<h2><SPAN name="I"></SPAN>I</h2>
<p class="h3">FOSSILS, AND HOW THEY ARE FORMED</p>
<div class="inset16">
<p>"<i>How of a thousand snakes each one<br/>
Was changed into a coil of stone.</i>"</p>
</div>
<p>Fossils are the remains, or even the indications,
of animals and plants that have, through
natural agencies, been buried in the earth and
preserved for long periods of time. This may
seem a rather meagre definition, but it is a difficult
matter to frame one that will be at once
brief, exact, and comprehensive; fossils are not
necessarily the remains of extinct animals or
plants, neither are they, of necessity, objects
that have become petrified or turned into stone.</p>
<p>Bones of the Great Auk and Rytina, which
are quite extinct, would hardly be considered
as fossils; while the bones of many species of
animals, still living, would properly come in
that category, having long ago been buried by
natural causes and often been changed into<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_2">[2]</SPAN></span>
stone. And yet it is not essential for a specimen
to have had its animal matter replaced by
some mineral in order that it may be classed as
a fossil, for the Siberian Mammoths, found entombed
in ice, are very properly spoken of as
fossils, although the flesh of at least one of these
animals was so fresh that it was eaten. Likewise
the mammoth tusks brought to market
are termed fossil-ivory, although differing but
little from the tusks of modern elephants.</p>
<p>Many fossils indeed merit their popular appellation
of petrifactions, because they have
been changed into stone by the slow removal
of the animal or vegetable matter present and
its replacement by some mineral, usually silica
or some form of lime. But it is necessary to
include 'indications of plants or animals' in
the above definition because some of the best
fossils may be merely impressions of plants or
animals and no portion of the objects themselves,
and yet, as we shall see, some of our
most important information has been gathered
from these same imprints.</p>
<p>Nearly all our knowledge of the plants that
flourished in the past is based on the impressions<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_3">[3]</SPAN></span>
of their leaves left on the soft mud or
smooth sand that later on hardened into enduring
stone. Such, too, are the trails of creeping
and crawling things, casts of the burrows of
worms and the many footprints of the reptiles,
great and small, that crept along the shore or
stalked beside the waters of the ancient seas.
The creatures themselves have passed away,
their massive bones even are lost, but the prints
of their feet are as plain to-day as when they
were first made.</p>
<p>Many a crustacean, too, is known solely or
mostly by the cast of its shell, the hard parts
having completely vanished, and the existence
of birds in some formations is revealed merely
by the casts of their eggs; and these natural
casts must be included in the category of
fossils.</p>
<p>Impressions of vertebrates may, indeed, be
almost as good as actual skeletons, as in the
case of some fishes, where the fine mud in
which they were buried has become changed
to a rock, rivalling porcelain in texture; the
bones have either dissolved away or shattered
into dust at the splitting of the rock, but the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_4">[4]</SPAN></span>
imprint of each little fin-ray and every threadlike
bone is as clearly defined as it would have
been in a freshly prepared skeleton. So fine,
indeed, may have been the mud, and so quiet
for the time being the waters of the ancient
sea or lake, that not only have prints of bones
and leaves been found, but those of feathers
and of the skin of some reptiles, and even of
such soft and delicate objects as jelly fishes.
But for these we should have little positive
knowledge of the outward appearance of the
creatures of the past, and to them we are occasionally
indebted for the solution of some
moot point in their anatomy.</p>
<p>The reader may possibly wonder why it is
that fossils are not more abundant; why, of the
vast majority of animals that have dwelt upon
the earth since it became fit for the habitation
of living beings, not a trace remains. This,
too, when some objects—the tusks of the Mammoth,
for example—have been sufficiently well
preserved to form staple articles of commerce
at the present time, so that the carved handle
of my lady's parasol may have formed part of
some animal that flourished at the very dawn
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_5">[5]</SPAN></span>
of the human race, and been gazed upon by
her grandfather a thousand times removed.
