Project Gutenberg's The Past Condition of Organic Nature, by Thomas H. Huxley

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Title: The Past Condition of Organic Nature
       Lecture II. (of VI.), Lectures To Working Men, at the
              Museum of Practical Geology, 1863, On Darwin's work: "Origin
              of Species".

Author: Thomas H. Huxley

Release Date: January 4, 2009 [EBook #2922]
Last Updated: January 22, 2013

Language: English

Character set encoding: ASCII

*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CONDITION OF ORGANIC NATURE ***




Produced by Amy E. Zelmer, and David Widger






 




THE PAST CONDITION 
OF ORGANIC NATURE  




Lecture II. (of VI.), "Lectures To Working Men", at the Museum of  Practical Geology, 1863, On Darwin's work: "Origin of Species".





By Thomas H. Huxley  










List of Illustrations  

Fig.4.

Fig. 5.











IN the lecture which I delivered last Monday evening, I endeavoured to  sketch in a very brief manner, but as well as the time at my disposal  would permit, the present condition of organic nature, meaning by that  large title simply an indication of the great, broad, and general  principles which are to be discovered by those who look attentively at the  phenomena of organic nature as at present displayed. The general result of  our investigations might be summed up thus: we found that the multiplicity  of the forms of animal life, great as that may be, may be reduced to a  comparatively few primitive plans or types of construction; that a further  study of the development of those different forms revealed to us that they  were again reducible, until we at last brought the infinite diversity of  animal, and even vegetable life, down to the primordial form of a single  cell.  

We found that our analysis of the organic world, whether animals or  plants, showed, in the long run, that they might both be reduced into, and  were, in fact, composed of, the same constituents. And we saw that the  plant obtained the materials constituting its substance by a peculiar  combination of matters belonging entirely to the inorganic world; that,  then, the animal was constantly appropriating the nitrogenous matters of  the plant to its own nourishment, and returning them back to the inorganic  world, in what we spoke of as its waste; and that finally, when the animal  ceased to exist, the constituents of its body were dissolved and  transmitted to that inorganic world whence they had been at first  abstracted. Thus we saw in both the blade of grass and the horse but the  same elements differently combined and arranged. We discovered a continual  circulation going on,the plant drawing in the elements of inorganic  nature and combining them into food for the animal creation; the animal  borrowing from the plant the matter for its own support, giving off during  its life products which returned immediately to the inorganic world; and  that, eventually, the constituent materials of the whole structure of both  animals and plants were thus returned to their original source: there was  a constant passage from one state of existence to another, and a returning  back again.  

Lastly, when we endeavoured to form some notion of the nature of the  forces exercised by living beings, we discovered that theyif not  capable of being subjected to the same minute analysis as the constituents  of those beings themselvesthat they were correlative withthat  they were the equivalents of the forces of inorganic naturethat  they were, in the sense in which the term is now used, convertible with  them. That was our general result.  

And now, leaving the Present, I must endeavour in the same manner to put  before you the facts that are to be discovered in the Past history of the  living world, in the past conditions of organic nature. We have, to-night,  to deal with the facts of that historya history involving periods  of time before which our mere human records sink into utter insignificancea  history the variety and physical magnitude of whose events cannot even be  foreshadowed by the history of human life and human phenomenaa  history of the most varied and complex character.  

We must deal with the history, then, in the first place, as we should deal  with all other histories. The historical student knows that his first  business should be to inquire into the validity of his evidence, and the  nature of the record in which the evidence is contained, that he may be  able to form a proper estimate of the correctness of the conclusions which  have been drawn from that evidence. So, here, we must pass, in the first  place, to the consideration of a matter which may seem foreign to the  question under discussion. We must dwell upon the nature of the records,  and the credibility of the evidence they contain; we must look to the  completeness or incompleteness of those records themselves, before we turn  to that which they contain and reveal. The question of the credibility of  the history, happily for us, will not require much consideration, for, in  this history, unlike those of human origin, there can be no cavilling, no  differences as to the reality and truth of the facts of which it is made  up; the facts state themselves, and are laid out clearly before us.  

But, although one of the greatest difficulties of the historical student  is cleared out of our path, there are other difficultiesdifficulties  in rightly interpreting the facts as they are presented to uswhich  may be compared with the greatest difficulties of any other kinds of  historical study.  

