The Origin of Species
by Charles Darwin
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Chapter 9 - On the Imperfection of the Geological Record
IN the sixth chapter I enumerated the chief objections which might
be justly urged against the views maintained in this volume. Most
of them have now been discussed. One, namely the distinctness of specific
forms, and their not being blended together by innumerable transitional
links, is a very obvious difficulty. I assigned reasons why such links
do not commonly occur at the present day, under the circumstances
apparently most favourable for their presence, namely on an extensive
and continuous area with graduated physical conditions. I endeavoured
to show, that the life of each species depends in a more important
manner on the presence of other already defined organic forms, than
on climate; and, therefore, that the really governing conditions of
life do not graduate away quite insensibly like heat or moisture.
I endeavoured, also, to show that intermediate varieties, from existing
in lesser numbers than the forms which they connect, will generally
be beaten out and exterminated during the course of further modification
and improvement. The main cause, however, of innumerable intermediate
links not now occurring everywhere throughout nature depends on the
very process of natural selection, through which new varieties continually
take the places of and exterminate their parent-forms. But just in
proportion as this process of extermination has acted on an enormous
scale, so must the number of intermediate varieties, which have formerly
existed on the earth, be truly enormous. Why then is not every geological
formation and every stratum full of such intermediate links? Geology
assuredly does not reveal any such finely graduated organic chain;
and this, perhaps, is the most obvious and gravest objection which
can be urged against my theory. The explanation lies, as I believe,
in the extreme imperfection of the geological record.
In the first place it should always be borne in mind what sort
of intermediate forms must, on my theory, have formerly existed.
I have found it difficult, when looking at any two species, to avoid
picturing to myself, forms directly intermediate between
them. But this is a wholly false view; we should always look for
forms intermediate between each species and a common but unknown
progenitor; and the progenitor will generally have differed in some
respects from all its modified descendants. To give a simple illustration:
the fantail and pouter pigeons have both descended from the rock-pigeon;
if we possessed all the intermediate varieties which have ever existed,
we should have an extremely close series between both and the rock-pigeon;
but we should have no varieties directly intermediate between the
fantail and pouter; none, for instance, combining a tail somewhat
expanded with a crop somewhat enlarged, the characteristic features
of these two breeds. These two breeds, moreover, have become so
much modified, that if we had no historical or indirect evidence
regarding their origin, it would not have been possible to have
determined from a mere comparison of their structure with that of
the rock-pigeon, whether they had descended from this species or
from some other allied species, such as C. oenas.
So with natural species, if we look to forms very distinct, for
instance to the horse and tapir, we have no reason to suppose that
links ever existed directly intermediate between them, but between
each and an unknown common parent. The common parent will have had
in its whole organisation much general resemblance to the tapir
and to the horse; but in some points of structure may have differed
considerably from both, even perhaps more than they differ from
each other. Hence in all such cases, we should be unable to recognise
the parent-form of any two or more species, even if we closely compared
the structure of the parent with that of its modified descendants,
unless at the same time we had a nearly perfect chain of the intermediate
links.
It is just possible by my theory, that one of two living forms
might have descended from the other; for instance, a horse from
a tapir; and in this case direct intermediate links will
have existed between them. But such a case would imply that one
form had remained for a very long period unaltered, whilst its descendants
had undergone a vast amount of change; and the principle of competition
between organism and organism, between child and parent, will render
this a very rare event; for in all cases the new and improved forms
of life will tend to supplant the old and unimproved.
By the theory of natural selection all living species have been
connected with the parent-species of each genus, by differences
not greater than we see between the varieties of the same species
at the present day; and these parent-species, now generally extinct,
have in their turn been similarly connected with more ancient species;
and so on backwards, always converging to the common ancestor of
each great class. So that the number of intermediate and transitional
links, between all living and extinct species, must have been inconceivably
great. But assuredly, if this theory be true, such have lived upon
this earth.
On the lapse of Time. Independently of our not finding fossil
remains of such infinitely numerous connecting links, it may be
objected, that time will not have sufficed for so great an amount
of organic change, all changes having been effected very slowly
through natural selection. It is hardly possible for me even to
recall to the reader, who may not be a practical geologist, the
facts leading the mind feebly to comprehend the lapse of time. He
who can read Sir Charles Lyell's grand work on the Principles of
Geology, which the future historian will recognise as having produced
a revolution in natural science, yet does not admit how incomprehensibly
vast have been the past periods of time, may at once close this
volume. Not that it suffices to study the Principles of Geology,
or to read special treatises by different observers on separate
formations, and to mark how each author attempts to give an inadequate
idea of the duration of each formation or even each stratum. A man
must for years examine for himself great piles of superimposed strata,
and watch the sea at work grinding down old rocks and making fresh
sediment, before he can hope to comprehend anything of the lapse
of time, the monuments of which we see around us.
It is good to wander along lines of sea-coast, when formed of moderately
hard rocks, and mark the process of degradation. The tides in most
cases reach the cliffs only for a short time twice a day, and the
waves eat into them only when they are charged with sand or pebbles;
for there is reason to believe that pure water can effect little
or nothing in wearing away rock. At last the base of the cliff is
undermined, huge fragments fall down, and these remaining fixed,
have to be worn away, atom by atom, until reduced in size they can
be rolled about by the waves, and then are more quickly ground into
pebbles, sand, or mud. But how often do we see along the bases of
retreating cliffs rounded boulders, all thickly clothed by marine
productions, showing how little they are abraded and how seldom
they are rolled about! Moreover, if we follow for a few miles any
line of rocky cliff, which is undergoing degradation, we find that
it is only here and there, along a short length or round a promontory,
that the cliffs are at the present time suffering. The appearance
of the surface and the vegetation show that elsewhere years have
elapsed since the waters washed their base.
