Page:The Journal of geology (IA journalofgeology11893univ).pdf/424
posits. This is abundantly proven in the St. Lawrence and Champlain valleys, where clays containing marine fossils occur up to a certain horizon and record a Pleistocene invasion of these depressions by the sea. If the adjacent Ontario basin was occupied by the sea about the same time that the Champlain valley received its filling of clays containing marine fossils, there is every reason to believe that the deposits and their contained fossils in each basin would have been essentially the same.
One of the best known of the ancient shore lines about Lake Ontario has an average elevation of approximately 500 feet above the sea. If the sea had access to the basin at the time this breech was formed, then at corresponding horizon without the basin especially, to the south and southeast, where the full force of the Atlantic's waves would have been felt, there should be still more prominent beaches.
Many well-defined shore lines in the Laurentian basin are much higher than the one just referred to, and if these were also formed during various stages of submergence, as has been claimed, it is evident that ocean beaches and ocean sediments of Pleistocene age should be looked for over nearly the whole of the eastern part of the United States. The student may easily answer this question for himself, and thus prehaps make a contribution to the subject here treated.
In the investigation here outlined, the work of previous observers should not be ignored, and every plausable hypothesis that has been advanced to account for the facts observed should be carefully tested. In writing these pages I have not quoted the writing of others, for the reason that a discussion of evidence has not been the aim in view, and also because the writings examined are so numerous that justice could not be done them in the space at command. That the literature relating to the subject is voluminous is indicated by the fact that an annotated bibliography of the Pleistocene history of the Laurentian basin, now in preparation, already contains over 200 entries of individual papers.
Israel C. Russell.