The Rock Record
How do we know when the
various classes of animals and plants were
established on the
earth? How do we know the order of their
appearance and the
succession of their advances? The answer is: by reading the Rock Record. In the course of time the
crust of the
earth has been elevated into continents and
depressed into ocean-troughs, and the
surface of the land has been buckled up into mountain ranges and folded in gentler hills and valleys. The high places of the land have been
weathered by air and water in many forms, and the results of the weathering have been borne away by rivers and seas, to be laid down again elsewhere as deposits which
eventually formed sandstones, mudstones, and
similar sedimentary rocks. Much of the
material of the
original crust has
thus been broken down and worked up again many times over, and if the
total thickness of the
sedimentary rocks is added up it amounts,
according to some geologists, to a
total of 67 miles. In most cases, however, only a small part of this thickness is to be seen in one place, for the deposits were usually formed in limited areas at any one time.
The Use of Fossils
When the sediments were accumulating age after age, it naturally came about that remains of the plants and animals living at the time were buried, and these formed the fossils by the
aid of which it is
possible to read the story of the past. By
careful piecing together of
evidence the
geologist is
able to
determine the order in which the
different sedimentary rocks were laid down, and
thus to say, for
instance, that the Devonian
period was the time of the
origin of Amphibians. In other case, the
geologist utilizes the fossils in his
attempt to work out the order of the strata when these have been much disarranged. For the simpler
fossil forms of any type must be older than those that are more
complex. There is no
vicious circle here, for the
general succession of strata is clear, and it is quite
certain that there were fishes before there were amphibians, and amphibians before there were reptiles, and reptiles before there were birds and mammals. In
certain cases, e.g. of
fossil horses and elephants, the actual
historical succession has been clearly worked out.
If the
successive strata contained good samples of all the plants and animals living at the time when the beds were formed, then it would be easy to read the
record of the rocks, but many animals were too soft to become
satisfactory fossils, many were eaten or dissolved away, many were destroyed by
heat and
pressure, so that the rock
record is like a library very much damaged by fire and looting and
decay.
The Geological Time-table
The long history of the
earth and its inhabitants is conveniently divided into eras. Thus, just as we speak of the
ancient,
medieval, and
modern history of mankind, so we may speak of Paleozoic, Mesozoic and Cenozoic eras in the history of the
earth as a whole.
Geologists cannot tell us except in an
approximate way how long the
process of
evolution has taken. One of the methods is to
estimate how long has been required for the
accumulation of[Pg 90] the salts of the sea, for all these have been dissolved out of the rocks since rain began to fall on the
earth. Dividing the
total amount of
saline matter by what is contributed every year in
modern times, we get about a hundred million years as the age of the sea. But as the present rate of salt-
accumulation is
probably much greater than it was during many of the geological periods, the
prodigious age just mentioned is in all
likelihood far below the mark. Another
method is to
calculate how long it would take to form the
sedimentary rocks, like sandstones and mudstones, which have a
total thickness of over fifty miles, though the
local thickness is
rarely over a mile. As most of the materials have come from the weathering of the
earth's
crust, and as the
annual amount of weathering now going on can be estimated, the time required for the
formation of the
sedimentary rocks of the world can be
approximately calculated. There are some other ways of trying to tell the
earth's age and the
length of the
successive periods, but no certainty has been reached.
The eras as
before the Cambrian correspond to about thirty-two miles of the thickness of strata, and all the
subsequent eras with
fossil-bearing rocks to a thickness of about twenty-one miles—in itself an
astounding fact. Perhaps thirty million years must be allotted to the Pre-Cambrian eras, eighteen to the Paleozoic, nine to the Mesozoic, three to the Cenozoic, making a grand
total of sixty million.