The Birth-Time of the World and Other Scientific Essays. John Joly

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The Birth-Time of the World and Other Scientific Essays - John Joly

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Clarke, _A Preliminary Study of Chemical Denudation_

       (Washington, 1910). My own estimate in 1899 (_loc. cit._) made as a

       test of yet another method of finding the age, showed that the

       sediments may be taken as sufficient to form a layer 1.1 mile

       deep if spread uniformly over the continents; and would amount to

       64 x 1018 tons.

      [2] Van Tillo, _Comptes Rendues_ (Paris), vol. cxiv., 1892.

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      major and minor limits to the geological age. If we take 25 per

       cent. only of the present river supply of sediment, we evidently

       fix a major limit to the age, for it is certain that over the

       past there must have been on the average a faster supply. If we

       take the entire river supply, on similar reasoning we have what

       is undoubtedly a minor limit to the age.

      The river supply of detrital sediment has not been very

       extensively investigated, although the quantities involved may be

       found with comparative ease and accuracy. The following table

       embodies the results obtained for some of the leading rivers.[1]

      Mean annual Total annual Ratio of

       discharge in sediment in sediment

       cubic feet thousands to water

       per second. of tons. by weight.

       Potomac - 20,160 5,557 1 : 3.575

       Mississippi - 610,000 406,250 1 : 1,500

       Rio Grande - 1,700 3,830 1 : 291

       Uruguay - 150,000 14,782 1 : 10,000

       Rhone - 65,850 36,000 1 : 1,775

       Po - 62,200 67,000 1 : 900

       Danube - 315,200 108,000 1 : 2,880

       Nile - 113,000 54,000 1 : 2,050

       Irrawaddy - 475,000 291,430 1 : 1,610

       Mean - 201,468 109,650 1 : 2,731

      We see that the ratio of the weight of water to the

      [1] Russell, _River Development_ (John Murray, 1888).

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      weight of transported sediment in six out of the nine rivers does

       not vary widely. The mean is 2,730 to 1. But this is not the

       required average. The water-discharge of each river has to be

       taken into account. If we ascribe to the ratio given for each

       river the weight proper to the amount of water it discharges, the

       proportion of weight of water to weight of sediment, for the

       whole quantity of water involved, comes out as 2,520 to 1.

      Now if this proportion holds for all the rivers of the

       world—which collectively discharge about 27 x 1012 tonnes of

       water per annum—the river-born detritus is 1.07 x 1010 tonnes. To

       this an addition of 11 per cent. has to be made for silt pushed

       along the river-bed.[1] On these figures the minor limit to the

       age comes out as 47 millions of years, and the major limit as 188

       millions. We are here going on rather deficient estimates, the

       rivers involved representing only some 6 per cent. of the total

       river supply of water to the ocean. But the result is probably

       not very far out.

      We may arrive at a probable age lying between the major and minor

       limits. If, first, we take the arithmetic mean of these limits,

       we get 117 millions of years. Now this is almost certainly

       excessive, for we here assume that the rate of covering of the

       primary rocks by sediments was uniform. It would not be so,

       however, for the rate of supply of original sediment must have

       been continually diminishing

      [1] According to observations made on the Mississippi (Russell,

       _loc. cit._).

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      during geological time, and hence we may assume that the rate of

       advance of the sediments on the primary rocks has also been

       diminishing. Now we may probably take, as a fair assumption, that

       the sediment-covered area was at any instant increasing at a rate

       proportionate to the rate of supply of sediment; that is, to the

       area of primary rocks then exposed. On this assumption the age is

       found to be 87 millions of years.

      THE AGE BY THE SODIUM OF THE OCEAN

      I have next to lay before you a quite different method. I have

       already touched upon the chemistry of the ocean, and on the

       remarkable fact that the sodium contained in it has been

       preserved, practically, in its entirety from the beginning of

       geological time.

      That the sea is one of the most beautiful and magnificent sights

       in Nature, all admit. But, I think, to those who know its story

       its beauty and magnificence are ten-fold increased. Its saltness

       it due to no magic mill. It is the dissolved rocks of the Earth

       which give it at once its brine, its strength, and its buoyancy.

       The rivers which we say flow with "fresh" water to the sea

       nevertheless contain those traces of salt which, collected over

       the long ages, occasion the saltness of the ocean. Each gallon of

      

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