CHAPTER X
Concerning the Chanel of the Sea, and the Original of it:
The Causes of its irregular form and unequal depths: As also of the Original of
Islands, their situation, and other properties.
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WE have hitherto given an account
of the Subterraneous Regions, and of their general form; We now come above
ground to view the surface of the Globe, which we find Terraqueous, or
divided into Sea and Land: These we must survey, and what is remarkable in them
as to their frame and structure, we must give an account of from our Hypothesis,
and shew to be inaccountable from any other.
As for the Ocean, there are two things considerable in it, the
Water and the Chanel that contains it. The Water, no doubt is as ancient as the
Earth and contemporary with it, and we suppose it to be part of the great
Abysse wherein the World was drown'd; the rest lying cover'd under the hollow
fragments of Continents and Islands. But that is not so much the subject of our
present discourse as the Chanel of the Ocean, that vast and prodigious Cavity
that runs quite round the Globe, and reacheth, for ought we know, from Pole to
Pole, and in many places is unsearchably deep: When I present this great Gulf to
my imagination, emptied of all its waters, naked and gaping at the Sun,
stretching its jaws from one end of the Earth to another, it appears to me the
most ghastly thing in Nature. What hands or instruments could work a Trench in
the body of the Earth of this vastness, and lay Mountains and Rocks on the side
of it, as Ramparts to enclose it ?
But as we justly admire its greatness, so we cannot at all
admire its beauty or elegancy, for 'tis as deform'd and irregular as it is
great. And there appearing nothing of order or any regular design in its parts,
it seems reasonable to believe that it was not the work of Nature, according to
her first intention, or according to the first model that was drawn in measure
and proportion, by the Line and by the Plummet, but a secondary work, and the
best that could be made of broken materials. And upon this supposition 'tis
easie to imagine, how upon the dissolution of the primæval Earth the Chanel of
the Sea was made, or that huge Cavity that lies between the several Continents
of the Earth; which shall be more particularly explain'd after we have view'd a
little better the form of it, and the Islands that lie scatter'd by its shores.
There is no Cavity in the Earth, whether open or
Subterraneous, that is comparably so great as that of the Ocean, nor would any
appear of that deformity if we could see it empty. The inside of a Cave is rough
and unsightly; The beds of great Rivers and great Lakes when they are laid dry,
look very raw and rude; The Valleys of the Earth, if they were naked, without
Trees and without Grass, nothing but bare ground and bare stones, from the tops
of their Mountains would have a ghastly aspect; but the Sea-chanel is the
complex of all these; here Caves, empty Lakes, naked Valleys are represented as
in their original, or rather far exceeded and out-done as to all their
irregularities; for the Cavity of the Ocean is universally irregular, both as to
the shores and borders of it; as to the uncertain breadth and the uncertain
depth of its several parts, and as to its ground and bottom and the whole mould:
If the Sea had been drawn round the Earth in regular figures and borders, it
might have been a great beauty to our Globe, and we should reasonably have
concluded it a work of the first Creation, or of Nature's first production; but
finding on the contrary all the marks of disorder and disproportion in it, we
mayas reasonably conclude, that it did not belong to the
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first order of things, but was something succedaneous, when
the degeneracy of Mankind, and the judgments of God had destroy'd the first
World, and subjected the Creation to some kind of Vanity.
Nor can it easily be imagin'd, if the Sea had been always, and
the Earth, in this Terraqueous form, broke into Continents and Islands,
how Mankind could have been propagated at first through the face of the Earth,
all from one head and from one place. For Navigation was not then known, at
least as to the grand Ocean, or to pass from Continent to Continent; And, I
believe, Noah's Ark was the first Ship, or Vessel of bulk, that ever was
built in the World; how could then the Posterity of Adam overflow the
Earth, and stock the several parts of the World, if they had been distant or
separate then, as they are now, by the interposal of the great Ocean ? But
this consideration we will insist upon more largely in another place; let us
reflect upon the irregularities of the Sea-chanel again, and the possible causes
of it.
