uratinr ; BERKELEY .IBRARY NIVERSITY OF CALIFC" v .UNIVERSITY DISTRIBUTION AND ORIGIN OF LIFE IN AMERICA DISTRIBUTION AND ORIGIN OF LIFE IN AMERICA BY ROBERT FRANCIS SCHARFF Ph.D., B.Sc. Author of "European Animals, their Geological History and Geographical Distribution. Corresponding Member of the Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia; of the Senckeriberg Natural History Society, Frankfurt a] Main ; of the Linnean Society of Bordeaux ; and of the Anthropological Society of Paris NEW YORK THE MACMILLAN COMPANY 1912 QU5 : -PALI& LIBRARY EARTH SCIENCES LtBRARY PREFACE THIS volume is the outcome of the second series of " Swiney Lectures " on Geology which I delivered at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London in 1908. The subject chosen for these lectures was the " Geological History of the American Fauna." Instead of publishing the lectures, like the previous ones on the " European Fauna," with little alteration, I decided to amplify and rewrite them completely. In doing so I was enabled to bring out more clearly certain points in the geological history of the American animals which seemed to me of general interest. It is always difficult to choose a suitable title for a work of this kind. The one I have selected is brief yet comprehen- sive. At the same time, it may be urged that the origin and distribution of Man might reasonably be expected from the title, whereas it has been omitted in the text. This omission is mainly due to the fact that the literature dealing with the subject, exclusive of Man, is very extensive, while the origin and distribution of human races in America is treated in quite a distinct set of periodicals and books. An important feature of my researches is the elucidation of some of the problems connected with the cause and nature of the " Ice Age " or " Glacial Epoch." There is a considerable amount of faunistic evidence that both the Atlantic and the Pacific oceans were closed simultaneously in the north, result- ing in a higher temperature of these oceans and a greater snowfall in the countries surrounding them in the north. Similarly, if the Glacial Epoch had been due to a closing of the Arctic Ocean, the higher temperature prevailing in the Arctic 247501 vi PEEFACE area during early Tertiary times must have been caused by a more abundant supply of warm currents in the Arctic Ocean at that time. Consequently North America would probably have been more isolated in the north than it is now, for the currents must have had ample facilities for passing freely into the Arctic Ocean. Palaeontological evidence, however, points to an intimate union of North America and the Old World during the greater part of the Tertiary Era. There are thus a number of interesting problems, all of which are fully dis- cussed in this volume, quite apart from many other important theories arising out of the subject of the origin and distribution of life in North America. In this connection the testimony of fossil animals, and that of the marine fauna, has been largely availed of. To a certain degree the distribution of plants has also been included. I have endeavoured, as far as possible, to quote all the more noteworthy works and papers dealing with the subject under consideration. Nevertheless I am conscious of having possibly overlooked a few important contributions ; and I only hope my colleagues will be good enough to draw my attention to any omis- sions that they may notice, so as to enable me to add them in case a second edition of this book should be called for. I can lay no claim to having made careful studies of the literature dealing with the Geology or Botany of the American continents. The works cited are those that I happened to be acquainted with, and no doubt many gaps might be filled by those more conversant with these sciences than I am. I have hesitated for some time before actually illustrating my views as to the former changes of land and water. Some geologists consider it inadvisable to publish palaeogeographical maps founded on zoogeographical data, since such maps are very liable to revision according to the constantly advancing state of our knowledge. The latter are also apt to lead to a good deal of adverse criticism, for one map can only represent a single short phase of a long series of geological ages during which repeated changes of land and water probably took place. In spite of these objections I have ventured to con- struct a few of these ideal maps of ancient geography as a PREFACE vii general illustration of my views. I have felt that although I am open to criticism, my views will be more easily understood, and we shall eventually make more rapid progress in arriving at the correct conclusions as to the alterations in the configura- tion of the oceans and continents that actually occurred in the past than if such maps were altogether omitted. The immense advance that has been made in the United States in the study of zoology has greatly facilitated my work. And everywhere in America I found willing helpers ready to impart information. My thanks are particularly due in this respect to Prof. H. F. Osborn, Dr. Matthew and Dr. Hornaday of New York, to Prof. Morse and Mr. John Kitchie of Boston, to Dr. Henry B. Bigelow and Mr. T. Barbour of Harvard University, to the late Dr. A. E. Brown and Mr. Witmer Stone of Philadelphia, to Dr. Dall, Dr. T. W. Vaughan, Dr. Stejneger and Miss Kichardson of Washington, to the late Prof. Packard of Providence, to Dr. Ortmann of Pittsburg, to Dr. Van Den- burgh of San Francisco and to Dr. Kuthven of Ann Arbor. Several of my European friends also aided me in many ways. Among them particularly the following members of the staff of the British Museum : Dr. Smith Woodward, who was good enough to look through the proofs and to draw my attention to several errors, Dr. Andrews, Dr. Boulenger, Mr. Eegan, Mr. Pycraft and Mr. B. B. Woodward. Prof. Hull, Dr. Bruce and Dr. Stapf kindly pointed out to me various valuable sources of information. My most grateful acknowledgment, moreover, is due to the guardians of the Great Libraries, with- out whose ready assistance I should never have succeeded in accomplishing this work. The most generous facilities for study were given me by my friends Mr. Lyster of the National Library of Ireland, Mr. Praeger of the Koyal Irish Academy Library and Dr. Foord of the Royal Dublin Society's Library. I am indebted, too, for many services to Mr. Kappel, the Librarian of the Linnean Society, to Mr. Jones, Librarian of the Geological Society, Mr. Waterhouse of the Zoological Society of London, and Mr. Hinch of the National Library of Ireland. I am under a great obligation to Messrs. Meiklejohn & Son viii PREFACE for allowing me to reproduce two of their beautiful oroscopic maps, while the council of the Eoyal Irish Academy, Prof. Osborn, Dr. von Ihering, Dr. Ortmann, Mr. Thompson Seton, Dr. True and Dr. Hornaday were good enough to give me permission to copy maps illustrating their works. I can scarcely hope that all the conclusions I have arrived at in this book will be readily accepted, but I trust to have succeeded in impressing those who have not made a serious study of the science of geographical distribution of animals with the profound importance of the subject as an aid to palaeogeographical researches. B. F. S. TUDOR HOUSE, DUNDRUM, Co. DUBLIN, November 11th 1911. CONTENTS CHAPTEE I THE FAUNA OF GREENLAND PAGE Description of Greenland — The reindeer and its origin — The Arctic musk ox — The lemming and Arctic hare — On the ancient land connections between Greenland and the adjoining continents — On the cause of the Ice Age — The marine fauna of the North Atlantic cited as evidence in favour of a northern land connection — Did the fauna of Greenland survive the Ice Age in the country ? — The snails of Greenland quoted in support of this theory — On the supposed polar origin of life — General faunistic affinities of Greenland with other northern countries . 