, adding, no doubt, much to the known, and advancing
-many important interests, but at the same time doing
-little for the establishment of comprehensive views of nature<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_298"></a>[298]</span>
-Experiments in however narrow a walk, facts of whatever
-minuteness, make reputations in scientific societies; all beyond
-is regarded with suspicion and distrust. The consequence is,
-that philosophy, as it exists amongst us, does nothing to raise
-its votaries above the common ideas of their time. There
-can therefore be nothing more conclusive against our hypothesis
-in the disfavor of the scientific class, than in that of
-any other section of educated men.”</p>
-
-<p>This is surely a very strange statement. Waiving altogether
-the <i>general</i> fact, that great original discoverers in any
-department of knowledge are never men of one science or
-one faculty, but possess, on the contrary, breadth of mind
-and multiplicity of acquirement;—waiving, too, the <i>particular</i>
-fact, that the more distinguished original discoverers of
-the present day rank among at once its most philosophic,
-most elegant, and most extensively informed writers;—granting,
-for the argument’s sake, that our scientific men <i>are</i> men
-of narrow acquirement, and “exclusively engaged, each in
-his own little department of science;”—it is surely rational
-to hold, notwithstanding, that in at least these little departments
-they have a better right to be heard than any other
-class of persons whatever. We must surely not refuse to the
-man of science what we at once grant to the common mechanic.
-A cotton-weaver or calico-printer may be a very
-narrow man, “exclusively engaged in his own little department;”
-and yet certain it is that, in a question of cotton-weaving
-or calico-printing, his evidence is justly deemed more
-conclusive in courts of law than that of any other man,
-however much his superior in general breadth and intelligence.
-And had the author of the “Vestiges” founded his
-hypothesis on certain facts pertaining to the arts of cotton-weaving
-and calico-printing, the cotton-weaver and calico-printer<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_299"></a>[299]</span>
-would have an indisputable right to be heard on the
-question of their general correctness. Are we to regard the
-case as different because it is on facts pertaining to science,
-not to cotton-weaving or calico-printing, that he professes to
-found? His hypothesis, unless supported by scientific evidence,
-is a mere dream,—a fiction as baseless and wild as
-any in the “Fairy Tales” or the “Arabian Nights.” And,
-fully sensible of the fact, he calls in as witnesses the physical
-sciences, and professes to take down their evidence. He
-calls into court Astronomy, Geology, Phytology, and Zoology.
-“Hold!” exclaims the astronomer, as the examination goes
-on; “you are taking the evidence of my special science most
-unfairly; I challenge a right of cross-examining the witness.”
-“Hold!” cries the geologist; “you are putting my science to
-the question, and extorting from it, in its agony, a whole
-series of fictions: I claim the right of examining it fairly and
-softly, and getting from it just the sober truth, and nothing
-more.” And the phytologist and zoologist urge exactly similar
-claims. “No, gentlemen,” replies the author of the
-“Vestiges,” “you are narrow men, confined each of you to
-his own little department, and so I will not permit you to
-cross-examine the witnesses.” “What!” rejoin the men of
-science, “not permit us to examine our own witnesses!—refuse
-to us what you would at once concede to the cotton-weaver
-or the calico-printer, were the question one of cotton-weaving
-or of calico-printing! We are surely not much
-narrower men than the man of cotton or the man of calico.
-It is but in our own little departments that we ask to be heard.”
-“But you shall not be heard, gentlemen,” says the author of
-the “Vestiges;” “at all events, I shall not care one farthing
-for anything you say. For observe, gentlemen, my hypothesis
-is nothing without the evidence of your sciences; and you<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_300"></a>[300]</span>
-all unite, I see, in taking that evidence from me; and so I
-confidently raise my appeal in this matter to people who
-know nothing about either you or your sciences. It must be
-before another tribunal that the new philosophy is to be truly
-and righteously judged.” Alas! what can this mean? or
-where are we to seek for that tribunal of last resort to which
-this ingenious man refers with such confidence the consideration
-of his case? Can it mean, that he appeals from the
-only class of persons qualified to judge of his facts, to a class
-ignorant of these, but disposed by habits of previous scepticism
-to acquiesce in his conclusions, and take his premises for
-granted;—that he appeals from astronomers and geologists
-to low-minded materialists and shallow phrenologers,—from
-phytologists and zoologists to mesmerists and phreno-mesmerists?</p>
-
-<p>I remember being much struck, several years ago, by a remark
-dropped in conversation by the late Rev. Mr. Stewart
-of Cromarty, one of the most original-minded men I ever
-knew. “In reading in my Greek New Testament this morning,”
-he said, “I was curiously impressed by a thought
-which, simple as it may seem, never occurred to me before.
-The portion which I perused was in the First Epistle of Peter;
-and as I passed from the thinking of the passage to the language
-in which it is expressed,—‘This Greek of the untaught
-Galilean fisherman,’—I said, ‘so admired by scholars
-and critics for its unaffected dignity and force, was not acquired,
-as that of Paul may have been, in the ordinary way,
-but formed a portion of the Pentecostal gift! Here, then,
-immediately under my eye, on these pages, are there embodied,
-not, as in many other parts of the Scriptures, the
-mere <i>details</i> of a miracle, but the direct <i>results</i> of a miracle.
-How strange! Had the old tables of stone been placed before<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_301"></a>[301]</span>
-me, with what an awe-struck feeling would I have looked
-on the characters traced upon them by God’s own finger!
-How is it that I have failed to remember that, in the language
-of these Epistles, miraculously impressed by the Divine
-power upon the mind, I possessed as significant and suggestive
-a relic as that which the inscription miraculously impressed
-by the Divine power upon the stone could possibly have furnished?”
-It was a striking thought; and in the course of
-our walk, which led us over richly fossiliferous beds of the
-Old Red Sandstone, to a deposit of the Eathie Lias, largely
-charged with the characteristic remains of that formation, I
-ventured to connect it with another. “In either case,” I remarked,
-as we seated ourselves beside a sea-cliff, sculptured
-over with the impressions of extinct plants and shells, “your
-relics, whether of the Pentecostal Greek or of the characters
-inscribed on the old tables of stone, could address themselves
-to but previously existing belief. The sceptic would see in
-the Sinaitic characters, were they placed before him, merely
-the work of an ordinary tool; and in the Greek of Peter and
-John, a well-known language, acquired, he would hold, in
-the common way. But what say you to the relics that stand
-out in such bold relief from the rocks beside us, in <i>their</i> character
-as the results of miracle? The perished tribes and
-races which they represent all <i>began</i> to exist. There is no
-truth which science can more conclusively demonstrate than
-that they had all a beginning. The infidel who, in this late
-age of the world, would attempt falling back on the fiction of
-an ‘infinite series,’ would be laughed to scorn. They all began
-to be. But how? No true geologist holds by the development
-hypothesis;—it has been resigned to sciolists and
-smatterers;—and there is but one other alternative. They
-began to be, <i>through the miracle of creation</i>. From the evidence<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_302"></a>[302]</span>
-furnished by these rocks we are shut down either to
-the belief in <i>miracle</i>, or to the belief in something else infinitely
-harder of reception, and as thoroughly unsupported
-by testimony as it is contrary to experience. Hume is at
-length answered by the severe truths of the stony science.
-He was not, according to Job, ‘in league with the stones of
-the field,’ and they have risen in irresistible warfare against
-him in the Creator’s behalf.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_303"></a>[303]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XV">FINAL CAUSES.—THEIR BEARING ON GEOLOGIC HISTORY.<br />
-CONCLUSION.</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>“Natural History has a principle on which to reason,”
-says Cuvier, “which is peculiar to it, and which it employs
-advantageously on many occasions: it is that of the <i>conditions
-of existence</i>, commonly termed <i>final causes</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>In Geology, which is Natural History extended over all
-ages, this principle has a still wider scope,—embracing not
-merely the characteristics and conditions of the beings which
-now exist, but of all, so far as we can learn regarding them,
-which have ever existed, and involving the consideration
-of not merely their peculiarities as races placed before us
-without relation to time, but also of the history of their rise,
-increase, decline, and extinction. In studying the <i>biography</i>,
-if I may so express myself, of an individual animal, we have
-to acquaint ourselves with the circumstances in which nature
-has placed it,—its adaptation to these, both in structure and
-instinct,—the points of resemblance which it presents to the
-individuals of other races and families, and the laws which
-determine its terms of development, vigorous existence, and
-decay. And all Natural History, when restricted to the passing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_304"></a>[304]</span>
-<i>now</i> of the world’s annals, is simply a congeries of biographies.
-It is when we extend our view into the geological
-field that it passes from <i>biography</i> into <i>history proper</i>, and
-that we have to rise from the consideration of the birth and
-death of individuals, which, in all mere biographies, form the
-great terminal events that constitute beginning and end, to a
-survey of the birth and death of races, and the elevation or
-degradation of dynasties and sub-kingdoms.</p>
-
-<p>We learn from human history that nations are as certainly
-mortal as men. They enjoy a greatly longer term of existence,
-but they die at last: Rollin’s History of Ancient Nations
-is a history of the dead. And we are taught by geological
-history, in like manner, that <i>species</i> are as mortal as individuals
-and nations, and that even genera and families become
-extinct. There is no <i>man</i> upon earth at the present moment
-whose age greatly exceeds an hundred years;—there is no
-<i>nation</i> now upon earth (if we perhaps except the long-lived
-Chinese) that also flourished three thousand years ago;—there
-is no <i>species</i> now living upon earth that dates beyond the
-times of the Tertiary deposits. All bear the stamp of death,—individuals,—nations,—species;
-and we may scarce less
-safely predicate, looking upon the past, that it is appointed for
-nations and species to die, than that it “is appointed for <i>man</i>
-once to die.” Even our own species, <i>as now constituted</i>,—with
-instincts that conform to the original injunction, “increase
-and multiply,” and that, in consequence, “marry and are given
-in marriage,”—shall one day cease to exist: a fact not less
-in accordance with beliefs inseparable from the faith of the
-Christian, than with the widely-founded experience of the
-geologist. Now, it is scarce possible for the human mind to
-become acquainted with the fact, that at certain periods species
-began to exist and then, after the lapse of untold ages, ceased<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_305"></a>[305]</span>
-to be, without inquiring whether, from the “conditions of existence,
-commonly termed final causes,” we cannot deduce
-a reason for their rise or decline, or why their term of being
-should have been included rather in one certain period of time
-than another. The same faculty which finds employment in
-tracing to their causes the rise and fall of nations, and which
-it is the merit of the philosophic historian judiciously to exercise,
-will to a certainty seek employment in this department
-of history also; and that there will be an appetency for such
-speculations in the public mind, we may infer from the success,
-as a literary undertaking, of the “Vestiges of Creation,”—a
-work that bears the same sort of relation, in this special
-field to sober inquiry, founded on the true conditions of things,
-that the legends of the old chroniclers bore to authentic history.
-The progressive state of geologic science has hitherto
-militated against the formation of theory of the soberer character.
-Its facts—still merely in the forming—are necessarily
-imperfect in their classification, and limited in their
-amount; and thus the essential data continues incomplete.
-Besides, the men best acquainted with the basis of fact which
-already exists, have quite enough to engage them in adding
-to it. But there are limits to the field of palæontological discovery,
-in its relation to what may be termed the chronology
-of organized existence, which, judging from the progress of
-the science in the past, may be well nigh reached in favored
-localities, such as the British islands, in about a quarter of a
-century from the present time; and then, I doubt not, geological
-history, in legitimate conformity with the laws of mind,
-and from the existence of the pregnant principle peculiar, according
-to Cuvier, to that science of which Geology is
-simply an extension, will assume a very extraordinary form.
-We cannot yet aspire “to the height of this great argument:”<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_306"></a>[306]</span>
-our foundations are in parts still unconsolidated and incomplete,
-and unfitted to sustain the perfect superstructure which
-shall one day assuredly rise upon them; but from the little
-which we can now see, “as if in a glass darkly,” enough appears
-from which to</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent8">“Assert eternal Providence,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And justify the ways of God to men.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The history of the four great monarchies of the world was
-typified, in the prophetic dream of the ancient Babylonish
-king, by a colossal image, “terrible in its form and brightness,”
-of which the “head was pure gold,” the “breast and
-arms of silver,” the “belly and thighs of brass,” and the legs
-and feet “of iron, and of iron mingled with clay.” The
-vision in which it formed the central object was appropriately
-that of a puissant monarch; and the image itself typified the
-merely human monarchies of the earth. It would require a
-widely different figure to symbolize the great monarchies
-of creation. And yet Revelation does furnish such a figure.
