Lyell and the Principles of Geology
Transfer of ideas
- Analogies to human history are obvious from first page
- Past errors of geology are due to
- Lack of appreciation of the time scale; Lack of imagination
- Viewpoint as terrestrial beings
- Confusing geology with cosmology (origins)
Processes
- Physical
- Aqueous
- Erosion and deposition at surface
- Wide range of modern processes described
- Igneous and Earthquakes
- Examples described
- May build up or decay the landscape
- Source of magmas not really specified (not accept internal heat)
- Argues that these modern processes (acting at the current rates) can form all the features of the present physical world.
- Argues for a long-term balance of uplift and subsidence
- No net change in area of land versus sea
- Position of land may shift over time
- Aqueous
- Biological
- Species are natural units
- Species originate at a single place that they are suited to live in
- Origination is due to an unknown natural mechanism
- Migrate into appropriate environments
- Go extinct when environment changes
- Species distribution in constant flux but relatively uniform in time
- Result is a gradual turnover through time
- Interactions of Physical and Biological
- Physical processes will result in a gradual changes of paleogeography
- Changes will drive environmental changes
- Leading to extinctions of fauna and flora
- Leads to a constant flux in the fauna and flora
Climate Model
- Lyell’s answer to directional history of life
- Builds on his view of processes and their interactions
- Faunal Progression
- Sequential faunal appearances of invertebrates, fish, amphibians/reptiles, mammals, “cold climate” mammals (mammoths), humans
- Parallel development in plants: ferns, gymnosperms, angiosperms
- All interpreted as due to progressive cooling of earth through time
- Secondary to Tertiary = the cooling half of a grand climate cycle
- Driven by shifting positions of land through time
- Uses European record as evidence
- Secondary: Marine and swamps = warm
- Tertiary: Mixed terrestrial and scattered basins = cooler
- Modern: terrestrial = coldest
Historical Geology
- Outline by topic
- General principles (ch 1-4)
- Tertiary rocks (5-22)
- Secondary rocks (ch 23)
- Mountain building (ch 24)
- Primary rocks (ch 25-26)
- Diagrams and Tables summarize his point
- Constant turnover of species suggest long time scale and gaps
- “Primary” rocks are actually a mixture of igneous intrusions and metamorphic (his new term!) rocks
- Igneous rocks that cross-cut younger strata indicate that they form throughout earth history
- Same types of environments through the Tertiary and Secondary deposits => NO net change
Uniformity (more or this soon!)
- Natural processes
- Actualism (modern processes)
- Gradualism
- Steady-State