Scepticism in geology and the reasons for it, by Verifier1877 |
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Page 42
... original fractures , and thus water - tight lake and river beds would be formed . Geologists assure us that lateral pressure has crumpled up the Palæozoic rocks extending from the Mendip Hills , under the sea , to the Ardennes , a ...
... original fractures , and thus water - tight lake and river beds would be formed . Geologists assure us that lateral pressure has crumpled up the Palæozoic rocks extending from the Mendip Hills , under the sea , to the Ardennes , a ...
Page 59
... original granite bed of the Sioule . Lyell's ravine at Milledgeville , Georgia , was excavated 55 feet deep in twenty years , because " the sides of the ravine consist of beds of clay and sand , red , white , and green . " In fact the ...
... original granite bed of the Sioule . Lyell's ravine at Milledgeville , Georgia , was excavated 55 feet deep in twenty years , because " the sides of the ravine consist of beds of clay and sand , red , white , and green . " In fact the ...
Page 71
... original slope of the land , but the deep dells , the broad valleys and straths , have all been scooped out by running waters . " - Geikie's Geology , p . 76 . Do the rivers rising from the central Forest Ridge run CHAP . VI . 71 RIVER ...
... original slope of the land , but the deep dells , the broad valleys and straths , have all been scooped out by running waters . " - Geikie's Geology , p . 76 . Do the rivers rising from the central Forest Ridge run CHAP . VI . 71 RIVER ...
Page 77
... original fracture , there would have been no valley at all . Next to the Great Glen as a feature in the geo- graphy of Scotland , comes the valley of the Tay , which sends to the sea more water than any other in Britain . From the head ...
... original fracture , there would have been no valley at all . Next to the Great Glen as a feature in the geo- graphy of Scotland , comes the valley of the Tay , which sends to the sea more water than any other in Britain . From the head ...
Page 87
... original surfaces and outline unchanged for thousands of years , while walls of stoutest masonry have crumbled . Besides , there is no trace of beach or shingle1 at the base of the chalk escarpments , such as must inevitably have been ...
... original surfaces and outline unchanged for thousands of years , while walls of stoutest masonry have crumbled . Besides , there is no trace of beach or shingle1 at the base of the chalk escarpments , such as must inevitably have been ...
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Common terms and phrases
Account Ancient assertion Assyria atmospheric Baltic basin beds BISHOP Cabinet Edition CANON Cathedral chalk change of level Chili Church cliffs coast Crown 8vo Dead Sea denudation Dictionary earth earth's crust earth's surface earthquake effects English erosion Essays evidence existence Fall faults Fcap feet fissures fracture frost G. R. GLEIG Geikie Geikie's Geology Geography geologists Geology glaciation glaciers globe gorges Grammar granite Greek heaval History of England hollow Islands Julius Cæsar LADY Lake of Lucerne lakes land Library Edition limestone LORD Lyell's Principles MALCOLM KERR Map and Woodcuts Medium 8vo Memoir miles Modern Causes modern geology mountains movement Muka nature Norway OBSERVATIONS original permanent elevation plain Plates Popular Edition Portrait Post 8vo present ravine rise river running water Scenery of Scotland Scotland shores Sioule Sir Charles Lyell solid rock strata stream Student's theory tion Translated Travels upheaval valleys vertical VIA MALA Vols washed waves Woodcuts ZAMBESI
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Page vi - But expectation is permissible where belief is not ; and if it were given me to look beyond the abyss of geologically recorded time to the still more remote period when the earth was passing through physical and chemical conditions, which it can no more see again than a man can recall his infancy, I should expect to be a witness of the evolution of living protoplasm from not living matter.
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Page 120 - Determined by it, by a process of abstraction from experience we form physical theories which lie beyond the pale of experience, but which satisfy the desire of the mind to see every natural occurrence resting upon a cause. In forming their notions of the origin of things, our earliest historic (and doubtless, we might add, our prehistoric) ancestors pursued, as far as their intelligence permitted, the same course. They also fell back upon experience, but with this...
Page 76 - I have therefore little doubt that the Bath springs, like most other thermal waters, mark the site of some great convulsion and fracture which took place in the crust of the earth at some former period — perhaps not a very remote one, geologically speaking.