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THE RECORD OF THE ROCKS

REFERENCES

  • Bather, F. A. Fossils and Life: Address to the Geological Section of the British Association. Rept. Brit. Assoc, 1920.
  • Huxley, T. H. The Rise and Progress of Palaeontology. Nature, Vol. XXIV, pp. 342–346, 1881.
  • Price, G. McCready. Evolutionary Geology and the New Catastrophism. Published by the author at Watford, Herts, 1927.
  • Rowe, A. W. An Analysis of the Genus Micraster, etc. Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc, Vol. IV, pp. 494–547, 1899.
  • Smith, William. Strata Identified by Organised Fossils, (etc.). London, 1816. The bearing of Smith’s work is elucidated in an Address at Bath on July 10, 1926, by F. A. Bather, published by the Royal Lit. and Sci. Inst., Bath.

“Everywhere is ceaseless change. Nowhere is there perfect adjustment and harmony, always a constant becoming, a never-ceasing growth. The world is never finished, never a flawless work of art, but always striving toward perfection, taking its course, it may be, toward that one far-off divine event toward which the whole creation moves.”—F. L. Darrow.


Fossil remains show that none of the plants or animals of the distant past were like those of to-day. They prove that species have altered since the beginning; and the farther back in time we find the remains the more imperfect, the series showing a gradual improvement in forms.—Editor.

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