1-25 CHAPTER II THE FAUNA OF NORTH-EASTERN NORTH AMERICA Description of the general features of Labrador and its fauna — The voles and jumping mice — On some northern frogs — The origin and distribution of the moose deer — The fauna of the White Mountains and its origin — Pre- Glacial relict colonies in the North-East — Supposed effect of the Ice Age on the fauna — Were the animals driven south by the cold ? — On mild inter- glacial phases of the Glacial Epoch — Foraminifera in the Glacial drift deposits — The relict fauna of the Great Lakes — The fishes of the Great Lakes and their origin — Distribution and geological history of the fresh-water mussel Margaritana — The past history of the Great Lakes — The fauna of Newfoundland 26-57 CHAPTEE III THE ANIMALS OF THE CANADIAN NORTH-WEST The Mackenzie basin and its fauna — The lemmings and gophers — On American ptarmigans — The past history of the bison and its gradual destruction — On the distribution and origin of the wapiti deer — The Canadian tree - porcupine — On the molluscan fauna of the north-west and its relationship . 58-73 x CONTENTS CHAPTER IV THE FAUNA OF ALASKA PAGE On the general features of Alaska, its glaciers, volcanoes and flora- Conditions of Alaska during the Glacial Epoch— On the evidences derived from the fossil mammals as to the former climate of the country — Evidences of an Asiatic invasion of animals into Alaska— The faunistic affinities of Alaska— On the former presence of the mammoth in Alaska — The fresh-water fishes of Alaska— The distribution and origin of the butterflies belonging to the genus Parnassius — On the mammals peculiar to Alaska — On the relationship of the marine mollusks of the northern Pacific in recent and past times— Evidences of a former land bridge near Bering Strait 74-100 CHAPTER V THE ROCKY MOUNTAINS AND THEIR INHABITANTS The region of the Great Salt Lake— Distribution and origin of the jnountain sheep and Rocky Mountain goat — On the geological history of the American deer tribe — the prong-horn antelope and its origin — On the Eocky Mountain flora — Accidental distribution as applied to butterflies — Description of the American game preserves — The great Tertiary deposits and their contents . . 101-122 CHAPTER VI THE ANIMALS OF THE EASTERN STATES On the poverty of lizards in this region — The snakes of the eastern states and their affinities — The origin_and distribution of the garter snakes — Rattlesnakes and their range — On American tortoises and turtles — The giant salamanders of America and Asia — On newts and their allies — The relationship of the Eastern plants — The pine-barren flora — The range of the star-nosed mole 123-143 CHAPTER VH THE FAUNA OF THE CONTINENTAL BASIN Description of the prairie region and its inhabitants — On the extinc- tion of the horse in America and the geological history of the horse tribe — Prairie dogs and their distribution — On the origin and past history of the raccoon — On caves and their contents as illustrating the geological history of the fauna — The former CONTENTS xi presence of the reindeer south of its existing range — Evidences of a southern fauna in the north and of its gradual southward retreat — Helicina — Turkeys and the Florida parrot — On the dispersal of fresh- water mussels — Eelicts of the past — Bony-pike and bow-fin — The blind fauna of America . 144-166 CHAPTER VIII THE SOUTH-EASTERN STATES AND BERMUDA On the vegetation and general features of Florida — The geological history of Florida — On the reptiles and amphibians of the south- east— The south-east as a centre of dispersal — The terrestrial mollusks of Florida — On scorpions and dragon-flies — Alligators and crocodiles, their origin and past history — The fauna of Bermuda island — The geology and flora of Bermuda — The birds and their origin — Terrestrial isopods, spiders and the land nemertean worm Geonemertes — On the snails of Bermuda and their ancestors — The origin of the Bermudan fauna . 167-195 CHAPTEE IX SOUTH-WESTERN NORTH AMERICA AND ITS FAUNA On the so-called " Sonoran Region " — The palaeogeography of California and the adjoining States — On the western insecti- vores — On horned toads and burrowing lizards — Discontinuous distribution of some western toads — The snails of California — The fauna of lower California and its Cape region — On the European element of the Calif ornian fauna as illustrated by the mollusks, butterflies and ants — The crayfishes of the south- west and their origin — Various faunistic problems — On mam- malian affinities — The American rabbits and their relations — The former Atlantic land connections between the New World and the Old, supported by the evidence derived from Tertiary mammals — Conclusions 196-232 CHAPTER X THE FAUNA OF CENTRAL AMERICA The fishes of Central America and their origin — On the geology and palaeogeography of Central America — Importance of deter- mining the age of Central America — Evidence derived from a study of the marine faunas — On the faunistic affinities between North and South America — The flora of Central America — Monkeys and raccoons — On birds, tortoises and snakes — The xii CONTENTS PACK fresh- water crabs and their dispersal — The European element in the fauna of Central America — -Oil discontinuous distribution of animals as a proof of their antiquity .... 233-260 CHAPTER XI THE WEST INDIAN ISLANDS AND THEIR INHABITANTS The geology of the Antilles — Palaeography as illustrated by the dis- tribution of snails — Antiquity and dispersal of snails, their relationship and European affinities — On the theory of the ancient Atlantis — The problem of the supposed permanence of ocean basins — The marine mammals of the Antilles and their origin — Evidences in favour of a mid- Atlantic land bridge — The terrestrial mammals of the West Indian islands — Evidences of former changes of level in the Antillean area — The blind animals of Cuba — On the ancient Antillean continent 261-294 CHAPTER XII THE FAUNA AND FLORA OF THE GALAPAGOS ISLANDS Darwin's visit to the islands and his views on the origin of their animals and plants — On accidental dispersal — The birds, tortoises and snails of the Galapagos islands — Origin of the flora — Baur's criticisms of Darwin's views — Euphorbia and its past history — Conclusions as to the origin of the Galapagos fauna — The geological history of the Pacific Ocean — On the supposed former Pacific continent — Mr. Guppy's researches- Coral reefs and their history — A circum-Pacific land belt — Evidences of ancient lands westward of Central America — On faunistic affinities between the Atlantic and Pacific oceans — The Humboldt current . 