Comparison with 1861 |
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Text in this page (from paragraph 1100, sentence 900, word 34 to paragraph 1200, sentence 300, word 23) is not present in 1861 |
I have made these few remarks because it is highly important for us to gain some notion, however imperfect,
of the lapse of
time. time. 1861 1866 | years. 1859 1860 |
During each
....... 1861 1866 | of these 1859 1860 |
year, year, 1861 1866 | years, 1859 1860 |
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must remember that almost all strata contain harder layers or nodules, which from long resisting attrition form a breakwater at the base. We may at least confidently believe that no rocky coast 500 feet in height commonly yields at the rate of a foot per century; for this would be the same in amount as a cliff one yard in height retreating twelve yards in twenty-two years; and no one, I think, who has carefully observed the shape of old fallen fragments at the base of cliffs, will admit any near approach to such rapid wearing away. Hence, under ordinary circumstances, I
should infer should infer 1860 | conclude 1859 |
that for a cliff 500 feet in height, a denudation of one inch per century for the whole length would be
a sufficient a sufficient 1860 | an ample 1859 |
allowance. At this rate, on the above data, the denudation of the Weald must have required 306,662,400 years; or say three hundred million years. But perhaps it would be safer to allow two or three inches per century, and this would reduce the number of years to one hundred and fifty or one hundred million years. |
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The action of fresh water on the gently inclined Wealden district, when upraised, could hardly have been great, but it would somewhat reduce the above estimate. On the other hand, during oscillations of level, which we know this area has undergone, the surface may have existed for millions of years as land, and thus have escaped the action of the sea: when deeply submerged for perhaps equally long periods, it would, likewise, have escaped the action of the coast-waves. So that
it is not improbable that a it is not improbable that a 1860 |
in all probability a far 1859 |
longer period than 300 million years has elapsed since the latter part of the Secondary period. |
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I have made these few remarks because it is highly important for us to gain some notion, however
imperfect, imperfect, 1859 1860 1861 | imper- fect, 1866 |
of the lapse of
years. years. 1859 1860 | time. 1861 1866 |
During each
of these of these 1859 1860 | of these 1861 1866 |
years, years, 1859 1860 | year, 1861 1866 |
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