登陆注册
5654500000002

第2章

Or, again, are they, as others thought, the products of the germs of animals and of the seeds of plants which have lost their way, as it were, in the bowels of the earth, and have achieved only an imperfect and abortive development? It is easy to sneer at our ancestors for being disposed to reject the first in favour of one or other of the last two hypotheses; but it is much more profitable to try to discover why they, who were really not one whit less sensible persons than our excellent selves, should have been led to entertain views which strike us as absurd, The belief in what is erroneously called spontaneous generation, that is to say, in the development of living matter out of mineral matter, apart from the agency of pre-existing living matter, as an ordinary occurrence at the present day--which is still held by some of us, was universally accepted as an obvious truth by them. They could point to the arborescent forms assumed by hoar-frost and by sundry metallic minerals as evidence of the existence in nature of a "plastic force"competent to enable inorganic matter to assume the form of organised bodies. Then, as every one who is familiar with fossils knows, they present innumerable gradations, from shells and bones which exactly resemble the recent objects, to masses of mere stone which, however accurately they repeat the outward form of the organic body, have nothing else in common with it;and, thence, to mere traces and faint impressions in the continuous substance of the rock. What we now know to be the results of the chemical changes which take place in the course of fossilisation, by which mineral is substituted for organic substance, might, in the absence of such knowledge, be fairly interpreted as the expression of a process of development in the opposite direction--from the mineral to the organic. Moreover, in an age when it would have seemed the most absurd of paradoxes to suggest that the general level of the sea is constant, while that of the solid land fluctuates up and down through thousands of feet in a secular ground swell, it may well have appeared far less hazardous to conceive that fossils are sports of nature than to accept the necessary alternative, that all the inland regions and highlands, in the rocks of which marine shells had been found, had once been covered by the ocean. It is not so surprising, therefore, as it may at first seem, that although such men as Leonardo da Vinci and Bernard Palissy took just views of the nature of fossils, the opinion of the majority of their contemporaries set strongly the other way; nor even that error maintained itself long after the scientific grounds of the true interpretation of fossils had been stated, in a manner that left nothing to be desired, in the latter half of the seventeenth century. The person who rendered this good service to palaeontology was Nicolas Steno, professor of anatomy in Florence, though a Dane by birth. Collectors of fossils at that day were familiar with certain bodies termed "glossopetrae," and speculation was rife as to their nature. In the first half of the seventeenth century, Fabio Colonna had tried to convince his colleagues of the famous Accademia dei Lincei that the glossopetrae were merely fossil sharks' teeth, but his arguments made no impression. Fifty years later, Steno re-opened the question, and, by dissecting the head of a shark and pointing out the very exact correspondence of its teeth with the glossopetrae, left no rational doubt as to the origin of the latter. Thus far, the work of Steno went little further than that of Colonna, but it fortunately occurred to him to think out the whole subject of the interpretation of fossils, and the result of his meditations was the publication, in 1669, of a little treatise with the very quaint title of "De Solido intra Solidum naturaliter contento." The general course of Steno's argument may be stated in a few words. Fossils are solid bodies which, by some natural process, have come to be contained within other solid bodies, namely, the rocks in which they are embedded; and the fundamental problem of palaeontology, stated generally, is this: "Given a body endowed with a certain shape and produced in accordance with natural laws, to find in that body itself the evidence of the place and manner of its production." The only way of solving this problem is by the application of the axiom that "like effects imply like causes,"or as Steno puts it, in reference to this particular case, that "bodies which are altogether similar have been produced in the same way." Hence, since the glossopetrae are altogether similar to sharks' teeth, they must have been produced by sharklike fishes; and since many fossil shells correspond, down to the minutest details of structure, with the shells of existing marine or freshwater animals, they must have been produced by similar animals; and the like reasoning is applied by Steno to the fossil bones of vertebrated animals, whether aquatic or terrestrial. To the obvious objection that many fossils are not altogether similar to their living analogues, differing in substance while agreeing in form, or being mere hollows or impressions, the surfaces of which are figured in the same way as those of animal or vegetable organisms, Steno replies by pointing out the changes which take place in organic remains embedded in the earth, and how their solid substance may be dissolved away entirely, or replaced by mineral matter, until nothing is left of the original but a cast, an impression, or a mere trace of its contours. The principles of investigation thus excellently stated and illustrated by Steno in 1669, are those which have, consciously or unconsciously, guided the researches of palaeontologists ever since. Even that feat of palaeontology which has so powerfully impressed the popular imagination, the reconstruction of an extinct animal from a tooth or a bone, is based upon the simplest imaginable application of the logic of Steno. A moment's consideration will show, in fact, that Steno's conclusion that the glossopetrae are sharks' teeth implies the reconstruction of an animal from its tooth. It is equivalent to the assertion that the animal of which the glossopetrae are relics had the form and organisation of a shark; that it had a skull, a vertebral column, and limbs similar to those which are characteristic of this group of fishes; that its heart, gills, and intestines presented the peculiarities which those of all sharks exhibit; nay, even that any hard parts which its integument contained were of a totally different character from the scales of ordinary fishes. These conclusions are as certain as any based upon probable reasonings can be. And they are so, simply because a very large experience justifies us in believing that teeth of this particular form and structure are invariably associated with the peculiar organisation of sharks, and are never found in connection with other organisms. Why this should be we are not at present in a position even to imagine; we must take the fact as an empirical law of animal morphology, the reason of which may possibly be one day found in the history of the evolution of the shark tribe, but for which it is hopeless to seek for an explanation in ordinary physiological reasonings.