If we could imagine the Chanel of the Sea to have been made as
we may imagine the Chanels of Rivers to have been, by long and insensible
attrition, the water wearing by degrees the ground under it, by the force it
hath from its descent and course, we should not wonder at its irregular form;
but 'tis not possible it should have had any such original; whence should its
waters have descended, from what Mountains, or from what Clouds ? Where is the
spring-head of the Sea ? what force could eat away half the surface of the
Earth, and wear it hollow to an immeasurable depth ? This must not be from
feeble and lingring causes, such as the attrition of waters, but from some great
violence offer'd to Nature, such as we suppose to have been in the general
Deluge, when the frame of the Earth was broken. And after we have a little
survey'd the Sea-coast, and so far as we can, the form of the Sea-chanel, we
shall the more easily believe that they could have no other original than what
we assign.
The shores and coasts of the Sea are no way equal or uniform, but go
in a line uncertainly crooked and broke; indented and jag'd as a thing tom, as
you may see in the Maps of the Coasts and the Sea-charts; and yet there are
innumerable more inequalities than are taken notice of in those draughts; for
they only mark the greater Promontories and Bays; but there are besides those a
multitude of Creeks and out-lets, necks of Land and Angles, which break the
evenness of the shore in all manner of ways. Then the height and level of the
shore is as uncertain as the line of it; 'Tis sometimes high and sometimes
low, sometimes spread in sandy Plains, as smooth as the Sea it self, and of such
an equal height with it, that the waves seem to have no bounds but the meer
figure and convexity of the Globe; In other places 'tis rais'd into banks and
ramparts of Earth, and in others 'tis wall'd in with Rocks; And all this without
any order that we can observe, or any other reason than that this is what might
be expected in a ruine.
As to the depths and soundings of the Sea, they are under no rule
nor equality any more than the figures of the Shores; Shallows in some places,
and Gulfs in others; beds of Sands sometimes, and sometimes Rocks under water;
as Navigators have learn' d by a long and dangerous experience: And though we
that are upon dry Land, are not much concem'd how the Rocks and the Shelves lie
in
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the Sea, yet a poor Ship-wreckt Mariner, when he hath run his
Vessel upon a Rock in the middle of the Chanel, expostulates bitterly with
Nature, who it was that plac'd that Rock there, and to what purpose ? was there
not room enough, saith he, upon the Land, or the Shore, to lay your great
Stones, but they must be thrown into the middle of the Sea, as it were in spite
to Navigation ? The best Apology that can be made for Nature in this case, so
far as I know, is to confess that the whole business of the Sea-chanel is but a
ruine, and in a ruine things tumble uncertainly, and commonly lie in confusion:
Though to speak the truth, it seldom happens, unless in narrow Seas, that Rocks
or Banks or Islands lie in the middle of them, or very far from the Shores.
Having view'd the more visible parts of the Chanel of the Sea,
we must now descend to the bottom of it, and see the form and contrivance of
that; but who shall guide us in our journey, while we walk, as Job saith,
in the search of the deep ? Or who can make a description of that which none
hath seen ? It is reasonable to believe, that the bottom of the Sea is much more
rugged, broken and irregular than the face of the Land; There are Mountains, and
Valleys, and Rocks, and ridges of Rocks, and all the common inequalities we see
upon Land; besides these, 'tis very likely there are Caves under water, and
hollow passages into the bowels of the Earth, by which the Seas circulate and
communicate one with another, and with Subterraneous waters; Those great Eddees
and infamous Syrtes and Whirlpools that are in some Seas, as the Baltick
and the Mediterranean, that suck into them and overwhelm whatever
comes within their reach, show that there is something below that sucks from
them in proportion, and that drinks up the Sea as the Sea drinks up the Rivers.
We ought also to imagine the Shores within the water to go inclin'd and sloping,
but with great inequality; there are many Shelves in the way, and Chambers, and
sharp Angles; and many broken Rocks and great Stones lie tumbled down to the
bottom.
