The Birth-Time of the World and Other Scientific Essays by John Joly
page 30 of 328 (09%)
page 30 of 328 (09%)
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we must infer that the average supply of salts to the ocean by
the rivers of the world is less than over the long past, and that, therefore, our estimate of the age of the Earth as already given is excessive. There is, however, one condition which will operate to unduly diminish our estimate of geologic time, and it is a condition which may possibly obtain at the present time. If the land is, on the whole, now sinking relatively to the ocean level, the denudation area tends, as we have seen, to move inwards. It will thus encroach upon regions which have not for long periods drained to the ocean. On such areas there is an accumulation of soluble salts which the deficient rivers have not been able to carry to the ocean. Thus the salt content of certain of [1] See the essay on Denudation. 18 the rivers draining to the ocean will be influenced not only by present denudative effects, but also by the stored results of past effects. Certain rivers appear to reveal this unduly increased salt supply those which flow through comparatively arid areas. However, the flowoff of such tributaries is relatively small and the final effects on the great rivers apparently unimportant--a result which might have been anticipated when the extremely slow rate of the land movements is taken into account. The difficulty of effecting any reconciliation of the methods already described and that now to be given increases the interest |
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