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Kingsley, Charles, 1819-1875

"Town Geology"

And this is proved by a very curious
fact--which the reader, if he geologises about slate quarries much,
may see with his own eyes. The fossils in the slate are often
distorted into quaint shapes, pulled out long if they lie along the
plane of cleavage, or squeezed together, or doubled down on both
sides, if they lie across the plane. So that some force has been at
work which could actually change the shape of hard shells, very
slowly, no doubt, else it would have snapped and crumbled them.
If I am asked what that force was, I do not know. I should advise
young geologists to read what Sir Henry de la Beche has said on it in
his admirable "Geological Observer," pp. 706-725. He will find
there, too, some remarks on that equally mysterious phenomena of
jointing, which you may see in almost all the older rocks; it is
common in limestones. All we can say is, that some force has gone
on, or may be even now going on, in the more ancient rocks, which is
similar to that which produces single crystals; and similar, too, to
that which produced the jointed crystals of basalt, i.e. lava, at the
Giant's Causeway, in Ireland, and Staffa, in the Hebrides. Two
philosophers--Mr. Robert Were Fox and Mr. Robert Hunt--are of opinion
that the force which has determined the cleavage of slates may be
that of the electric currents, which (as is well known) run through
the crust of the earth.


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