295-335 CHAPTER XIII THE ANIMALS OF THE NORTH-WESTERN STATES OF SOUTH AMERICA The geological history of South America — The faunal elements of the continent — Palaeontology — Course of development of the continent during the Tertiary Era — Peripatus and its distribu- tion in South America — On the origin of Clausilia and its relations — The South American bear — On the tapirs and their origin — The dwarf deer of South America — On the supposed existence of former land connections — Derivation and history of the fossil elephants — The river Amazon . . . 336-362 CONTENTS xiii CHAPTER XIV THE FAUNA OF EASTERN SOUTH AMERICA PAGK South American monkeys, their distribution and geological history — Sloths — The birds of South America — On fossil mammals and Old World affinities — The theory of an ancient land connection between South America and Africa — Evidence derived from the distribution of reptiles, amphibians, fishes, mollusks and fresh- water crabs — Dr. von Ihering's researches — Fernando de Noronha and St. Helena — The fauna of St. Helena and its antiquity — Tristan da Cunha 363-394 CHAPTER XV ARGENTINA AND CHILE The fauna of Argentina — Prof. Ameghino's discoveries of fossils and their importance — Fossil edentates and rodents — Faunistic affinities — The llama and its origin — Fossil elephants — Ancient land connections between South and North America — Fossil plants — Floral affinities — The oircum-Pacific land belt — Antarctic problems — On the Antarctic continent — Affinities of the faunas of Patagonia and New Zealand — On a Pacific continent — The marine fauna of Patagonia — The Falkland islands— Antarctic expeditions — The pendulation theory 395-435 LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS 1. Map of North America (reproduced from Meiklejohn's oro- scopic maps by permission of Messrs. Meiklejohn & Son) . 1 2. Map of the North Atlantic, showing the supposed conditions of land and water during later Pliocene times (reproduced by permission of the Council of the Eoyal Irish Academy) . 16 3. Map of North America, showing the distribution of the Moose Deer (reproduced by permission of Mr. Thompson Seton) . 32 4. Map showing the outlines of the White Mountain Plateau and Mount Washington, with an inset Map of North America indicating the geographical position of the White Mountains 36 5. Map of North America showing the original distribution of the Bison, the range of the same species after the completion of the Union Pacific Railroad and its present range (reproduced by permission of Dr. Hornaday) 65 6. Map of North America, showing the original distribution of the Wapiti deer, and its range in 1900 (reproduced by permission of Mr. Thompson Seton) ....... 67 7. Map of the northern parts of the northern hemisphere, showing the supposed land connections and the extent of the sea in the early part of the Glacial Epoch .... 98 8. Map of the World, indicating the distribution of the newt Spelerpes 138 9. Map of North America, showing the distribution of the Star- nosed Mole (reproduced by permission of Dr. True) . .142 10. Map of North America, showing the distribution of the Bein- deer (reproduced with some modifications by permission of Mr. Thompson Seton) 155 11. Map of North and South America, showing the distribution of the snail Helicina 158 12. Map of the World, showing the distribution of the family of fishes Cichlidae (reproduced by permission of Mr. Tate Eegan) 234 xvi LIST OF ILLUSTKATIONS FIG. FAQ 13. Map of the West Indian Area, showing the position of the principal islands ......... 262 14. Map of North and South America, indicating roughly the supposed conditions of land and water about the commence- ment of the Tertiary Era . . ... . .280 15. Map of the World, showing the conditions of land and water in upper Cretaceous times according to Dr. Ortmann (repro- duced with the author's permission) . ... . . 292 16. Map of North and South America, indicating roughly the supposed conditions of land and water about the middle of the Tertiary Era . . . . ... .,, .294 17. Map of the World, showing the conditions of land and water during the Eocene Period, according to Dr. von Ihering (reproduced with the author's permission) . ,. . .314 18. Map of South America (reproduced fromMeiklejohn'soroscopic maps, by permission of Messrs. Meiklejohn & Son) . . 336 19. Map indicating the distribution of the snail Clausilia in the Mediterranean region, in Africa and America, with an inset figure of Clausilia (Nenia) ....... 349 20. Map of the World, showing the conditions of land and water in lower Tertiary times, according to Dr. Ortmann (repro- duced with the author's permission) . . .... 382 21. Map of the World, showing the conditions of land and water in late Cretaceous and basal Eocene times, according to Professor Osborn (reproduced with the author's permission) 419 Highland over 1,000 Feet. Upland under 1.000 Feet. Lowland under 600 Feet. . — Map of North America. (Reproduced from Meiklejohn's Oroscopic Map, by permission of Messrs. Meiklejohn & Son.) [To face p. 1, Distribution and Origin of Life in America CHAPTER I THE FAUNA OF GREENLAND GREENLAND geographically belongs to arctic America rather than to Europe, and, as it no doubt formed part of the land bridge that once connected America and Europe, its past history contains chapters of the greatest interest. Scanty as the fauna and flora of Greenland are, they afford us many a clue as to former changes of land and water which th&t country has undergone. Their study enables us also to trace the origin of the animals and plants of the neighbouring por- tion of continental America, which is one of the objects of the present work. Greenland is now too well known to need a long description. Yet few readers realise the vast size of this stern and uninviting country, which covers an area considerably larger than the whole of France and Germany together. Three- quarters, at least, of this area being completely buried under an enormous glacier ice-sheet, or inland ice, only a comparatively narrow belt of partly barren rocky ground is left along the shore on which animal and plant life is possible. The broadest exposed strip of land on the west coast of Green- land is about a hundred miles .wide. Here and ther e two kinds of willows and the dwarf birch together form scrubby low- growing woods, the stems rarely rising more than a few feet from the ground. Thickets of alder, white birch and dwarf juniper likewise occur, while in sheltered nooks the L.A. B 2 OK JOIN. OF LIFE IN AMERICA Lapland rhododendron, many kinds of saxifrages, cinquefoil, crowfoot, a willow-herb, a lousewort, the narrow-leaved arnica and other flowering plants for a time infuse variety into the brownish-grey landscape, giving it quite a gay appearance with the many brightly-coloured blossoms. During a couple of weeks in the short summer the natives may even have the advantage of gathering crow-berries (Empetrum nigrum), which grow in great abundance almost everywhere, just as they do in boreal America and Europe. "The bilberry and cowberry are also noticeable, but they are less common and do not seem to be used by the natives, nor is the cloudberry, whose fruit rarely ripens. All these are