-It is that which was witnessed by the captive prophet beside
-“the river Chebar,” when “the heavens were opened, and
-he saw visions of God.” In that chariot of Deity, glowing
-in fire and amber, with its complex wheels “so high that
-they were dreadful,” set round about with eyes, there were
-living creatures, of whose four faces three were brute and
-one human; and high over all sat the Son of Man. It would
-almost seem as if, in this sublime vision,—in which, with
-features distinct enough to impress the imagination, there
-mingle the elements of an awful incomprehensibility, and
-which even the genius of Raffaelle has failed adequately to
-portray,—the history of all the past and of all the future had
-been symbolized. In the order of Providence intimated in the
-geologic record, the brute faces, as in the vision, outnumber<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_307"></a>[307]</span>
-the human;—the human dynasty is one, and the dynasties
-of the inferior animals are three; and yet who can doubt that
-they all equally compose parts of a well-ordered and perfect
-whole, as the four faces formed but one cherubim; that they
-have been moving onward to a definite goal, in the unity of
-one grand harmonious design,—now “lifted up high” over
-the comprehension of earth,—now let down to its humble
-level; and that the Creator of all has been ever seated over
-them on the throne of his providence,—a “likeness in the
-appearance of a man,”—embodying the perfection of his
-nature in his workings, and determining the end from the beginning?</p>
-
-<p>There is geologic evidence, as has been shown, that in the
-course of creation the higher orders succeeded the lower.
-We have no good reason to believe that the mollusc and crustacean
-preceded the fish, seeing that discovery, in its slow
-course, has already traced the vertebrata in the ichthyic form,
-down to deposits which only a few years ago were regarded
-as representatives of the first beginnings of organized existence
-on our planet, and that it has at the same time failed to
-add a lower system to that in which their remains occur.
-But the fish seems most certainly to have preceded the reptile
-and the bird; the reptile and the bird to have preceded
-the mammiferous quadruped; and the mammiferous quadruped
-to have preceded man,—rational, accountable man,
-whom God created in his own image,—the much-loved Benjamin
-of the family,—last-born of all creatures. It is of itself
-an extraordinary fact, without reference to other considerations,
-that the order adopted by Cuvier, in his animal kingdom,
-as that in which the four great classes of vertebrate animals,
-when marshalled according to their rank and standing, naturally
-range should be also that in which they occur in order of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_308"></a>[308]</span>
-time. The brain which bears an average proportion to the
-spinal cord of not more than two to one, came first,—it is the
-brain of the fish; that which bears to the spinal cord an average
-proportion of two and a half to one succeeded it,—it
-is the brain of the reptile; then came the brain averaging as
-three to one,—it is that of the bird; next in succession came
-the brain that averages as four to one,—it is that of the mammal;
-and last of all there appeared a brain that averages as
-<i>twenty-three</i> to one,—reasoning, calculating man had come
-upon the scene. All the facts of geological science are hostile
-to the Lamarckian conclusion, that the lower brains were
-developed into the higher. As if with the express intention
-of preventing so gross a mis-reading of the record, we find,
-in at least two classes of animals,—fishes and reptiles,—the
-higher races placed at the beginning: the slope of the inclined
-plane is laid, if one may so speak, in the reverse way, and,
-instead of rising towards the level of the succeeding class,
-inclines downwards, with at least the effect, if not the design,
-of making the break where they meet exceedingly well
-marked and conspicuous. And yet the record does seem to
-speak of <i>development and progression</i>;—not, however, in the
-province of organized existence, but in that of insensate
-matter, subject to the purely chemical laws. It is in the style
-and character of <i>the dwelling-place</i> that gradual improvement
-seems to have taken place;—not in the functions or the rank
-of any class of its inhabitants; and it is with special reference
-to this gradual improvement in our common mansion-house
-the earth, in its bearing on the “conditions of existence,”
-that not a few of our reasonings regarding the introduction
-and extinction of species and genera must proceed.</p>
-
-<p>That definite period at which man was introduced upon
-the scene seems to have been specially determined by the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_309"></a>[309]</span>
-conditions of correspondence which the phenomena of his
-habitation had at length come to assume with the predestined
-constitution of his mind. The large reasoning brain
-would have been wholly out of place in the earlier ages. It
-is indubitably the nature of man to base the conclusions
-which regulate all his actions on fixed phenomena,—he reasons
-from cause to effect, or from effect to cause; and when
-placed in circumstances in which, from some lack of the
-necessary basis, he cannot so reason, he becomes a wretched,
-timid, superstitious creature, greatly more helpless and abject
-than even the inferior animals. This unhappy state is
-strikingly exemplified by that deep and peculiar impression
-made on the mind by a severe earthquake, which Humboldt,
-from his own experience, so powerfully describes.
-“This impression,” he says, “is not, in my opinion, the result
-of a recollection of those fearful pictures of devastation
-presented to our imagination by the historical narratives
-of the past, but is rather due to the sudden revelation
-of the delusive nature of the inherent faith by which we had
-clung to a belief in the immobility of the solid parts of the
-earth. We are accustomed from early childhood to draw a
-contrast between the mobility of water and the immobility
-of the soil on which we tread; and this feeling is confirmed
-by the evidence of our senses. When, therefore, we suddenly
-feel the ground move beneath us, a mysterious force,
-with which we were previously unacquainted, is revealed
-to us as an active disturber of stability. A moment destroys
-the illusion of a whole life; our deceptive faith in the
-repose of nature vanishes; and we feel transported into a
-realm of unknown destructive forces. Every sound—the
-faintest motion of the air—arrests our attention, and we no
-longer trust the ground on which we stand. There is an<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_310"></a>[310]</span>
-idea conveyed to the mind, of some universal and unlimited
-danger. We may flee from the crater of a volcano in active
-eruption, or from the dwelling whose destruction is threatened
-by the approach of the lava stream; but in an earthquake,
-direct our flight whithersoever we will, we still feel
-as if we trod upon the very focus of destruction.” Not less
-striking is the testimony of Dr. Tschudi, in his “Travels in
-Peru,” regarding this singular effect of earthquakes on the
-human mind. “No familiarity with the phenomenon can,”
-he remarks, “blunt the feeling. The inhabitant of Lima, who
-from childhood has frequently witnessed these convulsions
-of nature, is roused from his sleep by the shock, and rushes
-from his apartment with the cry of ‘<i>Misericordia</i>!’ The
-foreigner from the north of Europe, who knows nothing of
-earthquakes but by description, waits with impatience to feel
-the movements of the earth, and longs to hear with his own
-ear the subterranean sounds, which he has hitherto considered
-fabulous. With levity he treats the apprehension
-of a coming convulsion, and laughs at the fears of the
-natives; but as soon as his wish is gratified, he is terror-stricken,
-and is involuntarily prompted to seek safety in
-flight.”</p>
-
-<p>Now, a partially consolidated planet, tempested by frequent
-earthquakes of such terrible potency, that those of the
-historic ages would be but mere ripples of the earth’s surface
-in comparison, could be no proper home for a creature
-so constituted. The fish or reptile,—animals of a limited
-range of instinct, exceedingly tenacious of life in most of their
-varieties, oviparous, prolific, and whose young immediately
-on their escape from the egg can provide for themselves,
-might enjoy existence in such circumstances, to the full extent
-of their narrow capacities; and when sudden death fell<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_311"></a>[311]</span>
-upon them,—though their remains, scattered over wide areas,
-continue to exhibit that distortion of posture incident to violent
-dissolution, which seems to speak of terror and suffering,—we
-may safely conclude there was but little real suffering
-on the case: they were happy up to a certain point, and unconscious
-forever after. Fishes and reptiles were the proper
-inhabitants of our planet during the ages of the earth-tempests;
-and when, under the operation of the chemical laws,
-these had become less frequent and terrible, the higher
-mammals were introduced. That prolonged ages of these
-tempests did exist, and that they gradually settled down, until
-the state of things became at length comparatively fixed
-and stable, few geologists will be disposed to deny. The evidence
-which supports <i>this</i> special theory of the development
-of our planet in its capabilities as a scene of organized and
-sentient being, seems palpable at every step. Look first at
-these Grauwacke rocks; and, after marking how in one place
-the strata have been upturned on their edges for miles together,
-and how in another the Plutonic rock has risen molten
-from below, pass on to the Old Red Sandstone, and examine its
-significant platforms of violent death,—its faults, displacements,
-and dislocations; see, next, in the Coal Measures, those
-evidences of sinking and ever-sinking strata, for thousands of
-feet together; mark in the Oolite those vast overlying masses
-of trap, stretching athwart the landscape, far as the eye can
-reach; observe carefully how the signs of convulsion and
-catastrophe gradually lessen as we descend to the times of
-the Tertiary, though even in these ages of the mammiferous
-quadruped the earth must have had its oft-recurring ague
-fits of frightful intensity; and then, on closing the survey,
-consider how exceedingly partial and unfrequent these earth-tempests
-have become in the recent periods. Yes; we find<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_312"></a>[312]</span>
-every where marks of at once progression and identity,—of
-progress made, and yet identity maintained; but it is in
-the habitation that we find them,—not in the inhabitants.
-There is a tract of country in Hindustan that contains
-nearly as many square miles as all Great Britain, covered
-to the depth of hundreds of feet by one vast overflow
-of trap; a track similarly overflown, which exceeds in area
-all England, occurs in Southern Africa. The earth’s surface
-is roughened with such,—mottled as thickly by the
-Plutonic masses as the skin of the leopard by its spots. The
-trap district which surrounds our Scottish metropolis, and
-imparts so imposing a character to its scenery, is too inconsiderable
-to be marked on geological maps of the world, that we
-yet see streaked and speckled with similar memorials, though
-on an immensely vaster scale, of the eruption and overflow
-which took place in the earthquake ages. What could man
-have done on the globe at a time when such outbursts were
-comparatively common occurrences? What could he have
-done where Edinburgh now stands during that overflow of trap
-porphyry of which the Pentland range forms but a fragment,
-or that outburst of greenstone of which but a portion remains
-in the dark ponderous coping of Salisbury Craigs, or when the
-thick floor of rock on which the city stands was broken up,
-like the ice of an arctic sea during a tempest in spring, and laid
-on edge from where it leans against the Castle Hill to beyond
-the quarries at Joppa? The reasoning brain would have been
-wholly at fault in a scene of things in which it could neither
-foresee the exterminating calamity while yet distant, nor control
-it when it had come; and so the reasoning brain was not
-produced until the scene had undergone a slow but thorough
-process of change, during which, at each progressive stage, it
-had furnished a platform for higher and still higher life.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_313"></a>[313]</span>
-When the coniferæ could flourish on the land, and fishes
-subsist in the seas, fishes and cone-bearing plants were created;
-when the earth became a fit habitat for reptiles and
-birds, reptiles and birds were produced; with the dawn of a
-more stable and mature state of things the sagacious quadruped
-was ushered in; and, last of all, when man’s house
-was fully prepared for him,—when the data on which it is
-his nature to reason and calculate had become fixed and
-certain,—the reasoning, calculating brain was moulded by
-the creative finger, and man became a living soul. Such
-seems to be the true reading of the wondrous inscription
-chiselled deep in the rocks. It furnishes us with no clue
-by which to unravel the unapproachable mysteries of creation;—these
-mysteries belong to the wondrous Creator,
-and to Him only. We attempt to theorize upon them, and
-to reduce them to law, and all nature rises up against us
-in our presumptuous rebellion. A stray splinter of cone-bearing
-wood,—a fish’s skull or tooth,—the vertebra of a
-reptile,—the humerus of a bird,—the jaw of a quadruped,—all,
-any of these things, weak and insignificant as they
-may seem, become in such a quarrel too strong for us and our
-theory: the puny fragment, in the grasp of truth, forms as
-irresistible a weapon as the dry bone did in that of Samson
-of old; and our slaughtered sophisms lie piled up, “heaps
-upon heaps,” before it.</p>
-
-<p>There is no geological fact nor revealed doctrine with
-which this special scheme of development does not agree. To
-every truth, too, really such, from which the antagonist
-scheme derives its shadowy analogies, it leaves its full value.