He who most closely studies the action of the sea on our shores,
will, I believe, be most deeply impressed with the slowness with
which rocky coasts are worn away. The observations on this head
by Hugh Miller, and by that excellent observer Mr. Smith of Jordan
Hill, are most impressive. With the mind thus impressed, let any
one examine beds of conglomerate many thousand feet in thickness,
which, though probably formed at a quicker rate than many other
deposits, yet, from being formed of worn and rounded pebbles, each
of which bears the stamp of time, are good to show how slowly the
mass has been accumulated. Let him remember Lyell's profound remark,
that the thickness and extent of sedimentary formations are the
result and measure of the degradation which the earth's crust has
elsewhere suffered. And what an amount of degradation is implied
by the sedimentary deposits of many countries! Professor Ramsay
has given me the maximum thickness, in most cases from actual measurement,
in a few cases from estimate, of each formation in different parts
of Great Britain; and this is the result:-
Feet
Palaeozoic strata (not including igneous beds) 57,154
Secondary strata 13,190
Tertiary strata 2,240
making altogether 72,584 feet; that is, very nearly thirteen and
three-quarters British miles. Some of these formations, which are
represented in England by thin beds, are thousands of feet in thickness
on the Continent. Moreover, between each successive formation, we
have, in the opinion of most geologists, enormously long blank periods.
So that the lofty pile of sedimentary rocks in Britain, gives but
an inadequate idea of the time which has elapsed during their accumulation;
yet what time this must have consumed! Good observers have estimated
that sediment is deposited by the great Mississippi river at the
rate of only 600 feet in a hundred thousand years. This estimate
may be quite erroneous; yet, considering over what wide spaces very
fine sediment is transported by the currents of the sea, the process
of accumulation in any one area must be extremely slow.
But the amount of denudation which the strata have in many places
suffered, independently of the rate of accumulation of the degraded
matter, probably offers the best evidence of the lapse of time.
I remember having been much struck with the evidence of denudation,
when viewing volcanic islands, which have been worn by the waves
and pared all round into perpendicular cliffs of one or two thousand
feet in height; for the gentle slope of the lava-streams, due to
their formerly liquid state, showed at a glance how far the hard,
rocky beds had once extended into the open ocean. The same story
is still more plainly told by faults, those great cracks along which
the strata have been upheaved on one side, or thrown down on the
other, to the height or depth of thousands of feet; for since the
crust cracked, the surface of the land has been so completely planed
down by the action of the sea, that no trace of these vast dislocations
is externally visible.
The Craven fault, for instance, extends for upwards of 30 miles,
and along this line the vertical displacement of the strata has
varied from 600 to 3000 feet. Prof. Ramsay has published an account
of a downthrow in Anglesea of 2300 feet; and he informs me that
he fully believes there is one in Merionethshire of 12,000 feet;
yet in these cases there is nothing on the surface to show such
prodigious movements; the pile of rocks on the one or other side
having been smoothly swept away. The consideration of these facts
impresses my mind almost in the same manner as does the vain endeavour
to grapple with the idea of eternity.
I am tempted to give one other case, the well-known one of the
denudation of the Weald. Though it must be admitted that the denudation
of the Weald has been a mere trifle, in comparison with that which
has removed masses of our Palaeozoic strata, in parts ten thousand
feet in thickness, as shown in Prof. Ramsay's masterly memoir on
this subject. Yet it is an admirable lesson to stand on the North
Downs and to look at the distant South Downs; for, remembering that
at no great distance to the west the northern and southern escarpments
meet and close, one can safely picture to oneself the great dome
of rocks which must have covered up the Weald within so limited
a period as since the latter part of the Chalk formation. The distance
from the northern to the southern Downs is about 22 miles, and the
thickness of the several formations is on an average about 1100
feet, as I am informed by Prof. Ramsay. But if, as some geologists
suppose, a range of older rocks underlies the Weald, on the flanks
of which the overlying sedimentary deposits might have accumulated
in thinner masses than elsewhere, the above estimate would be erroneous;
but this source of doubt probably would not greatly affect the estimate
as applied to the western extremity of the district. If, then, we
knew the rate at which the sea commonly wears away a line of cliff
of any given height, we could measure the time requisite to have
denuded the Weald. This, of course, cannot be done; but we may,
in order to form some crude notion on the subject, assume that the
sea would eat into cliffs 500 feet in height at the rate of one
inch in a century. This will at first appear much too small an allowance;
but it is the same as if we were to assume a cliff one yard in height
to be eaten back along a whole line of coast at the rate of one
yard in nearly every twenty-two years. I doubt whether any rock,
even as soft as chalk, would yield at this rate excepting on the
most exposed coasts; though no doubt the degradation of a lofty
cliff would be more rapid from the breakage of the fallen fragments.
On the other hand, I do not believe that any line of coast, ten
or twenty miles in length, ever suffers degradation at the same
time along its whole indented length; and we must remember that
almost all strata contain harder layers or nodules, which from long
resisting attrition form a breakwater at the base. Hence, under
ordinary circumstances, I conclude that for a cliff 500 feet in
height, a denudation of one inch per century for the whole length
would be an ample allowance. At this rate, on the above data, the
denudation of the Weald must have required 306,662,400 years; or
say three hundred million years.