What is this record of the past history of the globe, and what are the  questions which are involved in an inquiry into its completeness or  incompleteness? That record is composed of mud; and the question which we  have to investigate this evening resolves itself into a question of the  formation of mud. You may think, perhaps, that this is a vast stepof  almost from the sublime to the ridiculousfrom the contemplation of  the history of the past ages of the world's existence to the consideration  of the history of the formation of mud! But, in nature, there is nothing  mean and unworthy of attention; there is nothing ridiculous or  contemptible in any of her works; and this inquiry, you will soon see, I  hope, takes us to the very root and foundations of our subject.  

How, then, is mud formed? Always, with some trifling exception, which I  need not consider nowalways, as the result of the action of water,  wearing down and disintegrating the surface of the earth and rocks with  which it comes in contactpounding and grinding it down, and  carrying the particles away to places where they cease to be disturbed by  this mechanical action, and where they can subside and rest. For the  ocean, urged by winds, washes, as we know, a long extent of coast, and  every wave, loaded as it is with particles of sand and gravel as it breaks  upon the shore, does something towards the disintegrating process. And  thus, slowly but surely, the hardest rocks are gradually ground down to a  powdery substance; and the mud thus formed, coarser or finer, as the case  may be, is carried by the rush of the tides, or currents, till it reaches  the comparatively deeper parts of the ocean, in which it can sink to the  bottom, that is, to parts where there is a depth of about fourteen or  fifteen fathoms, a depth at which the water is, usually, nearly  motionless, and in which, of course, the finer particles of this detritus,  or mud as we call it, sinks to the bottom.  

Or, again, if you take a river, rushing down from its mountain sources,  brawling over the stones and rocks that intersect its path, loosening,  removing, and carrying with it in its downward course the pebbles and  lighter matters from its banks, it crushes and pounds down the rocks and  earths in precisely the same way as the wearing action of the sea waves.  The matters forming the deposit are torn from the mountain-side and  whirled impetuously into the valley, more slowly over the plain, thence  into the estuary, and from the estuary they are swept into the sea. The  coarser and heavier fragments are obviously deposited first, that is, as  soon as the current begins to lose its force by becoming amalgamated with  the stiller depths of the ocean, but the finer and lighter particles are  carried further on, and eventually deposited in a deeper and stiller  portion of the ocean.  

It clearly follows from this that mud gives us a chronology; for it is  evident that supposing this, which I now sketch, to be the sea bottom, and  supposing this to be a coast-line; from the washing action of the sea upon  the rock, wearing and grinding it down into a sediment of mud, the mud  will be carried down, and at length, deposited in the deeper parts of this  sea bottom, where it will form a layer; and then, while that first layer  is hardening, other mud which is coming from the same source will, of  course, be carried to the same place; and, as it is quite impossible for  it to get beneath the layer already there, it deposits itself above it,  and forms another layer, and in that way you gradually have layers of mud  constantly forming and hardening one above the other, and conveying a  record of time.  

It is a necessary result of the operation of the law of gravitation that  the uppermost layer shall be the youngest and the lowest the oldest, and  that the different beds shall be older at any particular point or spot in  exactly the ratio of their depth from the surface. So that if they were  upheaved afterwards, and you had a series of these different layers of  mud, converted into sandstone, or limestone, as the case might be, you  might be sure that the bottom layer was deposited first, and that the  upper layers were formed afterwards. Here, you see, is the first step in  the historythese layers of mud give us an idea of time.  

The whole surface of the earth,I speak broadly, and leave out minor  qualifications,is made up of such layers of mud, so hard, the  majority of them, that we call them rock whether limestone or sandstone,  or other varieties of rock. And, seeing that every part of the crust of  the earth is made up in this way, you might think that the determination  of the chronology, the fixing of the time which it has taken to form this  crust is a comparatively simple matter. Take a broad average, ascertain  how fast the mud is deposited upon the bottom of the sea, or in the  estuary of rivers; take it to be an inch, or two, or three inches a year,  or whatever you may roughly estimate it at; then take the total thickness  of the whole series of stratified rocks, which geologists estimate at  twelve or thirteen miles, or about seventy thousand feet, make a sum in  short division, divide the total thickness by that of the quantity  deposited in one year, and the result will, of course, give you the number  of years which the crust has taken to form.  

