Outlines of the Earth's History - A Popular Study in Physiography by Nathaniel Southgate Shaler
page 269 of 476 (56%)
page 269 of 476 (56%)
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prevented the sea waves from attaining the shore, and thus hindered
the formation of those beaches which in their present elevated condition enable us to interpret the old position of the sea along coast lines which have been recently elevated. Here and there, however, from New Jersey to Greenland, we find bits of these ancient shores which clearly tell the story of that down-sinking of the land beneath the burden of the ice which is such an instructive feature in the history of that period. CHAPTER VII. THE WORK OF UNDERGROUND WATER. We have already noted two means by which water finds its way underground. The simplest and largest method by which this action is effected is by building in the fluid as the grains of the rock are laid down on the floors of seas or lakes. The water thus imprisoned is firmly inclosed in the interstices of the stone, it in time takes up into its mass a certain amount of the mineral materials which are contained in the deep-buried rocks. The other portion of the ground water--that with which we are now to be specially concerned--arises from the rain which descends into the crevices of the earth; it is therefore peculiar to the lands. For convenience we shall term the original embedded fluid _rock water_, and that which originates from the rain _crevice water_, the two forming the mass of the earth water. |
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