The action of fresh water on the gently inclined Wealden district,
when upraised, could hardly have been great, but it would somewhat
reduce the above estimate. On the other hand, during oscillations
of level, which we know this area has undergone, the surface may
have existed for millions of years as land, and thus have escaped
the action of the sea: when deeply submerged for perhaps equally
long periods, it would, likewise, have escaped the action of the
coast-waves. So that in all probability a far longer period than
300 million years has elapsed since the latter part of the Secondary
period.
I have made these few remarks because it is highly important for
us to gain some notion, however imperfect, of the lapse of years.
During each of these years, over the whole world, the land and the
water has been peopled by hosts of living forms. What an infinite
number of generations, which the mind cannot grasp, must have succeeded
each other in the long roll of years! Now turn to our richest geological
museums, and what a paltry display we behold!
On the poorness of our Palaeontological collections. That
our Palaeontological collections are very imperfect, is admitted
by every one. The remark of that admirable Palaeontologist, the
late Edward Forbes, should not be forgotten, namely, that numbers
of our fossil species are known and named from single and often
broken specimens, or from a few specimens collected on some one
spot. Only a small portion of the surface of the earth has been
geologically explored, and no part with sufficient care, as the
important discoveries made every year in Europe prove. No organism
wholly soft can be preserved. Shells and bones will decay and disappear
when left on the bottom of the sea, where sediment is not accumulating.
I believe we are continually taking a most erroneous view, when
we tacitly admit to ourselves that sediment is being deposited over
nearly the whole bed of the sea, at a rate sufficiently quick to
embed and preserve fossil remains. Throughout an enormously large
proportion of the ocean, the bright blue tint of the water bespeaks
its purity. The many cases on record of a formation conformably
covered, after an enormous interval of time, by another and later
formation, without the underlying bed having suffered in the interval
any wear and tear, seem explicable only on the view of the bottom
of the sea not rarely lying for ages in an unaltered condition.
The remains which do become embedded, if in sand or gravel, will
when the beds are upraised generally be dissolved by the percolation
of rain-water. I suspect that but few of the very many animals which
live on the beach between high and low watermark are preserved.
For instance, the several species of the Chthamalinae (a sub-family
of sessile cirripedes) coat the rocks all over the world in infinite
numbers: they are all strictly littoral, with the exception of a
single Mediterranean species, which inhabits deep water and has
been found fossil in Sicily, whereas not one other species has hitherto
been found in any tertiary formation: yet it is now known that the
genus Chthamalus existed during the chalk period. The molluscan
genus Chiton offers a partially analogous case.
With respect to the terrestrial productions which lived during
the Secondary and Palaeozoic periods, it is superfluous to state
that our evidence from fossil remains is fragmentary in an extreme
degree. For instance, not a land shell is known belonging to either
of these vast periods, with one exception discovered by Sir C. Lyell
in the carboniferous strata of North America. I n regard to mammiferous
remains, a single glance at the historical table published in the
Supplement to Lyell's Manual, will bring home the truth, how accidental
and rare is their preservation, far better than pages of detail.
Nor is their rarity surprising, when we remember how large a proportion
of the bones of tertiary mammals have been discovered either in
caves or in lacustrine deposits; and that not a cave or true lacustrine
bed is known belonging to the age of our secondary or palaeozoic
formations.
But the imperfection in the geological record mainly results from
another and more important cause than any of the foregoing; namely,
from the several formations being separated from each other by wide
intervals of time. When we see the formations tabulated in written
works, or when we follow them in nature, it is difficult to avoid
believing that they are closely consecutive. But we know, for instance,
from Sir R. Murchison's great work on Russia, what wide gaps there
are in that country between the superimposed formations; so it is
in North America, and in many other parts of the world. The most
skilful geologist, if his attention had been exclusively confined
to these large territories, would never have suspected that during
the periods which were blank and barren in his own country, great
piles of sediment, charged with new and peculiar forms of life,
had elsewhere been accumulated. And if in each separate territory,
hardly any idea can be formed of the length of time which has elapsed
between the consecutive formations, we may infer that this could
nowhere be ascertained. The frequent and great changes in the mineralogical
composition of consecutive formations, generally implying great
changes in the geography of the surrounding lands, whence the sediment
has been derived, accords with the belief of vast intervals of time
having elapsed between each formation.
But we can, I think, see why the geological formations of each
region are almost invariably intermittent; that is, have not followed
each other in close sequence. Scarcely any fact struck me more when
examining many hundred miles of the South American coasts, which
have been upraised several hundred feet within the recent period,
than the absence of any recent deposits sufficiently extensive to
last for even a short geological period. Along the whole west coast,
which is inhabited by a peculiar marine fauna, tertiary beds are
so scantily developed, that no record of several successive and
peculiar marine faunas will probably be preserved to a distant age.
A little reflection will explain why along the rising coast of the
western side of South America, no extensive formations with recent
or tertiary remains can anywhere be found, though the supply of
sediment must for ages have been great, from the enormous degradation
of the coast-rocks and from muddy streams entering the sea. The
explanation, no doubt, is, that the littoral and sub-littoral deposits
are continually worn away, as soon as they are brought up by the
slow and gradual rising of the land within the grinding action of
the coast-waves.
We may, I think, safely conclude that sediment must be accumulated
in extremely thick, solid, or extensive masses, in order to withstand
the incessant action of the waves, when first upraised and during
subsequent oscillations of level. Such thick and extensive accumulations
of sediment may be formed in two ways; either, in profound depths
of the sea, in which case, judging from the researches of E. Forbes,
we may conclude that the bottom will be inhabited by extremely few
animals, and the mass when upraised will give a most imperfect record
of the forms of life which then existed; or, sediment may be accumulated
to any thickness and extent over a shallow bottom, if it continue
slowly to subside. In this latter case, as long as the rate of subsidence
and supply of sediment nearly balance each other, the sea will remain
shallow and favourable for life, and thus a fossiliferous formation
thick enough, when upraised, to resist any amount of degradation,
may be formed.
