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Chapter 5 ELEVATION OF STRATA ABOVE THE SEA—HORIZONTAL AND INCLINED STRATIFICATION.

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nclined and vertical stratification - Anticlinal and synclinal lines - Bent strata in east of Scotland - Theory of folding by lateral movement - Creeps - Dip and strike - Structure of the Jura - Vario

alternations produced by th

er opinion, assuming that the ocean was originally universal, and had gradually sunk down to its actual level, so that the present islands and continents were left dry. It seemed to them far easier to conceive that the water had gone down, than that solid land had risen upwards into its present position. It was, however, impossible to invent any satisfactory hypothesis to explain the disappearance of so enormous a body of water throughout the globe, it being necessary to infer that the ocean had once stood at whatever height marine shells might be detected. It moreover appeared clear, as the science of Geology advanced, that certain

ine origin in which the stratification remains horizontal, and for those in which the strata are disturbed, broken, inclined, or vertical. Secondly, it is consistent with human experience that land should rise gradually in some places and be depressed in others. Such changes have actually occurred in our own days, and are now in progress, having been accompanied in some cases by violen

reat theoretical interest attached to all facts connected with the po

d of horizontal strata of high antiquity, which contain fossil remains of animals wholly dissimilar from any now known to exist. In the south of Sweden, for example, near Lake Wener, the beds of one of the oldest of the fossiliferous deposits, namely that formerly called Transition, and now Silurian, by geologists, occur in as level a position as if they had recently formed part of the delta of a great river, and be

Bothnia, proofs have been obtained that the land is experiencing, and has experienced for centuries, a slow upheaving movement. Playfair argued in favour of this opinion in 1802; and in 1807, Von Buch, after his travels in Scandinavia, announced his conviction that a rising of the land was in progress. Celsius and other Swedish writers had, a century before, declared their belief that a gradual change had, for ages, been taking place in the relative level of land and sea. They attributed the change to

l sinking of the west coast of Greenland, for the space of more than 600 miles from north to south, during the last four centuries, has been established by the observations of a Danish naturalist, Dr. Pingel. And while these proofs of continental elevation and subsidence, by slow and insensible movements, have been recently brought to light, the evidence

e is a slow and continued sinking of the submarine mountains on which the masses of coral are based; while there are

art of the actual course of nature; and when admitted, they will be found to afford a key to the interpretation of a variety of geological appearances, such as the elevation of horizontal, inclined, or disturbed marine strata, and the superposition of freshwater to marine deposits, afterwards to be described. It will also appear, in the sequel, how much light the doctrine of a conti

rmations, and the depression of certain freshwater strata, to oscillations in the level of the waters instead of the land, we should be c

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glomerate an

ure first observed certain conglomerates in a similar position in the Swiss Alps, he remarked that the pebbles, being for the most part of an oval shape, had their longer axes parallel to the planes of stratification (See fig. 61.). From this he inferred, that such strata must, at first, have been horizontal, each oval pebble having originally settled at the bottom of the water, with its flatter side parallel to the hori

eat curves, which may have a diameter of a few yards, or of several miles. I shall first describe two curves of considerable regularity

s No. 4. and No. 3. are vertical, and they generally form a ridge parallel to the southern skirts of the Grampians. The superior strata Nos. 2. and 1. become less and less inclined on descending to the valley of Strathmore, where the strata, having a concave bend, are said by geologists to lie in a "trough" or "basin." Through the centre of this valley runs an imaginary line A, called technically a "synclinal line," where the beds, which are tilted in opposite directions, may be supposed to meet. It is most important for the observer to mark such lines, for he will perceive by the diagram, that in travelling from the north to the centre of the basin, he is always passing from older to newer beds; whereas, after crossing the line A, and pursuing his course in the same southerly direct

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of the Grampians to the sea at Arbroath (volcanic o

ear St. Abb's Head, on the east coast of Scotland, where the rocks consist principally of a bluish slate, having frequently a ripple-marked surface. The undulations of the beds reach from the t

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ear St. Abb's Head, Berw

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the removal of the weight, the layers of clay were found to be curved and folded, so as to bear a miniature resemblance to the strata in the cliffs. We must, however, bear in mind, that in the natural section or sea-cliff we only see the foldings imperfectly, one part being invisible beneath the sea, and the other, or upper portion, being supposed to have been carried awa

