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their hiding-places, or the thunder-voice of Deity spoke, as it still speaks, from the terror-striking tempest.

The office of this redundant vegetation was finally fulfilled. The atmosphere was purified of its noxious elements, and higher creatures could live upon the soil. Behold the wisdom and providence of the creative Architect! Carbonic acid was to be removed from the atmosphere, to fit it for animal respiration. A finite mind might have aimed to effect this end alone. Omnipotence was competent to annihilate the poison, or convert it to some solid or liquid form. The infinite Intelligence, however, had so planned the universe that the poison of the quadruped was the food of the plant. The very execution of one portion of the cosmical plan created a use for that which impeded the execution of another. A double object was thus effected. Nor was this all. Should these enormous crops of vegetation grow up and pass away unutilized for the want of an intelligent population to consume and use the fuel? It was not so to be. Though man was not except in the conceptions of the Almighty, man was regarded in the preparations of this age. The far-seeing Planner of the universe stored the carboniferous fuel in repositories where it could never perish, and where it could await the uses of the coming race of man. Nor was this even the end of the providential purposes. In a subsequent age those barren rocks and those beds of coal became covered, first with the basis of a soil, and then with the soil itself; so that man, when he should come upon the stage, might find an inexhaustible mine of fuel, and a foothold for the products of his farm, upon the self-same acres. Another circumstance should also be here remarked. The preservation of these carboniferous stores was effected by the packing down of layer after layer, while beds of clay, and sand, and calcareous sediment were interposed between

them. Not only was there never another period of the world when the supply of carbon was so great, but never, before or after, were those frequent and gentle oscillations so long continued which were the agencies in burying the successive crops of vegetable growths. At least, such frequent oscillations never before or since occurred at a time when the level of the continents so nearly coincided with the level of the sea. And, lastly, And, lastly, these very oscillations, while they were subserving this collateral end-which was still important enough to have been the sole and ultimate end-were only the symptoms of a great continental preparation, which was going on from the region of the Atlantic to that of the Pacific shores, and which had been in progress, and attended by similar, though much less frequent oscillations, from that remote period when the shrinking of the molten nucleus of the world located those huge wrinkles in the stiffening crust which were to be afterward deepened into the beds of the two great oceans. Verily, here is a scope and comprehensiveness of plan which must command our highest admiration.

The same general preparatory movements were still to be continued-continued till the finished earth had been

elaborated for the reception of man. It would seem that the frequent oscillations of the Coal Period were but the tremblings of the strained crust, pushed to the very verge of violent rupture by the two enormous masses of water. By turns, the central areas had been protruded above the wave and by turns the tension had found relief, and the uplifted crust dropped back for a time to its submarine. horizon. Not before the collateral uses of these phenomena had been subserved did the tension of the crust reach the measure of a grand upheaval. After trembling for ages beneath the immense and increasing pressures of two great oceans, it burst up in enormous folds thousands of

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feet in height, and extending from New England to Alabama. Some of the folds of the Appalachian upheaval, according to the grand generalizations of the brothers fie Rogers, were protruded with so abrupt a flexure, and to such a dizzy height, that they toppled over toward the west; while to the west of the principal axis of violence. the folds become gentler, and terminate in pleasant undulations of the surface. The Queen City of the West stands, perhaps, on the last of this series of undulations. Thus were the Appalachians brought into existence. Thus were the deep-seated beds of coal lifted above the general level of the land, and brought within the reach of moderate excavations, accompanied by the requisite conditions for natural drainage of the mines (Fig. 68).

Fig. 68. The North American Continent at the end of Paleozoic Time, or beginning of Mesozoic. (The dotted lines represent its present outlines; the broken lines the rivers.)

Subsequent geological agencies have greatly modified the primary result. The ocean has been permitted still again to sweep over the continent, and the crests of the folds and ridges have all been planed down, and the materials distributed over the intervening spaces, or worked up in the rock-building of later ages. Thus the original height of the Alleghanies has been much reduced. Thus the swell upon which the Queen City of the West is built has been worn off to the level of the adjacent areas; and thus the original limits of the great Carboniferous jungle have been very much restricted.

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EMPIR

CHAPTER XV.

THE SCOUTS OF THE REPTILE HORDE.

MPIRES rose upon the earth, and crumbled in succession to decay, a thousand ages before the foot of Adam had pressed the soil of the Garden of Eden. A series of dynasties flitted like shadows over the face of our planet, and disappeared beneath the dim horizon of the past, while the empire of man was but an idea dwelling in the Almighty Mind. Here were morning and evening, invigorating sunlight and cooling dew, softly-wooing breeze and fiercely-maddened tempest, springtime and autumn, weeping clouds and placid evening sky, Winter piping his melancholy song upon the withered reeds of Summer, oceansurges waging everlasting battle with the rocky shore, God alone spectator of the progress of the mighty work which was being accomplished. But there was life, and motion, and consciousness, and enjoyment, and death through all those dim and distant ages. Those dim and distant ages-how imagination halts, and faints, and falters in the effort to shoot back over the infinite stretch of years! Life was here, but without a voice, without a wing, without a footstep. The ignoble mollusc held dominion in the sea through all the morning twilight of animated existence.

The mute fish reared his empire on the ruins of that of the mollusc. In the middle Paleozoic ages this first and lowest form of vertebrate existence appeared in all the seas -not fishes clothed in horny scales like those which swarm in the waters of the human era, but fishes clad in coat of mail, bucklered aud helmeted with bony plates, and armed

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