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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
226             GEOLOGY OF NEW YORK CITY
not, at the time, have sufficiently marveled at this, but his indifference to so singular a circumstance has to-day been replaced by the industrious researches of the archaeologist, in an effort to trace the aboriginal record at every point of the continent. Whatever antecedent steps ushered the Indian to our eastern shores, it is very certain that when Hendrik Hudson entered the great harbor of Manhattan he had dis­covered the beauty and convenience of this inland bay.
The shores of the Hudson, the beaches, hills, and plains of Long Island, the islets, promontories, and woods of Man­hattan Island, and the forested recesses and wave-splashed sands of Staten Island on the Raritan Bay were parts of his demesne, and furnished him with food, and offered him pleas­ant haunts for habitation and for pleasure.
Mr. Chas. B. Todd has given us an imaginative picture of Manhattan Island—the nucleus of the greater city—when the red man possessed it, and the white man first put foot upon it: " Nature's temples, not man's, adorned it. Sombre forests overhung the Jersey shore and fringed the water-line of the island. A chain of low, craggy hills covered with noble for-fests of oak, chestnut, hickory, and other trees, with pretty grassy valleys between, extended from the Battery to near the present line of Canal Street; on either side, along the river banks, were wide marshes stretching away to the north; at Canal Street they bore directly across the island, and were so low that on high tides the water flowed across from river to river. In the sheltered valleys were: the maize fields and queer villages of the Indians and the rude log-cabins of the settlers who had come over the year before. Cow-paths crossed the marshes to the upper part of the island, which was much wilder and more savage, with precipitous ledges, and in many places dense thickets of grape-vines, creepers, blackberry and other bushes which no one could penetrate. The settlers did not allow their sheep and calves to cross this marsh lest they should be throttled by the wolves, bears, and panthers that lurked in the thickets, and in their letters home they com-
Appendix I: Glaciation in Great New York Page of 281 Appendix I: Glaciation in Great New York
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