. The dawn of life [microform] : being the history of the oldest known fossil remains, and their relations to geological time, and to the development of the animal kingdom. Paleontology; Life; Paléontologie; Vie. 11 CHAPTER II. THE LAURENTIAN EOCKS. As we descend in depth and time into tlie earth's crust, after passing through nearly all the vast series of strata constituting the monuments of geological history, we at length reach the Eozoic or Laurentian rocks, deepest and oldest of all the formations known to the geologist, and more thoroughly altered or metamorphosed by heat and heated mois


. The dawn of life [microform] : being the history of the oldest known fossil remains, and their relations to geological time, and to the development of the animal kingdom. Paleontology; Life; Paléontologie; Vie. 11 CHAPTER II. THE LAURENTIAN EOCKS. As we descend in depth and time into tlie earth's crust, after passing through nearly all the vast series of strata constituting the monuments of geological history, we at length reach the Eozoic or Laurentian rocks, deepest and oldest of all the formations known to the geologist, and more thoroughly altered or metamorphosed by heat and heated moisture than any others. These rocks, at one time known as Azoic, being supposed destitute of all remains of living things, but now more properly Eozoic, are those in which the first bright streaks of the dawn of life make their ;^ The name Laurentian, given originally to the Canadian development of these rocks by Sir William Logan, but now applied to them throughout the world, is derived from a range of hills lying north of the St. Lawrence valley, which the old French geographers named the Laurentides. In these hills the harder rocks of this old formation rise to consider- able heights, and form the highlands separating the * Dana has recently proposed the term " Archcean,*' on the ground that some of these rocks are as yet unfossiliferous but as the oldest known part of them contains fossils, there tieems no need for this new Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original Dawson, J. W. (John William), Sir, 1820-1899. Montreal : Dawson


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, booksubjectpaleontology, bookyea