well-known American and European plants. The most valuable vegetable, which is largely used for food, is a tall angelica. It sometimes attains a height of six feet in favourable localities. During early Tertiary times many species of conifers and several of our common deciduous oaks, poplars, walnuts, maples, lindens, magnolias and beeches flourished in Green- land. Many of the same trees also lived in Iceland, Spits- bergen, Grinnell Land, boreal North America and the New Siberian islands. It is evident that the climate all round the Arctic Ocean must have been mild. Many causes have been assigned for the change from the former temperate climatic conditions to the arctic ones now prevailing in the eame region. A less restricted circulation of warm ocean water into the circumpolar area might, as has been suggested, help to bring about such a state. Yet it would not alone be sufficient. Sun and light for a longer period than now obtains would seem to have been necessary to ripen the wood of the trees and bring the fruit to maturity. At any rate, all this luxuriant flora must have disappeared from these northern regions long before the Ice Age. It is quite possible, and I even think it probable, that many of our common arctic and alpine plants originated in these remote Tertiary times. I cannot adduce any direct geological evidence for such a belief, since few of these plants possess properties which would enable the remains of their leaves to be preserved in a fossil condition. The assumption is founded chiefly on their wide geographical distribution. As I am dealing mainly with faunistic problems, the REINDEER AND ITS ORIGIN 3 animals of Greenland have to be considered more in detail. It is especially the beasts or mammals that are of importance because their distribution and geological history are better known than those of the smaller animals. They also enable us to readily appreciate the more recent changes in the fauna, and the causes which have led to them. The most noteworthy and best known of the Greenland mammals is the reindeer. The term reindeer (Eangifer tarandus) is employed for the sake of convenience in its wide sense. In America it has been the custom for many years past to distinguish under the names of " barren-ground caribou," and " woodland caribou " two strikingly different forms which occur on the continent, the term " caribou " being probably derived from the Indian word " maccaribo." Not only have these two kinds of 'reindeer dissimilar habits, they also differ from one another in size, and in the structure of their skulls and antlers. More recently, smaller groups of reindeer have been discovered, showing distinctive characters in their antlers alone. Several of the nine forms thus recognised as American are founded upon comparatively slight differences. An illustrated account of these various American reindeer has been given by Mr. Madison Grant.* Mr. Lydekker f holds that they and the Old World forms are all referable to one single species, of which he distin- guishes six varieties. Whether these differences are to be regarded as specific or varietal is a matter of opinion, but, as th,e antlers of reindeer are so very variable, it has been suggested by Professor Camerano that the structure of the skull might be utilised to greater advantage in discriminating between the various varieties or species. In his researches on the Spitsbergen form, he argues that there are three species, viz., the reindeer of Spitsbergen (R. spitsbergensis). the one inhabiting Greenland, Norway, Lapland and part of Siberia (R. tarandus), and lastly the American reindeer (R. caribou) . Among the last two species he distinguishes again between the reindeer possessing cylindrical (cylindricornis) and those having compressed (compressicornis) antlers. It is worthy of note that the reindeer of Scandinavia and * Grant, Madison, " The Caribou." f Lydekker, E., " The Deer of all Lands," p. 33. B 2 4 OBIGIN OF LIFE IN AMERICA Greenland constitute a single variety, according to Professor Camerano,* while Mr. Lydekker separates the Scandinavian from the Greenland race. Following Professor Camerano's example, Dr. Lonnberg f prefers the nasal bones of the skull, to the antlers for specific diagnosis. He unites the Greenland, Spitsbergen and Scandinavian forms with the American barren-ground reindeer in one group, characterised by their flat nasals. ^The Finland and Siberian reindeer he holds to be quite distinct races, particularly the former, which, with its elevated nasal bones and somewhat flattened antlers, ap- proaches the American woodland caribou. Even Robert Brown J long ago commented on the likeness of the Green- land and European reindeer, remarking that some reindeer horns from Greenland could not be distinguished from European ones. Since Professors Camerano and Lonnberg, moreover, take both skull characters and antlers into con- sideration, we may assume that this view of the affinity of the Greenland to the north-west European race is likely to be the correct one. An anonymous writer in " Natural Science," (p. 358, 1899) gave it as his opinion that there are no grounds for deciding whether the Old or the New World was the original home of the reindeer. No doubt he meant to convey that we know nothing of the ancestry of the reindeer. I ventured, § on the contrary, to put forward the theory that the reindeer had originated in the Polar area, beyond the confines of the European Continent, while Professor Schlosser || argued that it was evidently of American origin. Neither of these views is supported by positive geological evidence ; nevertheless I cannot agree with the above critic that we possess no grounds for deciding the place of origin of the reindeer, as the results of Professor Camerano's and Professor Lonnberg's cranial researches seem to indicate the existence of a closer rela- tionship between the west European and the Greenland and * Camerano, L., " Renne delle Isole Spitzberge," p. 167. t Lonnberg, Einar, " Taxonomic Notes about Reindeer," p. 10. | Brown, Robert, "Mammals of Greenland," p. 352. § Scharff, R. F., " History of European Fauna," p. 155. || Schlosser, M.,M Beziehungen d. ausgestorben. Siiugethier-faunen," p. 617. REINDEEK AND ITS ORIGIN 5 arctic American varieties than between the west European and the Siberian reindeer. The assumption that the species originated in Greenland or arctic America and thence spread along old land connections east and west to Europe arid Asia, is, therefore, not quite so unjustified ias Dr. Stejneger * seems to think. But we must not forget the possibility of the reindeer having originated in the Old World. Dr. Brown f argues that the barren-ground variety spread to America from western Europe by way of a Spitsbergen-Greenland land connection, while the other traversed Siberia, and crossed to the New World by Bering Strait. In the more southern parts of its range in America, new varieties may have arisen, perhaps owing to changes in the natural sur- roundings. Long cylindrical antlers were no doubt a dis- advantage to reindeer in wooded districts, hence the beam became reduced in length and increased in width in what is known in America as the " woodland caribou." Some of these varieties, or species as many American naturalists choose