The term Azoic[50] applied by some writers to these oldest rocks suggests the absence of life during the period in which they were formed. Life there must have been, though we are unable to discover its records. The period of time represented by the Archaean or Pre-Cambrian rocks must be enormous, and it was in that earliest era that the first links in the chain of life were forged.

II. Cambrian.

The term Cambrian was adopted by Sedgwick for a series of sedimentary rocks in North Wales (Cambria). In that district, in South Wales, the Longmynd Hills, the Malverns, in Scotland, and other regions there occur more or less highly folded and contorted beds of pebbly conglomerate, sandstones, shales and slates resting on the uneven surface of an Archaean foundation.

It is in these Cambrian rocks that trustworthy records of organic life are first met with. Among the most constant and characteristic fossils of this period are the extinct and aberrant members of the crustacea, the trilobites; these with some brachiopods, sponges, and other fossils comprise the oldest fauna, of which the ancestral types have yet to be discovered. During the last few decades the number of Cambrian fossils has been considerably increased, and in certain regions of North America and China there are found many thousand feet of strata above the typical Archaean rocks and below the newer fossiliferous beds of Cambrian age. It is reasonable to suppose that future research may extend the present limits of fossil-bearing rocks below the horizon, which is marked by the occurrence of the widely distributed and oldest known trilobite, the genus Olenellus.

The vast thickness of Cambrian strata was for the most part laid down on the floor of a comparatively deep sea; other members of the series represent the shingle beaches and coast deposits accumulated on the slopes of Archaean islands. There have been many conjectures as to the distribution of land and sea during the deposition of these rocks; but the data are too imperfect to enable us to restore with any degree of confidence the physical geography of this Palaeozoic epoch, of which the sediments stood out as islands of Cambrian land during many succeeding ages.

III. Ordovician.

Since the days when Sedgwick and Murchison first worked out the succession of Palaeozoic strata in North Wales, there has always existed a considerable difference of opinion as to the best method of subdividing the Cambrian-Silurian strata. Later research has shown that the rocks included by Sedgwick in his Cambrian system, fall naturally into two groups; for the upper of these Prof. Lapworth has suggested the term Ordovician, from the name of the Ordovices, who inhabited a part of northern Wales. At the base of the system we have a series of volcanic and sedimentary rocks to which Sedgwick gave the name Arenig; above these there occur the Llandeilo Flags, succeeded by a considerable thickness of rocks known as the Bala series. The rocks making up these Ordovician sediments consist for the most part of slates, sandstones and limestones with volcanic ashes and lavas. Much of the typical Welsh scenery owes its character to the folded and weathered rocks laid down on the floor of the Ordovician sea, on which from many centres of volcanic activity lava streams and showers of ash were spread out between sheets of marine sediment. The Arenig Hills, Snowdonia, and many other parts of North and South Wales, parts of Shropshire, Scotland, Sweden, Russia, Bohemia, North America and other regions consist of great thicknesses of Ordovician strata.

IV. Silurian.

Passing up a stage higher in the geologic series, we have a succession of conglomerates, sandstones, shales, and limestones; in other words, a series of beds which represent pebbly shore deposits, the sands and muds of deeper water, and the accumulated débris of calcareous skeletons of animals which lived in the clear water of the Silurian sea. The term Silurian (Siluria was the country of Caractacus and the old Britons known as Silures[51]) was first applied by Murchison in 1835 to a more comprehensive series of rocks than are now included in the Silurian system. The rocks of this period occur in Wales, Shropshire, parts of Scotland, Ireland, Scandinavia, Russia, the United States and other countries. After the accumulation of the thick Ordovician sediments, the sea-floor was upraised and in places converted into ridges or islands of land, of which the detritus formed part of the material of Silurian deposits. The limestones of the Wenlock ridge have yielded an abundant fauna, consisting of corals, crinoids, molluscs and other invertebrates. In this period we have the first representatives of the Vertebrata, discovered in the rocks of Ludlow. In fact, in the Silurian period, “all the great divisions of the Animal Kingdom were already represented[52].”

V. Devonian.