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MANHATTAN ISLAND                       115
the East River, at least, was a tumultuous one, broken by rapids and falls.
And in considering this hypothesis it should be recalled that the dropping down and out of rock sections two to five hundred feet involves abyssal conditions in the crust of the earth not to be lightly invoked. In mountain ranges there do, indeed, occur displacements of extraordinary dimensions, but this amounts to reshifting of elevations already above sea-level, and accompanied with uplift and overshove crumpling and crushing. Dr. Hobbs' view seems to contemplate a fall­ing out of blocks along joint walls, as, in a tile mosaic, one tile may sink below the level of its neighbors. The memoirs and papers of Professor J. J. Stevenson have fully displayed the wonderful extent of the faults in Tennessee, Virginia, and Pennsylvania, with differential changes of 500, 2,400 and 2,800 to 12,000 feet, and these have largely been considered by Professor Stevenson as " cracked anticlinals." Professor Stevenson refers the time of these faults to the Mesozoic {Triassic).*
In 1895 the tunnel for the East River Gas Company from East 70th Street, underneath Blackwell's Island to Ravens-wood, Long Island, was completed. The tunnel is 2,516 feet long, and about ten feet and a half in diameter. The rocks met were mica schist, " much contorted, but with a well-marked general dip of about 8o° west" (Kemp), kaolin with garnet and biotite, quartz, decomposed mica schist, a fissure filled with soft mud, river sand, and near the east shore of Blackwell's Island ten to twelve feet of dolomite. Beyond this, compressed in a synclinal fold, were mica schist and again white " crystalline dolomite precisely like the outcrop at KSngs-bridge " (Kemp). If it is assumed that this dolomite lay in the flooring of the west channel at this point, then, as Professor
An item of interest to students of our Manhattan geology is thus re­corded by Professor Stevenson: " The crushing at several localities near Clinch River is excessive, and at one locality the shales are folded as closely as micaceous shales on Manhattan Island, but they show no evi­dence of metamorphism."