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Show 122 ISLAND LIFE. (PART I. 4. Chan<Tes in the distribution of land and water. 5. Chan;es in the position of the earth's axis of rotation. 6. A variation in the amount of heat radiated by the sun. 7. A variation in the temperature of space. Of the above, causes (1) and (2) are undoubted realities; but it is now generally admitted that they are utterly inadequate to produce the observed effects. Causes (5) (6) and (7) are all purely hypothetical, for though such changes may have occurred there is no evidence that they have occurred during geological time ; and it is besides certain that they would not, either singly or combined, be adequate to explain the whole of the phenomena. There remain causes (3) and (4), which have the advantage of being demonstrated facts, and which are universally admitted to be capable of producing some effect of the nature required, the only question being whether, either alone or in combination, they are adequate to produce all the observed effects. It is therefore to these two causes that we shall confine our inquiry, taking first those astronomical causes whose complex and wide reaching effects have been so admirably explained and discussed by Dr. Croll in numerous papers and in his work" Climate and Time in their Geological Relations." Astronomical Causes of Changes of Olimate.-The earth moves in an elliptical orbit round the sun, which is situated in one of the foci of the ellipse, so that the distance of the sun from us varies during the year to a considerable amount. Strange to say we are now three millions of miles nearer to the sun in winter than in summer, while the reverse is the case in the southern hemisphere; and this must have some effect in making our northern winters less severe than those of the south temperate zone. But the earth moves more rapidly in that part of .its orbit which is nearer to the sun, so that our winter is not only milder, but several days shorter, than that of the southern hemisphere. The distribution of land and sea and other local causes prevent us from making any accurate estimate of the effects due to these differences; but there can be no doubt that if our winter were now as long as our summer, and we were also three million miles further from the sun at the former period, a very decided difference of climate would result-our winter CliAP. VJII.J THE CAUSES OF GLACIAL EPOCHS. 123 would be colder and longer, our summer hotter and shorter. Now there is a combination of astronomical revolutions (the precession of the equinoxes and the motion of the aphelion) which actually brings this change about every 10,500 years, so that after this interval the condition of the two hemispheres is reversed as regards nearness to the sun in summer and comparative duration of summer and winter; and this ~hange has been going on throughout all geological periods. (See Diagram.) The influence of the present phase of precession is perhaps seen in the great extension of the antarctic ice-fields, and the existence of glaciers at the sea-level in the southern hemisphere, in latitudes corresponding to that of England; but it is not supposed that .similar effects would be produced with us at the N.HEMISPHERE WINTER IN APHELION CLACIAL EPOCH IN N.HEMISPHERE S .HEMISPHERE WINTER IN APHELION CLACIAL EPOC.I IN S.HEMISPHERE DIAGRAM SHOWING THE ALTERED POSITION 0~' THE POLES AT INTERVALS OF 10,500 YEARS PRODUCED BY THE PRECESSION OF THE EQUINOXES AND THE MOTION OF TUE APHELION ; AND ITS EFFECT ON CLIMATE DURING A PERIOD OF HIOH EXCENTRICITY. last cold period, 10,500 years ago, because we are exceptionally favoured, by the Gulf stream warming the whole North Atlantic ocean and by the prevalence of westerly winds which convey that warmth to our shores ; and also by the comparatively small quantity of high land around the North Pole which does not encourage great accnmulations of ice. But the amount of excentricity itself varies v0ry largely, though very slowly, and it is now nearly at a minimum. It also varies very irregularly; but. its amount has been calculated for several million years back. Fifty thousand years ago it was rather less than it. is now, but it then increased, and when we come to a hundred thousand years ago there is a difference of |