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Show 232 DISINTEGRATION CrrAP. V. land. A huge pHe of rock bas been planed awav on one side and not a remnant left. Until the last twenty or thirty years, most geologists thought that the waves of the sea were the chief agents in the work of denudation ; but we may now feel sure that air and rain, aided by streams and rivers, are much 1nore powerful agents,-that is if we consider the whole area of the land. The long lines of escarpment which stretch across several parts of England were formerly considered to be undoubtedly ancient coast-lines ; but we now know that they stand up above the general surface merely from resisting air, rain and frost better than the adjoining formations. It has rarely been the good fortune of a geologist to bring conviction to the minds of · his fellow-workers on a disputed point by a single memoir; but Mr. Whitaker, of tho Geological Survey of England, was so fortunate when, in 1867, he published his paper "On sub-aerial Denudation, and on Cliffs and Escarpments of the Chalk."* Before this * 'Geological Magazine,' Octol1er and November, 18G7, vol. iv. l?P· 44.7 and 483. Copious references on the subject are given in this remarkable memoir. 0HAP. V. AND DENUDATION. 233 paper appeared, Mr . .A.. Tylor had adduced important evidence on sub-aerial denudation, by showing that the arnount of n1atter brought down by rivers must infallibly lower the level of their drainage-basins by many feet in no immense lapse of time. This line of argument has since been followed up in the most interesting manner by Archibald Geikie, Croll and others, in a series of valuable memoirs.* For the sake of those who have never attended to this subject, a single instance may be here given, namely, that of the Mississippi, which is chosen because the amount of sediment brought down by this great river has been investigated with especial care by order of the United States Government. The result is, as Mr. Croll shows, that the mean level of its enormous area of * A. 'l'ylor "On changes of the sea-level," &c., 'Philosophical Mag.' (Sor. 4th) vol. v., 1853, p. 258. Archibald Gcikie, Transactions Geolog. Soc. of Glasgow, vol. iii., p.153 (read March, 1868). Croll "On Geological 'l'ime,'' 'Philosophical Mag.', May, August, and November, 1868. See also Croll, • Climate and 'l'ime,' 1875, Chap. XX. For some recent information on tho amount of sediment brought down by rivers, sec' Nature,' Sept. 23rd, 1880. Mr. T. Mollard Heade bas published somo interesting articles on the astonishing amount of matter brought down in solution by rivers. See Address, Geolog. Soo., Liverpool, 1R76-77. |