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INTRODUCTION
NORTH AMERICAN GEOLOGY
Whereas the geological growth of Europe presents the record of an archipelago of forming points, with conti­nental or semi-continental areas to which they were refer­able, slowly consolidating into a continuous surface, the cor­responding geological development of North America presents contrastedly a picture of consecutive additions to a nucleal and primary framework. Its geological history in outline is more simple. The preponderating initial land surfaces were, at the north, with longitudinal alignments along the eastern and western edges of the continental uplift, with a few interior centers of elevation (Missouri, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Texas, Dakota) ; and the sequence of the appearance of land surfaces was from the north southward, and laterally east and west on the borders of the two long descending ridges defining the sides of the continent, as against the submerged and cavern­ous troughs of the Atlantic and Pacific oceans.
In the geological history of Europe we are confronted with a series of slowly filled-up basins converted into land surfaces. In America an early architectonic outline of a primordial continent appears with two limbs, stretching southward. These .enclose a broad and shallow basin more open on the west, whose floor underwent secular changes of elevation and de­pression. Generally these changes enlarged the land surfaces, progressively through geological time, from north to south, and inwardly on the edges of the two limbs, while on the extreme east and west the continent also grew outward, in an encroachment on the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. The