Geological Evidence of the Antiquity of Man, 1863
eBook - ePub

Geological Evidence of the Antiquity of Man, 1863

  1. 544 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Geological Evidence of the Antiquity of Man, 1863

Book details
Book preview
Table of contents
Citations

About This Book

Charles Lyell's argument in this classic volume is that the processes of nature are slow and uniform, and that the Earth is in consequence hundreds of millions of years old. This work includes his prediction that if our nearest relatives are great apes, then the places to look for human fossils will be central Africa and Indonesia.

Frequently asked questions

Simply head over to the account section in settings and click on “Cancel Subscription” - it’s as simple as that. After you cancel, your membership will stay active for the remainder of the time you’ve paid for. Learn more here.
At the moment all of our mobile-responsive ePub books are available to download via the app. Most of our PDFs are also available to download and we're working on making the final remaining ones downloadable now. Learn more here.
Both plans give you full access to the library and all of Perlego’s features. The only differences are the price and subscription period: With the annual plan you’ll save around 30% compared to 12 months on the monthly plan.
We are an online textbook subscription service, where you can get access to an entire online library for less than the price of a single book per month. With over 1 million books across 1000+ topics, we’ve got you covered! Learn more here.
Look out for the read-aloud symbol on your next book to see if you can listen to it. The read-aloud tool reads text aloud for you, highlighting the text as it is being read. You can pause it, speed it up and slow it down. Learn more here.
Yes, you can access Geological Evidence of the Antiquity of Man, 1863 by Charles Lyell in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Biological Sciences & Evolution. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Publisher
Routledge
Year
2004
ISBN
9781134439775
Edition
1
CHAPTER I.
INTRODUCTORY.
PRELIMINARY REMARKS ON THE SUBJECTS TREATED OF IN THIS WORK—DEFINITION OF THE TERMS RECENT, POST-PLIOCENE, AND POST-TERTIARY—TABULAR VIEW OF THE ENTIRE SERIES OF FOSSILIFEROUS STRATA.
NO subject has lately excited more curiosity and general interest among geologists and the public than the question of the Antiquity of the Human Race,—whether or no we have sufficient evidence in caves, or in the superficial deposits commonly called drift or ‘diluvium,’ to prove the former co-existence of man with certain extinct mammalia. For the last half-century, the occasional occurrence, in various parts of Europe, of the bones of man or the works of his hands, in cave-breccias and stalactites, associated with the remains of the extinct hyéna, bear, elephant, or rhinoceros, has given rise to a suspicion that the date of man must be carried further back than we had heretofore imagined. On the other hand, extreme reluctance was naturally felt, on the part of scientific reasoners, to admit the validity of such evidence, seeing that so many caves have been inhabited by a succession of tenants, and have been selected by man, as a place not only of domicile, but of sepulture, while some caves have also served as the channels through which the waters of occasional land-floods or engulfed rivers have flowed, so that the remains of living beings which have peopled the district at more than one era may have subsequently been mingled in such caverns and confounded together in one and the same deposit. But the facts brought to light in. 1858, during the systematic investigation of the Brixham cave, near Torquay in Devonshire, which will be described in the sequel, excited anew the curiosity of the British public, and prepared the way for a general admission that scepticism in regard to the bearing of cave evidence in favour of the antiquity of man had previously been pushed to an extreme.
Since that period, many of the facts formerly adduced in favour of the co-existence in ancient times of man with certain species of mammalia long since extinct have been re-examined in England and on the Continent, and new cases bearing on the same question, whether relating to caves or to alluvial strata in valleys, have been brought to light. To qualify myself for the appreciation and discussion of these cases, I have visited, in the course of the last three years, many parts of England, France, and Belgium, and have communicated personally or by letter with not a few of the geologists, English and foreign, who have taken part in these researches. Besides explaining in the present volume the results of this enquiry, I shall give a description of the glacial formations of Europe and North America, that I may allude to the theories entertained respecting their origin, and consider their probable relations in a chronological point of view to the human epoch, and why throughout a great part of the northern hemisphere they so often interpose an abrupt barrier to all attempts to trace farther back into the past the signs of the existence of man upon the earth.