Truly, that looks a very simple process! It would be so except for certain  difficulties, the very first of which is that of finding how rapidly  sediments are deposited; but the main difficultya difficulty which  renders any certain calculations of such a matter out of the questionis  this, the sea-bottom on which the deposit takes place is continually  shifting.  

Instead of the surface of the earth being that stable, fixed thing that it  is popularly believed to be, being, in common parlance, the very emblem of  fixity itself, it is incessantly moving, and is, in fact, as unstable as  the surface of the sea, except that its undulations are infinitely slower  and enormously higher and deeper.  

Now, what is the effect of this oscillation? Take the case to which I have  previously referred. The finer or coarser sediments that are carried down  by the current of the river, will only be carried out a certain distance,  and eventually, as we have already seen, on reaching the stiller part of  the ocean, will be deposited at the bottom.  

Let C y (Fig. 4) be the sea-bottom, y D the shore, x y the sea-level, then  the coarser deposit will subside over the region B, the finer over A,  while beyond A there will be no deposit at all; and, consequently, no  record will be kept, simply because no deposit is going on. Now, suppose  that the whole land, C, D, which we have regarded as stationary, goes  down, as it does so, both A and B go further out from the shore, which  will be at y1; x1, y1, being the new sea-level. The consequence will be  that the layer of mud (A), being now, for the most part, further than the  force of the current is strong enough to convey even the finest 'debris',  will, of course, receive no more deposits, and having attained a certain  thickness will now grow no thicker.  

We should be misled in taking the thickness of that layer, whenever it may  be exposed to our view, as a record of time in the manner in which we are  now regarding this subject, as it would give us only an imperfect and  partial record: it would seem to represent too short a period of time.  


Fig.4.


Suppose, on the other hand, that the land (C D) had gone on rising slowly  and graduallysay an inch or two inches in the course of a century,what  would be the practical effect of that movement? Why, that the sediment A  and B which has been already deposited, would eventually be brought nearer  to the shore-level, and again subjected to the wear and tear of the sea;  and directly the sea begins to act upon it, it would of course soon cut up  and carry it away, to a greater or less extent, to be re-deposited further  out.  

Well, as there is, in all probability, not one single spot on the whole  surface of the earth, which has not been up and down in this way a great  many times, it follows that the thickness of the deposits formed at any  particular spot cannot be taken (even supposing we had at first obtained  correct data as to the rate at which they took place) as affording  reliable information as to the period of time occupied in its deposit. So  that you see it is absolutely necessary from these facts, seeing that our  record entirely consists of accumulations of mud, superimposed one on the  other; seeing in the next place that any particular spots on which  accumulations have occurred, have been constantly moving up and down, and  sometimes out of the reach of a deposit, and at other times its own  deposit broken up and carried away, it follows that our record must be in  the highest degree imperfect, and we have hardly a trace left of thick  deposits, or any definite knowledge of the area that they occupied, in a  great many cases. And mark this! That supposing even that the whole  surface of the earth had been accessible to the geologist,that man  had had access to every part of the earth, and had made sections of the  whole, and put them all together,even then his record must of  necessity be imperfect.  

But to how much has man really access? If you will look at this Map you  will see that it represents the proportion of the sea to the earth: this  coloured part indicates all the dry land, and this other portion is the  water. You will notice at once that the water covers three-fifths of the  whole surface of the globe, and has covered it in the same manner ever  since man has kept any record of his own observations, to say nothing of  the minute period during which he has cultivated geological inquiry. So  that three-fifths of the surface of the earth is shut out from us because  it is under the sea. Let us look at the other two-fifths, and see what are  the countries in which anything that may be termed searching geological  inquiry has been carried out: a good deal of France, Germany, and Great  Britain and Ireland, bits of Spain, of Italy, and of Russia, have been  examined, but of the whole great mass of Africa, except parts of the  southern extremity, we know next to nothing; little bits of India, but of  the greater part of the Asiatic continent nothing; bits of the Northern  American States and of Canada, but of the greater part of the continent of  North America, and in still larger proportion, of South America, nothing!  

Under these circumstances, it follows that even with reference to that  kind of imperfect information which we can possess, it is only of about  the ten-thousandth part of the accessible parts of the earth that has been  examined properly. Therefore, it is with justice that the most thoughtful  of those who are concerned in these inquiries insist continually upon the  imperfection of the geological record; for, I repeat, it is absolutely  necessary, from the nature of things, that that record should be of the  most fragmentary and imperfect character. Unfortunately this circumstance  has been constantly forgotten. Men of science, like young colts in a fresh  pasture, are apt to be exhilarated on being turned into a new field of  inquiry, to go off at a hand-gallop, in total disregard of hedges and  ditches, losing sight of the real limitation of their inquiries, and to  forget the extreme imperfection of what is really known. Geologists have  imagined that they could tell us what was going on at all parts of the  earth's surface during a given epoch; they have talked of this deposit  being contemporaneous with that deposit, until, from our little local  histories of the changes at limited spots of the earth's surface, they  have constructed a universal history of the globe as full of wonders and  portents as any other story of antiquity.  

But what does this attempt to construct a universal history of the globe  imply? It implies that we shall not only have a precise knowledge of the  events which have occurred at any particular point, but that we shall be  able to say what events, at any one spot, took place at the same time with  those at other spots.  

Let us see how far that is in the nature of things practicable. Suppose  that here I make a section of the Lake of Killarney, and here the section  of another lakethat of Loch Lomond in Scotland for instance. The  rivers that flow into them are constantly carrying down deposits of mud,  and beds, or strata, are being as constantly formed, one above the other,  at the bottom of those lakes. Now, there is not a shadow of doubt that in  these two lakes the lower beds are all older than the upperthere is  no doubt about that; but what does 'this' tell us about the age of any  given bed in Loch Lomond, as compared with that of any given bed in the  Lake of Killarney? It is, indeed, obvious that if any two sets of deposits  are separated and discontinuous, there is absolutely no means whatever  given you by the nature of the deposit of saying whether one is much  younger or older than the other; but you may say, as many have said and  think, that the case is very much altered if the beds which we are  comparing are continuous. Suppose two beds of mud hardened into rock,A  and B-are seen in section. (Fig. 5.)  


Fig. 5.


Well, you say, it is admitted that the lowermost bed is always the older.  Very well; B, therefore, is older than A. No doubt, 'as a whole', it is  so; or if any parts of the two beds which are in the same vertical line  are compared, it is so. But suppose you take what seems a very natural  step further, and say that the part 'a' of the bed A is younger than the  part 'b' of the bed B. Is this sound reasoning? If you find any record of  changes taking place at 'b', did they occur before any events which took  place while 'a' was being deposited? It looks all very plain sailing,  indeed, to say that they did; and yet there is no proof of anything of the  kind. As the former Director of this Institution, Sir H. De la Beche, long  ago showed, this reasoning may involve an entire fallacy. It is extremely  possible that 'a' may have been deposited ages before 'b'. It is very easy  to understand how that can be. To return to Fig. 4; when A and B were  deposited, they were 'substantially' contemporaneous; A being simply the  finer deposit, and B the coarser of the same detritus or waste of land.  Now suppose that that sea-bottom goes down (as shown in Fig. 4), so that  the first deposit is carried no farther than 'a', forming the bed Al, and  the coarse no farther than 'b', forming the bed B1, the result will be the  formation of two continuous beds, one of fine sediment (A A1) over-lapping  another of coarse sediment (B B1). Now suppose the whole sea-bottom is  raised up, and a section exposed about the point Al; no doubt, 'at this  spot', the upper bed is younger than the lower. But we should obviously  greatly err if we concluded that the mass of the upper bed at A was  younger than the lower bed at B; for we have just seen that they are  contemporaneous deposits. Still more should we be in error if we supposed  the upper bed at A to be younger than the continuation of the lower bed at  Bl; for A was deposited long before B1. In fine, if, instead of comparing  immediately adjacent parts of two beds, one of which lies upon another, we  compare distant parts, it is quite possible that the upper may be any  number of years older than the under, and the under any number of years  younger than the upper.  

Now you must not suppose that I put this before you for the purpose of  raising a paradoxical difficulty; the fact is, that the great mass of  deposits have taken place in sea-bottoms which are gradually sinking, and  have been formed under the very conditions I am here supposing.  

Do not run away with the notion that this subverts the principle I laid  down at first. The error lies in extending a principle which is perfectly  applicable to deposits in the same vertical line to deposits which are not  in that relation to one another.  