The answer to this query is that, unless the conditions
were such as to preserve at least the
hard parts of any creature from immediate decay,
there was small probability of its becoming
fossilized. These conditions are that the
objects must be protected from the air, and,
practically, the only way that this happens in
nature is by having them covered with water,
or at least buried in wet ground.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_030.jpg" width-obs="400" height-obs="188" alt="" /> Fig. 1.—Diplomystus, an Ancient Member of the Shad Family. From the Fishbed at Green River, Wyoming. <br/>
<i>From a specimen in the United States National Museum.</i></div>
<p>If an animal dies on dry land, where its bones
lie exposed to the summer's sun and rain and
the winter's frost and snow, it does not take
these destructive agencies long to reduce the
bones to powder; in the rare event of a climate
devoid of rain, mere changes of temperature,
by producing expansion and contraction,
will sooner or later cause a bone to crack and
crumble.</p>
<p>Usually, too, the work of the elements is
aided by that of animals and plants. Every
one has seen a dog make way with a pretty
good-sized bone, and the Hyena has still greater
capabilities in that line; and ever since vertebrate
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_6">[6]</SPAN></span>
life began there have been carnivorous
animals of some kind to play the rôle of bone-destroyers.
Even were there no carnivores,
there were probably then, as now, rats and
mice a-plenty, and few suspect the havoc small
rodents may play with a bone for the grease it
contains, or merely for the sake of exercising
their teeth. Now and then we come upon a
fossil bone, long since turned into stone, on
which are the marks of the little cutting teeth
of field mice, put there long, long ago, and yet
looking as fresh as if made only last week.
These little beasts, however, are indirect rather
than direct agents in the destruction of bones
by gnawing off the outer layers, and thus permitting
the more ready entrance of air and
water. Plants, as a rule, begin their work after
an object has become partly or entirely buried
in the soil, when the tiny rootlets find their
way into fissures, and, expanding as they grow,
act like so many little wedges to force it
asunder.</p>
<p>Thus on dry land there is small opportunity
for a bone to become a fossil; but, if a creature
so perishes that its body is swept into the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_7">[7]</SPAN></span>
ocean or one of its estuaries, settles to the
muddy bottom of a lake or is caught on the
sandy shoals of some river, the chances are
good that its bones will be preserved. They
are poorest in the ocean, for unless the body
drifts far out and settles down in quiet waters,
the waves pound the bones to pieces with stones
or scour them away with sand, while marine
worms may pierce them with burrows, or
echinoderms cut holes for their habitations;
there are more enemies to a bone than one
might imagine.</p>
<p>Suppose, however, that some animal has
sunk in the depths of a quiet lake, where the
wash of the waves upon the shore wears the
sand or rock into mud so fine that it floats out
into still water and settles there as gently as
dew upon the grass. Little by little the bones
are covered by a deposit that fills every groove
and pore, preserving the mark of every ridge
and furrow; and while this may take long, it
is merely a matter of time and favorable circumstance
to bury the bones as deeply as one
might wish. Scarce a reader of these lines but
at some time has cast anchor in some quiet<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_8">[8]</SPAN></span>
pond and pulled it up, thickly covered with
sticky mud, whose existence would hardly be
suspected from the sparkling waters and pebbly
shores. If, instead of a lake, our animal had
gone to the bottom of some estuary into which
poured a river turbid with mud, the process of
entombment would have been still more rapid,
while, had the creature been engulfed in quicksand,
it would have been the quickest method
of all; and just such accidents did take place
in the early days of the earth as well as now.
At least two examples of the great Dinosaur
Thespesius have been found with the bones all
in place, the thigh bones still in their sockets
and the ossified tendons running along the
backbone as they did in life. This would
hardly have happened had not the body been
surrounded and supported so that every part
was held in place and not crushed, and it is
difficult to see any better agency for this than
burial in quicksand.</p>
<p>If such an event as we have been supposing
took place in a part of the globe where the
land was gradually sinking—and the crust of
the earth is ever rising and falling—the mud<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_9">[9]</SPAN></span>
and sand would keep on accumulating until
an enormously thick layer was formed. The
lime or silica contained in the water would
tend to cement the particles of mud and grains
of sand into a solid mass, while the process
would be aided by the pressure of the overlying
sediment, the heat created by this pressure,
and that derived from the earth beneath.
