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I.—Contributions to the Study of Volcanos.—Second Series
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 May 2009
Extract
The study of the great mountain ranges of America by Rogers, Hall, Dana, Le Conte, Hunt, and other geologists, has now thrown much new light on the earth-movements which precede and accompany the formation of mountain chains. As the result of these researches, it appears certain that the preliminary stage in the formation of every mountain system has consisted in a long-continued depression of the area which is afterwards to become its site; and, in consequence of this prolonged subsidence, the accumulation of an enormous thickness of stratified rocks, within the great trough so formed, has taken place. Of this character, as is now well known, have been the earlier manifestations of the subterranean forces that were concerned in the formation of the Appalachians, Green Mountains, and other American ranges; the districts in which they are situated were subjected to long-continued depression, which permitted of an abnormal development of all the members of the sedimentary deposits formed during this initiatory period; and it was by the folding, metamorphism and crushing together of this abnormally thickened portion of the earth's crust that the indurated and elevated masses have been formed which denudation has sculptured into the existing mountain chains.
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References
page 337 note 1 See the May Number, p. 200.
page 339 note 1 See Review of Gilbert's and Churchill's Dolomite Mountains (by the late DrWoodward, S. P.), Geol. Mag. 1864, Vol I. p. 40.—Edit. Geol. Mag.Google Scholar
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