to call them, intergrade to such an extent as to-be difficult to dis- criminate from one another. Thus Rangifer stonei is a form of barren-ground reindeer living in Alaska, while Rangifer osborni is a woodland form. Dr. Allen, who first described them, considers them as well-marked species, while Mr. Osgood,J during his travels in Alaska, finds that the differ- ences between the two are all relative, that they are excessively variable and rather intangible. The mountain caribou (Ran- gifer montanus), originally described by Mr. Thompson Seton, is considered by Dr. Allen § to be allied to the wood- land form, but distinguished from it in colour, size and shape of antlers. Mr. Seton, || who has published a most instructive map of the geographical distribution of the caribou in North America, which has furnished me with the materials for the map given in this work (Fig. 10), thinks that in future the * Stejneger, L., " ScharfE's History of the European Fauna," p. 112. f Brown, A. E., " North American Big Game," p. 87. J Osgood, W. H., " North American Fauna," 33, p. 17. § Allen, J. A., "Mountain Caribou," pp. 8 & 9. || Seton, E, Thompson, "Northern Animals, I.," p. 192, 6 OKIGIN OF LIFE IN AMERICA ten species now recognised in America will be reduced to four well-marked species. How long the caribou or reindeer has been in existence we do not know. Its remains have been discovered both in Europe and America in deposits believed to have been laid down during the Pleistocene Period, and as these occur far to the south of its present range, it has invariably "been assumed that the species was compelled, owing to unfavour- able climatic changes to abandon its more northerly habitat. When the climate became once more suitable to its require- ments, the reindeer is supposed to have returned to its, original home. This idea suggests that the reindeer originated in pre-Glacial times, and this view is, in my opinion, supported by the evidence of its occurrence, conjointly with the hyaena, in Irish cave deposits.* The whole subject of the influence of the Glacial Epoch on animals and plants will be dealt with later on, and need not be considered here. The fact of the occurrence of un- doubted reindeer remains far to the south of its present range certainly requires an explanation, and this is more easily given in conjunction with other facts to be stated in this chapter. While .the reindeer still lives in Europe no /further south than the fifty-second degree of latitude, in America it is found no less than seven degrees further south. In former times it inhabited Oregon and Kentucky. In the east it came down to the neighbourhood of the present site of New York City, whereas in Europe it advanced as far as Mentone on the shores of the Mediterranean, and penetrated to the north of Spain, i.e., to the latitudes of the thirty-eighth degree in America and of the forty-third degree in Europe.f The musk ox (Ovibos moschatus) is another even more arctic mammal than the reindeer. So called from the musky odour of its flesh, this species was believed to be more closely allied to the sheep than to the ox, which it resembles more in gize. In its geographical distribution it differs strikingly from that of the reindeer in so far as it is now quite confined to Greenland and arctic North America. It no longer inhabits * Scharff, R F., " European Animals," p. 112. t Brauer, A., " Die arktische Subregion." AECTIC MUSK OX 7 the Old World. Yet in Europe it penetrated as far as England and France in Pleistocene times, having apparently reached these countries from an eastward direction. While the rein- deer occurs even in southern Greenland, the musk ox frequents only the north and east of that country. According to Dr. Conwentz, it has only wandered east- ward from the north coast of Greenland in recent times. At any rate, Professor Nathorst alleges that Scoresby, in the year 1822, did not observe it in the neighbourhood of the Sound which bears his name, though it is now found there. Nevertheless, the discovery of some very ancient skulls between the seventieth and seventy-fifth degrees of latitude on the same coast make it probable that the musk ox lived in that region in more remo'te times, afterwards becoming extinct only to advance once more to its former habitat in: recent times.* The musk ox to most observers has appeared to be subject to little variation. Mr. Lydekker, however, described a form from eastern Greenland (Ovibos moschatus wardi) with a whitish face-patch and lighter general colouration, which Dr. Allen f has since raised to specific rank, showing that it also differed from the type in the structure of the horns and hoofs. The latter likewise pointed out that it was not con- fined to Greenland, but inhabited also Ellesmere and Grinnell Land. Another form of musk ox, an almost black one, from the far north of Canada, was first noticed and described by Mr. Elliot. A renewed examination of musk ox skins and skulls was recently undertaken by Dr. KowarzikJ with rather re- markable results. He recognises two strikingly distinct groups of "musk oxen, a western and an eastern group, characterised by very important osteological and external features, which had apparently escaped the attention of pre- vious observers. In a private letter he admitted to me that the musk ox must have originated in North America, Bootherium being probably its direct ancestor. Yet he is evidently inclined to believe that, after spreading by way of * Conwentz, " Yerbreitung d. Moschusochsen," pp. 429 — 431. t Allen, J. A., " Musk-Oxen of Arctic America," p. 76. I Kowarzik, E., " Der Moschusochs," p. 120. 8 OKIGIN OF LIFE IN AMERICA Asia to Europe, it became extinct in America as well as in Greenland. Part of one section of the old musk ox stock returned to North America by way of Asia, while another travelled by means of a north Atlantic land connection to southern Green- land, gradually finding its way along the eastern and western coasts to northern Greenland. Meanwhile the musk ox had entered Alaska again from Asia and crossed the Mackenzie Eiver into arctic Canada, where some of the peculiar forms originated. Dr. Kowarzik promises us further contributions to this interesting problem from a palaeontological point of view. These will be of particular value in elucidating the question of the relationship between the European and the Greenland forms of the musk ox. I agree in so far with Dr. Kowarzik, as I feel convinced that the musk ox originated in North America in pre-Glacial times, but I differ in most of his other views. If land connections existed between North America and Asia, and between North America and Europe, they must have persisted through Pliocene to early Pleistocene times. I am of opinion, therefore, that the musk ox spread east- ward to Europe and westward to Asia as long as land bridges enabled it to do so. It is quite possible that the Asiatic section subsequently travelled westward to Europe, but neither of them succeeded in returning to their native lajid. The musk oxen we find in Greenland and arctic America probably survived the Ice Age. where they now live. This opinion has the support of Dr. F. Wright * and Professor Upham as the result of their special study of the geological history of Greenland. Not