EXTINCT VOLCANOES OF THE MOON.

The moon, which is of far smaller size than our earth, exhibits on its surface sufficiently striking evidences of the action of volcanic forces. Indeed the dimensions of the craters and fissures which cover the whole visible lunar surface are such that we cannot but infer volcanic activity to have been far more violent on the moon than it is at the present day upon the earth. This greater violence of the volcanic forces on the moon is perhaps accounted for by the fact that the force of gravity on the surface of the moon is only one-sixth of that at the surface of the earth; and thus the eruptive energy will have a much less smaller resistance to overcome in bursting asunder the solid crust and accumulated heaps of ejected materials on its surface. But the volcanic action on the moon appears now to have wholly ceased, and the absence of both water and atmosphere in our satellite suggests that this extinction of volcanic energy may have been caused by the complete absorption of its gaseous envelope. The appearance presented by a portion of the moon's surface is shown in [fig. 95].

The sun and the moon appear to exhibit two widely separated extremes in the condition assumed during the cooling down from a state of incandescence of great globes of vaporised materials. The several planets, our own among the number, probably exhibit various intermediate stages of consolidation.

Fig. 95.—A group of Lunar craters (Maurolycus, Barocius, etc.), the largest being more than 60 miles in diameter.

ERUPTIVE ACTION IN THE SUN, EARTH AND MOON.

Our earth is, as we have seen, closely allied to the other bodies of the solar system in its movements, its relations, and its composition; and a true theory of terrestrial vulcanicity, when it is discovered, may be expected not only to afford an explanation of the phenomena displayed on our own globe, but to account for those displays of internal energy which have been manifested in other members of the same great family of worlds.

INDEX.

[ [A] ][ [B] ][ [C] ][ [D] ][ [E] ][ [F] ][ [G] ][ [H] ]
[ [I] ][ [J] ][ [K] ][ [L] ][ [M] ][ [N] ][ [O] ][ [P] ]
[ [R] ][ [S] ][ [T] ][ [U] ][ [V] ][ [W] ][ [Y] ][ [Z] ]

[The subjects illustrated in the engravings are indicated by italics, the names of authors are in Capitals.]