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120                          Science and the Bible.                       [Jan.
ders, related to fishes in having gills when young) com­menced, and land-plants were first in exuberant growth, the Carboniferous age (the land-plants, as stated, cleansing the atmosphere from carbonic acid for land animals). Then fol­lowed an Age in which true reptiles increased in numbers and diversity, by multiplied creations, until there were rep­tiles larger than whales in the water, immense leviathan reptiles on the land, and flying reptiles in the air, so that each of the elements was taken possession of by these scaly tribes. This was the Reptilian age. In its progress, reptiles passed their climax, and before its close, commenced their decline ; the race, since then, has been a comparatively feeble one.
Moreover, in each of these Ages, there were many distinct creations succeeding to exterminations of previously existing life. Through the Silurian, Devonian, Carboniferous and Reptilian Ages in America, the fifth day of Genesis, fifteen times at least the seas were swept of their species, so that, in the rocky folios of the succeeding epoch, not a species of the former epoch occurs, or only half a dozen or so out of hun­dreds. After each, life was again reinstated by the Creative Hand, life in all the departments that had thus far been in­troduced to the globe, new mollusca, new corals, new cri-noids, new trilobites; and if the Age of Fishes were in pro­gress, new fishes also, and so on; making a complete crea­tion for the time. Even in the Age of Fishes alone (the De­vonian age), there were four such revolutions in America, with new creations throughout. Moreover, there were many partial destructions and restorations at other times. These exterminations can be proved, in many cases, to have been produced, either by the escape of heat, through fissures, from the earth's interior, or the elevation of the sea-bottom to dry land, or some convulsion in the earth's crust. They were, in general, connected with the earth's physical history.
Recapitulating the geological Ages mentioned, and add­ing those following, they are (naming them, as has been done by Agassiz, from the dominant type) :
I. the Age of Molluscsj^^the Silurian; II. the Age of Fishes, or the Devonian flK the Age of Coal-plants and