同类推荐
  • 串雅内外编

    串雅内外编

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 天变邸抄

    天变邸抄

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 屈原全集

    屈原全集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 入定不定印经

    入定不定印经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • The Deputy of Arcis

    The Deputy of Arcis

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 伐魔剑

    伐魔剑

    一千五百年前,有天外陨石落在异世大陆,陨石奇特,形状似剑。铸剑师仇冶闻讯赶到,受天意感召,穷毕生之力将之锻造成剑。此剑出世之时,精光贯天,星斗避彩。仇冶见状,更深信神剑降世乃是天意。故命名“天机剑”。千多年来,人族与兽族血债滔天。可恩怨起始正在此剑现世之时。大陆上风云变幻,唯强者独尊。而天机剑之主往往能凭一己之力搅动风云,扭转乾坤。似乎一切的一切都与此剑息息相关……
  • Two Gentlemen of Verona

    Two Gentlemen of Verona

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 木偶奇遇记

    木偶奇遇记

    这部作品借助童话的形式,以非凡的想象力和巧妙的构思,描绘了小木偶匹诺曹从一个贪玩、爱撒谎、到处闯祸的孩子,经历重重波折和教训,终变成一个诚实、勇敢的真正的男孩的成长历程。故事情节曲折、引人入胜,生动地描绘出了儿童特有的天真、好奇的本性,同时学会了基本的做人道理:诚实、有责任心、勇敢、尊重父母等等。
  • 南北欧现代著名作家(世界文学百科丛书)

    南北欧现代著名作家(世界文学百科丛书)

    作家是以写作为工作者,从事文学创作有成就的人。本书是丛书中“文学大师篇”中的一本,介绍了保加利亚、阿尔巴尼亚、塞尔维亚和黑山、意大利、罗马尼亚、希腊、西班牙、挪威、瑞典、冰岛等南北欧国家现代著名作家。
  • 快穿之男神又智障了

    快穿之男神又智障了

    她,南意,21世纪家里蹲大学优秀毕业生,就是因为贪图九块九还包邮的电视机,葬送了大好的青春岁月,不得不用自己卑微的生命,去各个位面历险!梦幻少女心的霸道总裁(√)一言不合就寻死的前朝太子(√)穿越千年只为广场舞蹦迪的清冷师尊(√)颜控十足还有洁癖的丧尸皇(√)恐女又晕血的高贵血族(√)生活不易,且行且苟且。
  • 清渡雍也

    清渡雍也

    活的肆意潇洒的宋姝被急着夺舍的修士乔伊一连累致死,阴差阳错之下取代了修士在清朝秀女胡亦安身上重生,随后被康熙指给四贝勒胤禛。彼时柔弱无力委身为妾,怎愿被冷心冷肺的男人逗猫遛狗似的宠爱?心有不甘,立下宏愿:定要占了你的心,伤了你的心,再要了你心。立场不同注定争锋,情关难渡,两心沉沦!
  • 明末黔国公

    明末黔国公

    现代人穿越至崇祯十六年的黔国公府,以少年庶子身份杀出一条血路,建立基业,屯田练兵,声闻天下,力挽狂澜。本书是传统种田争霸流,硬架空,非生活流。喜欢的请加收藏。
  • 修道江湖

    修道江湖

    她本是天真烂漫的大小姐,奈何在执行父亲的任务中认识了他………他本是暗黑组织的杀手老大,一个天真烂漫,一个腹黑,如何相爱相杀呢
  • 息桐

    息桐

    景瑟耗了大半生,终于大仇得报然后,她重生了一切又得重新再来。她不高兴了,所以她也得让仇人们不高兴。有人开始倒霉了……PS:倘若有朝一日,我成了世人口中的奸妄之臣,你还愿意携我之手,不负此生吗?
  • 掀翻诸天万界

    掀翻诸天万界

    你快要死了,将时日无多…这是来自一个系统的诅咒。似乎一切都是从这诅咒开始!