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Appendix I: Glaciation in Great New York

Appendix I: Glaciation in Great New York Page of 281 Appendix I: Glaciation in Great New York Text size:minus plus Restore normal size   Mail page  Print this page
EVIDENCES OF GLACIATION                191
moldings, and the rocks they occur upon are polished and oftentimes lustrous. The channels diminish in size to the faintest striae which, like sharp scratches, cover the surface, running along at times in parallel series, or diverging in dif­ferent directions, as though the great primitive plane had varied its course over them, scoring with exquisite fineness.
In the same region they have the same direction. They seem, as it were, with us, to stream from the north, and wher­ever other scores contravene this, these secondary markings are themselves harmonious, indicating some subsequent action upon the rocks, in character similar to the first, though varying in its motion and probably restricted in its extent and im­portance.
Thus the scores upon the rocks of New England point northwest and southeast, and only local derangements dis­turb this prevailing direction. The easting increases as we progress to the ocean, reaching its maximum in Maine and the borders of Canada; while, as we retire from the margin of the States, we observe that the scratches and grooves acquire a north-and-south direction, becoming nearly meridi­onal over New York, and there slowly swing round to the west, until in Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Wisconsin, and the west­ern limits of the continent they lie pointing northeast and southwest. In the east they assume a rudely outlined radia­tion from the highlands of Canada, and stretch out from a hypothetical center like the multiplied spokes of a great wheel. In Switzerland they sweep down and out from the central ranges of the Alps in all directions, and, while locally uniform, they converge from the south, and east, and north, and west, toward the lofty slopes and pinnacles of this assemblage of mountains. Over West Russia and Northern Europe, where the markings are discovered, they indicate the Scandinavian mountains to have been the seat of whatever disturbance or agency has fluted and engraved the continent. Similarly as the rocks lie related to the Highlands of Scotland, the Lake Hills of England, or the mountains of Wales, the striae im-
Appendix I: Glaciation in Great New York Page of 281 Appendix I: Glaciation in Great New York
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