-It has no quarrel with the facts of even the “Vestiges,” in
-their character as realities. There is certainly something very
-extraordinary in that fœtal progress of the human brain on<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_314"></a>[314]</span>
-which the assertors of the development hypothesis have founded
-so much. Nature, in constructing this curious organ, first lays
-down a grooved cord, as the carpenter lays down the keel of
-his vessel; and on this narrow base the perfect brain, as
-month after month passes by, is gradually built up, like the
-vessel from the keel. First it grows up into a brain closely
-resembling that of a fish; a few additions more convert it
-into a brain undistinguishable from that of a reptile; a few
-additions more impart to it the perfect appearance of the
-brain of a bird; it then developes into a brain exceedingly
-like that of a mammiferous quadruped; and, finally, expanding
-atop, and spreading out its deeply corrugated lobes, till
-they project widely over the base, it assumes its unique character
-as a human brain. Radically such from the first, it
-passes towards its full development, through all the inferior
-forms, from that of the fish upwards,—thus comprising, during
-its fœtal progress, an epitome of geologic history, as if
-each man were in himself, not the <i>microcosm</i> of the old fanciful
-philosopher, but something greatly more wonderful,—a
-compendium of all animated nature, and of kin to every
-creature that lives. Hence the remark, that man is the
-sum total of all animals,—“the animal equivalent,” says
-Oken, “to the whole animal kingdom.” We are perhaps too
-much in the habit of setting aside real facts, when they have
-been first seized upon by the infidel, and appropriated to the
-purposes of unbelief, as if they had suffered contamination in
-his hands. We forget, like the brother “weak in the faith,”
-instanced by the Apostle, that they are in themselves “creatures
-of God;” and too readily reject the lesson which they
-teach, simply because they have been offered in sacrifice to
-an idol. And this strange fact of the progress of the human
-brain is assuredly a fact none the less worth looking at from the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_315"></a>[315]</span>
-circumstance that infidelity has looked at it first. On no principle
-recognizable in right reason can it be urged in support of
-the development hypothesis;—it is a fact of <i>fœtal</i> development,
-and of that only. But it would be well should it lead
-our metaphysicians to inquire whether they have not been
-rendering their science too insulated and exclusive; and
-whether the mind that works by a brain thus “fearfully and
-wonderfully made,” ought not to be viewed rather in connection
-with all animated nature, especially as we find nature
-exemplified in the various vertebral forms, than as a thing
-fundamentally abstract and distinct. The brain built up of
-all the types of <i>brain</i>, may be the organ of a mind compounded,
-if I may so express myself, of all the varieties of
-<i>mind</i>. It would be perhaps over fanciful to urge that it is the
-creature who has made himself free of all the elements,
-whose brain has been thus in succession that of all their proper
-denizens; and that there is no animal instinct, the function of
-which cannot be illustrated by some art mastered by man: but
-there can be nothing over fanciful in the suggestion, founded
-on this fact of fœtal development, that possibly some of the
-more obscure signs impressed upon the human character may
-be best read through the spectacles of physical science. The
-successive phases of the fœtal brain give at least fair warning
-that, in tracing to its first principles the moral and intellectual
-nature of man, what is properly his “natural history”
-should not be overlooked. Oken, after describing the human
-creature in one passage as “equivalent to the whole animal
-kingdom,” designates him in another as “God wholly manifested,”
-and as “God become man;”—a style of expression
-at which the English reader may start, as that of the “big
-mouth speaking blasphemy,” but which has become exceedingly
-common among the nationalists of the Continent. The<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_316"></a>[316]</span>
-irreverent naturalist ought surely to have remembered, that
-the sum total of all the animals cannot be different in its
-nature from the various sums of which it is an aggregate,—seeing
-that <i>no</i> summation ever differs in <i>quality</i> from
-the items summed up, which compose it,—and that, though
-it may amount in this case to man <i>the animal</i>,—to man, as
-he may be weighed, and measured, and subjected to the
-dissecting knife,—it cannot possibly amount to God. Is God
-merely a sum total of birds and beasts, reptiles and fishes;—a
-mere Egyptian deity, composed of fantastic hieroglyphics
-derived from the forms of the brute creation? The impieties
-of the transcendentalist may, however, serve to illustrate that
-mode of seizing on terms which, as the most sacred in the
-message of revelation, have been long coupled in the popular
-mind with saving truths, and forcibly compelling them to bear
-some visionary and illusive meaning, wholly foreign to that
-with which they were originally invested, which has become
-so remarkable a part of the policy of modern infidelity. Rationalism
-has learned to sacrifice to Deity with a certain
-measure of conformity to the required pattern; but it is a
-conformity in appearance only, not in reality: the sacrifice
-always resembles that of Prometheus of old, who presented
-to Jupiter what, though it seemed to be an ox without
-blemish, was merely an ox-skin stuffed full of bones and
-garbage.</p>
-
-<p>There is another very remarkable class of facts in geological
-history, which appear to fall as legitimately within the scope of
-argument founded on final causes, as those which bear on the
-appearance of man at his proper era. The period of the
-mammiferous quadrupeds seems, like the succeeding human
-period, to have been determined, as I have said, by the earth’s
-fitness at the time as a place of habitation for creatures so<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_317"></a>[317]</span>
-formed. And the bulk to which, in the more extreme cases,
-they attained, appears to have been regulated, as in the higher
-mammals now, with reference to the force of gravity at
-the earth’s surface. The Megatherium and the Mastodon, the
-Dinotherium and the extinct elephant, increased in bulk, in
-obedience to the laws of the specific constitution imparted to
-them at their creation; and these laws bore reference, in turn,
-to another law,—that law of gravity which determines that no
-creature which moves in air and treads the surface of the
-earth should exceed a certain weight or size. To very near
-the limits assigned by this law some of the ancient quadrupeds
-arose. It is even doubtful whether the Dinotherium, the
-most gigantic of mammals, may not have been, like the existing
-sea-lions and morses, mainly an aquatic quadruped;—an
-inference grounded on the circumstance that, in at least
-portions of its framework, it seems to have risen beyond these
-limits. Now, it does not seem wonderful that, with apparent
-reference to the point at which the gravity of bodies at the
-earth’s surface <i>bisects</i> the conditions of texture and matter
-necessary to existence among the sub-aerial vertebrata, the
-<i>reptiles</i> of the Secondary periods should have grown up in
-some of their species and genera to the extreme size. A
-world of frogs, newts, and lizards would have borne stamped
-upon it the impress of a tame and miserable mediocrity, that
-would have harmonized ill with the extent of the earth’s
-capabilities for supporting life on a large scale. There
-would be no principle of adaptation or rule of proportion
-maintained between an animal kingdom composed of so
-contemptible a group of beings, and either the dynamic laws
-under which matter exists on our planet, or the luxuriant vegetation
-which it bore during the Secondary ages. And such
-was not the character of the group which composed the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_318"></a>[318]</span>
-reptile dynasty. The Iguanodon must have been quite
-as tall as the elephant,—greatly longer, and, it would
-seem, at least as bulky. The Megalosaurus must have at
-least equalled the rhinoceros; the Hylæosaurus would have
-outweighed the hippopotamus. And when reptiles that rivalled
-in size our hugest mammals inhabited the land, other reptiles,—Ichthyosaurs,
-Plesiosaurs, and Cetiosaurs,—scarce less
-bulky than the cetacea themselves, possessed the sea. Not
-only was the platform of being occupied in all its <i>breadth</i>, but
-also in all its <i>height</i>; and it is according to our simpler and
-more obvious ideas of adaptation—simple and obvious because
-gleaned from the very surface of the universe of life—that
-such should have been the case. But it does appear
-strange, because under the regulation, it would seem, of a
-principle of adaptation more occult, and, if I may so speak,
-more <i>Providential</i>, that no sooner are the huge mammals introduced
-<i>as a group</i>, than, with but a few exceptions, the reptiles
-appear in greatly diminished proportions. They no longer
-occupy the platform to its full extent of <i>height</i>. Even in
-tropical countries, in which certain families of mammals still
-attain to the maximum size, the reptiles, if we except the crocodilean
-family, a few harmless turtles, and the degraded boas
-and pythons, are a small and comparatively unimportant race.
-Nay, the existing giants of the class—the crocodiles and
-boas—hardly equal in bulk the third-rate reptiles of the ages
-of the Oolite and the Wealden. So far as can be seen, there
-is no reason deduceable from the nature of things, why the
-country that sustains a mammal bulky as the elephant,
-should not also support a reptile huge as the Iguanodon; or
-why the Megalosaurus, Hylæosaurus, and Dicynodon, might
-not have been contemporary with the lion, tiger, and rhinoceros.
-The change which took place in the reptile group immediately<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_319"></a>[319]</span>
-on their dethronement at the close of the Secondary
-period, seems scarce less strange than that sung by Milton:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Behold a wonder! They but now who seemed</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">In bigness to surpass earth’s giant sons,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Now less than smallest dwarfs, in narrow room</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Thronged numberless; like that pygmean race</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Beyond the Indian mount; or fairy elves,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Whose midnight revels, by a forest side</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Or fountain, some belated peasant sees,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Or dreams he sees, while, overhead, the moon</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Sits arbitress, and nearer to the earth</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Wheels her pale course.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>But though we cannot assign a <i>cause</i> for this general reduction
-of the reptile class, save simply the will of the all-wise
-Creator, the <i>reason</i> why it should have taken place
-seems easily assignable. It was a bold saying of the old
-philosophic heathen, that “God is the soul of brutes;” but
-writers on instinct in even our own times have said less
-warrantable things. God <i>does</i> seem to do for many of the
-inferior animals of the lower divisions, which, though devoid
-of brain and vertebral column, are yet skilful chemists and
-accomplished architects and mathematicians, what he enables
-man, through the exercise of the reasoning faculty, to
-do for himself; and the ancient philosopher meant no more.
-And in clearing away the giants of the reptile dynasty, when
-their kingdom had passed away, and then re-introducing the
-class as much shrunken in their proportions as restricted in
-their domains, the Creator seems to have been doing for the
-mammals what man, in the character of a “mighty hunter
-before the Lord,” does for himself. There is in nature very
-little of what can be called war. The cities of this country
-cannot be said to be in a state of war, though their cattle-markets<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_320"></a>[320]</span>
-are thronged every week with animals for slaughter
-and the butcher and fishmonger find their places of business
-thronged with customers. And such, in the main, is the condition
-of the animal world;—it consists of its two classes,—animals
-of prey, and the animals upon which they prey: its
-wars are simply those of the butcher and fisher, lightened by
-a dash of the enjoyments of the sportsman.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“The creatures see of flood and field,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And those that travel on the wind,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">With them no strife can last; they live</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">In peace and peace of mind.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">Generally speaking, the carnivorous mammalia respect one
-another: lion does not war with tiger, nor the leopard contend
-with the hyena. But the carnivorous reptiles manifest
-no such respect for the carnivorous mammals. There are
-fierce contests in their native jungles, on the banks of the
-Ganges, between the gavial and the tiger; and in the steaming
-forests of South America, the boa-constrictor casts his
-terrible coil scarce less readily round the puma than the antelope.
-A world which, after it had become a home of the
-higher herbivorous and more powerful carnivorous mammals,
-continued to retain the gigantic reptiles of its earlier ages,
-would be a world of horrid, exterminating war, and altogether
-rather a place of torment than a scene of intermediate
-character, in which, though it sometimes reëchoes the
-groans of suffering nature, life is, in the main, enjoyment.
-And so,—save in a few exceptional cases, that, while they
-establish the rule as a fact, serve also as a key to unlock
-that principle of the Divine government on which it appears
-to rest,—no sooner was the reptile removed from his
-place in the fore-front of creation, and creatures of a higher
-order introduced into it the consolidating and fast-ripening<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_321"></a>[321]</span>
-planet of which he had been so long the monarch, than his
-bulk shrank and his strength lessened, and he assumed a humility
-of form and aspect at once in keeping with his reduced
-circumstances, and compatible with the general welfare. But
-though the <i>reason</i> of the reduction appears obvious, I know
-not that it can be referred to any other <i>cause</i> than simply the
-will of the All-Wise Creator.</p>
-
-<p>There hangs a mystery greatly more profound over the
-fact of the <i>degradation</i> than over that of the <i>reduction</i> and
-<i>diminution</i> of classes. We can assign what at least <i>seems</i>
-to be a sufficient <i>reason</i> why, when reptiles formed as a class
-the highest representatives of the vertebrata, they should be
-of imposing bulk and strength, and altogether worthy of that
-post of precedence which they then occupied among the animals.
-We can also assign a <i>reason</i> for the strange reduction
-which took place among them in strength and bulk immediately
-on their removal from the first to the second place.