I am convinced that all our ancient formations, which are rich
in fossils, have thus been formed during subsidence. Since publishing
my views on this subject in 1845, I have watched the progress of
Geology, and have been surprised to note how author after author,
in treating of this or that great formation, has come to the conclusion
that it was accumulated during subsidence. I may add, that the only
ancient tertiary formation on the west coast of South America, which
has been bulky enough to resist such degradation as it has as yet
suffered, but which will hardly last to a distant geological age,
was certainly deposited during a downward oscillation of level,
and thus gained considerable thickness.
All geological facts tell us plainly that each area has undergone
numerous slow oscillations of level, and apparently these oscillations
have affected wide spaces. Consequently formations rich in fossils
and sufficiently thick and extensive to resist subsequent degradation,
may have been formed over wide spaces during periods of subsidence,
but only where the supply of sediment was sufficient to keep the
sea shallow and to embed and preserve the remains before they had
time to decay. On the other hand, as long as the bed of the sea
remained stationary, thick deposits could not have been accumulated
in the shallow parts, which are the most favourable to life. Still
less could this have happened during the alternate periods of elevation;
or, to speak more accurately, the beds which were then accumulated
will have been destroyed by being upraised and brought within the
limits of the coast-action.
Thus the geological record will almost necessarily be rendered
intermittent. I feel much confidence in the truth of these views,
for they are in strict accordance with the general principles inculcated
by Sir C. Lyell; and E. Forbes independently arrived at a similar
conclusion.
One remark is here worth a passing notice. During periods of elevation
the area of the land and of the adjoining shoal parts of the sea
will be increased, and new stations will often be formed; all circumstances
most favourable, as previously explained, for the formation of new
varieties and species; but during such periods there will generally
be a blank in the geological record. On the other hand, during subsidence,
the inhabited area and number of inhabitants will decrease (excepting
the productions on the shores of a continent when first broken up
into an archipelago), and consequently during subsidence, though
there will be much extinction, fewer new varieties or species will
be formed; and it is during these very periods of subsidence, that
our great deposits rich in fossils have been accumulated. Nature
may almost be said to have guarded against the frequent discovery
of her transitional or linking forms.
From the foregoing considerations it cannot be doubted that the
geological record, viewed as a whole, is extremely imperfect; but
if we confine our attention to any one formation, it becomes more
difficult to understand, why we do not therein find closely graduated
varieties between the allied species which lived at its commencement
and at its close. Some cases are on record of the same species presenting
distinct varieties in the upper and lower parts of the same formation,
but, as they are rare, they may be here passed over. Although each
formation has indisputably required a vast number of years for its
deposition, I can see several reasons why each should not include
a graduated series of links between the species which then lived;
but I can by no means pretend to assign due proportional weight
to the following considerations.
Although each formation may mark a very long lapse of years, each
perhaps is short compared with the period requisite to change one
species into another. I am aware that two palaeontologists, whose
opinions are worthy of much deference, namely Bronn and Woodward,
have concluded that the average duration of each formation is twice
or thrice as long as the average duration of specific forms. But
insuperable difficulties, as it seems to me, prevent us coming to
any just conclusion on this head. When we see a species first appearing
in the middle of any formation, it would be rash in the extreme
to infer that it had not elsewhere previously existed. So again
when we find a species disappearing before the uppermost layers
have been deposited, it would be equally rash to suppose that it
then became wholly extinct. We forget how small the area of Europe
is compared with the rest of the world; nor have the several stages
of the same formation throughout Europe been correlated with perfect
accuracy.
With marine animals of all kinds, we may safely infer a large amount
of migration during climatal and other changes; and when we see
a species first appearing in any formation, the probability is that
it only then first immigrated into that area. It is well known,
for instance, that several species appeared somewhat earlier in
the palaeozoic beds of North America than in those of Europe; time
having apparently been required for their migration from the American
to the European seas. In examining the latest deposits of various
quarters of the world, it has everywhere been noted, that some few
still existing species are common in the deposit, but have become
extinct in the immediately surrounding sea; or, conversely, that
some are now abundant in the neighbouring sea, but are rare or absent
in this particular deposit. It is an excellent lesson to reflect
on the ascertained amount of migration of the inhabitants of Europe
during the Glacial period, which forms only a part of one whole
geological period; and likewise to reflect on the great changes
of level, on the inordinately great change of climate, on the prodigious
lapse of time, all included within this same glacial period. Yet
it may be doubted whether in any quarter of the world, sedimentary
deposits, including fossil remains, have gone on accumulating within
the same area during the whole of this period. It is not, for instance,
probable that sediment was deposited during the whole of the glacial
period near the mouth of the Mississippi, within that limit of depth
at which marine animals can flourish; for we know what vast geographical
changes occurred in other parts of America during this space of
time. When such beds as were deposited in shallow water near the
mouth of the Mississippi during some part of the glacial period
shall have been upraised, organic remains will probably first appear
and disappear at different levels, owing to the migration of species
and to geographical changes. And in the distant future, a geologist
examining these beds, might be tempted to conclude that the average
duration of life of the embedded fossils had been less than that
of the glacial period, instead of having been really far greater,
that is extending from before the glacial epoch to the present day.