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differently coloured cloths upon a table, and when they are spread out horizontally, cover them with a book. Then apply other books

ar when the volcanic and granitic rocks are described, that some of them have, when melted, been injected forcibly into fissures, while others, already in

hout long periods, of such downward movements seems to imply the formation and renewal of cavities at a certain depth below the surface, whether by the removal of matter by volcanos and hot springs, or by the contraction of argillaceous rocks by heat and pressure, or any other comb

ven when props are left to support the roof of the mine. "In Yorkshire," says Mr. Buddle, "three distinct subsidences were perceptible at the surface, after the clearing out of three seams of coal below, and innumerable vertical cracks were

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ps." (J. Buddle, Esq.) Horizontal length of section 174 feet. The uppe

galleries which have been excavated are represented by the white spaces a b, while the adjoining dark portions are parts of the original coal-seam left as props, beds of sandy clay or shale constituting the floor of t

olid than the roof. But it usually happens, in coal-mines, that the roof is composed of hard shale, or occasionally of sandstone, more unyielding than the foundation, which often consists o

of the ridge are re-united and flattened at the top, exhibiting the flexure seen at d. Meanwhile the coal in the props has become crushed and cracked by pressure. It is also found, that below the creeps a, b, c, d, an inferior stratum, called the "metal coal," which is 3 feet thick, has been fractured at the points e, f, g, h, and has risen, so as to pr

ovement has been most rapid, the curvature of the beds is most regular, and the reunion of the fractured ends most complete; whereas the signs of displacement or violence are greatest in those creeps which have required months or years for their entire accomplishment. Hence we may conclude that similar

, they and the layers of shale are now inclined, or standing on end, it is obviously the effect of subsequent derangement. The proof becomes, if possible, still more striking when these strata, including vegetable remains, are curved again and again, and even folded into the form of the letter Z

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ures of coa

deviation from a level or horizontal line is called the amount of dip, or the angle of dip. Thus, in the annexed diagram (fig. 68.), a series of strata are inclined, and they dip to the north at an angle of forty-five degrees. The strike, or line of bearing, is the prolongation or extension of the strata in a direction at right angles to the dip; and hence it is sometimes called the direction of the strata. Thus, in the abov

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or quite level in all directi

a country, to learn how the beds dip in every part of the district; but it requires some pr

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ontality of in

cliff, if the observer see the strata in the line of their strike, the dip being inwards from the face of the cliff. If, however, we come to a break in the cliff, which exhibits a section exactly at right angles to the line of the strike, we are then able to ascertain the true dip. In the annexed drawing (fig. 69.), we may suppose a headland, one side of which faces to the north, where the beds would

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s, and placing the fingers of one in a perpendicular, and of the other in a horizontal position, as in fig. 70. It is thus easy to discover whether the lines of the inclined beds bisect the angle of 90°, formed by the meeting of the hands, so as to give an angle of 45°, or whether it would divide the spac

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ing the structure

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the denuded r

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erse s

the nature and dip are occasionally displayed in deep transverse gorges, called "cluses," caused by fractures at right angles to the direction of the chain.[55-A] Now let us suppose these ridges and parallel valleys to run north and south, we should then say that the strike of the beds is north and south, and the dip east and west. Lines drawn along the summits of the ridges, A, B, would be anticlinal lines, and one following the bottom of the adjoining valleys a synclinal line. It will be observed that some of these ridges, A, B, are unbroken on the summit, whereas one of them, C, has been fr

an would exhibit the edges of the strata forming a succession of circles, or ellipses, round a common centre. These circles are the lines of strike, and the dip being

they happen to have been denuded. One of the simplest rules with which every geologist should be acquainted, relates to the V-like form of the beds as they crop

s steep than the slope of the valley, then the V's, as they are often termed by miners, will point upwards (see fig. 74.),

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ey 40°, dip o

ley, then the V's will point downwards (see fig. 75.), and those for

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ey 20°, dip o

lination, the newer beds will appear the highest, as in the first and second cases. This is shown by the drawing (fig. 76.),