During this process the animal matter of bones
or other objects would disappear and its place
be taken by lime or silica, and thus would be
formed a layer of rock containing fossils. The
exact manner in which this replacement is
effected and in which the chemical and mechanical
changes occur is very far from being
definitely known—especially as the process of
"fossilization" must at times have been very
complicated.</p>
<p>In the case of fossil wood greater changes
have taken place than in the fossilization of
bone, for there is not merely an infiltration
of the specimen but a complete replacement of
the original vegetable by mineral matter, the
interior of the cells being first filled with silica
and their walls replaced later on. So completely<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_10">[10]</SPAN></span>
and minutely may this change occur
that under the microscope the very cellular
structure of the wood is visible, and as this
varies according to the species, it is possible,
by microscopical examination, to determine
the relationship of trees in cases where nothing
but fragments of the trunk remain.</p>
<p>The process of fossilization is at best a slow
one, and soft substances such as flesh, or even
horn, decay too rapidly for it to take place, so
that all accounts of petrified bodies, human or
otherwise, are either based on deliberate frauds
or are the result of a very erroneous misinterpretation
of facts. That the impression or
cast of a body <i>might</i> be formed in nature,
somewhat as casts have been made of those
who perished at Pompeii, is true; but, so far, no
authentic case of the kind has come to light,
and the reader is quite justified in disbelieving
any report of "a petrified man."</p>
<p>Natural casts of such hard bodies as shells
are common, formed by the dissolving away of
the original shell after it had become enclosed
in mud, or even after this had changed to
stone, and the filling up of this space by the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_11">[11]</SPAN></span>filtering in of water charged with lime or silica,
which is there deposited, often in crystalline
form. In this way, too, are formed casts
of eggs of reptiles and birds, so perfect that it
is possible to form a pretty accurate opinion
as to the group to which they belong.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_038.jpg" width-obs="400" height-obs="212" alt="" /> Fig. 2.—Bryozoa from the Shore of the Devonian Sea that Covered Eastern New York. <br/>
<i>From a specimen in Yale University Museum, prepared by Dr. Beecher.</i></div>
<p>Sometimes it happens that shells or other
small objects imbedded in limestone have been
dissolved and replaced by silica, and in such
cases it is possible to eat away the enveloping
rock with acid and leave the silicified casts.
By this method specimens of shells, corals,
and bryozoans are obtained of almost lace-like
delicacy, and as perfect as if only yesterday
gathered at the sea-shore. Casts of the interior
of shells, showing many details of structure,
are common, and anyone who has seen clams
dug will understand how they are formed
by the entrance of mud into the empty shell.</p>
<p>Casts of the kernels of nuts are formed in
much the same way, and Professor E. H. Barbour
has thus described the probable manner
in which this was done. When the nuts were
dropped into the water of the ancient lake the
kernel rotted away, but the shell, being tough<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_12">[12]</SPAN></span>
and hard, would probably last for years under
favorable circumstances. Throughout the
marls and clays of the Bad Lands (of South
Dakota) there is a large amount of potash.
This is dissolved by water, and then acts upon
quartz, carrying it away in solution. This
would find its way by infiltration into the interior
of the nut. At the same time with this
process, carrying lime carbonate in solution
was going on, so that doubtless the stone kernels,
consisting of pretty nearly equal parts of
lime and silica, were deposited within the nuts.
These kernels, of course, became hard and
flinty in time, and capable of resisting almost
any amount of weathering. Not so the organic
shell; this eventually would decay away,
and so leave the filling or kernel of chalcedony
and lime.<SPAN name="FNanchor_1_1"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</SPAN></p>
<div class="footnote"><p><SPAN name="Footnote_1_1"></SPAN><SPAN href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></SPAN> <i>Right here is the weak spot in Professor Barbour's explanation,
and an illustration of our lack of knowledge. For
it is difficult to see why the more enduring husk should not have
become mineralized equally with the cavity within.</i></p>
</div>
<p>"Fossil leaves" are nothing but fine casts,
made in natural moulds, and all have seen
the first stages in their formation as they
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_13">[13]</SPAN></span>watched the leaves sailing to the ground to be
covered by mud or sand at the next rain, or
dropping into the water, where sooner or later
they sink, as we may see them at the bottom
of any quiet woodland spring.</p>
<p>Impressions of leaves are among the early
examples of color-printing, for they are frequently
of a darker, or even different, tint from
that of the surrounding rock, this being caused
by the carbonization of vegetable matter or to
its action on iron that may have been present
in the soil or water. Besides complete mineralization,
or petrifaction, there are numerous
cases of incomplete or semi-fossilization, where
modern objects, still retaining their phosphate
of lime and some animal matter even, are
found buried in rock. This takes place when
water containing carbonate of lime, silica, or
sometimes iron, flows over beds of sand, cementing
the grains into solid but not dense
rock, and at the same time penetrating and
uniting with it such things as chance to be buried.
