登陆注册
19468400000025

第25章

Toutes ces montagnes sont formees de couches paralleles inclinees du centre de l'ile vers la mer." These statements have been disputed, though not in detail, by M.Quoy, in the voyage of Freycinet.As far as my limited means of observation went, I found them perfectly correct.(M.Lesson, in his account of this island, in the "Voyage of the 'Coquille'," seems to follow M.Bailly's views.) The mountains on the N.W.side of the island, which Iexamined, namely, La Pouce, Peter Botts, Corps de Garde, Les Mamelles, and apparently another farther southward, have precisely the external shape and stratification described by M.Bailly.They form about a quarter of his girdle of ramparts.Although these mountains now stand quite detached, being separated from each other by breaches, even several miles in width, through which deluges of lava have flowed from the interior of the island;nevertheless, seeing their close general similarity, one must feel convinced that they originally formed parts of one continuous mass.Judging from the beautiful map of the Mauritius, published by the Admiralty from a French MS., there is a range of mountains (M.Bamboo) on the opposite side of the island, which correspond in height, relative position, and external form, with those just described.Whether the girdle was ever complete may well be doubted; but from M.Bailly's statements, and my own observations, it may be safely concluded that mountains with precipitous inland flanks, and composed of strata dipping outwards, once extended round a considerable portion of the circumference of the island.The ring appears to have been oval and of vast size; its shorter axis, measured across from the inner sides of the mountains near Port Louis and those near Grand Port, being no less than thirteen geographical miles in length.M.Bailly boldly supposes that this enormous gulf, which has since been filled up to a great extent by streams of modern lava, was formed by the sinking in of the whole upper part of one great volcano.

It is singular in how many respects those portions of St.Jago and of Mauritius which I visited agree in their geological history.At both islands, mountains of similar external form, stratification, and (at least in their upper beds) composition, follow in a curved chain the coast-line.

These mountains in each case appear originally to have formed parts of one continuous mass.The basaltic strata of which they are composed, from their compact and crystalline structure, seem, when contrasted with the neighbouring basaltic streams of subaerial formation, to have flowed beneath the pressure of the sea, and to have been subsequently elevated.We may suppose that the wide breaches between the mountains were in both cases worn by the waves, during their gradual elevation--of which process, within recent times, there is abundant evidence on the coast-land of both islands.

At both, vast streams of more recent basaltic lavas have flowed from the interior of the island, round and between the ancient basaltic hills; at both, moreover, recent cones of eruption are scattered around the circumference of the island; but at neither have eruptions taken place within the period of history.As remarked in the last chapter, it is probable that these ancient basaltic mountains, which resemble (at least in many respects) the basal and disturbed remnants of two gigantic volcanoes, owe their present form, structure, and position, to the action of similar causes.

ST.PAUL'S ROCKS.

This small island is situated in the Atlantic Ocean, nearly one degree north of the equator, and 540 miles distant from South America, in 29degrees 15 minutes west longitude.Its highest point is scarcely fifty feet above the level of the sea; its outline is irregular, and its entire circumference barely three-quarters of a mile.This little point of rock rises abruptly out of the ocean; and, except on its western side, soundings were not obtained, even at the short distance of a quarter of a mile from its shore.It is not of volcanic origin; and this circumstance, which is the most remarkable point in its history (as will hereafter be referred to), properly ought to exclude it from the present volume.It is composed of rocks, unlike any which I have met with, and which I cannot characterise by any name, and must therefore describe.

The simplest, and one of the most abundant kinds, is a very compact, heavy, greenish-black rock, having an angular, irregular fracture, with some points just hard enough to scratch glass, and infusible.This variety passes into others of paler green tints, less hard, but with a more crystalline fracture, and translucent on their edges; and these are fusible into a green enamel.Several other varieties are chiefly characterised by containing innumerable threads of dark-green serpentine, and by having calcareous matter in their interstices.These rocks have an obscure, concretionary structure, and are full of variously coloured angular pseudo fragments.These angular pseudo fragments consist of the first-described dark green rock, of a brown softer kind, of serpentine, and of a yellowish harsh stone, which, perhaps, is related to serpentine rock.There are other vesicular, calcareo-ferruginous, soft stones.There is no distinct stratification, but parts are imperfectly laminated; and the whole abounds with innumerable veins, and vein-like masses, both small and large.Of these vein-like masses, some calcareous ones, which contain minute fragments of shells, are clearly of subsequent origin to the others.

A GLOSSY INCRUSTATION.