-But why not only <i>reduction</i>, but also <i>degradation</i>? Why, as
-division started up in advance of division,—first the reptiles
-in front of the fishes, then the quadrupedal mammals in front
-of the reptiles, and, last of all, man in front of the quadrupedal
-mammals,—should the supplanted classes,—two of
-them at least,—fishes and reptiles,—for there seem to have
-been no additions made to the mammals since man entered upon
-the scene,—why should they have become the receptacles of
-orders and families of a degraded character, which had no place
-among them in their monarchical state? The fishes removed
-beyond all analogy with the higher vertebrata, by their homocercal
-tails,—the fishes (<i>Acanthopterygii</i> and <i>Sub-brachiati</i>)
-with their four limbs slung in a belt round their necks,—the
-flat fishes, (<i>Pleuronectidæ</i>,) that, in addition to this deformity,
-are so twisted to a side, that while the one eye occupies a single<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_322"></a>[322]</span>
-orbit in the middle of the skull, the other is thrust out to its
-edge,—the irregular fishes generally (sun-fishes, frog-fishes,
-hippocampi, &amp;c.) were not introduced into the ichthyic division
-until after the full development of the reptile dynasty;
-nor did the hand that makes no slips in its working “form
-the crooked serpent,” footless, grovelling, venom-bearing, the
-authorized type of a fallen and degraded creature, until
-after the introduction of the mammals. What can
-this fact of degradation mean? Species and genera seem to
-be greatly more numerous in the present age of the world
-than in any of the geologic ages. Is it not possible that the
-extension of the chain of being which has thus taken place—not
-only, as we find, through the addition of the higher divisions
-of animals to its upper end, but also through the interpolations
-of <i>lower links</i> into the previously existing divisions—may
-have borne reference to some predetermined scheme of
-well-proportioned gradation, or, according to the poet,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Of general <span class="smcap">Order</span> since the whole began?”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">May not, in short, what we term degradation be merely one
-of the modes resorted to for filling up the voids in creation,
-and thereby perfecting a scale which must have been originally
-not merely a scale of narrow compass, but also of innumerable
-breaks and blanks, hiatuses and chasms? Such,
-certainly, would be the reading of the enigma which a Soame
-Jenyns or a Bolingbroke would suggest; but the geologist has
-learned from his science, that the completion of a chain of at
-least contemporary being, perfect in its gradations, cannot
-possibly have formed the design of Providence. Almost ever
-since God united vitality to matter, the links in this chain of
-animated nature, as if composed of a material too brittle to
-bear their own weight when stretched across the geologic<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_323"></a>[323]</span>
-ages, have been dropping one after out, from his hand, and
-sinking, fractured and broken, into the rocks below. It is
-urged by Pope, that were “we to press on superior powers,”
-and rise from our own assigned place to the place immediately
-above all, we would, in consequence of the transposition,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent8">“In the full creation leave a void,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Where, one step broken, the great scale’s destroyed.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">From nature’s chain whatever link we strike,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Tenth or ten thousandth, breaks the chain alike.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">The poet could scarce have anticipated that there was a science
-then sleeping in its cradle, and dreaming the dreams of
-Whiston, Leibnitz, and Burnet, which was one day to rise and
-demonstrate that both the tenth and the ten thousandth link
-in the chain had been already broken and laid by, with all
-the thousands of links between; and that man might laudably
-“press on superior powers,” and attain to a “new nature,”
-without in the least affecting the symmetry of creation
-by the void which his elevation would necessarily create;
-that, in fine, voids and blanks in the scale are exceedingly
-common things; and that, if men could, by rising into angels,
-make one blank more, they might do so with perfect
-impunity. Further, even were the graduated chain of Bolingbroke
-a reality, and not what Johnson well designates it, an
-“absurd hypothesis,” and were what I have termed the interpolation
-of links necessary to its completion, the mere filling
-up of the original blanks and chasms would not necessarily
-involve the fact of degradation, seeing that each blank could
-be filled up, if I may go express myself, from its lower end.
-Each could be as certainly occupied to the full by an elevation
-of lower forms, as by a humiliation of the higher. We
-might receive the hypothesis of Bolingbroke, and yet<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_324"></a>[324]</span>
-find the mysterious fact of degradation remain an unsolved
-riddle in our hands.</p>
-
-<p>But though I can assign neither <i>reason</i> nor <i>cause</i> for the
-fact, I cannot avoid the conclusion, that it is associated with
-certain other great facts in the moral government of the universe,
-by those threads of analogical connection which run
-through the entire tissue of Creation and Providence, and
-impart to it that character of unity which speaks of the single
-producing Mind. The first idea of every religion on earth
-which has arisen out of what may be termed the spiritual instincts
-of man’s nature, is that of a Future State; the second
-idea is, that in this state men shall exist in two separate classes,—the
-one in advance of their present condition, the other far
-in the rear of it. It is on these two great beliefs that conscience
-every where finds the fulcrum from which it acts upon
-the conduct; and it is, we find, wholly inoperative as a force
-without them. And in that one religion among men that,
-instead of retiring, like the pale ghosts of the others, before
-the light of civilization, brightens and expands in its beams,
-and in favor of whose claim as a revelation from God the
-highest philosophy has declared, we find these two master
-ideas occupying a still more prominent place than in any of
-those merely indigenous religions that spring up in the human
-mind of themselves. The special lesson which the Adorable
-Saviour, during his ministry on earth, oftenest enforced, and
-to which all the others bore reference, was the lesson of a
-final separation of mankind into two great divisions,—a division
-of God-like men, of whose high Standing and full-orbed
-happiness man, in the present scene of things, can form no
-adequate conception; and a division of men finally lost, and
-doomed to unutterable misery and hopeless degradation.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_325"></a>[325]</span>
-There is not in all Revelation a single doctrine which we
-find oftener or more clearly enforced than that there shall
-continue to exist, throughout the endless cycles of the future,
-a race of degraded men and of degraded angels.</p>
-
-<p>Now, it is truly wonderful how thoroughly, in its general
-scope, the revealed pieces on to the geologic record. We
-know, as geologists, that the dynasty of the fish was succeeded
-by that of the reptile,—that the dynasty of the reptile
-was succeeded by that of the mammiferous quadruped,—and
-that the dynasty of the mammiferous quadruped was succeeded
-by that of man as man now exists,—a creature of
-mixed character, and subject, in all conditions, to wide alternations
-of enjoyment and suffering. We know, further—so
-far at least as we have yet succeeded in deciphering the
-record,—that the several dynasties were introduced, not in
-their lower, but in their higher forms;—that, in short, in the
-imposing programme of creation it was arranged, as a general
-rule, that in each of the great divisions of the procession the
-magnates should walk first. We recognize yet further the fact
-of degradation specially exemplified in the fish and the reptile.
-And then, passing on to the revealed record, we learn that the
-dynasty of man in the mixed state and character is not the
-final one, but that there is to be yet another creation, or, more
-properly, <i>re</i>-creation, known theologically as the Resurrection,
-which shall be connected in its physical components, by
-bonds of mysterious paternity, with the dynasty which now
-reigns, and be bound to it mentally by the chain of identity,
-conscious and actual; but which, in all that constitutes superiority,
-shall be as vastly its superior as the dynasty of
-responsible man is superior to even the lowest of the preliminary
-dynasties. We are further taught, that at the commencement
-of this last of the dynasties, there will be a re-creation<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_326"></a>[326]</span>
-of not only elevated, but also of degraded beings,—a
-re-creation of the <i>lost</i>. We are taught yet further, that
-though the present dynasty be that of a lapsed race, which at
-their first introduction were placed on higher ground than
-that on which they now stand, and sank by their own act, it
-was yet part of the original design, from the beginning of all
-things, that they should occupy the existing platform; and
-that Redemption is thus no after-thought, rendered necessary
-by the fall, but, on the contrary, part of a general scheme,
-for which provision had been made from the beginning; so
-that the Divine Man, through whom the work of restoration
-has been effected, was in reality, in reference to the purposes
-of the Eternal, what he is designated in the remarkable text,
-“<i>the Lamb slain from the foundations of the world</i>.” Slain
-from the foundations of the world! Could the assertors of the
-stony science ask for language more express? By piecing
-the two records together,—that revealed in Scripture and
-that revealed in the rocks,—records which, however widely
-geologists may mistake the one, or commentators misunderstand
-the other, have emanated from the same great Author—we
-learn that in slow and solemn majesty has period succeeded
-period, each in succession ushering in a higher end yet
-higher scene of existence,—that fish, reptiles, mammiferous
-quadrupeds, have reigned in turn,—that responsible man,
-“made in the image of God,” and with dominion over all
-creatures, ultimately entered into a world ripened for his reception;
-but, further, that this passing scene, in which he forms
-the prominent figure, is not the final one in the long series, but
-merely the last of the <i>preliminary</i> scenes; and that that period
-to which the bygone ages, incalculable in amount, with all their
-well-proportioned gradations of being, form the imposing vestibule,
-shall have perfection for its occupant, and eternity for its<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_327"></a>[327]</span>
-duration. I know not how it may appear to others; but for
-my own part, I cannot avoid thinking that there would be a
-lack of proportion in the series of being, were the period of
-perfect and glorified humanity abruptly connected, without
-the introduction of an intermediate creation of <i>responsible</i> imperfection,
-with that of the dying irresponsible brute. That
-scene of things in which God became Man, and suffered,
-<i>seems</i>, as it no doubt <i>is</i>, a necessary link in the chain.</p>
-
-<p>I am aware that I stand on the confines of a mystery
-which man, since the first introduction of sin into the world
-till now, has “vainly aspired to comprehend.” But I have
-no new reading of the enigma to offer. I know not why it
-is that moral evil exists in the universe of the All-Wise and
-the All-Powerful; nor through what occult law of Deity it
-is that “perfection should come through suffering.” The
-question, like that satellite, ever attendant upon our planet,
-which presents both its sides to the sun, but invariably the
-same side to the earth, hides one of its faces from man, and
-turns it to but the Eye from which all light emanates. And
-it is in that God-ward phase of the question that the mystery
-dwells. We can map and measure every protuberance
-and hollow which roughens the nether disk of the moon, as,
-during the shades of night, it looks down upon our path to
-cheer and enlighten; but what can we know of the other? It
-would, however, seem, that even in this field of mystery the
-extent of the inexplicable and the unknown is capable of
-reduction, and that the human understanding is vested in an
-ability of progressing towards the central point of that dark
-field throughout all time, mayhap all eternity, as the asymptote
-progresses upon its curve. Even though the essence
-of the question should forever remain a mystery, it may
-yet in its reduced and defined state, serve as a key for the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_328"></a>[328]</span>
-laying of other mysteries open. The philosophers are still
-as ignorant as ever respecting the intrinsic nature of gravitation;
-but regarded simply as a force, how many enigmas
-has it not served to unlock! And that moral gravitation
-towards evil, manifested by the only two classes of responsible
-beings of which there is aught known to man, and of
-which a degradation linked by mysterious analogy with a
-class of facts singularly prominent in geologic history is the
-result, occupies apparently a similar place, as a force, in the
-moral dynamics of the universe, and seems suited to perform
-a similar part. Inexplicable itself, it is yet a key to the solution
-of all the minor inexplicabilities in the scheme of
-Providence.</p>
-
-<p>In a matter of such extreme niceness and difficulty, shall I
-dare venture on an illustrative example?</p>
-
-<p>So far as both the geologic and the Scriptural evidence
-extends, no species or family of existences seems to have
-been introduced by creation into the present scene of being
-since the appearance of man. In Scripture the formation of
-the human race is described as the terminal act of a series,
-“good” in all its previous stages, but which became “very
-good” then; and geologists, judging from the modicum of
-evidence which they have hitherto succeeded in collecting on
-the subject,—evidence still meagre, but, so far as it goes, independent
-and distinct,—pronounce “post-Adamic creations”
-at least “improbable.” The naturalist finds certain
-animal and vegetable species restricted to certain circles,
-and that in certain foci in these circles they attain to their
-fullest development and their maximum number. And these
-foci he regards as the original centres of creation, whence,
-in each instance in the process of increase and multiplication,
-the plant or creature propagated itself outwards in circular<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_329"></a>[329]</span>
-wavelets of life, that sank at each stage as they widened
-till at length, at the circumference of the area, they wholly
-ceased. Now we find it argued by Professor Edward Forbes
-that “since man’s appearance, certain geological areas, both
-of land and water, have been formed, presenting such physical
-conditions as to entitle us to expect within their bounds
-one, or in some instances more than one, centre of creation,
-or <i>point of maximum of a zoological or botanical province</i>.
-But a critical examination renders evident,” the Professor
-adds, “that instead of showing distinct foci of creation, they
-have been in all instances peopled by colonization, <i>i. e.</i> by
-migration of species from pre-existing, and in every case pre-Adamic,
-provinces. Among the terrestrial areas the British
-isles may serve as an example; among marine, the Baltic,
-Mediterranean, and Black Seas. The British islands have
-been colonized from various centres of creation in (now)
-continental Europe; the Baltic Sea from the Celtic region,
-although it runs itself into the conditions of the Boreal one;
-and the Mediterranean, as it now appears, from the fauna and
-flora of the more ancient Lusitanian province.” Professor
-Forbes, it is stated further, in the report of his paper to which
-I owe these details,—a paper read at the Royal Institution in
-March last,—“exhibited, in support of the same view, a
-map, showing the relation which the centres of creation of the
-air-breathing molluscs in Europe bear to the geological history
-of the respective areas, and proving that the whole snail
-population of its northern and central extent (the portion of
-the Continent of newest and probably post-Adamic origin)
-had been derived from foci of creation seated in pre-Adamic
-lands. And these remarkable facts have induced the Professor,”
-it was added, “to maintain the improbability of post-Adamic
-creations.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_330"></a>[330]</span></p>
-
-<p>With the introduction of man into the scene of existence,
-creation, I repeat, seems to have ceased. What is it that
-now takes its place, and performs its work? During the
-previous dynasties, all elevation in the scale was an effect
-simply of creation. Nature lay dead in a waste theatre of
-rock, vapor, and sea, in which the insensate laws, chemical;
-mechanical, and electric, carried on their blind, unintelligent
-processes: the <i>creative fiat</i> went forth; and, amid waters
-that straightway teemed with life in its lower forms, vegetable
-and animal, the dynasty of the fish was introduced.
