For many years past Mr. Croll’s astronomical theory as to the cause of the Glacial period has been considered in certain circles as so nearly established that it has been adopted by them as a chronological table in which to insert a series of supposed successive Glacial epochs which are thought to have characterised not merely the Quaternary epoch but all preceding geological eras. What we have already said, however, respecting the weakness of Mr. Croll’s theory is probably sufficient to discredit it as a chronological apparatus. We will therefore turn immediately to the more tangible evidences bearing upon the subject.

The data directly relating to the length of time which separates the present from the Glacial period are mainly connected with two classes of facts:

1. The amount of erosion which has been accomplished by the river systems since the Glacial period; and 2. The amount of sedimentation which has taken place in lakes and kettle-holes. We will consider first the evidence from erosion.

Fig. 103.—Diagram of eccentricity and precession: Abscissa represents time and ordinates, degrees of eccentricity and also of cold. The dark and light shades show the warmer and colder winters, and therefore indicate each 10,500 years, the whole representing a period of 300,000 years.

The gorge below Niagara Falls affords an important chronometer for measuring the time which has elapsed since a certain stage in the recession of the great North American ice-sheet. As already shown, the present Niagara River is purely a post-glacial line of drainage;[EA] the preglacial outlet to Lake Erie having been filled up by glacial deposits, so that, on the recession of the ice, the lowest level between Lake Erie and Lake Ontario was in the line of the trough of the present outlet. But, from what has already been said, it also appears that the Niagara River did not begin to flow until considerably after the ice-front had withdrawn from the escarpment at Queenston, where the river now emerges from its cañon to the low shelf which borders Lake Ontario. For a considerable period afterwards the ice continued to block up the easterly and northerly outlets through the valleys of the Mohawk and of the St. Lawrence, and held the water in front of the ice up to the level of the passes leading into the Mississippi Valley. Niagara River, of course, was not born until these ice-barriers on the east and northeast melted away sufficiently to allow the drainage to take its natural course.

[EA] See above, [p. 200] et seq.