Theory of the Earth, Volume 2 (of 4) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 375 pages of information about Theory of the Earth, Volume 2 (of 4).

Theory of the Earth, Volume 2 (of 4) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 375 pages of information about Theory of the Earth, Volume 2 (of 4).

It is not here meant to affirm, that a mass of marble, which is a calcareous substance, opposes equal resistance, whether to the operations of dissolution or attrition, as a mass composed of granite or of quartz; it is only here maintained that there are in the Alps lofty mountains of marble, as there are in other places lower masses of granite and its accompanying schistus.  But that which is particularly to be attended to here is this:  In all countries of the earth, whether of primitive masses or those of secondary formation, whether uniform and homogeneous, or compound and mixed of those two different kinds of bodies, the system is always the same, of hills and valleys, lakes and rivers, ravines and streams:  no man can say, by looking into the most perfect map, what is primary or what secondary in the constitution of the globe.  It is the same system of larger rivers branching into lesser and lesser in a continued series, of smaller rivers in like manner branching into rivulets, and of rivulets terminating at last into springs or temporary streams.  The principle is universal; and, having learned the natural history of one river, we know the constitution of every other upon the face of the earth.

Thus all the surface of this earth is formed according to a regular system of heights and hollows, hills and valleys, rivulets and rivers, and these rivers return the waters of the atmosphere into the general mass, in like manner as the blood, returning to the heart, is conducted in the veins.  But as the solid land, formed at the bottom of the sea or in the bowels of the earth, could not be there constructed according to that system of things which we find so widely pursued upon the surface of the globe, it must be by wasting the solid parts of the land that this system of the surface has been formed, in like manner as it is by the operations of the sea that the shape of the land is determined, upon the shore.

Thus it has been shown, that the general tendency of the operations natural to the surface of the globe is to wear the surface of the earth, and waste the land; consequently that, however long the continents of this earth may be supposed to last, they are on the whole in a constant state of diminution and decay; and, in the progress of time, will naturally disappear.  Hence confirmation is added to that mineral system of the earth, by which the present land is supposed to have acquired solidity and hardness; and according to which future land is supposed to be preparing from the materials of the sea and former continents; which land will be brought to light in time, to supply the place of that which necessarily wastes, in serving plants and animals.  But what is here more particularly to the purpose is this; that we find an explanation of that various shape and conformation which is to be observed upon the surface of this earth, as being the effect of causes which are constant and unremitting in their operation, which are widely adapted to the end or absolutely necessary in the system of this world, and which, in the indefinite course of time, become unlimited in their effect, or powerful in any conceivable degree.

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Theory of the Earth, Volume 2 (of 4) from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.