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dip of strata 20°, in

h other. A miner unacquainted with the rule, who had first explored the valley (fig. 74.), may have sunk a vertical shaft below the coal seam A, until he reached the inferior bed B. He might then pass to the valley fig. 75., and discovering there also the

a valley, as in A, B, fig. 62. p. 48.; but there are exceptions to this rule, t

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lowed out at the time when these rocks were still beneath the level of the sea, or perhaps at the period of their gradual emergence from beneath the waters. The existence of such cracks at the point of the sharpest bending of solid strata of limestone is precisely what we should have expected; but the occasional want of all similar signs of fracture, even where the strain has been greatest, as at

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rit, and marl, nea

o sharp, that specimens might be broken off, well fitted to serve as ridge-tiles on the roof of a house. Although this chert could not have been brittle as now, when first folded into this shape, it presents, nevertheless, here and the

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gyp

m

of solid gypsum interstratified. Sometimes these solid layers have been broken into detached fragments, still preserving t

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ct beds, or sets of beds, No. 1. being the newest, and No. 12. the oldest of the series. But this section may, perhaps, exhibit merely six beds, which have been folded in the manner seen in fig. 81., so that each of them is twice repeated, the position of one half being reversed, and part of No. 1., originally the uppermost, having now become the lowest of the series. These phenomena are often observable on a magnificent scale in certain regions in Switz

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ta of the I

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Silurian schist at the Siccar Point, near St.

elapsed between the production of the two sets of strata, and that, during this interval, the older series had been tilted and disturbed. Afterwards the upper series was thrown down in horizontal strata upon it. If these superior beds, as

sea. Here the curved and vertical strata, now known to be of Silurian age, and which often exhibit a ripple-marked surface[60-B], are well exposed at the headland called the Siccar Point, penetrating with their edges into the incumbent beds of slightly inclined sandstone, in which large pieces of the schist, some round and others angular, are united by an arenaceous cement. "What clearer evidence," exclaims Playfair, "could we have had of the different formation of these rocks, and of the long interval which separated their formation, had we actually seen them emerging from the bosom of the deep? We felt ourselves necessarily carried back to the time when the schistus on which we stood was yet at the bottom of the sea, and when the sandstone before us was only beginning to be dep

however, to do justice to the original sketch, in an engraving, as the contrast of the red sandstone and the light fawn-coloured vertical schists could not be expressed. From the point of view here selected, the underlying bed

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ormable strata nea

strata of greenish and whitish marls of the Cretaceous formation. The lowest and therefore the oldest bed of the horizontal series is usually the sand and conglomerate, a, in which are rounded fragments of stone, from an inch to two feet in diameter. These fragments have often adhering shells attached to them, and have been bored by p

aining in the same places; but we often find a fissure, several inches or yards wide, intervening between the disunited portions. These fissur

is supposed that the lines of the stri? indicate the direction in which the rocks were moved. During one of the minor earthquakes in Chili, which happened about the year 1840, and was described to me by an eye-witness, the brick walls of a building were rent vertically in several places, and made to vibrate for

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dicular, C D obliq

hose lines and bearings which had hitherto directed his course. When his mine reaches a certain plane, which is sometimes perpendicular, as in A B, fig. 85., sometimes oblique to the horizon (as in C D, ibid.), he finds the beds of rock broken asunder, those on the one side of the plane having changed their place, by sliding in a particular direction along the face of the others.

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rubbish, on each side of which t

from each other. The sides of the faults, when perpendicular, are commonly separated several yards, but are sometimes as much as 50 yards asunder, the interval being filled with broken débris of the strata. In following the course of the same fault it is sometimes found to produce in different places ve

argillaceous and other beds, slight subsidences having taken place from failure of support. Sometimes, however, even these small slips may have been produced during earthquakes; for land h

epeated alternations of rocks, when, in fact, the same strata, once continuous, have been bent round so as to rec

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ns of strata caused

nclined strata, and that the different masses under E F, F G, and G D, sank down successively, so as to leave vacant the spaces marked in the diagram by dotted lines, and to occupy those marked by the continuous lines, then let denudation take place along the line A H, so that the protruding masses indicated by the fainter lines are swept away,-a miner, who has not discovered the faults, finding the mass a, whi