-Many ages passed, during which there took place no further
-elevation: on the contrary, in not a few of the newly introduced
-species of the reigning class there occurred for the first
-time examples of an asymmetrical misplacement of parts,
-and, in at least one family of fishes, instances of defect of
-parts: there was the manifestation of a downward tendency
-towards the degradation of monstrosity, when the elevatory
-fiat again went forth, and, <i>through an act of creation</i>, the
-dynasty of the reptile began. Again many ages passed
-by, marked, apparently, by the introduction of a warm-blooded
-oviparous animal, the bird, and of a few marsupial
-quadrupeds, but in which the prevailing class reigned undeposed,
-though at least unelevated. Yet again, however,
-the elevatory fiat went forth, and <i>through an act of creation</i>
-the dynasty of the mammiferous quadruped began. And after
-the further lapse of ages, the elevatory fiat went forth yet
-once more <i>in an act of creation</i>; and with the human, heaven-aspiring
-dynasty, the moral government of God, in its connection
-with at least the world which we inhabit, “took beginning.”
-And then creation ceased. Why? Simply because
-God’s moral government <i>had</i> begun,—because in necessary
-conformity with the institution of that government, there<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_331"></a>[331]</span>
-was to be a thorough identity maintained between the glorified
-and immortal beings of the terminal dynasty, and the
-dying magnates of the dynasty which now is; and because,
-in consequence of the maintenance of this identity as an
-essential condition of this moral government, mere <i>acts of
-creation</i> could no longer carry on the elevatory process.
-The work analogous in its end and object to those <i>acts
-of creation</i> which gave to our planet its successive dynasties
-of higher and yet higher existences, is the work of
-<span class="smcap">Redemption</span>. It is the elevatory process of the present time,—the
-only possible provision for that final act of <i>re</i>-creation
-“to everlasting life,” which shall usher in the terminal
-dynasty.</p>
-
-<p>I cannot avoid thinking that many of our theologians
-attach a too narrow meaning to the remarkable reason “annexed
-to the Fourth Commandment” by the Divine Lawgiver.
-“God rested on the seventh day,” says the text,
-“from all his work which He had created and made; and
-God blessed the seventh day, and sanctified it.” And such
-is the reason given in the Decalogue why man should also
-rest on the seventh day. God rested on the Sabbath, and
-sanctified it; and therefore man ought also to rest on the
-Sabbath, and keep it holy. But I know not where we shall
-find grounds for the belief that that Sabbath-day during
-which God rested was merely commensurate in its duration
-with one of the Sabbaths of short-lived man,—a brief period,
-measured by a single revolution of the earth on its axis. We
-have not, as has been shown, a shadow of evidence that He
-resumed his work of creation on the morrow: the geologist
-finds no trace of post-Adamic creation,—the theologian can
-tell us of none. God’s Sabbath of rest may still exist;—<i>the
-work of <span class="smcap">Redemption</span> may be the work of his Sabbath day</i>. That<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_332"></a>[332]</span>
-elevatory process through successive acts of creation which
-engaged Him during myriads of ages, was of an ordinary
-week-day character; but in when the term of his moral government
-began, the elevatory process proper to it assumed
-the Divine character of the Sabbath. This special view appears
-to lend peculiar emphasis to the reason embodied in
-the commandment. The collation of the passage with the
-geologic record seems, as if by a species of re-translation, to
-make it enunciate as its injunction, “Keep this day, not
-merely as a day of memorial related to a past fact, but also
-as a day of coöperation with God in the work of elevation in
-relation both to a present fact and a future purpose. God
-keeps his Sabbath,” it says, “in order that He may save;
-keep yours also, in order that ye may be saved.” It serves,
-besides, to throw light on the prominence of the Sabbatical
-command, in a digest of law of which no part or tittle can
-pass away until the fulfilment of all things. During the present
-dynasty of probation and trial, that special work of both
-God and man on which the character of the future dynasty
-depends, is the Sabbath-day work of saving and being
-saved.<a id="FNanchor_41" href="#Footnote_41" class="fnanchor">[41]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_333"></a>[333]</span></p>
-
-<p>It is in this dynasty of the future that man’s moral and
-intellectual faculties will receive their full development
-The expectation of any very great advance in the present<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_334"></a>[334]</span>
-scene of things—great, at least, when measured by man’s
-large capacity of conceiving of the good and fair—seems
-to be, like all human hope when restricted to time, an expectation
-doomed to disappointment. There are certain limits
-within which the race improves;—civilization is better than
-the want of it, and the taught superior to the untaught man.
-There is a change, too, effected in the moral nature, through
-that Spirit which, by working belief in the heart, brings its
-aspirations into harmony with the realities of the unseen world,
-that, in at least its relation to the future state, cannot be estimated
-too highly. But conception can travel very far beyond
-even its best effects in their merely secular bearing; nay, it
-is peculiarly its nature to show the men most truly the subjects
-of it, how miserably they fall short of the high standard
-of conduct and feeling which it erects, and to teach them,
-more emphatically than by words, that their degree of happiness
-must of necessity be as low as their moral attainments
-are humble. Further,—man, though he has been increasing
-in knowledge ever since his appearance on earth, has not
-been improving in faculty;—a shrewd fact, which they who
-expect most from the future of this world would do well to
-consider. The ancient masters of mind were in no respect
-inferior in calibre to their predecessors. We have not yet
-shot ahead of the old Greeks in either the perception of the
-beautiful, or in the ability of producing it; there has been no
-improvement in the inventive faculty since the Iliad was
-written, some three thousand years ago; nor has taste become<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_335"></a>[335]</span>
-more exquisite, or the perception of the harmony of numbers
-more nice, since the age of the Æneid. Science is cumulative
-in its character; and so its votaries in modern times
-stand on a higher pedestal than their predecessors. But
-though nature produced a Newton some two centuries ago,
-as she produced a Goliath of Gath at an earlier period, the
-modern philosophers, as a class, do not exceed in actual stature
-the worse informed ancients,—the Euclids, Archimedeses,
-and Aristotles. We would be without excuse if, with the Bacon,
-Milton, and Shakspeare of these latter ages of the world
-full before us, we recurred to the obsolete belief that the human
-race is deteriorating; but then, on the other hand, we
-have certain evidence, that since genius first began unconsciously
-to register in its works its own bulk and proportions,
-there has been no increase in the mass or improvement in the
-quality of individual mind. As for the dream that there is to
-be some extraordinary elevation of the general platform of
-the race achieved by means of education, it is simply the
-hallucination of the age,—the world’s present alchemical
-expedient for converting farthings into guineas, sheerly by
-dint of scouring. Not but that education is good; it exercises,
-and, in the ordinary mind, developes, faculty. But it will not
-anticipate the terminal dynasty. Yet further,— man’s average
-capacity of happiness seems to be as limited and as incapable
-of increase as his average reach of intellect: it is a
-mediocre capacity at best; nor is it greater by a shade now,
-in these days of power-looms and portable manures, than in
-the times of the old patriarchs. So long, too, as the law of
-increase continues, man must be subject to the law of death,
-with its stern attendants, suffering and sorrow; for the two
-laws go necessarily together; and so long as death reigns,
-human creatures, in even the best of times, will continue to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_336"></a>[336]</span>
-quit this scene of being without professing much satisfaction
-at what they have found either in it or themselves. It will no
-doubt be a less miserable world than it is now, when the good
-come, as there is reason to hope they one day shall, to be a
-majority; but it will be felt to be an inferior sort of world
-even then, and be even fuller than now of wishes and longings
-for a better. Let it improve as it may, it will be a scene
-of probation and trial till the end. And so Faith, undeceived
-by the mirage of the midway desert, whatever form or name,
-political or religious, the phantasmagoria may bear, must continue
-to look beyond its unsolid and tremulous glitter,—its
-bare rocks exaggerated by the vapor into air-drawn castles, and
-its stunted bushes magnified into goodly trees,—and, fixing
-her gaze upon the re-creation yet future,—the terminal dynasty
-yet unbegun,—she must be content to enter upon her
-final rest—for she will not enter upon it earlier—“at
-return”</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent18">“Of Him, the Woman’s Seed,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Last in the clouds, from heaven to be revealed</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">In glory of the Father, to dissolve</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Satan with his perverted world, then raise</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">From the conflagrant mass, purged and refined,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">New heavens, new earth, ages of endless date,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Founded in righteousness, and peace, and love,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">To bring forth fruits,—joy and eternal bliss.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>But it may be judged that I am trespassing on a field into
-which I have no right to enter. Save, however, for its close
-proximity with that in which the geologist expatiates as properly
-his own, this little volume would never have been written.
-It is the fact that man must believingly coöperate with
-God in the work of preparation for the final dynasty, or exist
-throughout its never-ending cycles as a lost and degraded
-creature, that alone renders the development hypothesis<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_337"></a>[337]</span>
-formidable. But inculcating that the elevatory process is one
-of the natural law, not of moral endeavor,—by teaching, inferentially
-at least, that in the better state of things which is
-coming there is to be an identity of race with that of the existing
-dynasty, but no identity of individual consciousness,—that,
-on the contrary, the life after death which we are to
-inherit is to be merely a horrid life of wriggling impurities,
-originated in the putrefactive mucus,—and that thus the men
-who now live possess no real stake in the kingdom of the
-future,—it is its direct tendency, so far as its influence extends,
-to render the required coöperation with God an impossibility.
-For that coöperation cannot exist without belief as
-its basis. The hypothesis involves a misreading of the geologic
-record, which not merely affects its meaning in relation to
-the mind, and thus, in a question of science, substitutes error
-for truth, but which also threatens to affect the record itself,
-in relation to the destiny of every individual perverted and
-led astray. It threatens to write down among the degraded
-and the lost, men who, under the influence of an unshaken
-faith, might have risen at the dawn of the terminal period, to
-enjoy the fulness of eternity among the glorified and the
-good.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">FOOTNOTES</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">[1]</a> Mr. Miller is the author also of <i>Scenes and Legends of the North of Scotland</i>, one
-vol. 8vo.; <i>A Letter from one of the Scotch people to the Right Honorable Lord Brougham
-and Vaux, on the opinions expressed by his Lordship in the Auchterarder Case</i>; and <i>The
-Whiggism of the Old School, as exemplified in the Past History and Present Position of
-the Church of Scotland</i>. The second of these works is well characterized by Mr.
-Gladstone as “an able, elegant, and masculine production.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_2" href="#FNanchor_2" class="label">[2]</a> London, 1847, pp. 409</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_3" href="#FNanchor_3" class="label">[3]</a> Since the above sentence was written and set in type, I have
-learned that my ingenious friend, Mr. Charles Peach of the Customs,
-Fowey, so well known for his palæontological discoveries,
-has just found in the Devonian system of Cornwall, fragments of
-what seem to be dermal plates of <i>Asterolepis</i>. It is a somewhat
-curious circumstance, that the two farthest removed extremities
-of Great Britain—Cornwall and Caithness—should be tipped
-by fossiliferous deposits of the same ancient system, and that
-organisms which, when they lived, were contemporary, should be
-found embedded in the rocks which rise over the British Channel
-on the one extremity, and overhang the Pentland Frith on the
-other.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_4" href="#FNanchor_4" class="label">[4]</a> Figured from a Thurso specimen, slightly different in its proportions
-from the Stromness specimen described.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_5" href="#FNanchor_5" class="label">[5]</a> Dr. George Garson, Stromness, and Mr. William Watt, jun.