'Tis true these things affect us little, because they
are not expos'd to our senses; and we seldom give our selves the trouble to
collect from reason what the form of the invisible and inaccessible parts of the
Earth is; Or if we do sometimes, those Idea's are faint and weak, and
make no lasting impression upon our imagination and passions; but if we should
suppose the Ocean dry, and that we lookt down from the top of some high Cloud
upon the empty Shell, how horridly and barbarously would it look ? And with what
amazement should we see it under us like an open Hell, or a wide bottomless pit
? So deep, and hollow, and vast; so broken and confus'd, so every way deform'd
and monstrous. This would effectually waken our imagination, and make us inquire
and wonder how such a thing came in Nature; from what causes, by what force or
engines could the Earth be torn in this prodigious manner ? did they dig the Sea
with Spades, and carry out the molds in hand-baskets ? where are the entrails
laid ? and how did they cleave the Rocks asunder ? if as many Pioneers as the
Army of Xerxes, had been at work ever since the beginning of the World,
they could not have made a ditch of this greatness. According to the proportions
taken before in the Second Chapter, the Cavity or capacity of the Sea-chanel
will amount to no less than 4639090 cubical miles. Nor is it the greatness only,
but that wild and multifarious
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confusion which we see in the parts and fashion of it, that
makes it strange and inaccountable; 'tis another Chaos in its kind, who can
paint the Scenes of it ? Gulfs, and Precipices, and Cataracts; Pits within Pits,
and Rocks under Rocks, broken Mountains and ragged Islands, that look as if they
had been Countries pull'd up by the roots, and planted in the Sea.
If we could make true and full representations of these things
to our selves, I think we should not be so bold as to make them the immediate
product of Divine Omnipotence; being destitute of all appearance of Art or
Counsel. The first orders of things are more perfect and regular, and this Decorum
seems to be observ'd afterwards, Nature doth not fall into disorder till
Mankind be first degenerate and leads the way. Monsters have been often made an
argument against Providence; if a Calf have two heads, or five legs, streight
there must not be a God in Heaven, or at least not upon Earth; and yet this is
but a chance that happens once in many years, and is of no consequence at all to
the rest of the World: but if we make the standing frame of Nature monstrous, or
deform'd and disproportion'd, and to have been so not by corruption and
degeneracy, but immediately by Divine Creation or Formation, it would not be so
easie to answer that objection against Providence. Let us therefore prevent this
imputation, and supposing, according to our Theory, that these things were not
originally thus, let us now explain more distinctly how they came to pass at the
Deluge, or upon the dissolution of the first Earth.
And we will not content our selves with a general answer to these
observations concerning the Sea-chanel, as if it was a sufficient account of
them to say they were the effects of a ruine; there are other things to be
consider'd and explain'd besides this irregularity, as the vast hollowness of
this Cavity, bigger incomparably than any other belonging to the Earth; and also
the declivity of the sides of it, which lie shelving from top to bottom; For
notwithstanding all the inequalities we have taken notice of in the Chanel or
the Sea, it hath one general form, which may, though under many differences, be
observ'd throughout, and that is, that the shores and sides within the water lie
inclin'd, and you descend by degrees to the deepest part, which is towards the
middle. This, I know, admits of many exceptions, for sometimes upon a rocky
shore, or among rocky Islands the Sea is very deep close to the Rocks, and the
deeper commonly the higher and steeper the Rocks are. Also where the descent is
more leisurely, 'tis often after a different manner, in some Coasts more equal
and uniform, in others more broken and interrupted, but still there is a descent
to the Chanel or deepest part, and this in the deep Ocean is fathomless; And
such a deep Ocean, and such a deep Chanel there is always between Continents.
This, I think, is a property as determinate as any we can pitch upon in the
Chanel of the Sea, and with those other two mention'd, its vast Cavity and
universal irregularity, is all one can desire an account of as to the form of
it; we will therefore from this ground take our rise and first measures for the
Explication of the Sea-chanel.