In order to get a perfect gradation between two forms in the upper
and lower parts of the same formation, the deposit must have gone
on accumulating for a very long period, in order to have given sufficient
time for the slow process of variation; hence the deposit will generally
have to be a very thick one; and the species undergoing modification
will have had to live on the same area throughout this whole time.
But we have seen that a thick fossiliferous formation can only be
accumulated during a period of subsidence; and to keep the depth
approximately the same, which is necessary in order to enable the
same species to live on the same space, the supply of sediment must
nearly have counterbalanced the amount of subsidence. But this same
movement of subsidence will often tend to sink the area whence the
sediment is derived, and thus diminish the supply whilst the downward
movement continues. In fact, this nearly exact balancing between
the supply of sediment and the amount of subsidence is probably
a rare contingency; for it has been observed by more than one palaeontologist,
that very thick deposits are usually barren of organic remains,
except near their upper or lower limits.
It would seem that each separate formation, like the whole pile
of formations in any country, has generally been intermittent in
its accumulation. When we see, as is so often the case, a formation
composed of beds of different mineralogical composition, we may
reasonably suspect that the process of deposition has been much
interrupted, as a change in the currents of the sea and a supply
of sediment of a different nature will generally have been due to
geographical changes requiring much time. Nor will the closest inspection
of a formation give any idea of the time which its deposition has
consumed. Many instances could be given of beds only a few feet
in thickness, representing formations, elsewhere thousands of feet
in thickness, and which must have required an enormous period for
their accumulation; yet no one ignorant of this fact would have
suspected the vast lapse of time represented by the thinner formation.
Many cases could be given of the lower beds of a formation having
been upraised, denuded, submerged, and then re-covered by the upper
beds of the same formation, facts, showing what wide, yet easily
overlooked, intervals have occurred in its accumulation. In other
cases we have the plainest evidence in great fossilised trees, still
standing upright as they grew, of many long intervals of time and
changes of level during the process of deposition, which would never
even have been suspected, had not the trees chanced to have been
preserved: thus, Messrs Lyell and Dawson found carboniferous beds
1400 feet thick in Nova Scotia, with ancient root-bearing strata,
one above the other, at no less than sixty-eight different levels.
Hence, when the same species occur at the bottom, middle, and top
of a formation, the probability is that they have not lived on the
same spot during the whole period of deposition, but have disappeared
and reappeared, perhaps many times, during the same geological period.
So that if such species were to undergo a considerable amount of
modification during any one geological period, a section would not
probably include all the fine intermediate gradations which must
on my theory have existed between them, but abrupt, though perhaps
very slight, changes of form.
It is all-important to remember that naturalists have no golden
rule by which to distinguish species and varieties; they grant some
little variability to each species, but when they meet with a somewhat
greater amount of difference between any two forms, they rank both
as species, unless they are enabled to connect them together by
close intermediate gradations. And this from the reasons just assigned
we can seldom hope to effect in any one geological section. Supposing
B and C to be two species, and a third, A, to be found in an underlying
bed; even if A were strictly intermediate between B and C, it would
simply be ranked as a third and distinct species, unless at the
same time it could be most closely connected with either one or
both forms by intermediate varieties. Nor should it be forgotten,
as before explained, that A might be the actual progenitor of B
and C, and yet might not at all necessarily be strictly intermediate
between them in all points of structure. So that we might obtain
the parent-species and its several modified descendants from the
lower and upper beds of a formation, and unless we obtained numerous
transitional gradations, we should not recognise their relationship,
and should consequently be compelled to rank them all as distinct
species.
It is notorious on what excessively slight differences many palaeontologists
have founded their species; and they do this the more readily if
the specimens come from different sub-stages of the same formation.
Some experienced conchologists are now sinking many of the very
fine species of D'Orbigny and others into the rank of varieties;
and on this view we do find the kind of evidence of change which
on my theory we ought to find. Moreover, if we look to rather wider
intervals, namely, to distinct but consecutive stages of the same
great formation, we find that the embedded fossils, though almost
universally ranked as specifically different, yet are far more closely
allied to each other than are the species found in more widely separated
formations; but to this subject I shall have to return in the following
chapter.
One other consideration is worth notice: with animals and plants
that can propagate rapidly and are not highly locomotive, there
is reason to suspect, as we have formerly seen, that their varieties
are generally at first local; and that such local varieties do not
spread widely and supplant their parent-forms until they have been
modified and perfected in some considerable degree. According to
this view, the chance of discovering in a formation in any one country
all the early stages of transition between any two forms, is small,
for the successive changes are supposed to have been local or confined
to some one spot. Most marine animals have a wide range; and we
have seen that with plants it is those which have the widest range,
that oftenest present varieties; so that with shells and other marine
animals, it is probably those which have had the widest range, far
exceeding the limits of the known geological formations of Europe,
which have oftenest given rise, first to local varieties and ultimately
to new species; and this again would greatly lessen the chance of
our being able to trace the stages of transition in any one geological
formation.
It should not be forgotten, that at the present day, with perfect
specimens for examination, two forms can seldom be connected by
intermediate varieties and thus proved to be the same species, until
many specimens have been collected from many places; and in the
case of fossil species this could rarely be effected by palaeontologists.
We shall, perhaps, best perceive the improbability of our being
enabled to connect species by numerous, fine, intermediate, fossil
links, by asking ourselves whether, for instance, geologists at
some future period will be able to prove, that our different breeds
of cattle, sheep, horses, and dogs have descended from a single
stock or from several aboriginal stocks; or, again, whether certain
sea-shells inhabiting the shores of North America, which are ranked
by some conchologists as distinct species from their European representatives,
and by other conchologists as only varieties, are really varieties
or are, as it is called, specifically distinct. This could be effected
only by the future geologist discovering in a fossil state numerous
intermediate gradations; and such success seems to me improbable
in the highest degree.