Extensive portions of these rocks are coated by a layer of a glossy polished substance, with a pearly lustre and of a greyish white colour; it follows all the inequalities of the surface, to which it is firmly attached.When examined with a lens, it is found to consist of numerous exceedingly thin layers, their aggregate thickness being about the tenth of an inch.It is considerably harder than calcareous spar, but can be scratched with a knife; under the blowpipe it scales off, decrepitates, slightly blackens, emits a fetid odour, and becomes strongly alkaline: it does not effervesce in acids.(In my "Journal" I have described this substance; I then believed that it was an impure phosphate of lime.) Ipresume this substance has been deposited by water draining from the birds'

dung, with which the rocks are covered.At Ascension, near a cavity in the rocks which was filled with a laminated mass of infiltrated birds' dung, Ifound some irregularly formed, stalactitical masses of apparently the same nature.These masses, when broken, had an earthy texture; but on their outsides, and especially at their extremities, they were formed of a pearly substance, generally in little globules, like the enamel of teeth, but more translucent, and so hard as just to scratch plate-glass.This substance slightly blackens under the blowpipe, emits a bad smell, then becomes quite white, swelling a little, and fuses into a dull white enamel; it does not become alkaline; nor does it effervesce in acids.The whole mass had a collapsed appearance, as if in the formation of the hard glossy crust the whole had shrunk much.At the Abrolhos Islands on the coast of Brazil, where also there is much birds' dung, I found a great quantity of a brown, arborescent substance adhering to some trap-rock.In its arborescent form, this substance singularly resembles some of the branched species of Nullipora.Under the blowpipe, it behaves like the specimens from Ascension; but it is less hard and glossy, and the surface has not the shrunk appearance.

同类推荐
  • 明伦汇编宫闱典乳保部

    明伦汇编宫闱典乳保部

    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。
  • 撫安東夷記

    撫安東夷記

    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。
  • 婆罗岸全传

    婆罗岸全传

    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。
  • 锦绣衣

    锦绣衣

    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。
  • 赤松山志

    赤松山志

    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。
热门推荐
  • 荒原小草

    荒原小草

    本小说描写了二十世纪九十年代至二十一世纪初乡村基础教育发展的艰难历程,诉说了当时教育发展的现状,尽管素质教育到目前还是教育发展亟待发展的需要,但目前的教育体制依然困难重重,要实现真正意义上的素质教育,必须改革目前的教育体制。小说同时描写了女主人翁因父母离异而导致她的一生婚姻、爱情的悲惨遭遇,从而呼吁年轻夫妇不能轻率的对自己的婚姻因一时冲动而分开,如此一来,真正的受害者是孩子。孩子在单亲家庭中,既不利于性格的形成,也不利于将来的发展。号召广大夫妇要建立和谐家庭,给孩子一个完美成长的空间。
  • 姻缘簿——钗头凤

    姻缘簿——钗头凤

    红酥手,黄縢酒,满城春色宫墙柳。东风恶,欢情薄。一怀愁绪,几年离索。错、错、错。春如旧,人空瘦,泪痕红浥鲛绡透。桃花落,闲池阁。山盟虽在,锦书难托。莫、莫、莫!
  • 新的征程

    新的征程

    漫漫历史中,掩盖了许多过去不曾被发现的历史,但是在岁月的时光中,一点一滴,慢慢的将它们挖掘,这就是新的征程,随我一起走进那片新的战场吧。
  • 极品保镖在身边

    极品保镖在身边

    杀手准则的第一条,自信,狂妄,吾天唯我!我想杀的人,我就杀死他,而我想保护的人,谁也别想伤害到。
  • 神级幻术师

    神级幻术师

    千羽本只想进游戏单纯地“打工”,渐渐地结交了越来越多的队友后,大大小小的麻烦也随之而来……说好的不牵扯公会,却因为“复仇”之路而渐行渐远,大神们只有一个要求,打不过的话能不能让她下次再来打?
  • 大明涅槃

    大明涅槃

    少年箭术天才来到明末乱世,注定会掀起一场滔天大浪。这是一个风云际会的旧时代,也是一个改天换地的新时代。崇祯曰:“席铭乃是朕之擎天栋梁也。”多尔衮曰:“李自成者,草寇也。余所虑者,唯席铭与吴三桂也,此二子并世之枭雄。”吴三桂曰:“吾愿与席铭为永远之兄弟,但愿此生不为仇敌。”张献忠曰:“席铭将军何故赶之急也,吾愿裂一半之疆土相酬。”而席铭却道:“只要吾华夏古国在现代文明启蒙的十七世纪,能够屹立潮头,不落后于世界。则吾国当为五百年之世界霸主。”本书已签约,请书友放心收藏。
  • 星际之萌娘医娇

    星际之萌娘医娇

    突然穿越了,你要怎么办?如果那个世界是几千年或几万年后的未来世界,可以开始一个全新的生活,你准备怎么做?
  • 校园尸魂记

    校园尸魂记

    一个游手好闲的少年-吴天亦,在诡异的城市里过着非人类的生活,丧尸追杀,逃跑。一次意外,彻底改变了他的宿命。灰瞳,战斗,感情。绝望的城市里,生活着一群可以称之为“王”的人们
  • 药囚

    药囚

    她身穿绛红大衣,亭亭玉立,男子身穿青绿长衣,缓缓走来“不知不觉间,我们栩栩也长这么大了。”眸里满是笑意。“晟译,我有多久没见你了?”许栩五官不再稚嫩,眉眼长开,一双凤眼看起来十分撩人,高挺的鼻梁,朱唇点点。“唔……这我可没计算过。只是,栩栩,你与之前差别最大的,便是把发全绾了上去。”温温的笑意让对面的许栩感到短暂的窒息。晟译,我们还是错过了,许栩看着眼前的男子,目含悲哀,眼泪尽自己滚了出来。
  • 人海潮

    人海潮

    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。