The Elements of Geology eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 384 pages of information about The Elements of Geology.

The Elements of Geology eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 384 pages of information about The Elements of Geology.

Physical geography.  The physical history of the period is recorded in the succession of its formations.  The sandstones of the Upper Cambrian, as we have learned, tell of a transgressing sea which gradually came to occupy the Mississippi valley and the interior of North America.  The limestones of the early and middle Ordovician show that now the shore had become remote and the lands had become more low.  The waters now had cleared.  Colonies of brachiopods and other lime-secreting animals occupied the sea bottom, and their debris mantled it with sheets of limy ooze.  The sandy limestones of the Calciferous record the transition stage from the Cambrian when some sand was still brought in from shore.  The highly fossiliferous limestones of the Trenton tell of clear water and abundant life.  We need not regard this epicontinental sea as deep.  No abysmal deposits have been found, and the limestones of the period are those which would be laid in clear, warm water of moderate depth like that of modern coral seas.

The shales of the Utica and Hudson show that the waters of the sea now became clouded with mud washed in from land.  Either the land was gradually uplifted, or perhaps there had arrived one of those periodic crises which, as we may imagine, have taken place whenever the crust of the shrinking earth has slowly given way over its great depressions, and the ocean has withdrawn its waters into deepening abysses.  The land was thus left relatively higher and bordered with new coastal plains.  The epicontinental sea was shoaled and narrowed, and muds were washed in from the adjacent lands.

The Taconic deformation.  The Ordovician was closed by a deformation whose extent and severity are not yet known.  From the St. Lawrence River to New York Bay, along the northwestern and western border of New England, lies a belt of Cambrian-Ordovician rocks more than a mile in total thickness, which accumulated during the long ages of those periods in a gradually subsiding trough between the Adirondacks and a pre-Cambrian range lying west of the Connecticut River.  But since their deposition these ancient sediments have been crumpled and crushed, broken with great faults, and extensively metamorphosed.  The limestones have recrystallized into marbles, among them the famous marbles of Vermont; the Cambrian sandstones have become quartzites, and the Hudson shale has been changed to a schist exposed on Manhattan Island and northward.

In part these changes occurred at the close of the Ordovician, for in several places beds of Silurian age rest unconformably on the upturned Ordovician strata; but recent investigations have made it probable that the crustal movements recurred at later times, and it was perhaps in the Devonian and at the close of the Carboniferous that the greater part of the deformation and metamorphism was accomplished.  As a result of these movements,—­ perhaps several times repeated,—­a great mountain range was upridged, which has been long since leveled by erosion, but whose roots are now visible in the Taconic Mountains of western New England.

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The Elements of Geology from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.