Page:Physical Geography of the Sea and its Meteorology.djvu/313

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THE GEOLOGICAL AGENCY OF THE WINDS.
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basin of the Dead Sea, in the basin of the Caspian, of the Sea of Aral, and in the other inland basins of Asia, we are entitled to infer that the precipitation and evaporation are at this time exactly equal. Were it not so, the level of these seas would be rising or sinking. If the precipitation were in excess, these seas would be gradually becoming fuller; and if the evaporation were in excess, they would be gradually drying up; but observation does not show, nor history tell us, that either is the case. As far as we know, the level of these seas is as permanent as that of the ocean, and it is difficult to realize the existence of subterranean channels between them and the great ocean. Were there such a channel, the Dead Sea being the lower, it would be the recipient of ocean waters ; and we cannot conceive how it should be such a recipient without ultimately rising to the level of its feeder.

535. Whence come its rains?—It may be that the question suggested by my researches has no bearing upon the Dead Sea; that local elevations and subsidences alone were concerned in placing the level of its waters where it is. But is it probable that throughout all the geological periods, during all the changes that have taken place in the distribution of land and water surface over the earth, the winds, which in the general channels of circulation pass over the Dead Sea, have alone been unchanged? Throughout all ages, periods, and formations, is it probable that the winds have brought us just as much moisture to that sea as they now bring, and have just taken up as much water from it as they now carry off? Obviously and clearly not. The salt-beds, the water-marks, the geological formations, and other facts traced by Nature's own hand upon the tablets of the rock, all indicate plainly enough that not only the Dead Sea, but the Caspian also, had upon them, in former periods, more abundant rains than they now have. Where did the vapour for those rains come from? and what has stopped the supply? Surely not the elevation or depression of the Dead Sea basin. My researches with regard to the winds have suggested the probability (§ 290) that the vapour which is condensed into rains for the lake valley, and which the St. Lawrence carries off to the Atlantic Ocean, is taken up by the south-east trade winds of the Pacific Ocean. Suppose this to be the case, and that the winds which bring this vapour arrive with it in the lake country at a mean dew-point of 50°. Let us also admit the south-west winds to be the rain