In the concluding chapters I shall offer a few remarks on the recent modifications of the Lamarckian theory of progressive development and transmutation, which are suggested by Mr. Darwin’s work on the ‘Origin of Species, by Variation and Natural Selection,’ and the bearing of this hypothesis on the different races of mankind and their connection With other parts of the animal kingdom.
Nomenclature.—Some preliminary explanation of the nomenclature adopted in the following pages will be indispensable, that the meaning attached to the terms Recent, Post-pliocene, and Post-tertiary may be correctly understood.
Previously to the year 1833, when I published the third volume of the ‘Principles of Geology,’ the strata called Tertiary had been divided by geologists into Lower, Middle, and Upper; the Lower comprising the oldest formations of the environs of Paris and London, with others of like age; the Middle, those of Bordeaux and Touraine; and the Upper, all that lay above or Were newer than the last-mentioned group.
When engaged, in 1828, in preparing for the press the treatise on geology above alluded to, I conceived the idea of classing the whole of this series of strata according to the different degrees of affinity which their fossil testacea bore to the living fauna. Having obtained information on this subject during my travels on the Continent, I learnt that M.Deshayes of Paris, already celebrated as a conchologist, had been led independently, by the study of a large collection of recent and fossil shells, to very similar view’s respecting the possibility of arranging the tertiary formations in chronological order, according to the proportional number of species of shells identical with living ones, which characterised each of the successive groups above mentioned. After comparing 3000 fossil species with 5000 living ones, the result arrived at was, that in the lower tertiary strata, there were about
image
per cent, identical with recent; in the middle tertiary (the faluns of the Loire and Gironde), about 17 per cent.; and in the upper tertiary, from 35 to 50, and sometimes in the most modern beds as much as 90 to 95 per cent. For the sake of clearness and brevity, I proposed to give short technical names to these sets of strata, or the periods to which they respectively belonged. I called the first or oldest of them Eocene, the second Miocene, and the third Pliocene. The first of the above terms, Eocene, is derived from
image
eos, dawn, and
image
kainos, recent; because an extremely small proportion of the fossil shells of this period could be referred to living species, so that this era seemed to indicate the dawn of the present testaceous fauna, no living species of shells having been detected in the antecedent or secondary rocks.
Some conchologists are now unwilling to allow that any Eocene species of shell has really survived to our times so unaltered as to allow of its specific identification with a living species. I cannot enter in this place into this wide controversy. It is enough at present to remark, that the character of the Eocene fauna, as contrasted with that of the antecedent secondary formations, wears a very modern aspect, and that some able living conchologists still maintain that there are Eocene shells not specifically distinguishable from those now extant; though they may be fewer in number than was supposed in 1833.
The term Miocene (from Â”Î”Ă­Ï‰Ï… meiƍn, less; and
image
kainos, recent) is intended to express a minor proportion of recent species (of testacea); the term Pliocene (from
image
pleiƍn, more; and
image
kainos, recent), a comparative plurality of the same.
It has sometimes been objected to this nomenclature that certain species of infusoria found in the chalk are still existing, and, on the other hand, the Miocene and Older Pliocene deposits often contain the remains of mammalia, reptiles, and fish, exclusively of extinct species. But the reader must bear in mind that the terms Eocene, Miocene, and Pliocene were originally invented with reference purely to conchological data, and in that sense have always been and are still used by me.
Since the first introduction of the terms above defined, the number of new living species of shells obtained from different parts of the globe has been exceedingly great, supplying fresh data for comparison, and enabling the paleontologist to correct many erroneous identifications of fossil and recent forms. New species also have been collected in abundance from tertiary formations of every age, while newly discovered groups of strata have filled up gaps in the previously known series. Hence modifications and reforms have been called for in the classification first proposed. The Eocene, Miocene, and Pliocene periods have been made to comprehend certain sets of strata of which the fossils do not always conform strictly in the proportion of recent to extinct species with the definitions first given by me, or which are implied in the etymology of those terms. These innovations have been treated of in my ‘Elements or Manual of Elementary Geology,’ and in the Supplement to the fifth edition of the