In this way was formed the "fossil man"
of Guadeloupe, West Indies, a skeleton of a
modern Carib lying in recent concretionary<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_14">[14]</SPAN></span>
limestone, together with shells of existing species
and fragments of pottery. In a similar way,
too, human remains in parts of Florida have,
through the infiltration of water charged with
iron, become partially converted into limonite
iron ore; and yet we know that these bones
have been buried within quite recent times.</p>
<p>Sometimes we hear of springs or waters that
"turn things into stone," but these tales are
quite incorrect. Waters there are, like the
celebrated hot springs of Auvergne, France,
containing so much carbonate of lime in solution
that it is readily deposited on objects
placed therein, coating them more or less
thickly, according to the length of time they
are allowed to remain. This, however, is merely
an encrustation, not extending into the objects.
In a similar way the precipitation of
solid material from waters of this description
forms the porous rock known as tufa, and this
often encloses moss, twigs, and other substances
that are in no way to be classed with fossils.</p>
<p>But some streams, flowing over limestone
rocks, take up considerable carbonate of lime,
and this may be deposited in water-soaked logs,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_15">[15]</SPAN></span>
replacing more or less of the woody tissue and
thus really partially changing the wood into
stone.</p>
<p>The very rocks themselves may consist largely
of fossils; chalk, for example, is mainly made
up of the disintegrated shells of simple marine
animals called foraminifers, and the beautiful
flint-like "skeletons" of other small creatures
termed radiolarians, minute as they are, have
contributed extensively to the formation of
some strata.</p>
<p>Even after an object has become fossilized,
it is far from certain that it will remain in good
condition until found, while the chance of its
being found at all is exceedingly small. When
we remember that it is only here and there
that nature has made the contents of the rocks
accessible by turning the strata on edge, heaving
them into cliffs or furrowing them with
valleys and canyons, we realize what a vast
number of pages of the fossil record must
remain not only unread, but unseen. The
wonder is, not that we know so little of
the history of the past, but that we have
learned so much, for not only is nature careless<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_16">[16]</SPAN></span>
in keeping the records—preserving them
mostly in scattered fragments—but after they
have been laid away and sealed up in the rocks
they are subject to many accidents. Some
specimens get badly flattened by the weight
of subsequently deposited strata, others are
cracked and twisted by the movements of the
rocks during periods of upheaval or subsidence,
and when at last they are brought to the surface,
the same sun and rain, snow and frost,
from which they once escaped, are ready to
renew the attack and crumble even the hard
stone to fragments. Such, very briefly, are
some of the methods by which fossils may be
formed, such are some of the accidents by
which they may be destroyed; but this description
must be taken as a mere outline and as
applying mainly to vertebrates, or backboned
animals, since it is with them that we shall have
to deal. It may, however, show why it is that
fossils are not more plentiful, why we have
mere hints of the existence of many animals,
and why myriads of creatures may have flourished
and passed away without so much as
leaving a trace of their presence behind.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_17">[17]</SPAN></span></p>
<h3><i>REFERENCES</i></h3>
<p><i>A very valuable and interesting article by Dr. Charles
A. White, entitled "The Relation of Biology to Geological
Investigation," will be found in the Report of the
United States National Museum for 1892. This comprises
a series of essays on the nature and scientific uses
of fossil remains, their origin, relative chronological
value and other questions pertaining to them. The United
States National Museum has published a pamphlet, part
K, Bulletin 39, containing directions for collecting and
preparing fossils, by Charles Schuchert; and another,
part B, Bulletin 39, collecting recent and fossil plants,
by F. H. Knowlton.</i></p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_046.jpg" width-obs="400" height-obs="409" alt="" /> Fig. 3.—Skeleton of a Radiolarian Very Greatly Enlarged.</div>
<hr class="chapter" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_18">[18]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />