P674:7, 59:2.1 The periodic phenomena of land
elevation and land sinking characteristic of these times were all gradual
and
nonspectacular, being accompanied by little or no volcanic action.
Throughout all of these successive land elevations and depressions the
Asiatic mother continent did not fully share the history of the other land
bodies. It experienced many inundations, dipping first in one direction
and then another, more particularly in its earlier history, but it does
not present the uniform rock deposits which may be discovered on the other
continents. In recent ages Asia has been the most stable of all the land
masses.
P675:1, 59:2.2 350,000,000
years ago saw the beginning of the great flood period of all the continents
except central Asia. The land masses were repeatedly covered with water;
only the coastal highlands remained above these shallow but widespread
oscillatory inland seas. Three major inundations characterized this period,
but before it ended, the continents again arose, the total land emergence
being fifteen per cent greater than now exists. The Caribbean region was
highly elevated. This period is not well marked off in Europe because the
land fluctuations were less, while the volcanic action was more persistent.
P675:2, 59:2.3 340,000,000
years ago there occurred another extensive land sinking except in Asia
and Australia. The waters of the world's oceans were generally commingled.
This was a great limestone age, much of its stone being laid down by lime-secreting
algae.
P675:3, 59:2.4 A few million
years later large portions of the American continents and Europe began
to emerge from the water. In the Western Hemisphere only an arm of the
Pacific Ocean remained over Mexico and the present Rocky Mountain regions,
but near the close of this epoch the Atlantic and Pacific coasts again
began to sink.
P675:4, 59:2.5 330,000,000
years ago marks the beginning of a time sector of comparative quiet all
over the world, with much land again above water. The only exception to
this reign of terrestrial quiet was the eruption of the great North American
volcano of eastern Kentucky, one of the greatest single volcanic activities
the world has ever known. The ashes of this volcano covered five hundred
square miles to a depth of from fifteen to twenty feet.
P675:5, 59:2.6 320,000,000
years ago the third major flood of this period occurred. The waters of
this inundation covered all the land submerged by the preceding deluge,
while extending farther in many directions all over the Americas and Europe.
Eastern North America and western Europe were from 10,000 to 15,000 feet
under water.
P675:6, 59:2.7 310,000,000
years ago the land masses of the world were again well up excepting the
southern parts of North America. Mexico emerged, thus creating the Gulf
Sea, which has ever since maintained its identity.
P675:7, 59:2.8 The life
of this period continues to evolve. The world is once again quiet and relatively
peaceful; the climate remains mild and equable; the land plants are migrating
farther and farther from the seashores. The life patterns are well developed,
although few plant fossils of these times are to be found.
P675:8, 59:2.9 This was
the great age of individual animal organismal evolution, though many of
the basic changes, such as the transition from plant to animal, had previously
occurred. The marine fauna developed to the point where every type of life
below the vertebrate scale was represented in the fossils of those rocks
which were laid down during these times. But all of these animals were
marine organisms. No land animals had yet appeared except a few types of
worms which
burrowed along the seashores, nor had the land plants yet overspread
the continents; there was still too much carbon dioxide in the air to permit
of the existence of air breathers. Primarily, all animals except certain
of the more primitive ones are directly or indirectly dependent on plant
life for their existence.
P676:1, 59:2.10 The trilobites
were still prominent. These little animals existed in tens of thousands
of patterns and were the predecessors of modern crustaceans. Some of the
trilobites had from twenty-five to four thousand tiny
eyelets; others had
aborted eyes. As this period closed, the trilobites shared domination of
the seas with several other forms of invertebrate life. But they utterly
perished during the beginning of the next period.
P676:2, 59:2.11 Lime-secreting
algae were widespread. There existed thousands of species of the early
ancestors of the corals. Sea worms were abundant, and there were many varieties
of jellyfish which have since become extinct. Corals and the later types
of sponges evolved. The cephalopods were well developed, and they have
survived as the modern pearly
nautilus, octopus, cuttlefish, and
squid.
P676:3, 59:2.12
There were
many varieties of shell animals, but their shells were not then so much
needed for defensive purposes as in subsequent ages. The gastropods were
present in the waters of the ancient seas, and they included
single-shelled
drills,
periwinkles, and snails. The
bivalve gastropods have come on down
through the intervening millions of years much as they then existed and
embrace the mussels,
clams, oysters, and
scallops. The
valve-shelled organisms
also evolved, and these brachiopods lived in those ancient waters much
as they exist today; they even had
hinged,
notched, and other sorts of
protective arrangements of their
valves.
P676:4, 59:2.13 So ends
the evolutionary story of the second great period of marine life, which
is known to your geologists as the
Ordovician.