It is in consequence of circumstances of this kind, and of others that I  might mention to you, that our conclusions on and interpretations of the  record are really and strictly only valid so long as we confine ourselves  to one vertical section. I do not mean to tell you that there are no  qualifying circumstances, so that, even in very considerable areas, we may  safely speak of conformably superimposed beds being older or younger than  others at many different points. But we can never be quite sure in coming  to that conclusion, and especially we cannot be sure if there is any break  in their continuity, or any very great distance between the points to be  compared.  

Well now, so much for the record itself,so much for its  imperfections,so much for the conditions to be observed in  interpreting it, and its chronological indications, the moment we pass  beyond the limits of a vertical linear section.  

Now let us pass from the record to that which it contains,from the  book itself to the writing and the figures on its pages. This writing and  these figures consist of remains of animals and plants which, in the great  majority of cases, have lived and died in the very spot in which we now  find them, or at least in the immediate vicinity. You must all of you be  awareand I referred to the fact in my last lecturethat there  are vast numbers of creatures living at the bottom of the sea. These  creatures, like all others, sooner or later die, and their shells and hard  parts lie at the bottom; and then the fine mud which is being constantly  brought down by rivers and the action of the wear and tear of the sea,  covers them over and protects them from any further change or alteration;  and, of course, as in process of time the mud becomes hardened and  solidified, the shells of these animals are preserved and firmly imbedded  in the limestone or sandstone which is being thus formed. You may see in  the galleries of the Museum up stairs specimens of limestones in which  such fossil remains of existing animals are imbedded. There are some  specimens in which turtles' eggs have been imbedded in calcareous sand,  and before the sun had hatched the young turtles, they became covered over  with calcareous mud, and thus have been preserved and fossilized.  

Not only does this process of imbedding and fossilization occur with  marine and other aquatic animals and plants, but it affects those land  animals and plants which are drifted away to sea, or become buried in bogs  or morasses; and the animals which have been trodden down by their fellows  and crushed in the mud at the river's bank, as the herd have come to  drink. In any of these cases, the organisms may be crushed or be  mutilated, before or after putrefaction, in such a manner that perhaps  only a part will be left in the form in which it reaches us. It is,  indeed, a most remarkable fact, that it is quite an exceptional case to  find a skeleton of any one of all the thousands of wild land animals that  we know are constantly being killed, or dying in the course of nature:  they are preyed on and devoured by other animals or die in places where  their bodies are not afterwards protected by mud. There are other animals  existing in the sea, the shells of which form exceedingly large deposits.  You are probably aware that before the attempt was made to lay the  Atlantic telegraphic cable, the Government employed vessels in making a  series of very careful observations and soundings of the bottom of the  Atlantic; and although, as we must all regret, up to the present time that  project has not succeeded, we have the satisfaction of knowing that it  yielded some most remarkable results to science. The Atlantic Ocean had to  be sounded right across, to depths of several miles in some places, and  the nature of its bottom was carefully ascertained. Well, now, a space of  about 1,000 miles wide from east to west, and I do not exactly know how  many from north to south, but at any rate 600 or 700 miles, was carefully  examined, and it was found that over the whole of that immense area an  excessively fine chalky mud is being deposited; and this deposit is  entirely made up of animals whose hard parts are deposited in this part of  the ocean, and are doubtless gradually acquiring solidity and becoming  metamorphosed into a chalky limestone. Thus, you see, it is quite possible  in this way to preserve unmistakable records of animal and vegetable life.  Whenever the sea-bottom, by some of those undulations of the earth's crust  that I have referred to, becomes upheaved, and sections or borings are  made, or pits are dug, then we become able to examine the contents and  constituents of these ancient sea-bottoms, and find out what manner of  animals lived at that period.  

Now it is a very important consideration in its bearing on the  completeness of the record, to inquire how far the remains contained in  these fossiliferous limestones are able to convey anything like an  accurate or complete account of the animals which were in existence at the  time of its formation. Upon that point we can form a very clear judgment,  and one in which there is no possible room for any mistake. There are of  course a great number of animalssuch as jelly-fishes, and other  animalswithout any hard parts, of which we cannot reasonably expect  to find any traces whatever: there is nothing of them to preserve. Within  a very short time, you will have noticed, after they are removed from the  water, they dry up to a mere nothing; certainly they are not of a nature  to leave any very visible traces of their existence on such bodies as  chalk or mud. Then again, look at land animals; it is, as I have said, a  very uncommon thing to find a land animal entire after death. Insects and  other carnivorous animals very speedily pull them to pieces, putrefaction  takes place, and so, out of the hundreds of thousands that are known to  die every year, it is the rarest thing in the world to see one imbedded in  such a way that its remains would be preserved for a lengthened period.  Not only is this the case, but even when animal remains have been safely  imbedded, certain natural agents may wholly destroy and remove them.  