long ago the musk ox was still found in Alaska. Now it has been quite exterminated west of the Mackenzie Kiver. As Dr. Allen remarks, the genus Ovibos is a declining type, which has attained its last stronghold in the arctic barren grounds. Wherever it is within the grasp of man it will soon be a creature of the past. We possess no undoubted evidence of the existing species of musk ox having ever penetrated as far south as the United Sta;tes, nevertheless it is quite possible that the fragmentary * Wright, F. F., and Warren Upham, " Greenland Icefields," p. 332. LEMMING AND AKCTIC HAKE 9 remains which have been discovered in caves and other super- ficial (Pleistocene) deposits in Pennsylvania, Kentucky, Mis- souri, Iowa and Ohio may have belonged to varieties of Ovibos moschatus rather than to extinct species of musk oxen. There are two other arctic mammals which are of special interest to us, since both of them inhabit Greenland. They are the arctic hare (Lepus variabilis = L. timidus) and the arctic lemming (Dicrostonyx torqnatus = Cuniculus torquatus). Like the reindeer, the arctic hare is subject to great varia- tion over the vast area which it inhabits, and some of these varieties or races are now recognised by many zoologists as species. Mr. R. Brown * long ago felt the difficulty, nay, almost impossibility, in discriminating between the Green- land hare and the arctic or varying hare of Europe. The same embarrassment has confronted many subsequent authors. In American-he Greenland hare is now generally considered as specifically distinct from the arctic American hare, Mr. Rhoads f having pointed out some important features in its incisor teeth, while Mr. Nelson J finds that its excessively heavy wool -like coat of fur, the long claws and tapering upper mandible sufficiently distinguish it from its relatives on the American Continent to give it the rank of separate species. However, as Mr. Rhoads aptly remarks (p. 356) the peculiar dentition, long fur, and long claws are due partly to the scantiness and character of plant life, and partly to the depth and long continuance of the snow in Greenland. These fea- tures seem to have gradually impressed themselves on the Greenland hare in modifying it in the direction indicated. In Major Barrett-Hamilton's § opinion the chief differences between the European arctic hares and the Greenland form, from an external point of view, are only of a su|b- specific value, while Dr. Winge || does not specifically distinguish the American or European arctic hares from the Greenland one. The same problem of affinity has recently been investigated from a new standpoint by Mr. Hinton. His researches have * Brown, R., " Mammals of Greenland," p. 351. t Rhoads, S. N., u Polar Hares of North America," p. 368. | Nelson, E. W., " Rabbits of North America," p. 68. § Barrett-Hamilton, G. E. H., " The Variable Hare," p. 92. || Winge, H., " Gronlands Pattedyr," p. 376. 10 ORIGIN OF LIFE IN AMERICA led him to a comparison of the fossil hare remains from the ossiferous fissures of Ightham in England with the recent polar or arctic hares as a whole. He has been exceptionally fortunate in disposing of large osteological collections, and his conclusions are of particular interest and of much value in elucidating some important zoogeographioal problems. Dwelling upon the close affinity existing between the English fossil and the Irish living arctic hare, he regards the latter as the direct descendant of the former. I should not have mentioned these particulars except that they give rise to far- reaching deductions. From the fact of the fossil English and recent Irish forms being the least specialized members of the whole group of arctic hares, Mr. Hinton concludes that it is highly improbable that the group can have had a boreal origin.* That the Irish arctic hare has always lived in Ireland under temperate conditions is an opinion which I expressed long ago in my works on the European fauna, and in this view Mr. Hinton concurs. But I also believe, as I shall endeavour to demonstrate later on, that even southern Greenland and all the lands surrounding the north Atlantic had a milder climate during the Pleistocene Period. It is principally the climate of arctic America and Greenland, I think, that be- came much more unfavourable within recent geological times, while that of the British Isles has undergone comparatively little alteration. Meanwhile specialization among the animals constituting the Greenland fauna probably proceeded at a more rapid rate than in Ireland, where the hare had no need to become adapted to different 'conditions of food 'and tempera- ture. In spite of Mr. Hinton 's -argument, I still believe in the arctic origin of the group in Pliocene times, mainly because I do not admit that we have any evidence for the assumption that Ireland was connected with Great Britain during or after the Pleistocene Period. Mr. Hinton thus differs from me in regarding Central Asia as the centre of origin of the arctic hares in Pleistocene times. I mentioned that the banded lemming (Dicrostonyx tor- quatus) was found in Greenland. Of late years it has been * Hinton, M. A. C., " The fossil hare of Ightham," pp. 263—264. ANCIENT LAND CONNECTIONS 11 customary to distinguish the New World form (D. hud- sonius) from the Old World banded lemming (D. torquatus), but they are very closely allied. Several varieties of the former inhabit the mainland and islands of arctic America, including the north and east coasts of Greenland. The whole genus Dicrostonyx (Myodes), is confined to the Arctic Eegions. As in the case of the reindeer and other arctic species, we possess fossil testimony of a former southern extension of the range of the banded lemming in Europe.* It occurred in Central Europe, and also in England and Ireland, yet, as far as we know, it never penetrated into the United States in Pleistocene times. That the banded lemming is not a recent immigrant to Greenland, but has persisted there from pre-Glacial times seems to be indicated by the fact that Colonel Feilden f discovered its remains, with those of the reindeer and musk-ox, in post-Tertiary (Pleistocene) deposits from sea-level to an altitude .of 1,000 feet in northern Greenland. There are a couple of other mammals in Greenland, viz : the arctic wolf and the arctic fox, which need not be specially considered here. Nevertheless, a significant factor in connec- tion with one of these carnivores has been pointed out by Major Barrett-Hamilton and Mr. Bonhote.J It is that the arctic fox (Vulpes lagopus) of Spitsbergen, Novaya Zemlya and Iceland agrees with that from eastern Greenland, form- ing a variety distinct from those of the European and American mainlands. All the mammals alluded to as inhabiting Greenland, live also in Europe in identical or closely allied forms, or did so in former times. Hence it is permissible to argue that a land- connection once bridged over the intervening ocean. The affinity between Greenland and arctic America in some respects is even closer than that between Greenland and Europe. Only the narrow Davis Strait and the still narrower Kennedy Channel separate the two countries. Another * Scharff, E. F., G. Coffey, and others, " Caves of Kesh," p. 196. t Feilden, H. W., and C. E. de Eance, "Geology of Arctic Coasts," p. 566. t Barrett-Hamilton, G. E. H., and I. L. Bonhote, " Sub-species of Arctic Fox," p. 288. 