same, published in 1859, where some modifications of my classification, as first proposed, are introduced; but I need not dwell on these on the present occasion, as the only formations with which we shall be concerned in the present volume are those of the most modern date, or the Post-tertiary. It will be convenient to divide these into two groups, the Recent and the Post-pliocene. In the Recent we may comprehend those deposits in which not only all the shells but all the fossil mammalia are of living species; in the Post-pliocene those strata in which, the shells being recent, a portion, and often a considerable one, of the accompanying fossil quadrupeds belongs to extinct species. I am aware that it may be objected, with some justice, to this nomenclature, that the term Post-pliocene ought in strictness to include all geological monuments posterior in date to the Pliocene; but when I have occasion to speak of these in the aggregate, I shall call them Post-tertiary, and reserve the term Post-pliocene exclusively for Lower Post-pliocene, the Upper Post-pliocene formations being called ‘Recent.’
Cases will occur where it may be scarcely possible to draw the line of demarcation between the Newer Pliocene and Post-pliocene, or between the latter and the recent deposits; and we must expect these difficulties to increase rather than diminish with every advance in our knowledge, and in proportion as gaps are filled up in the series of geological records.
In 1839 I proposed the term Pleistocene as an abbreviation for Newer Pliocene, and it soon became popular, because adopted by the late Edward Forbes in his admirable essay on ‘The Geological Relations of the existing Fauna and Flora of the British Isles;’* but he applied the term almost precisely in the sense in which I shall use Post-pliocene in this volume, and not as short for Newer Pliocene. In order to prevent confusion, I think it best entirely to abstain from the use of Pleistocene in future; I have found that the introduction of such a fourth name (unless restricted solely to the older Post-tertiary formations) must render the use of Pliocene, in its original extended sense, impossible, and it is often almost indispensable to have a single term to comprehend both divisions of the Pliocene period.
The annexed tabular view of the whole series of fossiliferous strata will enable the reader to see at a glance the chronological relation of the Recent and Post-pliocene to the antecedent periods.
ABRIDGED GENERAL TABLE OF FOSSILIFEROUS STRATA.
image
* Geological Relations of the existing Fauna and Flora of the British Isles. (Memoirs of Geological Survey of Great Britain, vol. i. p. 336. London, 1846.)
CHAPTER II.
RECENT PERIOD—DANISH PEAT AND SHELL MOUNDS—SWISS LAKE DWELLINGS.
WORKS OF ART IN DANISH PEAT-MOSSES—REMAINS OF THREE PERIODS OF VEGETATION IN THE PEAT—AGES OF STONE, BRONZE, AND IRON—SHELL-MOUNDS OR ANCIENT REFUSE-HEAPS OF THE DANISH ISLANDS—CHANGE IN GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION OF MARINE MOLLUSCA SINCE THEIR ORIGIN—EMBEDDED REMAINS OF MAMMALIA OF RECENT SPECIES—HUMAN SKULLS OF THE SAME PERIOD—SWISS LAKE-DWELLINGS BUILT ON PILES STONE AND BRONZE IMPLEMENTS FOUND IN THEM—FOSSIL CEREALS AND OTHER PLANTS—REMAINS OF MAMMALIA, WILD AND DOMESTICATED—NO EXTINCT SPECIES—CHRONOLOGICAL COMPUTATIONS OF THE DATE OF THE BRONZE AND STONE PERIODS IN SWITZERLAND—LAKE-DWELLINGS, OR ARTIFICIAL ISLANDS CALLED ‘CRANNOGES,’ IN IRELAND.
Works of Art in Danish Peat.
WHEN treating in the ‘Principles of Geology’ of the changes of the earth which have taken place in comparatively modern times, I have spoken (chap. xlv.) of the embedding of organic bodies and human remains in peat, and explained under what conditions the growth of that vegetable substance is going on in northern and humid climates. Of late years, since I first alluded to the subject, more extensive investigations have been made into the history of the Danish peat-mosses. Of the results of these enquiries I shall give a brief abstract in the present chapter, that we may afterwards compare them with deposits of older date, which throw light on the antiquity of the human race.
The deposits of peat in Denmark,* varying in depth from ten to thirty feet, have been formed in hollows or depressions in the northern drift or boulder formation hereafter to be described. The lowest stratum, two to three feet thick, consists of swamp-peat composed chiefly of moss or sphagnum, above which lies another growth of peat, not made up exclusively of aquatic or swamp plants. Around the borders of the bogs, and at various depths in them, lie trunks of trees, especially of the Scotch fir (Pinus sylvestris), often three feet in diameter, which must have grown on the margin of the peat-mosses, and have frequently fallen into them. This tree is not now, nor has ever been in historical times, a native of the Danish Islands, and when introduced there has not thriven; yet it was evidently indigenous in the human period, for Steenstrtip has taken out with his own hands a flint instrument from below a buried trunk of one of these pines. It appears clear that the same Scotch fir was after-war...