-Skaill.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_6" href="#FNanchor_6" class="label">[6]</a> The Continental assertors of the development hypothesis are
-greatly more frank than those of our own country regarding the
-“life after death,” and what man has to expect from it. The individual,
-they tell us, perishes forever; but, then, out of his remains
-there spring up other vitalities. The immortality of the soul is, it
-would seem, an idle figment, for there really exists no such things as
-souls; but is there no comfort in being taught, instead, that we
-are to resolve into monads and maggots? Job solaced himself with
-the assurance that, even after worms had destroyed his body, he was
-in the flesh to see God. Had Professor Oken been one of his comforters,
-he would have sought to restrict his hopes to the prospect of
-living in the worms. “If the organic fundamental substance <i>consist</i>
-of infusoria,” says the Professor, “so must the whole organic world
-<i>originate</i> from infusoria. Plants and animals can only be metamorphoses
-of infusoria. This being granted, so also must all organizations
-<i>consist</i> of infusoria, and, during their destruction, dissolve into
-the same. Every plant, every animal, is converted by maceration
-into a mucous mass; this putrefies, and the moisture is stocked
-with infusoria. Putrefaction is nothing else than a division
-of organisms into infusoria,—a reduction of the higher to the
-primary life.... Death is no annihilation, but only a
-change. One individual emerges out of another. Death is only a
-transition to another life,—not into death. This transition from one
-life to another takes place through the primary condition of the organic,
-or the mucus.”—<i>Physio-Philosophy</i>, pp. 187-189.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_7" href="#FNanchor_7" class="label">[7]</a> I trust that at least by and by there may be an exception
-claimed, from the general, but, I am sure, well-meant, censure of
-this passage, in favor of the Free Church of Scotland. It has
-got as its Professor of Physical Science—thanks to the sagacity
-of Chalmers—Dr. John Fleming, a man of European reputation,
-and all that seems further necessary, in order to secure the benefits
-contemplated in the appointment, is, that attendance on his course
-should be rendered imperative on <i>all</i> Free Church candidates for the
-ministry.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_8" href="#FNanchor_8" class="label">[8]</a> Agassiz’s description of the <i>Pterichthys</i>, as quoted by Humboldt,
-in his <i>Cosmos</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_9" href="#FNanchor_9" class="label">[9]</a> From Murchison’s Silurian System.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_10" href="#FNanchor_10" class="label">[10]</a> These scales, which occur in a detached state, in a stratified clay
-of the Old Red Sandstone, near Cromarty, present for their size a
-larger extent of <i>cover</i> than the scales of any other Ganoid.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_11" href="#FNanchor_11" class="label">[11]</a> A peculiarity which also occurs in the anterior dorsal of the
-<i>Dipterus</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_12" href="#FNanchor_12" class="label">[12]</a> From the head of <i>Raja clavata</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_13" href="#FNanchor_13" class="label">[13]</a> The darker, upper patch in this figure indicates a portion in
-which the scales of the fins in the fossil still retain their enamel;—the
-lighter, a portion from which the enamel has disappeared.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_14" href="#FNanchor_14" class="label">[14]</a> The Acanths of the Coal Measures possess the cranial buckler.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_15" href="#FNanchor_15" class="label">[15]</a> Professor Owen, in fixing the homologies of the ichthyic head,
-differs considerably from Cuvier; but his view seems to be demonstrably
-the correct one. It will, however, be seen, that in
-my attempted comparison of the divisions of the ancient ganoid
-cranium with those of the craniums of existing fishes, the points
-at issue between the two great naturalists are not involved, otherwise
-than as mere questions of words. The matter to be determined,
-for instance, is not whether plate A in the skulls of the cod
-and <i>Coccosteus</i> be the homologue of a part of the occipital or that
-of a part of the parietal bones, but whether plate A in the <i>Coccosteus</i>
-be the homologue of plate A in the cod. The letters employed
-I have borrowed from Agassiz’s restoration of the <i>Coccosteus</i>; whereas
-the figures intimate divisions which the imperfect keeping of the
-specimens on which the ichthyologist founded did not enable him to
-detect.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_16" href="#FNanchor_16" class="label">[16]</a> The jaws (10, 10) which exhibit in the print their greatest
-breadth, would have presented in the animal, seen from beneath,
-their narrow under-edges, and have nearly fallen into the line of the
-sub-opercular plates, (13, 13.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_17" href="#FNanchor_17" class="label">[17]</a> In all probability it is likewise the principle of the placoid
-skull. The numerous osseous points by which the latter is encrusted,
-each capable of increase at the edges, seem the minute
-bricks of an ample dome. It is possible, however, that new points
-may be formed in the interstices between the first formed ones,
-as what anatomists term the <i>triquetra</i> or <i>Wormiana</i> form between
-the serrated edges of the lambdoidal suture in the human skull;
-and that the osseous surface of the cerebral dome may thus extend,
-as the dome itself increases in size, not through the growth
-of the previously existing pieces,—the minute bricks of my illustration,—but
-through the addition of new ones. Equally, in
-either case, however, that essential difference between the placoid skull
-and the placoid vertebra, to which I have referred,
-appears to hinge on the circumstance, that
-while the osseous nucleus of each vertebral
-centrum could form, in even its most complicated
-shape, from a <i>single</i> point, the osseous
-walls of the cranium had to be formed
-from <i>hundreds</i>. The accompanying diagram
-serves to show after what manner the vertebral
-centrum in the Ray enlarges with the
-growth of the animal, by addition of bony
-matter external to the point in the middle,
-at which ossification first begins. The horizontal
-lines indicate the lines of increment in the two internal cones
-which each centrum comprises, and the vertical ones the lines of
-increment in the lateral pillars.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 200px;" id="figure23">
-<img src="images/figure23.jpg" width="200" height="175" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Fig. 23.</p>
-<p class="caption">SECTION OF VERTEBRAL CENTRUM OF THORNBACK.</p>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_18" href="#FNanchor_18" class="label">[18]</a> One of the Thurso coprolites in my possession is about one
-fourth longer than the larger of the two specimens figured here, and
-nearly thrice as broad.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_19" href="#FNanchor_19" class="label">[19]</a> In two of these, in a collection of several score, I have failed
-to detect the spiral markings, though their state of keeping is
-decidedly good. There are other appearances which lead me to
-suspect that the <i>Asterolepis</i> was not the only large fish of the Lower
-Old Red Sandstone; but my facts on the subject are too inconclusive
-to justify aught more than sedulous inquiry.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_20" href="#FNanchor_20" class="label">[20]</a> The shaded plate, (<i>a</i>,) accidentally presented in this specimen,
-belongs to the upper part of the head. It is the posterior frontal
-plate F, which half-encircled the eye orbit, (see fig. 29;) and I have
-introduced it into the print here, as in none of the other prints, or of
-any other specimens, is its upper surface shown.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_21" href="#FNanchor_21" class="label">[21]</a> The late Mr. John Thurston.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_22" href="#FNanchor_22" class="label">[22]</a> “Mr. Phillips proceeded to describe some remains of a small
-fish, resembling the <i>Cheiracanthus</i> of the Old Red Sandstone, scales
-and spines of which he had found in a quarry at Hales End, on
-the western side of the Malverns. The section presented beds of
-the Old Red Sandstone inclined to the west; beneath these were
-arenaceous beds of a lighter color, forming the junction with Silurian
-shales; these, again, passing on to calcareous beds in the lower part
-of the quarry, containing the corals and shells of the Aymestry
-Limestone, of their agreement with which stronger evidence might
-be obtained elsewhere. He had found none of these scales in
-the junction beds or in the Upper Ludlow Shales; but about sixty
-or one hundred feet lower, just above the Aymestry Limestone, his
-attention had been attracted to discolored spots on the <i>surface</i> of the
-beds, which, upon microscopic examination, proved to be the minute
-scales and spines before mentioned. These remains were only
-apparent on the surface, whilst the ‘fish-bed’ of the Upper Ludlow
-rock, as it usually occurred, was an inch thick, consisting of innumerable
-small teeth and spines.”—<i>Report, in “<span class="upright">Athenæum</span>” for
-1842, of the Proceedings of the Twelfth Meeting of British Association,
-(Manchester.)</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_23" href="#FNanchor_23" class="label">[23]</a> “This is the lowest position” (that of the Onondago Limestone)
-“in the State of New York in which any remains have
-been found higher in the scale of organized beings than <i>Crustacea</i>,
-with the exception of an imperfectly preserved fish-bone discovered
-by Hall in the Oriskany Sandstone. That specimen, together with
-the defensive fish-bone found in this part of the New York system,
-furnishes evidences of the existence of animals belonging to the
-class <i>vertebrata</i> during the deposition of the middle part of the
-protozoic strata.”—<i>American Journal of Science and Arts for 1846</i>,
-p. 63.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_24" href="#FNanchor_24" class="label">[24]</a> “The shales <i>alternating</i> with the Wenlock Limestone.” (<i>Edinburgh
-Review.</i>)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_25" href="#FNanchor_25" class="label">[25]</a> The Silurian Placoids are most adequately represented by the
-<i>Cestracion</i> of the southern hemisphere; but I know not that of the
-peculiar character and instincts of this interesting Placoid,—the last
-of its race,—there is any thing known. For its form and general appearance
-see fig. 49, <a href="#figure49">page 177</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_26" href="#FNanchor_26" class="label">[26]</a> Such as the dog-fishes, picked and spotted.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_27" href="#FNanchor_27" class="label">[27]</a> The twelfth in <i>Spinax Acanthius</i>, and the fourteenth in <i>Scyllium
-Stellare</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_28" href="#FNanchor_28" class="label">[28]</a> It will scarce be urged against the degradation theory, that
-those races which, tried by the tests of defect or misplacement of
-parts, we deem degraded, are not less fitted for carrying on what
-in their own little spheres is the proper business of life, than the
-non-degraded orders and families. The objection is, however, a
-possible one, and one which a single remark may serve to obviate.
-It is certainly true that the degraded families <i>are</i> thoroughly fitted
-for the performance of all the work given them to do. They
-greatly increase when placed in favorable circumstances, and, when
-vigorous and thriving, enjoy existence. But then the same may
-be said of all animals, without reference to their place in the
-scale;—the mollusc is as thoroughly adapted to its circumstances
-and as fitted to accomplish the end proper to its being, as the mammiferous
-quadruped, and the mammiferous quadruped as man himself;
-but the fact of perfect adaptation in no degree invalidates the
-other not less certain fact of difference of rank, nor proves that the
-mollusc is equal to the quadruped, or the quadruped to man. And,
-of course, the remark equally bears on the <i>reduced</i> as on the <i>unelevated</i>,—on
-lowness of place when a result of degradation in races
-pertaining to a higher division of animals, as on lowness of place
-when a result of the humble standing of the division to which the
-races belong.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_29" href="#FNanchor_29" class="label">[29]</a> The vertebral column in the genus <i>Diplopterus</i> ran, as in the
-placoid genus <i>Scyllium</i>, nearly through the middle of the caudal
-fin.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_30" href="#FNanchor_30" class="label">[30]</a> In the following diagram a few simple lines serve to exhibit
-the progress of degradation. Fig. <i>a</i> represents the symmetrical
-Placoids of the Silurian period, consisting of head, neck, body, tail,
-fore limbs and hinder limbs; fig. <i>b</i> represents those heterocercal Ganoids
-of the Old Red Sandstone, Coal Measures, and Permian System,
-in which the neck is extinguished, and the fore limbs stuck on to the
-occiput; fig. <i>c</i>, those homocercal Ganoids of the Trias Lias, Oolite, and
-Wealden, whose tails spread out into broad terminal processes, without
-homologue in the higher animals; fig. <i>d</i>, those Acanthopterygii
-of the Chalk that, in addition to the non-homological processes,
-have both fore limbs and hinder limbs stuck round the head; while
-fig. <i>e</i> represents the asymmetrical Platessa, of the same period, with
-one of its eyes in the middle of its head, and the other thrust out to
-the side.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<img src="images/fish-diagram.jpg" width="500" height="275" alt="Diagram of the degradation described" />
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_31" href="#FNanchor_31" class="label">[31]</a> I would, however, respectfully suggest, that that theory of cerebral
-vertebræ, on which, in this question, the comparative anatomists
-proceed as their principle, and which finds as little support in
-the geologic record from the actual history of the fore limbs as from
-the actual history of the bones of the cranium, may be more ingenious
-than sound. It is a shrewd circumstance, that the rocks refuse
-to testify in its favor. Agassiz, I find, decides against it on other
-than geological grounds; and his conclusion is certainly rendered
-not the less worthy of careful consideration by the fact that, yielding
-to the force of evidence, his views on the subject underwent a thorough
-change. He had first held, and then rejected it. “I have
-shared,” he says, “with a multitude of other naturalists, the opinion
-which regards the cranium as composed of vertebræ; and I am consequently
-in some degree called upon to point out the motives which
-have induced me to reject it.”</p>
-
-<p>“M. Oken,” he continues, “was the first to assign this signification
-to the bones of the cranium. The new doctrine he expounded was
-received in Germany with great enthusiasm by the school of the
-philosophers of nature. The author conceived the cranium to consist
-of three vertebræ, and the basal occipital, the sphenoid, and the
-ethmoid, were regarded as the central parts of these cranial vertebræ.
