[132] “Discovery of the North-West Passage,” p. 213.
[133] “Voyage of the Resolute,” p. 294.
[134] Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc., vol. xi., p. 540.
[135] “McClure’s North-West Passage,” p. 214. Second Edition.
[136] “British Association Report for 1855,” p. 381. “The Last of the Arctic Voyages,” vol. i., p. 381.
[137] Mr. James Geikie informs me that the great accumulations of gravel which occur so abundantly in the low grounds of Switzerland, and which are, undoubtedly, merely the re-arranged materials originally brought down from the Alps as till and as moraines by the glaciers during the glacial epoch, rarely or never yield a single scratched or glaciated stone. The action of the rivers escaping from the melting ice has succeeded in obliterating all trace of striæ. It is the same, he says, with the heaps of gravel and sand in the lower grounds of Sweden and Norway, Scotland and Ireland. These deposits are evidently in the first place merely the materials carried down by the swollen rivers that issued from the gradually melting ice-fields and glaciers. The stones of the gravel derived from the demolition of moraines and till, have lost all their striæ and become in most cases well water-worn and rounded.
[138] Report on Icebergs, read before the Association of American Geologists, Silliman’s Journal, vol. xliii., p. 163 (1842).
[139] “Manual of Geology,” p. 677.
[140] Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc., vol. ix., p. 306.
[141] Dana’s “Manual of Geology,” p. 677.