The freshness of the high-level terraces surrounding the valleys of Great Salt Lake, in Utah, and of Pyramid and North Carson Lakes, in Nevada, and the small amount of erosion which has taken place since the formation of these terraces, point in the same direction—namely, to a very recent date for the glaciation of the Pacific coast.
We have already detailed the facts concerning the formation of these terraces and the evidence of their probable connection with the Glacial period. It is sufficient, therefore, here to add that, according to Mr. Russell and Mr. Gilbert (two of the most eminent members of the United States Geological Survey, who have each published monographs minutely embodying the results of their extensive observations in this region), the erosion of present streams in the beds which were deposited during the enlargement of the lakes is very slight, and the modification of the shores since the formation of the high terraces has been insignificant.
According to Mr. Gilbert: "The Bonneville shores are almost unmodified. Intersecting streams, it is true, have scored them and interrupted their continuity for brief spaces; but the beating of the rain has hardly left a trace. The sea-cliffs still stand as they first stood, except that frost has wrought upon their faces so as to crumble away a portion and make a low talus at the base. The embankments and beaches and bars are almost as perfect as though the lake had left them yesterday, and many of them rival in the symmetry and perfection of their contours the most elaborate work of the engineer. There are places where boulders of quartzite or other enduring rock still retain the smooth, glistening surfaces which the waves scoured upon them by clashing against them the sands of the beach.
“When this preservation is compared with that of the lowest Tertiary rocks of the region—the Pliocene beds to which King has given the name Humboldt—the difference is most impressive. The Pliocene shore-lines have disappeared.
“The deposits are so indurated as to serve for building-stone. They have been upturned in many places by the uplifting of mountains. Elsewhere they have been divided by faults, and the fragments, dissevered from their continuation in the valley, have been carried high up on the mountain-flanks, where erosion has carved them in typical mountain forms.... The date of the Bonneville flood is the geologic yesterday, and, calling it yesterday, we may without exaggeration refer the Pliocene of Utah to the last decade; the Eocene of the Colorado basin to the last century, and relegate the laying of the Potsdam sandstone to prehistoric times.”[EJ]
[EJ] Second Annual Report of the United States Geological Survey, p. 188.
Mr. Russell adds to this class of evidence that of the small extent to which the glacial striæ have been effaced since the withdrawal of the ice from the borders of these old lakes: “The smooth surfaces are still scored with fine, hair-like lines, and the eye fails to detect more than a trace of disintegration that has taken place since the surfaces received their polish and striation.... It seems reasonable to conclude that in a severe climate like that of the high Sierra it” (the polish) “could not remain unimpaired for more than a few centuries at the most.”[EK]
[EK] See also Mr. Upham in American Journal of Science, vol. xli, pp. 41, 51.
Europe does not seem to furnish so favourable opportunities as America for estimating the date of the Glacial period; still it is not altogether wanting in data bearing upon the subject.
Some of the caves in which palæolithic implements were found associated with the bones of extinct animals in southern England contain floors of stalagmite which have been thought by some to furnish a measure of the time separating the deposits underneath from those above. This is specially true in the case of Kent’s Cavern, near Torquay, which contains two floors of stalagmite, the upper one almost continuous and varying in thickness from sixteen inches to five feet, the lower one being in places twelve feet thick, underneath which human implements were found.