-On these alleged bodies of vertebræ, the arches enveloping the central
-parts of the nervous system were raised, while on the opposite
-side were attached the inferior pieces, which went to form the vegetative
-arch destined to embrace the intestinal canal and the large
-vessels. It would be too tedious to enumerate in this place the
-changes which each author introduced, in order to modify this matter
-so as to make it suit his own views. Some went the length of
-affirming that the vertebræ of the head were as complete as those of
-the trunk; and, by means of various dismemberments, separations,
-and combinations, all the forms of the cranium were referred to the
-vertebræ, by admitting that the number of pieces was invariably
-fixed in every head, and that all the vertebrata, whatever might be
-their organization in other respects, had in their heads the same
-number of points of ossification. At a later period, what was erroneous
-in this manner of regarding the subject was detected; but
-the idea of the vertebral composition of the head was still retained.
-It was admitted as a general law, that the cranium was composed of
-three primitive vertebræ, as the embryo is of three blastodermic leaflets;
-but that these vertebræ, like the leaflets, existed only ideally,
-and that their presence, although easily demonstrated in certain cases,
-could only be slightly traced, and with the greatest difficulty, in
-other instances. The notion thus laid down of the virtual existence
-of cranial vertebræ did not encounter very great opposition; it could
-not be denied that there was a certain general resemblance between
-the osseous case of the brain and the rachidian canal; the occipital,
-in particular, had all the characteristic features of a vertebra. But
-whenever an attempt was made to push the analogy further, and to
-determine rigorously the anterior vertebræ of the cranium, the observer
-found himself arrested by insurmountable obstacles, and he
-was obliged always to revert to the virtual existence.</p>
-
-<p>“In order to explain my idea clearly, let me have recourse to an
-example. It is certain that organized bodies are sometimes endowed
-with virtual qualities, which, at a certain period of the being’s life,
-elude dissection, and all our means of investigation. It is thus that
-at the moment of their origin, the eggs of all animals have such a
-resemblance to each other, that it would be impossible to distinguish,
-even by the aid of the most powerful microscope, the ovarial egg of
-a craw-fish, for example, from that of true fish. And yet who would
-deny that beings in every respect different from each other exist in
-these eggs? It is precisely because the difference manifests itself at
-a later period, in proportion as the embryo develops itself, that we
-are authorized to conclude, that, even from the earliest period, the
-eggs were different,—that each had virtual qualities proper to itself,
-although they could not be discovered by our senses. If, on the contrary,
-any one should find two eggs perfectly alike, and should
-observe two beings perfectly identical issue from them, he would
-greatly err if he ascribed to these eggs different virtual qualities. It
-is therefore necessary, in order to be in a condition to suppose that
-virtual properties peculiar to it are concealed in an animal, that these
-properties should manifest themselves once, in some phase or other
-of its development. Now, applying this principle to the theory of
-cranial vertebræ, we should say, that if these vertebræ virtually exist
-in the adult, they must needs show themselves in reality, at a certain
-period of development. If, on the contrary, they are found neither
-in the embryo nor the adult, I am of opinion that we are entitled
-likewise to dispute their virtual existence.</p>
-
-<p>“Here, however, an objection may be made to me, drawn from
-the physiological value of the vertebræ, the function of which, as is
-well known, is, on the one hand, to furnish a solid support to the
-muscular contractions which determine the movements of the trunk,
-and, on the other, to protect the centres of the nervous system, by
-forming a more or less solid case completely around them. The
-bodies of the vertebræ are particularly destined to the first of these
-offices; the neurapophyses to the second. What can be more natural
-than to admit, from the consideration of this, that in the head,
-the bodies of the vertebræ diminish in proportion as the moving
-function becomes lost, while the neurapophyses are considerably developed
-for protecting the brain, the volume of which is very considerable,
-when compared with that of the spinal marrow? Have we
-not an example of this fact in the vertebræ of the tail, where the
-neurapophyses become completely obliterated, and a simple cylindrical
-body alone remains? Now, may it not be the case, that in the
-head, the bodies of the vertebræ have disappeared; and that, in consequence,
-there is a prolongation of the cord only as far as the
-moving functions of the vertebræ extend? There is some truth in
-this argument, and it would be difficult to refute it <i>a priori</i>. But it
-loses all its force the moment that we enter upon a detailed examination
-of the bones of the head. Thus, what would we call, according
-to this hypothesis, the principal sphenoid, the great wings of the
-sphenoid, and the ethmoid, which form the floor of the cerebral cavity?
-It may be said they are apophyses. But the apophyses protect
-the nervous centres only on the side and above. It may be
-said that they are the bodies of the vertebræ. But they are formed
-without the concurrence of the dorsal cord; they cannot, therefore,
-be the bodies of the vertebræ. It must therefore be allowed, that
-these bones at least do not enter into the vertebral type; that they
-are in some measure peculiar. And if this be the case with them,
-why may not the other protective plates be equally independent of
-the vertebral type; the more so, because the relations of the frontals
-and parietals vary so much, that it would be almost impossible
-to assign to them a constant place?”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_32" href="#FNanchor_32" class="label">[32]</a> It is stated by Mr. Witham, that, “except in a few instances, he
-had ineffectually tried, with the aid of the microscope, to obtain some
-insight into the structure of coal. Owing,” he adds, “to its great
-opacity, which is probably due to mechanical pressure, the action of
-chemical affinity, and the percolation of acidulous waters, all traces
-of organization appear to have been obliterated.” I have heard the
-late Mr. Sanderson, who prepared for Mr. Witham most of the specimens
-figured in his well-known work on the “Internal Structure of
-Fossil Vegetables,” and from whom the materials of his statement on
-this point seem to have been derived, make a similar remark. It was
-rare, he said, to find a bit of coal that exhibited the organic structure.
-The case, however, is far otherwise; and the ingenious mechanic
-and his employer were misled, simply by the circumstance,
-that it is rare to find pieces of coal which exhibit the ligneous fibre,
-existing in a state of keeping solid enough to stand the grinding of
-the lapidary’s wheel. The lignite usually occurs in thin layers of a
-substance resembling soft charcoal, at which, from the loose adhesion
-of the fibres, the coal splits at a stroke; and as it cannot be prepared
-as a transparency, it is best examined by a Stanhope lens. It will
-be found, tried in this manner, that so far is vegetable fibre from
-being of rare occurrence in coal,—our Scotch coal at least,—that
-almost every cubic inch contains its hundreds, nay, its thousands, of
-cells.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_33" href="#FNanchor_33" class="label">[33]</a> On a point of such importance I find it necessary to strengthen
-my testimony by auxiliary evidence. The following is the judgment,
-on this ancient petrifaction, of Mr. Nicol of Edinburgh,—confessedly
-one of our highest living authorities in that division of
-fossil botany which takes cognizance of the internal structure of
-lignites, and decides, from their anatomy, their race and family:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">“Edinburgh, 19th July, 1845.</p>
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">Dear Sir</span>,—I have examined the structure of the fossil wood
-which you found in the Old Red Sandstone at Cromarty, and have
-no hesitation in stating, that the reticulated texture of the transverse
-sections, though somewhat compressed, clearly indicates a
-coniferous origin; but as there is not the slightest trace of a disc
-to be seen in the longitudinal sections parallel to the medullary
-rays, it is impossible to say whether it belongs to the Pine or Araucarian
-division. I am, &amp;c.,</p>
-
-<p class="right">“<span class="smcap">William Nicol.</span>”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>It will be seen that Mr. Nicol failed to detect what I now deem
-the discs of this conifer,—those stippled markings to which I have
-referred, and which the engraver has indicated in no exaggerated
-style, in one of the longitudinal sections (<i>b</i>) of the wood-cut given
-above. But even were this portion of the evidence wholly wanting,
-we would be left in doubt, in consequence, not whether the
-Old Red lignite formed part of a true gymnospermous tree, but
-whether that tree is now represented by the pines of Europe and
-America, or by the araucarians of Chili and New Zealand. Were
-I to risk an opinion in a department not particularly my province
-it would be in favor of an araucarian relationship.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_34" href="#FNanchor_34" class="label">[34]</a> The following digest from Professor Balfour’s very admirable
-“Manual of Botany,” of what is held on this curious subject,
-may be not unacceptable to the reader. “It is an interesting
-question to determine the mode in which the various species and
-tribes of plants were originally scattered over the globe. Various
-hypotheses have been advanced on the subject. Linnæus entertained
-the opinion that there was at first only one primitive
-centre of vegetation, from which plants were distributed over the
-globe. Some, avoiding all discussions and difficulties, suppose that
-plants were produced at first in the localities where they are now
-seen vegetating. Others think that each species of plant originated
-in, and was diffused from, a single primitive centre; and that there
-were numerous such centres situated in different parts of the world,
-each centre being the seat of a particular number of species. They
-thus admit great vegetable migrations, similar to those of the human
-races. Those who adopt the latter view recognize in the distribution
-of plants some of the last revolutions of our planet, and the
-action of numerous and varied forces, which impede or favor the
-dissemination of vegetables in the present day. They endeavor to
-ascertain the primitive flora of countries, and to trace the vegetable
-migrations which have taken place. Daubeny says, that analogy
-favors the supposition that each species of plant was originally
-formed in some particular locality, whence it spread itself gradually
-over a certain area, rather than that the earth was at once,
-by the fiat of the Almighty, covered with vegetation in the manner
-we at present behold it. The human race rose from a single pair;
-and the distribution of plants and animals over a certain definite
-area would seem to imply that the same was the general law. Analogy
-would lead us to believe that the extension of species over the
-earth originally took place on the same plan on which it is conducted
-at present, when a new island starts up in the midst of
-the ocean, produced either by a coral reef or a volcano. In these
-cases the whole surface is not at once overspread with plants, but
-a gradual progress of vegetation is traced from the accidental introduction
-of a single seed, perhaps, of each species, wafted by winds
-or floated by currents. The remarkable limitation of certain species
-to single spots on the globe seems to favor the supposition of specific
-centres.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_35" href="#FNanchor_35" class="label">[35]</a> <i>Rhodomenia palmata</i> and <i>Alaria esculenta</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_36" href="#FNanchor_36" class="label">[36]</a> <i>Porphyra laciniata</i>, <i>Chorda filum</i>, and <i>Enteromorpha compressa</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_37" href="#FNanchor_37" class="label">[37]</a> “Dr. Neill mentions,” says the Rev. Mr. Landsborough, in his
-complete and very interesting “History of British Sea-Weeds,” “that
-on our shores algæ generally occupy zones in the following order, beginning
-from deep water:—<i>F. Filum</i>; <i>F. esculentus</i> and <i>bulbosus</i>,
-<i>F. digitatus</i>, <i>saccharinus</i>, and <i>loreus</i>; <i>F. serratus</i> and <i>crispus</i>; <i>F. nodosus</i>
-and <i>vesiculosus</i>; <i>F. canaliculatus</i>; and, last of all, <i>F. pygmæus</i>;
-which is satisfied if it be within reach of the spray.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_38" href="#FNanchor_38" class="label">[38]</a> We are supplied with a curious example of that ever-returning
-cycle of speculation in which the human mind operates, by
-not only the introduction of the <i>principle</i> of Epicurus into the
-“Vestiges,” but also by the unconscious employment of even
-his very <i>arguments</i>, slightly modified by the floating semi-scientific
-notions of the time. The following passages, taken, the one from
-the modern work, the other from Fénélon’s life of the old Greek
-philosopher, are not unworthy of being studied, as curiously illustrative
-of the cycle of thought. Epicurus, I must, however, first
-remind the reader, in the words of his biographer, “supposed
-that men, and all other animals, were originally produced by the
-ground. According to him, the primitive earth was fat and nitrous;
-and the sun, gradually warming it, soon covered it with herbage
-and shrubs: there also began to arise on the surface of the ground
-a great number of small tumors like mushrooms, which having
-in a certain time come to maturity, the skin burst, and there came
-forth little animals, which, gradually retiring from the place where
-they were produced, began to respire.” And there can be little
-doubt, that had the microscope been a discovery of early Greece,
-the passage here would have told us, not of mushroom-like tumors,
-but of monads. Save that the element of microscopic fact is awanting
-in the one and present in the other, the following are strictly
-parallel lines of argument:—</p>
-
-<p>“To the natural objection that the earth does not now produce men,
-lions, and dogs, Epicurus replies that the fecundity of the earth is
-now exhausted. In advanced age a woman ceases to bear children; a piece
-of land never before cultivated produces much more during the few first
-years than it does afterwards; and when a forest is once cut down, the
-soil never produces trees equal to those which have been rooted up.
