patches of gravel. Still farther from the land, at depths of 600 feet and upwards, fine blue and green muds are found, composed of minute particles of such minerals as form the ordinary rocks of the land. But traced out into the open ocean, these various deposits of recognisable terrestrial origin give place to thoroughly oceanic accumulations, especially to widespread sheets of red and brown exceedingly fine clay. This clay, the most generally diffused deposit of the deeper or abysmal parts of the sea, appears to be derived from the decomposition of volcanic fragments either washed away from volcanic islands or supplied by submarine eruptions. That it is accumulated with extreme slowness is shown by two curious and interesting kinds of evidence. Where it occurs farthest removed from land, great numbers of sharks' teeth, with ear-bones and other bones of whales, have been dredged up from it, some of these relics being quite fresh, others partially coated with a crust of brown peroxide of manganese, some wholly and thickly enveloped in this substance. The same haul of the dredge has brought up bones in all these conditions, so that they must be lying side by side on the red clay floor of the ocean abysses. The deposition of manganese is no doubt an exceedingly slow process, but it is evidently faster than the deposition of the red clay. The bones dredged up probably represent a long succession of generations of animals. Yet so tardily does the red clay gather over them, that the older ones are not yet covered up by it, though they have had time to be deeply encased in oxide of manganese. The second kind of evidence of the extreme slowness of deposit in the ocean abysses is supplied by minute spherules of metallic iron, which occurring in numbers dispersed through the red clay, have been identified as portions of meteorites or falling stars. These particles no doubt fall all over the ocean, but it is only where the rate of deposition of sediment is exceedingly slow that they may be expected to be detected. Besides the sediments now enumerated, the bottom of the sea receives abundant accumulations of the remains of shells, corals, foraminifera and other marine creatures; but these will be described in the next chapter, where an account is given of the various ways in which plants and animals, both upon the land and in the sea, inscribe their records in geological history. It must also be borne in mind that throughout all the sediments of the sea-floor, from the upper part of the beach down to the bottom of the deepest and remotest abyss, the remains of the plants, sponges, corals, shells, fishes and other organisms of the ocean may be entombed and preserved. It will suffice here to remember that various depths and regions of the sea have their own characteristic forms of life, the remains of which are preserved in the sediments accumulating there, and that although gravel, sand, and mud laid down beneath the sea may not differ in any recognisable detail from similar materials deposited in a lake or river, yet the presence of marine organisms in them would be enough to prove that they had been formed in the sea. It is evident, also, that if the sea-floor over a wide area were raised into land, the extent of the deposits would show that they could not have been accumulated in any mere river or lake, but must bear witness to the former presence of the sea itself. Summary. The sea records its work upon the surface of the earth in a twofold way. In the first place, in cooperation with the atmospheric agents of disintegration, it eats away the margin of the land and planes it down. The final result of this process if uninterrupted would be to reduce the level of the land to that of a submarine platform, the position of the surface of which would be determined by the lower limit of effective breaker-action. In the second place, the sea gathers over its floor all the detritus worn by every agency from the surface of the land. This material is not distributed at random; it is assorted and arranged by the waves and currents, the coarsest portions being laid down nearest the land, and the finest in stiller and deeper water. The belt of sea-floor within which this deposition takes place probably does not much exceed a breadth of 200 miles. Beyond that belt, the bottom of the ocean is covered to a large extent with deposits of red clay derived from the decomposition of volcanic material and laid down with extreme slowness. These truly oceanic accumulations are recognisably distinct from those derived from terrestrial sources within the narrow zone of deposition near the land. CHAPTER VIII. HOW PLANTS AND ANIMALS INSCRIBE THEIR RECORDS IN GEOLOGICAL HISTORY. BROADLY considered, there are two distinct ways in which plants and animals leave their mark upon the surface of the earth. In the first place, they act directly by promoting or arresting the decay of the land, and by forming out of their own remains deposits which are sometimes thick and extensive. In the second place, their remains are transported and entombed in sedimentary accumulations of many different kinds, and furnish important evidence as to the conditions under which these accumulations were formed. Each of these two kinds of memorial deserves our careful attention, for, taken together, they comprise the most generally interesting departments of geology, and those in which the history of the earth is principally discussed.1 I. We have first to consider the direct action of plants and animals upon the surface of the globe. This action is often of a destructive kind, both plants and animals taking their part in promoting the general disintegration of rocks and soils. Thus, by their decay they furnish to the soil those organic acids referred to on p. 32, as so important in increasing the solvent power of water, and thereby promoting the waste of rocks. By thrusting their roots into crevices of cliffs, plants loosen and gradually wedge off pieces of rock, and by sending their roots and rootlets through the soil, they open up the subsoil to be attacked by air and descending moisture (p. 21). The action of the common earthworm in bringing up fine soil to be exposed to the influences of wind and rain was referred to at p. 24. Many burrowing animals also, such as the mole and rabbit, throw up large quantities of soil and subsoil which are liable to be blown or washed away. 1 In the Appendix a Table of the Vegetable and Animal Kingdoms is given, from which the organic grade of the plants and animals referred to in this and subsequent chapters may be understood. On the other hand, the action may be conservative, as, for instance, where, by forming a covering of turf, vegetation protects the soil underneath from being rapidly removed, or where sand-loving plants bind together the surface of dunes, and thereby arrest the progress of the sand, or where forests shield a mountain-side from the effects of heavy rains and descending avalanches. But it is chiefly by the aggregation of their own remains into more or less extensive deposits that plants and animals leave their most prominent and enduring memorials. As examples of the way in which this is done by plants, reference may be made to peat-bogs, mangrove-swamps, infusorial earth, and calcareous sea-weeds. In temperate and arctic countries, marshy vegetation accumulates in peat-bogs over areas of many square miles and to a depth of sometimes 50 feet. These deposits are largely due to the growth of bog-mosses and other aquatic plants which, dying in their lower parts, continue to grow upward on the same spot. On flat or gently-inclined moors, in hollows between hills, on valley-bottoms, and in shallow lakes, this marshy vegetation accumulates as a wet spongy |