Geological research, though it has added numerous species to existing
and extinct genera, and has made the intervals between some few
groups less wide than they otherwise would have been, yet has done
scarcely anything in breaking down the distinction between species,
by connecting them together by numerous, fine, intermediate varieties;
and this not having been effected, is probably the gravest and most
obvious of all the many objections which may be urged against my
views. Hence it will be worth while to sum up the foregoing remarks,
under an imaginary illustration. The Malay Archipelago is of about
the size of Europe from the North Cape to the Mediterranean, and
from Britain to Russia; and therefore equals all the geological
formations which have been examined with any accuracy, excepting
those of the United States of America. I fully agree with Mr Godwin-Austen,
that the present condition of the Malay Archipelago, with its numerous
large islands separated by wide and shallow seas, probably represents
the former state of Europe, when most of our formations were accumulating.
The Malay Archipelago is one of the richest regions of the whole
world in organic beings; yet if all the species were to be collected
which have ever lived there, how imperfectly would they represent
the natural history of the world!
But we have every reason to believe that the terrestrial productions
of the archipelago would be preserved in an excessively imperfect
manner in the formations which we suppose to be there accumulating.
I suspect that not many of the strictly littoral animals, or of
those which lived on naked submarine rocks, would be embedded; and
those embedded in gravel or sand, would not endure to a distant
epoch. Wherever sediment did not accumulate on the bed of the sea,
or where it did not accumulate at a sufficient rate to protect organic
bodies from decay, no remains could be preserved.
In our archipelago, I believe that fossiliferous formations could
be formed of sufficient thickness to last to an age, as distant
in futurity as the secondary formations lie in the past, only during
periods of subsidence. These periods of subsidence would be separated
from each other by enormous intervals, during which the area would
be either stationary or rising; whilst rising, each fossiliferous
formation would be destroyed, almost as soon as accumulated, by
the incessant coast-action, as we now see on the shores of South
America. During the periods of subsidence there would probably be
much extinction of life; during the periods of elevation, there
would be much variation, but the geological record would then be
least perfect.
It may be doubted whether the duration of any one great period
of subsidence over the whole or part of the archipelago, together
with a contemporaneous accumulation of sediment, would exceed
the average duration of the same specific forms; and these contingencies
are indispensable for the preservation of all the transitional gradations
between any two or more species. If such gradations were not fully
preserved, transitional varieties would merely appear as so many
distinct species. It is, also, probable that each great period of
subsidence would be interrupted by oscillations of level, and that
slight climatal changes would intervene during such lengthy periods;
and in these cases the inhabitants of the archipelago would have
to migrate, and no closely consecutive record of their modifications
could be preserved in any one formation.
Very many of the marine inhabitants of the archipelago now range
thousands of miles beyond its confines; and analogy leads me to
believe that it would be chiefly these far-ranging species which
would oftenest produce new varieties; and the varieties would at
first generally be local or confined to one place, but if possessed
of any decided advantage, or when further modified and improved,
they would slowly spread and supplant their parent-forms. When such
varieties returned to their ancient homes, as they would differ
from their former state, in a nearly uniform, though perhaps extremely
slight degree, they would, according to the principles followed
by many palaeontologists, be ranked as new and distinct species.
If then, there be some degree of truth in these remarks, we have
no right to expect to find in our geological formations, an infinite
number of those fine transitional forms, which on my theory assuredly
have connected all the past and present species of the same group
into one long and branching chain of life. We ought only to look
for a few links, some more closely, some more distantly related
to each other; and these links, let them be ever so close, if found
in different stages of the same formation, would, by most palaeontologists,
be ranked as distinct species. But I do not pretend that I should
ever have suspected how poor a record of the mutations of life,
the best preserved geological section presented, had not the difficulty
of our not discovering innumerable transitional links between the
species which appeared at the commencement and close of each formation,
pressed so hardly on my theory.
On the sudden appearance of whole groups of Allied Species.
The abrupt manner in which whole groups of species suddenly appear
in certain formations, has been urged by several palaeontologists,
for instance, by Agassiz, Pictet, and by none more forcibly than
by Professor Sedgwick, as a fatal objection to the belief in the
transmutation of species. If numerous species, belonging to the
same genera or families, have really started into life all at once,
the fact would be fatal to the theory of descent with slow modification
through natural selection. For the development of a group of forms,
all of which have descended from some one progenitor, must have
been an extremely slow process; and the progenitors must have lived
long ages before their modified descendants. But we continually
over-rate the perfection of the geological record, and falsely infer,
because certain genera or families have not been found beneath a
certain stage, that they did not exist before that stage. We continually
forget how large the world is, compared with the area over which
our geological formations have been carefully examined; we forget
that groups of species may elsewhere have long existed and have
slowly multiplied before they invaded the ancient archipelagoes
of Europe and of the United States. We do not make due allowance
for the enormous intervals of time, which have probably elapsed
between our consecutive formations, longer perhaps in some cases
than the time required for the accumulation of each formation. These
intervals will have given time for the multiplication of species
from some one or some few parent-forms; and in the succeeding formation
such species will appear as if suddenly created.
I may here recall a remark formerly made, namely that it might
require a long succession of ages to adapt an organism to some new
and peculiar line of life, for instance to fly through the air;
but that when this had been effected, and a few species had thus
acquired a great advantage over other organisms, a comparatively
short time would be necessary to produce many divergent forms, which
would be able to spread rapidly and widely throughout the world.