Table of contents

  1. Cover Page
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright Page
  4. About the Author
  5. Introduction To Volume Viii
  6. Contents
  7. Chapter I. Introduction.
  8. Chapter II. Recent Period—Danish Peat and Shell Mounds—Swiss Lake Dwellings.
  9. Chapter III. Fossil Human Remains and Works of Art of the Recent Period.
  10. Chapter IV. Post-Pliocene Period Bones of Man and Extinct Mammalia in Belgian Caverns.
  11. Chapter V. Post-Pliocene Period Fossil Human Skulls of 45 The Neanderthal and Engis Caves.
  12. Chapter VI. Post-Pliocene Alluvium and Cave Deposits With Flint Implements.
  13. Chapter VII. Peat and Post-Pliocene Alluvium of the Valley of the Somme.
  14. Chapter VIII. Post-Pliocene Alluvium With Flint Implements of the Valley of the Somme—
  15. Chapter IX. Works of Art in Post-Pliocene Alluvium of 100 France and England.
  16. Chapter X. Cavern Deposits, and Place of Sepulture of 113 the Post-Pliocene Period.
  17. Chapter XI. Age of Human Fossils of Le Put in Central France and of Natchez On the Mississippi, Discussed.
  18. Chapter XII. Antiquity of Man Relatively to the Glacial 137 Period and to the Existing Fauna and Flora.
  19. Chapter XIII. Chronological Relations of the Glacial Period and the Earliest Signs of Man’S Appearance in Europe.
  20. Chapter XIV. Chronological Relations of the Glacial Period and the Earliest Signs of Man’S Appearance in Europe—Continued.
  21. Chapter XV. Extinct Glaciers of the Alps and Their Chronological Relation to the Human Period.
  22. Chapter XVI. Human Remains in the Loess, and Their Probable Age.
  23. Chapter XVII. Post-Glacial Dislocations and Foldings of Cretaceous and Drift Strata in the Island of MÖEn, in Denmark.
  24. Chapter XVIII. the Glacial Period in North America.
  25. Chapter XIX. Recapitulation of Geological Proofs of Man’s Antiquity.
  26. Chapter XX. Theories of Progression and Transmutation.
  27. Chapter XXI. On the Origin of Species By Variation and Natural Selection.
  28. Chapter XXII. Objections to the Hypothesis of Transmutation Considered.
  29. Chapter XXIII. Origin and Development of Languages and Species Compared.
  30. Chapter XXIV. Bearing of the Doctrine of Transmutation On the Origin of Man, and His Place in the Creation.
  31. Index