The Birth-Time of the World and Other Scientific Essays by John Joly
page 24 of 328 (07%)
page 24 of 328 (07%)
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salinity. The fact is, the quantity of salts in the ocean is
enormous. We are only now concerned with the sodium; but if we could extract all the rock-salt (the chloride of sodium) from the ocean we should have enough to cover the entire dry land of the Earth to a depth of 400 feet. It is this gigantic quantity which is going to enter into our estimate of the Earth's age. The calculated mass of sodium contained in this rock-salt is 14,130 million million tonnes. If now we can determine the rate at which the rivers supply sodium to the ocean, we can determine the age.[1] As the result of many thousands of river analyses, the total amount of sodium annually discharged to the ocean [1] _Trans. R.D.S._, 1899. A paper by Edmund Halley, the astronomer, in the _Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society_ for 1715, contains a suggestion for finding the age of the world by the following procedure. He proposes to make observations on the saltness of the seas and ocean at intervals of one or more centuries, and from the increment of saltness arrive at their age. The measurements, as a matter of fact, are impracticable. The salinity would only gain (if all remained in solution) one millionth part in Too years; and, of course, the continuous rejection of salts by the ocean would invalidate the method. The last objection also invalidates the calculation by T. Mellard Reade (_Proc. Liverpool Geol. Soc._, 1876) of a minor limit to the age by the calcium sulphate in the ocean. Both papers were quite unknown to me when working out my method. Halley's paper was, I think, only brought to light in 1908. |
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