Let us suppose then in the dissolution of the Earth when it began to
fall, that it was divided only into three or four fragments, according to the
number of our Continents; but those fragments being vastly great could not
descend at their full
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| Fig. I | ![]() |
| Fig. 2 | ![]() |
| Fig. 3 | ![]() |
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breadth and expansion, or at least could not descend so fast
in the middle as towards the extremities; because the Air about the edges would
yield and give place easily, not having far to go to get out of the way; but the
Air that was under the middle of the fragment could not without a very swift
motion get from under the concave of it, and consequently its descent there
would be more resisted and suspended; but the sides in the mean time would
continually descend, bending the fragment with their weight, and so making it of
a lesser compass and expansion than it was before: And by this means there would
be an interval and distance made between the two falling fragments, and a good
part of the Abysse, after their descent, would lie uncover'd in the middle
betwixt them; as may be seen in this Figure, where the fragments A. B. bending
downwards in their extremities, separate as they go, and after they are faIn
leave a good space in the Abysse betwixt them, altogether uncover'd; This space
is the main Chanel of the great Ocean, lying betwixt two Continents; and the
inclining sides shew the declivity of the Shores.
This we have represented here only in a Ring or Circle of the Earth,
in the first Figure; but it may be better represented in a broader surface, as
in the second Figure, where the two fragments A. B. that are to make the two
opposite Continents, fall in like double Doors opening downwards, the Hinges
being towards the Land on either side, so as at the bottom they leave in the
middle betwixt them a deep Chanel of water, a. a. a. such as is betwixt all
Continents; and the Water reaching a good height upon the Land on either side,
makes Sea there too, but shallower, and by degrees you descend into the deepest
Chanel.
This gives an account of two things that we mention'd to be
consider'd and explain'd as to the Sea, how the great Cavity of its Chanel was
made, and how it was made in that general form of declivity in its sides from
the Land: The third thing was the irregularities of it, both as to its various
depths, and as to the form of the shores and of the bottom. And this is as
easily and naturally explain'd from the same supposition as the former two; for
though we have hitherto represented the fragments A. B. as even and regular
after their fall, because that was most simple, and there was no occasion then
to represent them otherwise, yet we must suppose that as soon as in their fall
they hit upon the top or bottom of the Abysse, that great force and weight with
which they descended broke off all the Edges and extremities, and so made
innumerable ruptures and inequalities in the shores, and as many within the Sea
and at the bottom; where the broken Rocks and lumps of Earth would lie in all
imaginable disorder; as you may conceive from the third Figure. For when
the motion came on a sudden to be obstructed, the load of the fragment still
pressing it forwards, such a concussion arise as made thousands of lesser
fragments, of all shapes and magnitudes, and in all postures and forms, and most
of them irregular. And by these fractions and secondary ruines the line of the
shores was broken, and the level of them too; In some places they would
stand high, in others low, sometimes rough and sometimes even, and generally
crooked, with Angles and in-lets, and uncertain windings. The bottom also, by
the same stroke, was diversifi'd into all manner of forms, sometimes Rocky with
Pits and Gulfs, and sometimes spread in plain beds, sometimes shallow and
sometimes deep; for those differences would depend only upon
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the situation of the secondary fragments; and so it might come
to pass, that some places near the shore might be excessive deep when a Rock or
Rocks stood in a steep posture, as (Figure 3.) b. b. b. and, on the
contrary, sometimes places much more advanc'd into the Ocean, might be less
deep, where a fragment of Earth lay under water, or one bore up another, as c.
c. c. but these cases would not be very frequent. To conclude, there are no
properties of the Sea-chanel, that I know of, nor differences or irregularities
in the form of it, which this Hypothesis doth not give a fair account of:
And having thus far open'd the way, and laid down the general grounds for their
Explication, other things that are more minute, we leave to the curiosity of
particular Genius's; being unwilling to clog the Theory at first with things
that may seem unnecessary. We proceed now to the consideration of Islands.
