登陆注册
37798800000051

第51章 CHAPTER IX--THE CORAL-REEF(5)

You have often heard those islands in Kenmare Bay talked of, and how some whom you know go to fish round them by night for turbot and conger; and when you hear them spoken of again, you must recollect that they are the last fragments of a great fringing coral-reef, which will in a few thousand years follow the fate of the rest, and be eaten up by the waves, while the mountains of hard rock stand round them still unchanged.

Now look at England, and there you will see patches at least of a great coral-reef which was forming at the same time as that Irish one, and on which perhaps some of your schoolfellows have often stood. You have heard of St. Vincent's Rocks at Bristol, and the marble cliffs, 250 feet in height, covered in part with rich wood and rare flowers, and the Avon running through the narrow gorge, and the stately ships sailing far below your feet from Bristol to the Severn sea. And you may see, for here they are, corals from St. Vincent's Rocks, cut and polished, showing too that they also, like the Dudley limestone, are made up of corals and of coral-mud.

Now, whenever you see St. Vincent's Rocks, as I suspect you very soon will, recollect where you are, and use your fancy, to paint for yourself a picture as strange as it is true. Fancy that those rocks are what they once were, a coral-reef close to the surface of a shallow sea. Fancy that there is no gorge of the Avon, no wide Severn sea--for those were eaten out by water ages and ages afterwards. But picture to yourself the coral sea reaching away to the north, to the foot of the Welsh mountains; and then fancy yourself, if you will, in a canoe, paddling up through the coral- reefs, north and still north, up the valley down which the Severn now flows, up through what is now Worcestershire, then up through Staffordshire, then through Derbyshire, into Yorkshire, and so on through Durham and Northumberland, till your find yourself stopped by the Ettrick hills in Scotland; while all to the westward of you, where is now the greater part of England, was open sea. You may say, if you know anything of the geography of England, "Impossible! That would be to paddle over the tops of high mountains; over the top of the Peak in Derbyshire, over the top of High Craven and Whernside and Pen-y-gent and Cross Fell, and to paddle too over the Cheviot Hills, which part England and Scotland." I know it, my child, I know it. But so it was once on a time. The high limestone mountains which part Lancashire and Yorkshire--the very chine and backbone of England--were once coral-reefs at the bottom of the sea. They are all made up of the carboniferous limestone, so called, as your little knowledge of Latin ought to tell you, because it carries the coal; because the coalfields usually lie upon it. It may be impossible in your eyes: but remember always that nothing is impossible with God.

But you said that the coal was made from plants and trees, and did plants and trees grow on this coral-reef?

That I cannot say. Trees may have grown on the dry parts of the reef, as cocoa-nuts grow now in the Pacific. But the coal was not laid down upon it till long afterwards, when it had gone through many and strange changes. For all through the chine of England, and in a part of Ireland too, there lies upon the top of the limestone a hard gritty rock, in some places three thousand feet thick, which is commonly called "the mill-stone grit." And above that again the coal begins. Now to make that 3000 feet of hard rock, what must have happened? The sea-bottom must have sunk, slowly no doubt, carrying the coral-reefs down with it, 3000 feet at least. And meanwhile sand and mud, made from the wearing away of the old lands in the North must have settled down upon it. I say from the North--for there are no fossils, as far as I know, or sign of life, in these rocks of mill-stone grit; and therefore it is reasonable to suppose that they were brought from a cold current at the Pole, too cold to allow sea-beasts to live,--quite cold enough, certainly, to kill coral insects, who could only thrive in warm water coming from the South.

Then, to go on with my story, upon the top of these mill-stone grits came sand and mud, and peat, and trees, and plants, washed out to sea, as far as we can guess, from the mouths of vast rivers flowing from the West, rivers as vast as the Amazon, the Mississippi, or the Orinoco are now; and so in long ages, upon the top of the limestone and upon the top of the mill-stone grit, were laid down those beds of coal which you see burnt now in every fire.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 南有相思木

    南有相思木

    南有相思木,合影复同心――这是南孟分开时对相思说的。在相思对南孟的喜欢难以自抑时,南孟却说不喜欢了。没有太多的言语,他们就分开了。再相逢时,相思想可能是为了更好的告别,但南孟却念念都是相思……
  • 万道归臻

    万道归臻

    世间种种,来日方长。过往一切,皆为虚妄。人生如梦,韶华白首,不过转瞬。唯有天道恒在,往复循环,不曾更改?
  • 辨惑编

    辨惑编

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 术炼之王

    术炼之王

    他曾是拥有天骄之称的绝世天才,然而,因为一部神秘的功法,他的师兄残忍无情弑师,并将一切都嫁祸给他。为了躲避师兄的追杀和帝国的追捕,亡命天涯的他来到了帝国边境。而在这里,他遇到了差点被人玷污的她……
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 漫威之联盟狂啸

    漫威之联盟狂啸

    (作品相关有解释章节,觉得毒的必看!!!) 林原穿越漫威世界,获得英雄联盟系统,慢慢走上了超级英雄之路。他的目标,让那只紫薯精的响指打不出!最后:浩克!蒙多觉得你是个大娘们!扣扣群:823880993
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 大地密藏

    大地密藏

    散落在世界各地的32个乘佛法黄金秘器,神秘古印度的哈拉怕文化,亡灵死海挣扎的僧伽罗人,潜藏在各地的璀璨珍宝,穿梭于森林、沙漠、百慕大三角星辰雾海,遭遇无数因此而来的亡命之徒,以及未知神秘的光怪离陆。我、叶有为和莫高山真实的寻宝探秘的故事。写小说是生活中不可或缺的兴趣,已经成为每天都要做的事情,各位读友大可不必担心小说的烂尾抑或莫名的断更,希望有更多的朋友支持老猫的作品,我们在路上奔跑,我们在字里行间享受,我们在为故事的桥段喝彩并参与其中,乐在其中。明天的故事更加精彩,如果可以,我希望把三个奇人的探险故事写到天荒地老,直到我老眼昏花,写尽所有奇妙的故事。非常感谢任参叔在弥留之际留给我最美好的故事
  • 洛克威尔

    洛克威尔

    被恶神选中的洛克威尔为了令自己的妹妹复活而答应参加由三柱神举行的一场游戏
  • 这剧本有点儿雷啊

    这剧本有点儿雷啊

    “我去!穿越了!这就是零俞城城主之子零尚的朝室吗?这也太、太丑了!我记得在我的剧本里,我给零尚安排的是及其豪华的零霄府啊?怎么我穿越过来就变成了狭小无比的茅草屋了!!!等等,这儿特玛竟然是牢房!!!”