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Young Folks' Library, Volume XI (of 20) - Wonders of Earth, Sea and Sky by Various
page 42 of 355 (11%)
flung out in one eruption of Vesuvius. Think of a mass of rock, one
hundred cubic yards in size, hurled to a distance of eight miles or
more out of the crater of Cotopaxi.

[Illustration: HOT WELLS.]

Think also of earthquake-shocks felt through twelve hundred miles of
country. Think of fierce tremblings and heavings lasting in constant
succession through days and weeks of terror. Think of hundreds of
miles of land raised several feet in one great upheaval. Think of the
earth opening in scores of wide-lipped cracks, to swallow men and
beasts. Think of hot mud, boiling water, scalding stream, liquid rock,
bursting from such cracks, or pouring from rents in a mountain-side.

Truly these are signs of a state of things in or below the solid crust
on which we live, that may make us doubt the absolute security of
"Mother Earth."

Different explanations have been put forward to explain this seemingly
fiery state of things underground.

Until lately the belief was widely held that our earth was one huge
globe of liquid fire, with only a slender cooled crust covering her, a
few miles in thickness.

This view was supported by the fact that heat is found to increase as
men descend into the earth. Measurements of such heat-increase have
been taken, both in mines and in borings for wells. The usual rate is
about one degree more of heat, of our common thermometer, for every
fifty or sixty feet of descent. If this were steadily continued, water
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