We must in the first place distinguish between Original Islands
and Factitt"ous Islands; Those I call factitious, that are not of
the same date and Antiquity with the Sea, but have been made some at one time,
some at another, by accidental causes, as the aggestion of Sands and Sand-beds,
or the Sea leaving the tops of some shallow places that lie high, and yet
flowing about the lower skirts of them; These make sandy and plain Islands, that
have no high Land in them, and are but mock-lslands in effect. Others are made
by divulsion from some Continent, when an Isthmus or the neck of a Promontory
running into the Sea, sinks or falls in, by an Earthquake or otherwise, and the
Sea entring in at the gap passeth through, and makes that Promontory or Country
become an Island. Thus the Island Sicily is suppos'd to have been made,
and all Africa might be an Island, if the Isthmus between the Mediterranean
and the red Sea should sink down. And these Islands may have Rocks and
Mountains in them, if the Land had so before. Lastly, there are Islands that
have been said to rise from the bottom of the Sea; History mentions such in both
the Archipelago's, Ægæan and Indian; and this seems to argue
that there are great fragments or tracts of Earth that lie loose at the bottom
of the Sea, or that are not incorporated with the ground ; which agrees very
well with our Explication of the Sea-chanel.
But besides these Islands and the several sorts of them, there are
others which I call Original; because they could not be produc'd in any
of the forementioned ways, but are of the same Origin and Antiquity with the
Chanel of the Sea; and such are the generality of our Islands; They were not
made of heaps of Sands, nor torn from any Continent, but are as ancient as the
Continents themselves, namely, ever since the Deluge, the common Parent of them
both. Nor is there any difficulty to understand how Islands were made at the
dissolution of the Earth, any more than how Continents were made; for Islands
are but lesser Continents, or Continents greater Islands; and according as
Continents were made of greater masses of Earth or greater fragments standing
above the Water, so Islands were made of less, but so big always, and in such a
posture, as to bear their tops above the water. Yet though they agree thus far,
there is a particular difference to be taken notice of as to their Origin; for
the Continents were made of those three or four primary masses into which the
falling Orb of the Earth was divided, but the Islands were made of the fractures
of these, and broken off
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by the fall from the skirts and extremities of the Continents;
We noted before, that when those great masses and primary fragments came to dash
upon the Abysse in their fall, the sudden stop of the motion, and the weighty
bulk of the descending fragment broke off all the edges and extremities of it,
which edges and extremities broken off made the Islands; And accordingly we see
that they generally lie scatter'd along the sides of the Continents, and are but
splinters, as it were, of those greater bodies. 'Tis true, besides these, there
were an infinite number of other pieces broke off that do not appear, some
making Rocks under water, some shallows and banks in the Sea; but the greatest
of them when they fell either one upon another, or in such a posture as to prop
up one another, their heads and higher parts would stand out of the water and
make Islands.
Thus I conceive the Islands of the Sea were at first produc'd; we
cannot wonder therefore that they should be so numerous, or far more numerous
than the Continents; These are the Parents, and those are the Children; Nor
can we wonder to see along the sides of the Continents several Islands or sets
of Islands, sown, as it were, by handfuls, or laid in trains; for the manner of
their generation would lead us to think they would be so plac'd. So the American
Islands lie scatter'd upon the Coast of that Continent; the Maldivian and
Philipine upon the East-Indian shore, and the Hesperides upon
the Africk; and there seldom happen to be any towards the middle of the
Ocean, though, by an accident, that also might come to pass. Lastly, it suits
very well with out Explication, that there should be Mountains and Rocks,
sometimes in clusters, sometimes in long chains, in all Islands; (as we find
there are in all that are true and Original) for 'tis that makes them high
enough to appear above the water, and strong enough to continue and preserve
themselves in that high situation.
And thus much may suffice for a summary Explication of the
causes of the Sea-chanel and Islands, according to our Hypothesis.