This general view of the known causes in operation during the Glacial period will go far towards answering an objection that has probably before this presented itself to the reader’s mind. It seems clear that the Glacial period in the southern hemisphere has been nearly contemporaneous with that of the northern. The Glacial period proper of the southern hemisphere is long since passed. The existing glaciers of New Zealand, of the southern portion of the Andes Mountains, and of the Himalaya Mountains are but remnants of those of former days. In the light of the considerations just presented, it would not seem improbable that the same causes should produce these similar effects in the northern and the southern hemisphere contemporaneously. At any rate, it would not seem altogether unlikely that the pressure of ice during the climax of the Glacial period upon the northern hemisphere (which, as we have seen, there is reason to believe aided in the depression of the continent to below its present level in the latter part of the Glacial period) should have contributed towards the elevation of mountains in other parts of the world, and so to the temporary enlargement of the glaciers about their summits.

Nor are we wholly without evidence that these readjustments of land-level which have been carried on so Vigorously since the middle of the Tertiary period are still going on with considerable though doubtless with diminished rapidity. There has been a re-elevation of the land in North America since the Glacial period amounting to 230 feet upon the coast of Maine, 500 feet in the vicinity of Montreal, from 1,000 to 1,600 feet in the extreme northern part of the continent, and in Scandinavia to the extent of 600 feet. In portions of Scandinavia the land is now rising at the rate of three feet in a century. Other indications of even the present instability of the earth’s surface occur in numbers too numerous to mention.[DY]

[DY] For a convincing presentation of the views here outlined, together with abundant references to literature, see Mr. Warren Upham’s Appendix to the author’s Ice Age in North America.

But, while we are increasingly confident that the main causes of the Glacial period have been changes in the relative relation of land-levels connected with diversion of oceanic currents, it is by no means impossible, as Wallace[DZ] and others have suggested, that these were combined with the astronomical causes urged by Drs. Croll and Geikie. By some this combination is thought to be the more probable, because of the extreme recentness of the close of the Glacial period, as shown by the evidence which will be presented in the following chapter. The continuance of glaciers in the highlands of Canada, down to within a few thousand years of the present time, coincides in a remarkable manner with the last occurrence of the conditions favourable to glaciation upon Mr. Croll’s theory, which took place about eleven thousand years ago.

[DZ] See Island Life, chapters viii and ix.


[CHAPTER X.]

THE DATE OF THE GLACIAL PERIOD.

In approaching the subject of glacial chronology, we are compelled to recognise at the outset the approximate character of all our calculations. Still, we shall find that there are pretty well-defined limits of time beyond which it is not reasonable to place the date of the close of the Glacial period; and, where exact figures cannot be determined, it may yet be of great interest and importance to know something near the limits within which our speculations must range.