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some fish and other marine animals, in the Mediterranean and in the seas of Japan,— these two areas being now completely separated by the breadth of a whole continent and by a wide space of ocean.
These cases of close relationship in many species either now or formerly inhabiting the seas on the eastern and western shores of North America, the Mediterranean and Japan, and the temperate lands of North America and Europe, are inexplicable on the theory of creation. We cannot maintain that such species have been created alike, in correspondence with the nearly similar physical conditions of the areas; for if we compare, for instance, certain parts of South America with parts of South Africa or Australia, we see countries closely similar in all their physical conditions, but with .. inhabitants utterly dissimilar.
Mundane Glacial Period .
But we must return to our more immediate subject. .. .. .. I am convinced that Forbes's view may be largely extended. In Europe we meet with the plainest evidence of the Glacial period, from the western shores of Britain to the Oural range, and southward to the Pyrenees. We may infer from the frozen mammals and nature of the mountain vegetation, that Siberia was similarly affected. In the Lebanon, according to Dr. Hooker, perpetual snow formerly covered the central axis, and feed glaciers which rolled 4000 feet down its valleys. Along the Himalaya, at points 900 miles apart, glaciers have left the marks of their former low descent; and in Sikkim, Dr. Hooker saw maize growing on gigantic ancient moraines. Southward of the great continent of Asia, on the opposite side of the equator, we now know, from the excellent researches of Dr. J. Haast and