Page:A History of Land Mammals in the Western Hemisphere.djvu/33

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METHODS—GEOLOGICAL
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simple geometrical method from the surface exposures of the beds, such as mining engineers continually employ to map the underground extension of economically important rocks, and shows how an enormous thickness of strata may be studied from the surface. The older beds are exposed at the western end of the section in Wales and, passing eastward, successively later and later beds are encountered, the newest appearing at the eastern end. Very many of the strata are richly fossiliferous, and thus a long succession of fossils was obtained in the order of their appearance, and this order has been found to hold good, not only in England, but throughout the world. The order

Fig. 2.—William Smith's section across the south of England. The vertical scale is exaggerated, which makes the inclination of the beds appear too steep.
N. B. The original drawing is in colors, which are not indicated by the dotted strata.

of succession of the fossils was thus in the first instance actually ascertained from the succession of the strata in which they are found and has been verified in innumerable sections in many lands and is thus a matter of observed and verifiable fact, not merely a postulate or working hypothesis. Once ascertained, however, the order of succession of living things upon the earth may be then employed as an independent and indispensable means of geologically dating the rocks in which they occur.

This is the palæontological method, which finds analogies in many other branches of learned inquiry. The student of manuscripts discovers that there is a development, or regular series of successive changes, in handwriting, and from the handwriting alone can make a very close approximation to the date of a manuscript. The order in which those changes came about