Almost all the hard parts of animalsthe bones and so onare  composed chiefly of phosphate of lime and carbonate of lime. Some years  ago, I had to make an inquiry into the nature of some very curious fossils  sent to me from the North of Scotland. Fossils are usually hard bony  structures that have become imbedded in the way I have described, and have  gradually acquired the nature and solidity of the body with which they are  associated; but in this case I had a series of 'holes' in some pieces of  rock, and nothing else. Those holes, however, had a certain definite shape  about them, and when I got a skilful workman to make castings of the  interior of these holes, I found that they were the impressions of the  joints of a backbone and of the armour of a great reptile, twelve or more  feet long. This great beast had died and got buried in the sand; the sand  had gradually hardened over the bones, but remained porous. Water had  trickled through it, and that water being probably charged with a  superfluity of carbonic acid, had dissolved all the phosphate and  carbonate of lime, and the bones themselves had thus decayed and entirely  disappeared; but as the sandstone happened to have consolidated by that  time, the precise shape of the bones was retained. If that sandstone had  remained soft a little longer, we should have known nothing whatsoever of  the existence of the reptile whose bones it had encased.  

How certain it is that a vast number of animals which have existed at one  period on this earth have entirely perished, and left no trace whatever of  their forms, may be proved to you by other considerations. There are large  tracts of sandstone in various parts of the world, in which nobody has yet  found anything but footsteps. Not a bone of any description, but an  enormous number of traces of footsteps. There is no question about them.  There is a whole valley in Connecticut covered with these footsteps, and  not a single fragment of the animals which made them has yet been found.  Let me mention another case while upon that matter, which is even more  surprising than those to which I have yet referred. There is a limestone  formation near Oxford, at a place called Stonesfield, which has yielded  the remains of certain very interesting mammalian animals, and up to this  time, if I recollect rightly, there have been found seven specimens of its  lower jaws, and not a bit of anything else, neither limb-bones nor skull,  or any part whatever; not a fragment of the whole system! Of course, it  would be preposterous to imagine that the beasts had nothing else but a  lower jaw! The probability is, as Dr. Buckland showed, as the result of  his observations on dead dogs in the river Thames, that the lower jaw, not  being secured by very firm ligaments to the bones of the head, and being a  weighty affair, would easily be knocked off, or might drop away from the  body as it floated in water in a state of decomposition. The jaw would  thus be deposited immediately, while the rest of the body would float and  drift away altogether, ultimately reaching the sea, and perhaps becoming  destroyed. The jaw becomes covered up and preserved in the river silt, and  thus it comes that we have such a curious circumstance as that of the  lower jaws in the Stonesfield slates. So that, you see, faulty as these  layers of stone in the earth's crust are, defective as they necessarily  are as a record, the account of contemporaneous vital phenomena presented  by them is, by the necessity of the case, infinitely more defective and  fragmentary.  

It was necessary that I should put all this very strongly before you,  because, otherwise, you might have been led to think differently of the  completeness of our knowledge by the next facts I shall state to you.  

The researches of the last three-quarters of a century have, in truth,  revealed a wonderful richness of organic life in those rocks. Certainly  not fewer than thirty or forty thousand different species of fossils have  been discovered. You have no more ground for doubting that these creatures  really lived and died at or near the places in which we find them than you  have for like scepticism about a shell on the sea-shore. The evidence is  as good in the one case as in the other.  

Our next business is to look at the general character of these fossil  remains, and it is a subject which it will be requisite to consider  carefully; and the first point for us is to examine how much the extinct  'Flora' and 'Fauna' as a 'whole'disregarding altogether the  'succession' of their constituents, of which I shall speak afterwardsdiffer  from the 'Flora' and 'Fauna' of the present day;how far they differ  in what we 'do' know about them, leaving altogether out of consideration  speculations based upon what we 'do not' know.  

I strongly imagine that if it were not for the peculiar appearance that  fossilised animals have, any of you might readily walk through a museum  which contains fossil remains mixed up with those of the present forms of  life, and I doubt very much whether your uninstructed eyes would lead you  to see any vast or wonderful difference between the two. If you looked  closely, you would notice, in the first place, a great many things very  like animals with which you are acquainted now: you would see differences  of shape and proportion, but on the whole a close similarity.  