-Those which are afterwards planted become dwarfish, and are perpetually
-degenerating. We are, however, he argues, by no means certain but there
-may be at present rabbits, hares, foxes, bears, and other animals,
-produced by the earth in their perfect state. The reason why we are
-backward in admitting it is, that it happens in retired places, and
-never falls under our view; and, never seeing rats but such as have
-been produced by other rats, we adopt the opinion that the earth never
-produced any.” (<i>Fénélon’s Lives of the Ancient Philosophers.</i>)</p>
-
-<p>“In the first place, there is no reason to suppose that, though life had
-been imparted by natural means, after the first cooling of the surface
-to a suitable temperament, it would continue thereafter to be capable of
-being imparted in like manner. The great work of the peopling of this
-globe with living species is mainly a fact accomplished: the highest
-known species came as a crowning effort thousands of years ago. The work
-being thus to all appearance finished, we are not necessarily to expect
-that the origination of life and of species should be conspicuously
-exemplified in the present day. We are rather to expect that the vital
-phenomena presented to our eyes should mainly, if not entirely, be
-limited to a regular and unvarying succession of races by the ordinary
-means of generation. This, however, is no more an argument against a
-time when phenomena of the first kind prevailed, than it would be a
-proof against the fact of a mature man having once been a growing youth,
-that he is now seen growing no longer..... Secondly, it is far from
-being certain that the primitive imparting of life and form to inorganic
-elements is not a fact of our times.” (<i>Vestiges of Creation.</i>)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_39" href="#FNanchor_39" class="label">[39]</a> “<i>Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation</i>,” and “<i>Explanations,
-being a Sequel to the Vestiges</i>.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_40" href="#FNanchor_40" class="label">[40]</a> The chapter in which this passage occurs originally appeared,
-with several of the others, in the <i>Witness</i> newspaper, in a series of
-articles, entitled “Rambles of a Geologist,” and drew forth the
-following letter from a correspondent of the <i>Scottish Press</i>, the
-organ of a powerful and thoroughly respectable section of the old
-Dissenters of Scotland. I present it to the reader merely to show,
-that if, according to the author of the “Vestiges,” geologists assailed
-the development hypothesis in the fond hope of “purchasing
-impunity for themselves,” they would succeed in securing only
-disappointment for their pains:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="center">“THE PRE-ADAMITE EARTH.</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">“<i>To the Editor of the Scottish Press.</i></p>
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">Sir</span>,—I occasionally observe articles in your neighbor and
-contemporary the <i>Witness</i>, characteristically headed ‘Rambles of
-a Geologist,’ wherein the writer with great zeal once more ‘slays
-the slain’ heresies of the ‘Vestiges of Creation.’ This writer (of
-the ‘Rambles,’ I mean) nevertheless, and at the same time, announces
-his own tenets to be much of the same sort, as applied to
-mere dead matter, that those of the ‘Vestiges’ are with regard
-to living organisms. He maintains that the world, during the
-last million of years, has been of itself rising or developing, without
-the interposition of a miracle, from chaos into its present state;
-and, of course, as it is still, as a world, confessedly far below the
-acme of physical perfection, that it must be just now on its passage,
-self-progressing, towards that point, which terminus it may
-reach in another million of years hence.[!!!] The author of the
-‘Vestiges,’ as quoted by the author of the ‘Rambles,’ in the last
-number of the <i>Witness</i>, complains that the latter and his allies
-are not at all so liberal to him as, from their present circumstances
-and position, he had a right to expect. He (the author of the
-‘Vestiges’) reminds his opponents that they have themselves only
-lately emerged from the antiquated scriptural notions that our
-world was the direct and almost immediate construction of its
-Creator,—as much so, in fact, as any of its organized tenants,—and
-that it was then created in a state of physical excellence, the
-highest possible, to render it a suitable habitation for these tenants,
-and all this only about six or seven thousand years ago,—to
-the new light of their present <i>physico-Lamarckian</i> views;
-and he asks, and certainly not without reason, why should <i>these
-men</i>, so circumstanced, be so anxious to stop him in his attempt
-to move one step further forward in the very direction they themselves
-have made the last move?—that is, in his endeavor to extend
-their own principles of self-development from mere matter
-to living creatures. Now, Sir, I confess myself to be one of those
-(and possibly you may have more readers similarly constituted)
-who not only cannot see any great difference between merely <i>physical</i>
-and <i>organic</i> development,[!!] but who would be inclined to allow
-the latter, absurd as it is, the advantage in point of likelihood.[!!!]
-The author of the ‘Rambles,’ however, in the face of this, assures
-us that <i>his</i> views of physical self-development and long chronology
-belong to the inductive sciences. Now, I could at this stage of
-his rambles have wished very much that, instead of merely <i>saying</i>
-so, he had given his <i>demonstration</i>. He refers, indeed, to
-several great men, who, he says, are of his opinion. Most that
-these men have written on the question at issue I have seen, but
-it appeared far from demonstrative, and some of them, I know,
-had not fully made up their mind on the point.[!!!] Perhaps the
-author of the ‘Rambles’ could favor us with the inductive process
-that converted himself; and, as the attainment of truth, and
-not victory, is my object, I promise either to acquiesce in or rationally
-refute it.[?] Till then I hold by my antiquated tenets, that
-our world, nay, the whole material universe, was created about
-six or seven thousand years ago, and that in a state of physical
-excellence of which we have in our present fallen world only the
-‘vestiges of creation.’ I conclude by mentioning that this view
-I have held now for nearly thirty years, and, amidst all the vicissitudes
-of the philosophical world during that period, I have never
-seen cause to change it. Of course, with this view I was, during
-the interval referred to, a constant opponent of the once famous,
-though now exploded, nebular hypothesis of La Place; and I yet
-expect to see <i>physical development</i> and <i>long chronology</i> wither also
-on this earth, now that <span class="smcap">their root</span> (the said hypothesis) has been
-eradicated from the <span class="smcap">sky</span>.[!!!]—I am, Sir, your most obedient servant,</p>
-
-<p class="right">“<span class="smcap">Philalethes.</span>”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>I am afraid there is little hope of converting a man who has
-held so stoutly by his notions “for nearly thirty years;” especially
-as, during that period, he has been acquainting himself with
-what writers such as Drs. Chalmers, Buckland, and Pye Smith
-have written on the other side. But for the <i>demonstration</i> which
-he asks, as <i>I</i> have conducted it, I beg leave to refer him to the
-seventeenth chapter of my little work, “First Impressions of
-England and its People.” I am, however, inclined to suspect
-that he is one of a class whose objections are destined to be removed
-rather by the operation of the laws of matter than of
-those of mind. For it is a comfortable consideration, that in this
-controversy the geologists <i>have</i> the laws of matter on their side;—“the
-stars in their courses fight against Sisera.” Their opponents
-now, like the opponents of the astronomer in the ages gone by, are,
-in most instances, men who have been studying the matter “for
-nearly thirty years.” When they study it for a few years longer
-they disappear; and the men of the same cast and calibre who succeed
-them are exactly the men who throw themselves most confidently
-into the arms of the enemy, and look down upon their poor
-silent predecessors with the loftiest commiseration. It is, however,
-not uninstructive to remark how thoroughly, in some instances,
-the weaker friends and the wilier enemies of Revelation are at one
-in their conclusions respecting natural phenomena. The correspondent
-of the <i>Scottish Press</i> merely regards the views of the author
-of the “Vestiges” as possessing “the advantage, in point of likelihood,”
-over those of the geologists his antagonists: his ally the
-Dean of York goes greatly further, and stands up as stoutly for the
-transmutation of species as Lamarck himself. Descanting, in his
-<i>New System of Geology</i>, on the various forms of trilobites, ammonites,
-belemnites, &amp;c. Dean Cockburn says,—</p>
-
-<p>“These creatures appear to have possessed the power of secreting
-from the stone beneath them a limy covering for their backs, and
-perhaps, fed partly on the same solid material. Supposing, now
-that the first trilobites were destroyed by the Llandeilo Slates,
-some spawn of these creatures would arise above these flags, and,
-after a time, would be warmed into existence. These <i>molluscs</i>,[!!]
-then, having a better material from which to extract their food
-and covering, would probably expand in a slightly different form,
-and with a more extensive mantle than what belonged to the
-parent species. The same would be still more the case with a new
-generation, fed upon a new deposit from some deeper volcano, such
-as the Caradoc or Wenlock Limestone, in which lime more and more
-predominates. Now, if any one will examine the various prints of
-trilobites in Sir R. Murchison’s valuable work, he will find but very
-trifling differences in any of them,[!!] and those differences only in
-the stony covering of their backs. I knew two brothers once
-much alike: the one became a curate with a large family; the
-other a London alderman. If the skins of these two pachydermata
-had been preserved in a fossil state, there would have been less
-resemblance between them than between an <i>Asaphus tyrannus</i> and
-an <i>Asaphus caudatus</i>.... A careful and laborious investigation
-has discovered, as in the trilobites, a difference in the ammonites
-of different strata; but such differences, as in the former
-case, exist only in the form of the external shell, and may be explained
-in the same manner.[!!] ... As to the scaphites,
-baculites, belemnites, and all the other <i>ites</i> which learned ingenuity
-has so named, you find them in various strata the same in all
-important particulars, but also differing slightly in their outward
-coverings, as might be expected from the different circumstances
-in which each variety was placed.[!!] The sheep in the warm valleys
-of Andalusia have a fine covering like to hair; but remove
-them to a northern climate, and in a few generations the back is
-covered with shaggy wool. The animal is the same,—the covering
-only is changed.... The learned have classed those shells
-under the names of terebratula, orthis, atrypa, pecten, &amp;c. They
-are all much alike.[!!!] It requires an experienced eye to distinguish
-them one from another: what little differences have been
-pointed out may readily be ascribed, as before, to difference of
-situation.”[!!!]</p>
-
-<p>The author of the “Vestiges,” with this, the fundamental portion
-of his case, granted to him by the Dean, will have exceedingly
-little difficulty in making out the rest for himself. The passage is,
-however, not without its value, as illustrative of the darkness, in
-matters of physical science, “even darkness which may be felt,”
-that is suffered to linger, in this the most scientific of ages, in the
-Church of Buckland, Sedgwick, and Conybeare.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_41" href="#FNanchor_41" class="label">[41]</a> The common objection to that special view which regards the
-<i>days</i> of creation as immensely protracted periods of time, furnishes a
-specimen, if not of reasoning in a circle, at least of reasoning from a
-mere assumption. It first takes for granted, that the Sabbath day
-during which God rested was a day of but twenty-four hours; and
-then argues, from the supposition, that in order to <i>keep up the proportion</i>
-between the six previous working days and the seventh day of
-rest, which the reason annexed to the fourth commandment demands,
-these previous days must also have been days of twenty-four hours
-each. It would, I have begun to suspect, square better with the
-ascertained facts, and be at least equally in accordance with Scripture,
-to reverse the process, and argue that, <i>because</i> God’s working days
-were immensely protracted periods, <i>his</i> Sabbath must <i>also</i> be an immensely
-protracted period. The reason attached to the law of the
-Sabbath seems to be simply <i>a reason of proportion</i>;—the objection to
-which I refer is an objection palpably founded on <i>considerations</i> of
-proportion. And certainly, were the reason to be divested of proportion,
-it would be divested also of its distinctive character as a
-reason. Were it to run as follows, it could not be at all understood:—“Six
-days shalt thou labor, &amp;c., but on the seventh day shalt thou
-do no labor, &amp;c.; for in six immensely protracted periods of many
-thousand years each did the Lord make the heavens and earth, &amp;c.,
-and then rested during a brief day of twenty-four hours; therefore
-the Lord blessed the brief day of twenty-four hours, and hallowed
-it.” This, I repeat, would not be reason. All, however, that seems
-necessary to the integrity of the reason, in its character as such, is,
-that the proportion of six parts to seven should be maintained. God’s
-periods may be periods expressed algebraically by letters symbolical
-of unknown quantity, and man’s periods by letters symbolical of
-quantities well known; but if God’s Sabbath be equal to one of his
-six working days, and man’s Sabbath equal to one of <i>his</i> six working
-days, the integrity of proportion is maintained. When I see the palpable
-absurdity of such a reading of the reason as the one given
-above, I can see no absurdity whatever in the reading which I subjoin:—“Six
-<i>periods</i> (<i>a=a=a=a=a=a</i>) shalt thou labor, &amp;c., but on
-the seventh <i>period</i> (<i>b=a</i>) shalt thou do no labor, &amp;c.; for in six <i>periods</i>
-(<i>x=x=x=x=x=x</i>) the Lord made heaven and earth, &amp;c., and
-rested the seventh <i>period</i>, (<i>y=x</i>;) therefore the Lord blessed the
-seventh <i>period</i>, and hallowed it” The reason, in its character as a
-reason of proportion, survives here in all its integrity. Man, when in
-his unfallen estate, bore the image of God, but it must have been a
-miniature image at best;—the proportion of man’s week to that of
-his Maker may, for aught that appears, be mathematically just in its
-proportions, and yet be a miniature image too,—the mere scale of a
-map, on which inches represent geographical degrees. All those
-week days and Sabbath days of man which have come and gone since
-man first entered upon this scene of being, with all which shall yet
-come and go, until the resurrection of the dead terminates the work
-of Redemption, may be included, and probably <i>are</i> included, in the
-one Sabbath day of God.</p>
-
-</div>
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