The regular and uniform preservation of this thin bed of black earth over a distance of many miles, shows that the change from dry land to the state of a freshwater lake or estuary, was not accompanied by any violent denudation, or rush of water, since... The Student's Elements of Geology - Page 279by Sir Charles Lyell - 1885 - 641 pagesFull view - About this book
| Geological Society of London - Geology - 1836 - 744 pages
...matter and soil, which has accumulated more than a foot of black earth around the roots of these trees. The regular and uniform preservation of this thin bed of black earth over a distance of so many miles, shows that * See Geological Transactions, Second Series, vol. ip 421 — 422. the change... | |
| John Phillips - 1837 - 324 pages
...dirt-bed, which has accumulated more than a foot of black earth, loaded with the wreck of its vegetation. The regular and uniform preservation of this thin bed of black earth over a distance of so many miles, shews that the change from dry land to the state of freshwater lake or estuary was not... | |
| Sir Charles Lyell - Science - 1838 - 582 pages
...beneath a body of freshwater, from which sediment enveloping fluviatile shells was deposited. 3dly. " The regular and uniform preservation of this thin...earth, together with the trees which lay prostrate on its surface, must inevitably have been swept away had any such violent catastrophe then taken place."... | |
| Sir Charles Lyell - Geology - 1839 - 330 pages
...beneath a body of freshwater, from which sediment enveloping fluviatile shells was deposited. 3dly. " The regular and uniform preservation of this thin...earth, together with the trees which lay prostrate on its surface, must inevitably have been swept away had any such violent catastrophe then taken place."*... | |
| Sir Charles Lyell - Geology - 1841 - 946 pages
...beneath a body of freshwater, from which sediment enveloping fluviatile shells was deposited. 3dly. " The regular and uniform preservation of this thin...accompanied by any violent denudation, or rush of water, aince the loose black earth, together with the trees which lay prostrate on its surface, must inevitably... | |
| Sir Charles Lyell - Geology - 1841 - 486 pages
...beneath a body of freshwater, from which sediment enveloping fluviatile shells was deposited. 3dly. " The regular and uniform preservation of this thin bed of black earth over a distance of many miles, Ch. XVIII.) IN ISLE OF PORTLAND. 427 shows that the change from dry land to the state of a freshwater... | |
| David Thomas Ansted - Geology - 1844 - 546 pages
...former vegetation. " The regular and uniform preservation also of this thin bed, over a distance of so many miles, shows that the change from dry land to the state of a fresh-water lake or estuary, (which the nature of the overlying rock proves to have succeeded the period of dry land,) was not accompanied... | |
| Sir Charles Lyell - Geology - 1851 - 602 pages
...beneath a body of fresh water, from which sediment was thrown down enveloping fluviatile shells. 3dly. The regular and uniform preservation of this thin...earth, together with the trees which lay prostrate on its surface, must inevitably have been swept away had any such violent catastrophe then taken place.... | |
| C. B. - Bible and geology - 1853 - 400 pages
...the land sank down, and was submerged with its forests beneath a body of fresh water; and that the uniform preservation of this thin bed of black earth over a distance of many miles, shows the change was not attended by any violent rush of water. But in sections of more complicated appearances,... | |
| Sir Charles Lyell - Geology - 1860 - 718 pages
...beneath a body of freshwater, from which sediment was thrown down enveloping fluviatile shells. 3clly. The regular and uniform preservation of this thin...distance of many miles, shows that the change from dry laud to the state of a freshwater lake or estuary, was not accompanied by any violent denudation, or... | |
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