Page:The Formation of Vegetable Mould through the Action of Worms (1881).djvu/160

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146
AMOUNT OF EARTH
Chap. III.

left. On removing, in 1877, the thin overlying layer of turf, the small flag-stones, all in their proper places, were found covered by an inch of fine mould.

Two recently published accounts of substances strewed on the surface of pasture-land, having become buried through the action of worms, may be here noticed. The Rev. H. C. Key had a ditch cut in a field, over which coal-ashes had been spread, as it was believed, eighteen years before; and on the clean-cut perpendicular sides of the ditch, at a depth of at least seven inches, there could be seen, for a length of 60 yards, "a distinct, very even, narrow line of coal-ashes, mixed with small coal, perfectly parallel with the top-sward."[1] This parallelism and the length of the section gives interest to the case. Secondly, Mr. Dancer states[2] that crushed bones had been thickly strewed over a field; and "some years afterwards" these were found "several inches below the surface, at a uniform depth." Worms appear to act in the same manner in New Zealand as in Europe; for Professor J.

  1. 'Nature,' November 1877, p. 28.
  2. 'Proc. Phil. Soc.' of Manchester, 1877, p. 247.