Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- THE BODIES OF SPACE—THEIR ARRANGEMENTS AND FORMATION
- CONSTITUENT MATERIALS OF THE EARTH, AND OF THE OTHER BODIES OF SPACE
- THE EARTH FORMED—ERA OF THE PRIMARY ROCKS
- COMMENCEMENT OF ORGANIC LIFE—SEA PLANTS, CORALS, ETC
- ERA OF THE OLD RED SANDSTONE—FISHES ABUNDANT
- SECONDARY ROCKS—ERA OF THE CARBONIFEROUS FORMATION—COMMENCEMENT OF LAND PLANTS
- ERA OF THE NEW RED SANDSTONE—TERRESTRIAL ZOOLOGY COMMENCES WITH REPTILES—FIRST TRACES OF BIRDS
- ERA OF THE OOLITE—COMMENCEMENT OF MAMMALIA
- ERA OF THE CRETACEOUS FORMATION
- ERA OF THE TERTIARY FORMATION — MAMMALIA ABUNDANT
- ERA OF THE SUPERFICIAL FORMATIONS—COMMENCEMENT OF PRESENT SPECIES
- GENERAL CONSIDERATIONS RESPECTING THE ORIGIN OF THE ANIMATED TRIBES
- PARTICULAR CONSIDERATIONS RESPECTING THE ORIGIN OF THE ANIMATED TRIBES
- HYPOTHESIS OF THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE VEGETABLE AND ANIMAL KINGDOMS
- AFFINITIES AND GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION OF ORGANISMS
- EARLY HISTORY OF MANKIND
- MENTAL CONSTITUTION OF ANIMALS
- PURPOSE AND GENERAL CONDITION OF THE ANIMATED CREATION
- NOTE CONCLUSORY
- APPENDIX
GENERAL CONSIDERATIONS RESPECTING THE ORIGIN OF THE ANIMATED TRIBES
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- THE BODIES OF SPACE—THEIR ARRANGEMENTS AND FORMATION
- CONSTITUENT MATERIALS OF THE EARTH, AND OF THE OTHER BODIES OF SPACE
- THE EARTH FORMED—ERA OF THE PRIMARY ROCKS
- COMMENCEMENT OF ORGANIC LIFE—SEA PLANTS, CORALS, ETC
- ERA OF THE OLD RED SANDSTONE—FISHES ABUNDANT
- SECONDARY ROCKS—ERA OF THE CARBONIFEROUS FORMATION—COMMENCEMENT OF LAND PLANTS
- ERA OF THE NEW RED SANDSTONE—TERRESTRIAL ZOOLOGY COMMENCES WITH REPTILES—FIRST TRACES OF BIRDS
- ERA OF THE OOLITE—COMMENCEMENT OF MAMMALIA
- ERA OF THE CRETACEOUS FORMATION
- ERA OF THE TERTIARY FORMATION — MAMMALIA ABUNDANT
- ERA OF THE SUPERFICIAL FORMATIONS—COMMENCEMENT OF PRESENT SPECIES
- GENERAL CONSIDERATIONS RESPECTING THE ORIGIN OF THE ANIMATED TRIBES
- PARTICULAR CONSIDERATIONS RESPECTING THE ORIGIN OF THE ANIMATED TRIBES
- HYPOTHESIS OF THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE VEGETABLE AND ANIMAL KINGDOMS
- AFFINITIES AND GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION OF ORGANISMS
- EARLY HISTORY OF MANKIND
- MENTAL CONSTITUTION OF ANIMALS
- PURPOSE AND GENERAL CONDITION OF THE ANIMATED CREATION
- NOTE CONCLUSORY
- APPENDIX
Summary
Thus concludes the wondrous chapter of the earth's history which is told by geology. It takes up our globe at the period when its original incandescent state had nearly ceased; conducts it through what we have every reason to believe were vast, or at least very considerable, spaces of time, in the course of which many superficial changes took place, and vegetable and animal life was gradually devolved; and drops it just at the point when man was apparently about to enter on the scene. The compilation of such a history, from materials of so extraordinary a character, and the powerful nature of the evidence which these materials afford, are calculated to excite our admiration, and the result must be allowed to exalt the dignity of science, as a product of man's industry and his reason.
If there is anything more than another impressed on our minds by the course of the geological history, it is, that the same laws and conditions of nature now apparent to us have existed throughout the whole time, though the operation of some of these laws may now be less conspicuous than in the early ages, from some of the conditions having come to a settlement and a close. That seas have flowed and ebbed, and winds disturbed their surfaces, in the time of the secondary rocks, we have proof on the yet preserved surfaces of the sands which constituted margins of the seas in those days.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Vestiges of the Natural History of CreationTogether with Explanations: A Sequel, pp. 153 - 172Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1844