I explained what I meant by ORDERS the other day, when I described the  animal kingdom as being divided in sub-kingdoms, classes and orders. If  you divide the animal kingdom into orders, you will find that there are  about one hundred and twenty. The number may vary on one side or the  other, but this is a fair estimate. That is the sum total of the orders of  all the animals which we know now, and which have been known in past  times, and left remains behind.  

Now, how many of those are absolutely extinct? That is to say, how many of  these orders of animals have lived at a former period of the world's  history, but have at present no representatives? That is the sense in  which I meant to use the word "extinct." I mean that those animals did  live on this earth at one time, but have left no one of their kind with us  at the present moment. So that estimating the number of extinct animals is  a sort of way of comparing the past creation as a whole with the present  as a whole. Among the mammalia and birds there are none extinct; but when  we come to the reptiles there is a most wonderful thing: out of the eight  orders, or thereabouts, which you can make among reptiles, one-half are  extinct. These diagrams of the plesiosaurus, the ichthyosaurus, the  pterodactyle, give you a notion of some of these extinct reptiles. And  here is a cast of the pterodactyle and bones of the ichthyosaurus and the  plesiosaurus, just as fresh as if it had been recently dug up in a  churchyard. Thus, in the reptile class, there are no less than half of the  orders which are absolutely extinct. If we turn to the 'Amphibia', there  was one extinct order, the Labyrinthodonts, typified by the large  salamander-like beast shown in this diagram.  

No order of fishes is known to be extinct. Every fish that we find in the  stratato which I have been referringcan be identified and  placed in one of the orders which exist at the present day. There is not  known to be a single ordinal form of insect extinct. There are only two  orders extinct among the 'Crustacea'. There is not known to be an extinct  order of these creatures, the parasitic and other worms; but there are  two, not to say three, absolutely extinct orders of this class, the  'Echinodermata'; out of all the orders of the 'Coelenterata' and  'Protozoa' only one, the Rugose Corals.  

So that, you see, out of somewhere about 120 orders of animals, taking  them altogether, you will not, at the outside estimate, find above ten or  a dozen extinct. Summing up all the orders of animals which have left  remains behind them, you will not find above ten or a dozen which cannot  be arranged with those of the present day; that is to say, that the  difference does not amount to much more than ten per cent.: and the  proportion of extinct orders of plants is still smaller. I think that that  is a very astounding, a most astonishing fact, seeing the enormous epochs  of time which have elapsed during the constitution of the surface of the  earth as it at present exists; it is, indeed, a most astounding thing that  the proportion of extinct ordinal types should be so exceedingly small.  

But now, there is another point of view in which we must look at this past  creation. Suppose that we were to sink a vertical pit through the floor  beneath us, and that I could succeed in making a section right through in  the direction of New Zealand, I should find in each of the different beds  through which I passed the remains of animals which I should find in that  stratum and not in the others. First, I should come upon beds of gravel or  drift containing the bones of large animals, such as the elephant,  rhinoceros, and cave tiger. Rather curious things to fall across in  Piccadilly! If I should dig lower still, I should come upon a bed of what  we call the London clay, and in this, as you will see in our galleries  upstairs, are found remains of strange cattle, remains of turtles, palms,  and large tropical fruits; with shell-fish such as you see the like of now  only in tropical regions. If I went below that, I should come upon the  chalk, and there I should find something altogether different, the remains  of ichthyosauri and pterodactyles, and ammonites, and so forth.  

I do not know what Mr. Godwin Austin would say comes next, but probably  rocks containing more ammonites, and more ichthyosauri and plesiosauri,  with a vast number of other things; and under that I should meet with yet  older rocks, containing numbers of strange shells and fishes; and in thus  passing from the surface to the lowest depths of the earth's crust, the  forms of animal life and vegetable life which I should meet with in the  successive beds would, looking at them broadly, be the more different the  further that I went down. Or, in other words, inasmuch as we started with  the clear principle, that in a series of naturally-disposed mud beds the  lowest are the oldest, we should come to this result, that the further we  go back in time the more difference exists between the animal and  vegetable life of an epoch and that which now exists. That was the  conclusion to which I wished to bring you at the end of this Lecture.  











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