12 ORIGIN OF LIFE IN AMERICA sound of inconsiderable width, Bering Strait, divides arctic America from the Asiatic Continent. We can easily imagine what a comparatively small change in the configuration of land and water would thus bring Greenland into direct touch with Asia, by way of arctic America (compare Fig. 1). It has actually been suggested by several writers that the faunal relationship which exists between Greenland and Europe is due to former land bridges across Bering Strait and Davis Strait, facilitating the passages of animals from Europe by way of Asia. That such land connections really existed in recent geological times, I do not doubt, and they will be further described in this and one of my next chapters. Still, their existence does not preclude the possibility of Greenland having likewise been connected by land directly with Europe. A close relationship exists between some of the western European and Greenland mammals. In some in- stances that affinity is no longer apparent in the recent mammalian fauna, but can be demonstrated to have once been a prominent feature. The extinct Irish reindeer for example, clearly indicates, in the character of its skull and antlers, that it was closely related to the present Greenland and arctic American races of reindeer, thus suggesting the former existence of some more direct means of transit from Green- land to Ireland, or vice versa, than by the circuitous route across Europe, Asia and arctic America. Many authorities, indeed, have on other grounds insisted upon the former presence of a land bridge uniting Scotland, the Faroes, Iceland and Greenland, with America. The story of the extermination of the indigenous reindeer in Iceland in the twelfth century is too vague to be of much use in connection with these researches. It appears certain, at any rate, that no reindeer had inhabited Iceland for some hundreds of years before the end of the eighteenth century, when the ancestors of the present stock were brought over from Finmark. The assumption of the existence of such a land connection as that referred to, in Pliocene, and perhaps early Pleistocene times, or, in other words, just before and during the beginning of the Glacial Epoch, is generally based upon other ground than the distribution of mammals. I have recently collected the various sources of evidence in favour GREENLAND-EUROPE LAND BRIDGE 13 of the theory from the oceanographical, geological and biological standpoints.* A second land bridge apparently united northern Greenland and Lapland at about the same time. This I described on a previous occasion. It will not be necessary for me to repeat all the arguments I advanced for and against the hypothesis, and I must content myself with a short statement of the main facts. The theory of the Greenland-Iceland- Scotland land bridge (Fig. 2) had been put forward by quite a number of authorities on independent grounds. Yet while some maintain that it merely existed in early Tertiary times, others contend that it could .only have been made use of by the .members of our present fauna and flora after the Glacial Epoch, because the latter had not yet come into existence before that time. One of the most important facts in favour of the existence of this land bridge is presented, in my opinion, by the geographi- cal distribution of the land snail known as Helix hortensis. I have quoted many other instances in my paper on this subject, but this no doubt affords the most striking biological support for the belief in a land connection between Scotland, Iceland, Greenland and Labrador. Helix hortensis is a typically west European species, being quite unknown in the eastern parts of Europe or in Asia. Beyond the mainland of Europe we find it in Great Britain, in Ireland, the Shetland Islands, the Faroes, Iceland, in southern Greenland, Labrador, the islands off the north-east coast of North America, and part of the opposite mainland. Biologists are often too ready in invoking human agency when endeavouring to explain the occurrence of certain common European species in unexpected localities abroad. When this snail was first discovered in North America, its presence there was universally attributed to the action of man, and was often cited as a good instance of the facility with which terrestrial mollusks are introduced into foreign coun- tries and become established there. Until the year 1864 no other theory was even thought of. During that year, however, * Scharff, E. F., " On a former Land Bridge between Europe and North America." 14 ORIGIN OF LIFE IN AMERICA Professor E. Morse first discovered the shell of this snail among the contents of ancient 'k kitchen-middens," those peculiar refuse heaps of primitive man, on some of the islands off the east coast of Maine. He pondered over this singular mystery and finally came to the conclusion that the snail must have slowly wandered, during a long series of centuries, from the Old World to the New, by means of an ancient North Atlantic land bridge. Mr. Johnson,* to whose instructive paper I am indebted for this information, states that Dr. Binney and Professor Cockerell concurred in Professor Morse's opinion. He also informs us that the Rev. Winkley and he were of opinion that the arrival of the snail Helix hortensis in America must have taken place before the advent of the Glacial Epoch. This theory, as can be imagined, was by no means gene- rally accepted in America. All doubts, however, as to the claim of Helix hortensis being an indigenous American species are now set at rest, through the discovery by Dr. Dall f of the shell of this snail in undoubtedly Pleisto- cene deposits in the State of Maine. Some naturalists might still be inclined to urge that greater facilities for occasional transport across the Atlantic may have existed in those remote times than at present, and that the argument in support of a land bridge is not convincing. No evidence, however, in favour of an ocean current from Europe to North America in Pleistocene times has as yet been brought forward, while the conviction in the former presence of a land connection between north-eastern America and north-western Europe is based upon other biological observations. From a geological point of view we can scarcely hope to be able to determine the period or periods during which this land bridge existed. The bathy- metrical features of the north Atlantic, according to Pro- fessor Hull,J Dr. Spencer § and Dr. Nansen,|| point to a pre- Glacial elevation of the land in northern latitudes. Dr. * Johnson, C. W., " Distribution of Helix hortensis," p. 73. t Dall, W. H., " Land and Freshwater Mollusks of Alaska," p. 20. J Hull, E., " Submerged Terraces and .River Valleys." § Spencer, J. W., " Submarine Valleys," p. 224. || Nansen, F., "North Polar Expedition," p. 192. • ON THE CAUSE OF THE ICE AGE 15 Wright * and Mr. Upham, two well-known authorities on glacial phenomena expressed the view that the northern lands must have been gradually elevated in Pliocene times, be- coming continuous before the Ice Age. Further particulars on this subject are contained in Dr. Spencer's articlef on high continental