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ocean。  And no doubt this reasoning must be admitted to be sound in

principle; though it is very hard to say what practical effect the

additions and subtractions thus made have had on the level of the

ocean; inasmuch as such additions and subtractions might be either

intensified or nullified; by contemporaneous changes in the level

of the land。  And no one has yet shown that any such great melting

of polar ice; and consequent raising of the level of the water of

the ocean; has taken place since the existing atolls began to be

formed。



In the absence of any evidence that the sea has ever risen to the

extent required to give rise to the encircling reefs and the

atolls; Mr。 Darwin adopted the opposite hypothesis; viz。; that the

land has undergone extensive and slow depression in those

localities in which these structures exist。



It seems; at first; a startling paradox; to suppose that the land

is less fixed than the sea; but that such is the case is the

uniform testimony of geology。  Beds of sandstone or limestone;

thousands of feet thick; and all full of marine remains; occur in

various parts of the earth's surface; and prove; beyond a doubt;

that when these beds were formed; that portion of the sea…bottom

which they then occupied underwent a slow and gradual depression to

a distance which cannot have been less than the thickness of those

beds; and may have been very much greater。  In supposing;

therefore; that the great areas of the Pacific and of the Indian

Ocean; over which atolls and encircling reefs are found scattered;

have undergone a depression of some hundreds; or; it may be;

thousands of feet; Mr。 Darwin made a supposition which had nothing

forced or improbable; but was entirely in accordance with what we

know to have taken place over similarly extensive areas; in other

periods of the world's history。  But Mr。 Darwin subjected his

hypothesis to an ingenious indirect test。  If his view be correct;

it is clear that neither atolls; nor encircling reefs; should be

found in those portions of the ocean in which we have reason to

believe; on independent grounds; that the sea…bottom has long been

either stationary; or slowly rising。  Now it is known that; as a

general rule; the level of the land is either stationary; or is

undergoing a slow upheaval; in the neighborhood of active

volcanoes; and; therefore; neither atolls nor encircling reefs

ought to be found in regions in which volcanoes are numerous and

active。  And this turns out to be the case。  Appended to Mr。

Darwin's great work on coral reefs; there is a map on which atolls

and encircling reefs are indicated by one colour; fringing reefs by

another; and active volcanoes by a third。  And it is at once

obvious that the lines of active volcanoes lie around the margins

of the areas occupied by the atolls and the encircling reefs。  It

is exactly as if the upheaving volcanic agencies had lifted up the

edges of these great areas; while their centres had undergone a

corresponding depression。  An atoll area may; in short; be pictured

as a kind of basin; the margins of which have been pushed up by the

subterranean forces; to which the craters of the volcanoes have; at

intervals; given vent。



Thus we must imagine the area of the Pacific now covered by the

Polynesian Archipelago; as having been; at some former time;

occupied by large islands; or; may be; by a great continent; with

the ordinarily diversified surface of plain; and hill; and mountain

chain。  The shores of this great land were doubtless fringed by

coral reefs; and; as it slowly underwent depression; the hilly

regions; converted into islands; became; at first; surrounded by

fringing reefs; and then; as depression went on; these became

converted into encircling reefs; and these; finally; into atolls;

until a maze of reefs and coral…girdled islets took the place of

the original land masses。



Thus the atolls and the encircling reefs furnish us with clear;

though indirect; evidence of changes in the physical geography of

large parts of the earth's surface; and even; as my lamented

friend; the late Professor Jukes;'124' has suggested; give us

indications of the manner in which some of the most puzzling facts

connected with the distribution of animals have been brought about。

For example; Australia and New Guinea are separated by Torres

Straits; a broad belt of sea one hundred or one hundred and twenty

miles wide。  Nevertheless; there is in many respects a curious

resemblance between the land animals which inhabit New Guinea and

the land animals which inhabit Australia。  But; at the same time;

the marine shellfish which are found in the shallow waters of the

shores of New Guinea are quite different from those which are met

with upon the coasts of Australia。  Now; the eastern end of Torres

Straits is full of atolls; which; in fact; form the northern

termination of the Great Barrier Reef which skirts the eastern

coast of Australia。  It follows; therefore; that the eastern end of

Torres Straits is an area of depression; and it is very possible;

and on many grounds highly probable; that; in former times;

Australia and New Guinea were directly connected together; and that

Torres Straits did not exist。  If this were the case; the existence

of cassowaries and of marsupial quadrupeds; both in New Guinea and

in Australia; becomes intelligible; while the difference between

the littoral molluscs of the north and the south shores of Torres

Straits is readily explained by the great probability that; when

the depression in question took place; and what was; at first; an

arm of the sea became converted into a strait separating Australia

from New Guinea; the northern shore of this new sea became tenanted

with marine animals from the north; while the southern shore was

peopled by immigrants from the already existing marine Australian

fauna。



Inasmuch as the growth of the reef depends upon that of successive

generations of coral polypes; and as each generation takes a

certain time to grow to its full size; and can only separate its

calcareous skeleton from the water in which it lives at a certain

rate; it is clear that the reefs are records not only of changes in

physical geography; but of the lapse of time。  It is by no means

easy; however; to estimate the exact value of reef chronology; and

the attempts which have been made to determine the rate at which a

reef grows vertically have yielded anything but precise results。  A

cautious writer; Mr。 Dana;'125' whose extensive study of corals and

coral reefs makes him an eminently competent judge; states his

conclusion in the following terms:



〃The rate of growth of the common branching madrepore is not over

one and a half inches a year。  As the branches are open; this would

not be equivalent to more than half an inch in height of solid

coral for the whole surface covered by the madrepore; and; as they

are also porous; to not over three…eighths of an inch of solid

limestone。  But a coral plantation has large bare patches without

corals; and the coral sands are widely distributed by currents;

part of them to depths over one hundred feet where there are no

living corals; not more than one…sixth of the surface of a reef

region is; in fact; covered with growing species。  This reduces the

three…eighths to ONE…SIXTEENTH。  Shells and other organic relics

may contribute one…fourth as much as corals。  At the outside; the

average upward increase of the whole reef…ground per year would not

exceed ONE…EIGHTH of an inch。



〃Now some reefs are at least two thousand feet thick; which at one…

eighth of an inch a year; corresponds to one hundred and ninety…two

thousand years。〃*





* Dana; Manual of Geology; p。 591。





Halve; or quarter; this estimate if you will; in order to be

certain of erring upon the right side; and still there remains a

prodigious period during which the ancestors of existing coral

polypes have been undisturbedly at work; and during which;

therefore; the climatal conditions over the coral area must have

been much what they are now。



And all this lapse of time has occurred within the most recent

period of the history of the earth。  The remains of reefs formed by

coral polypes of different kinds from those which exist now; enter

largely into the composition of the limestones of the Jurassic

period;'126' and still more widely different coral polypes have

contributed their quota to the vast thickness of the carboniferous

and Devonian strata。  Then as regards the latter group of rocks in

America; the high authority already quoted tells us:



〃The Upper Helderberg period is eminently the coral reef period of

the palaeozoic ages。  Many of the rocks abound in coral; and are as

truly coral reefs as the modern reefs of the Pacific。  The corals

are sometimes standing on the rocks in the position they had when

growing: others are lying in fragments; as they were bro

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