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time, marking what are the peculiarities of each and how they may best be classified.

If the labours of the geologist were concerned merely with the former mutations of the earth's surface, how sea and land have changed places, how rivers have altered their courses, how lakes have been filled up, how valleys have been excavated, how mountains, peaks, and precipices have been carved, how plains have been spread out, and how the story of these revolutions has been written in enduring characters upon the very framework of the land, he would feel the want of one of the great sources of interest in the study of the present face of nature. We naturally connect all modern changes of the earth's surface with the life of the plants and animals that flourish there, and more especially with their influence on the progress of Man himself. If there were no similar connection of the ancient changes with once living things if the history of the earth were merely one of dead inert matter it would lose much of its interest for us. But happily that history includes the records of successive generations of plants and animals which, from early times, have peopled land and sea. The remains of these organisms have been preserved in the deposits of different ages, and can be compared and contrasted with those of the modern world.

To realise how such preservation has been possible, and how far the forms so retained afford an adequate picture of the life of the time to which they belonged, we must turn once more to watch how nature deals with this matter at the present time. the millions of flowers, shrubs, and trees which year after year clothe the land with beauty, how many relics are preserved? Where are the successive generations of insect, bird, and beast which have appeared in this country since man first set foot upon its

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soil? They have utterly vanished. If all their living descendants could suddenly be swept away, how could we tell that such plants and animals ever lived at all? It must be confessed that the vast majority of them leave no trace behind. Nevertheless we should be able to recover relics of some of them by searching in the comparatively few places where, at the present day, dead plants and animals are entombed and preserved. From the alluvial terraces of rivers, from the silt of lake-bottoms, from the depths of peat-mosses, from the floors of subterranean caverns, from the incrustations left by springs, we might recover traces of some at least of the living things that people the land. And from these fragmentary and incomplete records we might conjecture what may have been the general character of the life of the time. By searching the similar records of earlier ages the geologist has brought to light many profoundly interesting vestiges of vegetation and of animal life belonging to types that have long since passed away.

It must be evident, however, that were we to confine our inquiries merely to its surface, we should necessarily gain a most imperfect view of the general history of the Earth. Beneath that surface, as volcanoes show, there lies a hot interior, which must have profoundly influenced the changes of the outer parts or crust of the planet. The study of volcanoes enables us to penetrate, as it were, a little way into that interior, and to understand some of the processes in progress there. But our knowledge of the inside of the Earth can obviously be based only to a very limited extent on direct observation, for man cannot penetrate far below the surface. The deepest mines do not go deep enough to reach materials differing in any essential respect from those visible above ground. Nevertheless, by inference from such observations as can be made, and by repeated and varied experiments in laboratories, imitating as closely as can be devised what may be supposed to be the conditions that exist deep within the globe, some probable conclusions can be drawn even as to the changes that take place in those deeper recesses that lie for ever concealed from our eyes. These conclusions will be stated in later chapters of this book, and the rocks will be described, on the origin of which they appear to throw light.

I have compared the soils and rocks with which geology deals to the records out of which the historian writes the chronicles of a nation. We might vary the simile by likening them to the materials employed in the construction of a great building. It is of course interesting enough to know what kinds of marble, granite, mortar, wood, brass, or iron, have been chosen by an architect. But much more important is it to inquire how these various substances have been grouped together so as to form such a building. In like manner, besides the nature and mode of origin of the various rocks of which the visible and accessible part of the earth consists, we ought to know how these varied substances have been arranged so as to build up what we can see of the outer part or crust of our globe. In short, we should try to trace what may be called the architecture of the planet, noting how each variety of rock occupies its own characteristic place, and how they are all grouped and braced together in the solid framework of the land. This then will be the next subject for consideration in this volume.

But in a great historical edifice, like one of the Gothic minsters of Europe, for example, there are often several different styles. A student of architecture can detect these distinctions, and by their means can show that a cathedral has not been completed in one age; that it may even have been partially destroyed and rebuilt during successive centuries, only finally taking its present form after many political vicissitudes and many changes of architectural taste. Each edifice has thus a separate history, which is recorded by the way the materials have been shaped and put together in the various parts of the masonry. So it is with the architecture of the Earth. We have evidence of many demolitions and rebuildings, and the story of their general progress can still be deciphered among the rocks. It is the business of Geology to trace out that story, to put all the scattered materials together, and to make known by what a long succession of changes the Earth has reached its present state. An outline of what science has accomplished in this task will form the last and concluding part of this book.

In the following chapters I wish two principles to be kept steadily in view. In the first place, looking upon Geology as the study of the Earth's history, we need not at first concern ourselves with any details, save those that may be needed to enable us clearly to understand what the general character and progress of this history have been. In a science which embraces so vast a range as Geology, the multiplicity of facts to be examined and remembered may seem at first to be almost overwhelming. But a selection of the essential facts is sufficient to give the learner a clear view of the general principles and conclusions of the science, and to enable him to enter with intelligence and interest into more detailed treatises. In the second place, Geology is essentially a science of observation. The facts with which it deals should, as far as possible, be verified by our own personal examination. We should lose no opportunity of seeing with our own eyes the actual progress of the changes which it investigates, and the proofs which it adduces of similar changes in the far past. To do this will lead us into the fields and hills, to the banks of rivers and lakes, and to the shores of the sea. We can hardly take any country walk, indeed, in which with duly observant eye we may not detect either some geological operation in actual progress, or the evidence of one which was completed long ago. Having

learnt what to look for and how to interpret it when seen, we are as it were gifted with a new sense. Every landscape comes to possess a fresh interest and charm, for we carry about with us everywhere an added power of enjoyment, whether the scenery has long been familiar or presents itself for the first time. I would therefore seek at the outset to impress upon those who propose to read the following pages, that one of the main objects with which this book is written is to foster a habit of observation, and to serve as a guide to what they are themselves to look for, rather than merely to relate what has been seen and determined by others. If they will so learn these lessons, I feel sure that they will never regret the time and labour they may spend over the task.

PART I

THE MATERIALS FOR THE HISTORY OF THE EARTH

CHAPTER II

THE INFLUENCE OF THE ATMOSPHERE IN THE CHANGES OF THE EARTH'S SURFACE

IN the history of mankind no sharp line can be drawn between the events that are happening now or have happened within the last few generations, and those that took place long ago, and which are sometimes, though inaccurately, spoken of as historical. Every people is enacting its history to-day just as fully as it did many centuries ago. The historian recognises this continuity in human progress. He knows that the feelings and aspirations which guided mankind in old times were essentially the same influences that impel them now, and therefore that the wider his knowledge of his fellowmen of the present day, the broader will be his grasp in dealing with the transactions of former generations. So too is it with the history of the Earth. That history is in progress now as really as it has ever been, and its events are being recorded in the same way and by the same agents as in the far past. Its continuity has never been broken. Obviously, therefore, if we would explore its records "in the dark backward and abysm of time," we should first make ourselves familiar with the manner in which these records are being written from day to day before our eyes.

In this first Part, attention will accordingly be given to the changes in progress upon the Earth at the present time, and to the various ways in which the passing of these changes is chronicled

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