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ed and striated faces. Now these facts seem to indicate partial changes in the direction of the movement, and some slidings subsequent to the first filling up of the fissure. Suppose the mass of rock A, B, C, to overlie an extensive chasm d e, formed at the depth of several miles, whether by the gradual contraction in bulk of a melted mass passing into a solid or crystalline state, or the shrinking of argillaceous strata, baked by a moderate heat, or by the subtraction of matter by volcanic action, or any other cause. Now, if this region be convulsed by earthquakes, the fissures f g, and others at right angles to them, may sever the mass B from A and from C, so that it may move freely, and begin to sink into the chasm. A fracture may be conceived so clean and perfect as to allow it to subside at once to the bottom of the subterranean cavity; but it is far more probable that the sinking will be effected at successive periods during different earthquakes, the mass always continuing to slide in the same direction along the planes of the fissures f g, and the edges of the falling mass being continually more broken and triturated at each convulsion. If, as is not improbable, the circumstances which have caused the failure of support continue in operation, it may happen that when the mass B has filled the cavity first formed, its foundations will again give way under it, so that it will fall again in the same direction. But, if the direction should change, the fact could not be discovered by observing the slickensides, because the last scoring would efface the lines of previous friction. In the present state of our ignorance of the causes of subsidenc

nudation, which will be treated of in the next chapter. By such movements every portion of the surface of the land becomes in its turn a line of coast, and is exposed to the action of the waves and tides. A country

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Contents

Chapter 1 ON THE DIFFERENT CLASSES OF ROCKS. Chapter 2 AQUEOUS ROCKS—THEIR COMPOSITION AND FORMS OF STRATIFICATION. Chapter 3 ARRANGEMENT OF FOSSILS IN STRATA—FRESHWATER AND MARINE. Chapter 4 CONSOLIDATION OF STRATA AND PETRIFACTION OF FOSSILS. Chapter 5 ELEVATION OF STRATA ABOVE THE SEA—HORIZONTAL AND INCLINED STRATIFICATION. Chapter 6 DENUDATION. Chapter 7 ALLUVIUM. Chapter 8 CHRONOLOGICAL CLASSIFICATION OF ROCKS. Chapter 9 ON THE DIFFERENT AGES OF THE AQUEOUS ROCKS. Chapter 10 CLASSIFICATION OF TERTIARY FORMATIONS.—POST-PLIOCENE GROUP. Chapter 11 NEWER PLIOCENE PERIOD.—BOULDER FORMATION.
Chapter 12 No.12
Chapter 13 NEWER PLIOCENE STRATA AND CAVERN DEPOSITS.
Chapter 14 OLDER PLIOCENE AND MIOCENE FORMATIONS.
Chapter 15 UPPER EOCENE FORMATIONS.
Chapter 16 No.16
Chapter 17 CRETACEOUS GROUP.
Chapter 18 WEALDEN GROUP.
Chapter 19 DENUDATION OF THE CHALK AND WEALDEN.
Chapter 20 OOLITE AND LIAS.
Chapter 21 No.21
Chapter 22 TRIAS OR NEW RED SANDSTONE GROUP.
Chapter 23 PERMIAN OR MAGNESIAN LIMESTONE GROUP.
Chapter 24 THE COAL, OR CARBONIFEROUS GROUP.
Chapter 25 No.25
Chapter 26 OLD RED SANDSTONE, OR DEVONIAN GROUP.
Chapter 27 SILURIAN GROUP.
Chapter 28 VOLCANIC ROCKS.
Chapter 29 No.29
Chapter 30 ON THE DIFFERENT AGES OF THE VOLCANIC ROCKS.
Chapter 31 No.31
Chapter 32 No.32
Chapter 33 PLUTONIC ROCKS—GRANITE.
Chapter 34 ON THE DIFFERENT AGES OF THE PLUTONIC ROCKS.
Chapter 35 METAMORPHIC ROCKS.
Chapter 36 No.36
Chapter 37 ON THE DIFFERENT AGES OF THE METAMORPHIC ROCKS.
Chapter 38 MINERAL VEINS.
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