Fishes of the Muschelkalk, Lias, and Oolite Formations 214 CHAP. XV. Proofs of design in the Fossil Remains of Mollusks. § 1. Fossil Univalve and Bivalve Shells 221 222 224 224 II. Fossil Remains of Naked Mollusks, Pens and Ink bags 11. Proofs of Design in the Mechanism of Fossil Chambered v. Nautilus Sypho and Nautilus Zic-Zae VI. Chambered Shells allied to Nautili and Ammonites VII. Belemnite viii. Foraminated Polythalamous Shells. Nummulites. Miliola 288 291 292 292 292 292 Trilobites 294 INTRODUCTION. CHAPTER I. Extent of the Province of Geology. If a stranger, landing at the extremity of England, were to traverse the whole of Cornwall and the North of Devonshire; and crossing to St. David's, should make the tour of all North Wales; and passing thence through Cumberland, by the Isle of Man, to the south-western shore of Scotland should proceed either through the hilly region of the Border Counties, or, along the Grampians, to the German Ocean; he would conclude from such a journey of many hundred miles, that Britain was a thinly peopled sterile region, whose principal inhabitants were miners and mountaineers. Another foreigner, arriving on the coast of Devon, and crossing the Midland Counties, from the mouth of the Exe, to that of the Tyne, would find a continued succession of fertile hills and valleys, thickly overspread with towns and cities, and in many parts crowded with a manufacturing population, whose industry is maintained by the coal with which the strata of these districts are abundantly inter spersed.* * It may seen, in any correct geological map of England, that the following important and populous towns are placed upon strata belonging to the single geological formation of the new red sandstone:-Exeter, Bristol, Worcester, Warwick, Birmingham, Lichfield, Coventry, Leicester, Nottingham, Derby, Stafford, Shrewsbury, Chester, Liverpool, Warrington, Manchester, Preston, York, and Carlisle. The population of these nineteen towns, by the census of 1830, exceeded a million. The most convenient small map to which I can refer my readers, in illustration of this and other parts of the present essay, is the single sheet, reVOL. I.-2 Fishes of the Muschelkalk, Lias, and Oolite Formations 214 CHAP. XV. Proofs of design in the Fossil Remains of Mollusks. 221 222 224 II. Fossil Remains of Naked Mollusks, Pens and Ink bags 11. Proofs of Design in the Mechanism of Fossil Chambered Shells Mechanical Contrivances in the Nautilus IV. Ammonites v. Nautilus Sypho and Nautilus Zic-Zac VI. Chambered Shells allied to Nautili and Ammonites viii. Foraminated Polythalamous Shells. Nummulites. Miliola CHAP. XVI. Proofs of Design in the Structure of Fossil Articulated 235 238 252 270 273 280 288 291 292 292 292 292 Trilobites 294 |