Omphalos: An Attempt to Untie the Geological Knot. Gosse Philip Henry
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Testimony of the Rocks, p. 144
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Discourse (5th Ed.), 115.
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Sac. Hist. of World.
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Rec. of Creation.
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Nat. Theology.
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Pre-Adamite Earth.
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Harmony of Scripture and Geology.
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Christian Observer, 1834.
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Religion of Geology, Lect. ii.
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Scripture and Geology.
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I am not
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"Protoplast," pp. 58, 59; p. 325; 2d. Ed.
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Unity of Worlds (1856), pp. 488, 493.
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"A geological truth must command our assent as powerfully as that of the existence of our own minds, or of the Deity himself; and any revelation which stands opposed to such truths
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Ansted's Ancient World, 18.
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Ansted's Ancient World, 30.
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Scripture and Geology, 371. (Ed. 1855.)
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"It is by no means unlikely that some beds of coal were derived from the mass of vegetable matter present at one time on the surface, and submerged suddenly. It is only necessary to refer to the accounts of vegetation in some of the extremely moist, warm islands in the southern hemisphere, where the ground is occasionally covered with eight or ten feet of decaying vegetable matter at one time, to be satisfied that this is at least possible."
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Ansted's Anc. World, 75.
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M'Culloch's System of Geology, i. 506.
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Origin of Coal.
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Testimony of the Rocks, p. 78.
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Mr. Newman suggests that they were "marsupial bats" (Zoologist, p. 129). I have adopted his attitudes, but have not ventured to give them mammalian ears.
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In Tennant's "List of Brit. Fossils" (1847), but two species – a Brachiopod and a Gastropod – are mentioned as common to the Chalk and the London Clay. They are
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Ansted's Anc. World, 267.
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Reliquiæ Diluvianæ.
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Travels through the Alps, p. 19.
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Prof. Owen, in his admirable account of the
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Naturalist's Voyage,
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The Indians of North America knew that the Mastodon had a trunk; a fact which (though the anatomist infers it from the bones of the skull) it is difficult to imagine them to be acquainted with, except by tradition from those who had seen the living animal.
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Ansted; Phys. Geography, 82.
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An interesting fact relating to the Brazilian caves was communicated to Dr. Mantell. "M. Claussen, in the course of his researches, discovered a cavern, the stalagmite floor of which was entire. On penetrating the sparry crust, he found the usual ossiferous bed; but pressing engagements compelled him to leave the deposit unexplored. After an interval of some years, M. Claussen again visited the cavern, and found the excavation he had made completely filled up with stalagmite, the floor being as entire as on his first entrance. On breaking through this newly-formed incrustation, it was found to be distinctly marked with lines of dark-coloured sediment, alternating with the crystalline stalactite. Reasoning on the probable cause of this appearance, M. Claussen sagaciously concluded that it arose from the alternation of the wet and dry seasons. During the drought of summer, the sand and dust of the parched land were wafted into the caves and fissures, and this earthy layer was covered during the rainy season by stalagmite, from the water that percolated through the limestone, and deposited calc-spar on the floor. The number of alternate layers of spar and sediment tallied with the years that had elapsed since his first visit; and on breaking up the ancient bed of stalagmite, he found the same natural register of the annual variations of the seasons; every layer dug through presented a uniform alternation of sediment and spar; and as the botanist ascertains the age of an ancient dicotyledonous tree from the annual circles of growth, in like manner the geologist attempted to calculate the period that had elapsed since the commencement of these ossiferous deposits of the cave; and although the inference, from want of time and means to conduct the inquiry with precision, can only be accepted as a rough calculation, yet it is interesting to learn that the time indicated by this natural chronometer, since the extinct mammalian forms were interred, amounted to many thousand years." – (
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Bibliothèque Univers., March, 1852.
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"It is now admitted by all competent persons, that the formation even of those strata which are
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Geology of Central France.
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"Though perfect knowledge is not possessed, yet there are reasons for believing that the duration of life to testacean individuals of the present race is several years. But who can state the