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Volume  Volume2\Physical Geography

Entry#  988. The marine shells were not produced away from the sea.


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The marine shells were not produced away from the sea.


As to those who say that shells existed for a long time and were

born at a distance from the sea, from the nature of the place and of

the cycles, which can influence a place to produce such

creatures--to them it may be answered: such an influence could not

place the animals all on one line, except those of the same sort and

age; and not the old with the young, nor some with an operculum and

others without their operculum, nor some broken and others whole,

nor some filled with sea-sand and large and small fragments of other

shells inside the whole shells which remained open; nor the claws of

crabs without the rest of their bodies; nor the shells of other

species stuck on to them like animals which have moved about on

them; since the traces of their track still remain, on the outside,

after the manner of worms in the wood which they ate into. Nor would

there be found among them the bones and teeth of fish which some

call arrows and others serpents' tongues, nor would so many

Footnote: I. Scilla argued against this hypothesis, which was still

accepted in his days; see: _La vana Speculazione, Napoli_ 1670.

portions of various animals be found all together if they had not

been thrown on the sea shore. And the deluge cannot have carried

them there, because things that are heavier than water do not float

on the water. But these things could not be at so great a height if

they had not been carried there by the water, such a thing being

impossible from their weight. In places where the valleys have not

been filled with salt sea water shells are never to be seen; as is

plainly visible in the great valley of the Arno above Gonfolina; a

rock formerly united to Monte Albano, in the form of a very high

bank which kept the river pent up, in such a way that before it

could flow into the sea, which was afterwards at its foot, it formed

two great lakes; of which the first was where we now see the city of

Florence together with Prato and Pistoia, and Monte Albano. It

followed the rest of its bank as far as where Serravalle now stands.

>From the Val d'Arno upwards, as far as Arezzo, another lake was

formed, which discharged its waters into the former lake. It was

closed at about the spot where now we see Girone, and occupied the

whole of that valley above for a distance of 40 miles in length.

This valley received on its bottom all the soil brought down by the

turbid waters. And this is still to be seen at the foot of Prato

Magno; it there lies very high where the rivers have not worn it

away. Across this land are to be seen the deep cuts of the rivers

that have passed there, falling from the great mountain of Prato

Magno; in these cuts there are no vestiges of any shells or of

marine soil. This lake was joined with that of Perugia Footnote:

See PI. CXIII.  


A great quantity of shells are to be seen where the rivers flow into

the sea, because on such shores the waters are not so salt owing to

the admixture of the fresh water, which is poured into it. Evidence

of this is to be seen where, of old, the Appenines poured their

rivers into the Adriatic sea; for there in most places great

quantities of shells are to be found, among the mountains, together

with bluish marine clay; and all the rocks which are torn off in

such places are full of shells. The same may be observed to have

been done by the Arno when it fell from the rock of Gonfolina into

the sea, which was not so very far below; for at that time it was

higher than the top of San Miniato al Tedesco, since at the highest

summit of this the shores may be seen full of shells and oysters

within its flanks. The shells did not extend towards Val di Nievole,

because the fresh waters of the Arno did not extend so far.


That the shells were not carried away from the sea by the deluge,

because the waters which came from the earth although they drew the

sea towards the earth, were those which struck its depths; because

the water which goes down from the earth, has a stronger current

than that of the sea, and in consequence is more powerful, and it

enters beneath the sea water and stirs the depths and carries with

it all sorts of movable objects which are to be found in the earth,

such as the above-mentioned shells and other similar things. And in

proportion as the water which comes from the land is muddier than

sea water it is stronger and heavier than this; therefore I see no

way of getting the said shells so far in land, unless they had been

born there. If you were to tell me that the river Loire Footnote:

Leonardo has written Era instead of Loera or Loira--perhaps under

the mistaken idea that _Lo_ was an article. ,which traverses France

covers when the sea rises more than eighty miles of country, because

it is a district of vast plains, and the sea rises about 20 braccia,

and shells are found in this plain at the distance of 80 miles from

the sea; here I answer that the flow and ebb in our Mediterranean

Sea does not vary so much; for at Genoa it does not rise at all, and

at Venice but little, and very little in Africa; and where it varies

little it covers but little of the country.


The course of the water of a river always rises higher in a place

where the current is impeded; it behaves as it does where it is

reduced in width to pass under the arches of a bridge.

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