I will now give a few examples to illustrate these remarks; and
to show how liable we are to error in supposing that whole groups
of species have suddenly been produced. I may recall the well-known
fact that in geological treatises, published not many years ago,
the great class of mammals was always spoken of as having abruptly
come in at the commencement of the tertiary series. And now one
of the richest known accumulations of fossil mammals belongs to
the middle of the secondary series; and one true mammal has been
discovered in the new red sandstone at nearly the commencement of
this great series. Cuvier used to urge that no monkey occurred in
any tertiary stratum; but now extinct species have been discovered
in India, South America, and in Europe even as far back as the eocene
stage. The most striking case, however, is that of the Whale family;
as these animals have huge bones, are marine, and range over the
world, the fact of not a single bone of a whale having been discovered
in any secondary formation, seemed fully to justify the belief that
this great and distinct order had been suddenly produced in the
interval between the latest secondary and earliest tertiary formation.
But now we may read in the Supplement to Lyell's 'Manual,' published
in 1858, clear evidence of the existence of whales in the upper
greensand, some time before the close of the secondary period.
I may give another instance, which from having passed under my
own eyes has much struck me. In a memoir on Fossil Sessile Cirripedes,
I have stated that, from the number of existing and extinct tertiary
species; from the extraordinary abundance of the individuals of
many species all over the world, from the Arctic regions to the
equator, inhabiting various zones of depths from the upper tidal
limits to 50 fathoms; from the perfect manner in which specimens
are preserved in the oldest tertiary beds; from the ease with which
even a fragment of a valve can be recognised; from all these circumstances,
I inferred that had sessile cirripedes existed during the secondary
periods, they would certainly have been preserved and discovered;
and as not one species had been discovered in beds of this age,
I concluded that this great group had been suddenly developed at
the commencement of the tertiary series. This was a sore trouble
to me, adding as I thought one more instance of the abrupt appearance
of a great group of species. But my work had hardly been published,
when a skilful palaeontologist, M. Bosquet, sent me a drawing of
a perfect specimen of an unmistakeable sessile cirripede, which
he had himself extracted from the chalk of Belgium. And, as if to
make the case as striking as possible, this sessile cirripede was
a Chthamalus, a very common, large, and ubiquitous genus, of which
not one specimen has as yet been found even in any tertiary stratum.
Hence we now positively know that sessile cirripedes existed during
the secondary period; and these cirripedes might have been the progenitors
of our many tertiary and existing species.
The case most frequently insisted on by palaeontologists of the
apparently sudden appearance of a whole group of species, is that
of the teleostean fishes, low down in the Chalk period. This group
includes the large majority of existing species. Lately, Professor
Pictet has carried their existence one sub-stage further back; and
some palaeontologists believe that certain much older fishes, of
which the affinities are as yet imperfectly known, are really teleostean.
Assuming, however, that the whole of them did appear, as Agassiz
believes, at the commencement of the chalk formation, the fact would
certainly be highly remarkable; but I cannot see that it would be
an insuperable difficulty on my theory, unless it could likewise
be shown that the species of this group appeared suddenly and simultaneously
throughout the world at this same period. It is almost superfluous
to remark that hardly any fossil-fish are known from south of the
equator; and by running through Pictet's palaeontology it will be
seen that very few species are known from several formations in
Europe. Some few families of fish now have a confined range; the
teleostean fish might formerly have had a similarly confined range,
and after having been largely developed in some one sea, might have
spread widely. Nor have we any right to suppose that the seas of
the world have always been so freely open from south to north as
they are at present. Even at this day, if the Malay Archipelago
were converted into land, the tropical parts of the Indian Ocean
would form a large and perfectly enclosed basin, in which any great
group of marine animals might be multiplied; and here they would
remain confined, until some of the species became adapted to a cooler
climate, and were enabled to double the southern capes of Africa
or Australia, and thus reach other and distant seas.
From these and similar considerations, but chiefly from our ignorance
of the geology of other countries beyond the confines of Europe
and the United States; and from the revolution in our palaeontological
ideas on many points, which the discoveries of even the last dozen
years have effected, it seems to me to be about as rash in us to
dogmatize on the succession of organic beings throughout the world,
as it would be for a naturalist to land for five minutes on some
one barren point in Australia, and then to discuss the number and
range of its productions.
On the sudden appearance of groups of Allied Species in the
lowest known fossiliferous strata. There is another and allied
difficulty, which is much graver. I allude to the manner in which
numbers of species of the same group, suddenly appear in the lowest
known fossiliferous rocks. Most of the arguments which have convinced
me that all the existing species of the same group have descended
from one progenitor, apply with nearly equal force to the earliest
known species. For instance, I cannot doubt that all the Silurian
trilobites have descended from some one crustacean, which must have
lived long before the Silurian age, and which probably differed
greatly from any known animal. Some of the most ancient Silurian
animals, as the Nautilus, Lingula, &c., do not differ much from
living species; and it cannot on my theory be supposed, that these
old species were the progenitors of all the species of the orders
to which they belong, for they do not present characters in any
degree intermediate between them. If, moreover, they had been the
progenitors of these orders, they would almost certainly have been
long ago supplanted and exterminated by their numerous and improved
descendants.
Consequently, if my theory be true, it is indisputable that before
the lowest Silurian stratum was deposited, long periods elapsed,
as long as, or probably far longer than, the whole interval from
the Silurian age to the present day; and that during these vast,
yet quite unknown, periods of time, the world swarmed with living
creatures.
To the question why we do not find records of these vast primordial
periods, I can give no satisfactory answer. Several of the most
eminent geologists, with Sir R. Murchison at their head, are convinced
that we see in the organic remains of the lowest Silurian stratum
the dawn of life on this planet. Other highly competent judges,
as Lyell and the late E. Forbes, dispute this conclusion. We should
not forget that only a small portion of the world is known with
accuracy. M. Barrande has lately added another and lower stage to
the Silurian system, abounding with new and peculiar species. Traces
of life have been detected in the Longmynd beds beneath Barrande's
so-called primordial zone. The presence of phosphatic nodules and
bituminous matter in some of the lowest azoic rocks, probably indicates
the former existence of life at these periods. But the difficulty
of understanding the absence of vast piles of fossiliferous strata,
which on my theory no doubt were somewhere accumulated before the
Silurian epoch, is very great. If these most ancient beds had been
wholly worn away by denudation, or obliterated by metamorphic action,
we ought to find only small remnants of the formations next succeeding
them in age, and these ought to be very generally in a metamorphosed
condition. But the descriptions which we now possess of the Silurian
deposits over immense territories in Russia and in North America,
do not support the view, that the older a formation is, the more
it has suffered the extremity of denudation and metamorphism.
The case at present must remain inexplicable; and may be truly
urged as a valid argument against the views here entertained. To
show that it may hereafter receive some explanation, I will give
the following hypothesis. From the nature of the organic remains,
which do not appear to have inhabited profound depths, in the several
formations of Europe and of the United States; and from the amount
of sediment, miles in thickness, of which the formations are composed,
we may infer that from first to last large islands or tracts of
land, whence the sediment was derived, occurred in the neighbourhood
of the existing continents of Europe and North America. But we do
not know what was the state of things in the intervals between the
successive formations; whether Europe and the United States during
these intervals existed as dry land, or as a submarine surface near
land, on which sediment was not deposited, or again as the bed of
an open and unfathomable sea.
Looking to the existing oceans, which are thrice as extensive as
the land, we see them studded with many islands; but not one oceanic
island is as yet known to afford even a remnant of any palaeozoic
or secondary formation. Hence we may perhaps infer, that during
the palaeozoic and secondary periods, neither continents nor continental
islands existed where our oceans now extend; for had they existed
there, palaeozoic and secondary formations would in all probability
have been accumulated from sediment derived from their wear and
tear; and would have been at least partially upheaved by the oscillations
of level, which we may fairly conclude must have intervened during
these enormously long periods. If then we may infer anything from
these facts, we may infer that where our oceans now extend, oceans
have extended from the remotest period of which we have any record;
and on the other hand, that where continents now exist, large tracts
of land have existed, subjected no doubt to great oscillations of
level, since the earliest silurian period. The coloured map appended
to my volume on Coral Reefs, led me to conclude that the great oceans
are still mainly areas of subsidence, the great archipelagoes still
areas of oscillations of level, and the continents areas of elevation.
But have we any right to assume that things have thus remained from
eternity? Our continents seem to have been formed by a preponderance,
during many oscillations of level, of the force of elevation; but
may not the areas of preponderant movement have changed in the lapse
of ages? At a period immeasurably antecedent to the silurian epoch,
continents may have existed where oceans are now spread out; and
clear and open oceans may have existed where our continents now
stand. Nor should we be justified in assuming that if, for instance,
the bed of the Pacific Ocean were now converted into a continent,
we should there find formations older than the silurian strata,
supposing such to have been formerly deposited; for it might well
happen that strata which had subsided some miles nearer to the centre
of the earth, and which had been pressed on by an enormous weight
of superincumbent water, might have undergone far more metamorphic
action than strata which have always remained nearer to the surface.
The immense areas in some parts of the world, for instance in South
America, of bare metamorphic rocks, which must have been heated
under great pressure, have always seemed to me to require some special
explanation; and we may perhaps believe that we see in these large
areas, the many formations long anterior to the silurian epoch in
a completely metamorphosed condition.
The several difficulties here discussed, namely our not finding
in the successive formations infinitely numerous transitional links
between the many species which now exist or have existed; the sudden
manner in which whole groups of species appear in our European formations;
the almost entire absence, as at present known, of fossiliferous
formations beneath the Silurian strata, are all undoubtedly of the
gravest nature. We see this in the plainest manner by the fact that
all the most eminent palaeontologists, namely Cuvier, Owen, Agassiz,
Barrande, Falconer, E. Forbes, &c., and all our greatest geologists,
as Lyell, Murchison, Sedgwick, &c., have unanimously, often
vehemently, maintained the immutability of species. But I have reason
to believe that one great authority, Sir Charles Lyell, from further
reflexion entertains grave doubts on this subject. I feel how rash
it is to differ from these great authorities, to whom, with others,
we owe all our knowledge. Those who think the natural geological
record in any degree perfect, and who do not attach much weight
to the facts and arguments of other kinds even in this volume, will
undoubtedly at once reject my theory. For my part, following out
Lyell's metaphor, I look at the natural geological record, as a
history of the world imperfectly kept, and written in a changing
dialect; of this history we possess the last volume alone, relating
only to two or three countries. Of this volume, only here and there
a short chapter has been preserved; and of each page, only here
and there a few lines. Each word of the slowly-changing language,
in which the history is supposed to be written, being more or less
different in the interrupted succession of chapters, may represent
the apparently abruptly changed forms of life, entombed in our consecutive,
but widely separated formations. On this view, the difficulties
above discussed are greatly diminished, or even disappear.
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