elevation. Sir Henry Howorth opposes this view, urging that Green- land, Scandinavia, and North America were all at a much lower level in so-called Glacial times than they are now. If this be so, then the epeirogenic theory has no base to stand upon. I do not think that Sir Henry Howorth's J statement is applicable to southern Greenland or eastern North America. At any rate, it is not contended by anyone that the high level condition of these countries persisted during the whole of the Ice Age. The theory that the Ice Age or Glacial Epoch was brought about mainly by the closing of the Arctic Ocean to the influence of the Gulf Stream is a very tempting one. The temperature of the Atlantic Ocean would under such conditions have been higher than it is now, because its heat would not have been modified by cold arctic currents, as it is at present. Southern Greenland, Iceland, and the lands on both sides of the Atlantic should also have had a more favourable climate than obtains under existing circumstances, since the warm ocean would have had considerable influence upon their climate for a certain distance inland. There is evidence, on the European side of the Atlantic, that, at a not very distant geological period, and presumably at a time when the coasts of France, south-west of England and south of Ireland were still united, the southern fauna and flora crept steadily northward along the ancient shore-line. That this did not take place in very recent times is evidenced by the fact that the southern marine shore forms of mollusks, crustaceans and other invertebrates have a somewhat discontinuous range on the west coast pf the British Islands, and do not occur in the English Channel or in the southern part of the North Sea. * Wright, G. F., and Warren Upham, " Greenland Icefields " p. 331, f Spencer, J. W., " High Continental Elevation." t Howorth, H. H., "Ice or Water," Vol. I., p. 136. 16 OBIGIN OF LIFE IN AMEEICA Hence they evidently wandered northward under different geographical conditions than exist at present, and only main- tain a slender hold in isolated localities, where they form relict colonies. I assume that this northward advance of the marine fauna took place in late Pliocene times when the northern Atlantic was closed, and the temperature of the ocean raised. As Dr. Dall wrote to me " the Pliocene all over the northern hemisphere was a period of warmer sea water than the Miocene or Pleistocene." My attention was also recently drawn by Professor Morse* to the fact that even littoral European species have extended their range across the ocean to North America. As long ago as 1855 he received specimens of the common European " Periwinkle " (Littorina litorea) from Chaleur Bay in the Gulf of St. Lawrence. Later on this 'mollusk was reported also to occur on the coast of Nova Scotia and Labrador. It is steadily advancing now in a southward direction, while it is becoming scarce in the north. Dr. Ash worth f tells me that the lugworm (Arenicola marina) which is common on the west coast of Europe is also met with on the coasts of the Shetland islands, the Faroes, Iceland, Greenland, Labrador and Nova Scotia. It is absent from the coasts of the Pacific Ocean. Hence he concludes that a continuous shore-line formerly existed between the two areas on each side of the Atlantic Ocean in which this worm is now found. Dr. Ashworth believes that the extensive stretch; of ocean at present existing between Europe and America forms just as much a barrier to the dispersal of the littoral lugworm as it does to that of the terrestrial Helix hortensis just alluded to. Commenting on this occurrence of European littoral marine mollusks on the north-east coast of North America, Mr. B. B. Woodward writes to me that no other theory than that of the previous existence and subsequent rupture of a land bridge I in the direction indicated can satisfactorily account for the/ present disjointed distribution of the two divisions of the/ boreal fauna. It was assumed by Professor NathorstJ that a portion of * Morse, E. S., "Dispersion of certain Mollusks," p. 8. • Ashworth, J. H., Catalogue of Chaetopoda part I. | Nathorst, A. G., " Pflanzengeographie der Vorzeit," p. 267. P* 0 il o> * l is .-H O IS §"S O jj "3 '3 I" FAUNA OF NORTH ATLANTIC 17 the arctic flora had originated in Greenland in pre-Glacial times and had been scattered east and west across the exist- ing land bridges on the advent of the Glacial Epoch, during which the maintenance of life was no longer possible in that country. Sir Joseph Hooker * long ago expressed the opinion that, although many Greenland plants were possibly destroyed during the Ice Age, the existing remnant of a much richer flora had survived in the southern parts of the country, whence it subsequently spread northward again. One of the biological arguments I adduced in favour of a former north Atlantic land bridge was derived from the well- known fact that deposits of dead marine shallow-water species had been dredged in deep water in various localities such as Eockall Bank and off the coast of Iceland. This peculiar circumstance has been applied by several authorities in sup- port of the theory of a gradual sinking of the land, the shallow- water species having thus been moved to a position in which they are no longer able to live. It is this part of the biological argument on the land bridge theory which has received most of the adverse criticism. Dr. Johansen,f for instance, pointed out that the evidence derived from the marine shallow-water shells is untrustworthy, because their presence in great depths in the northern Atlantic is not due to a sinking of the land, but mainly to various casual or accidental activities of transport. The theory of the north Atlantic land bridge, in so far as it is founded upon the occur- rence of shallow-water marine shells at great depths, does not, therefore, meet with his approval. Similarly, Dr. Appell^f J insists that the most recent dis- coveries on the " Faroe Bank " are of considerable zoogeo- Igraphical significance, since they are opposed in some measure to the theory of the sinking of the land. He informs us that among the thick layer of dead shallow shells found on the Faroe Bank living specimens of several of the species were met with. * Hooker, J. D., " Distribution of Arctic Plants," pp. 252—255. t Johansen, A. 0., "On the Sinking of Sea-beds," p. 403. J Appeltyf. A., " Norwegian Fisheries," Vol. II., pp. 83—89. L.A. C 18 OBIGIN OF LIFE IN AMEEICA No doubt this discovery provides an argument for the op- ponents of the land bridge theory, yet we know how adaptive certain species are to a change of conditions, and how long they can maintain themselves under adverse circumstances. I am not, therefore, disposed to attach too much importance to Dr. Appell^f s discovery. In any case, the land bridge theory is not dependent on the evidence alluded to. Dr. Spethmann,* on the other hand, reiterates what we already know, that from a purely geological standpoint there are no positive proofs in favour of a former land bridge between Europe and Greenland. These seem to be the principal arguments that have been advanced in opposition to the land bridge theory, and they are, in my opinion, not very formidable ones. The question of the supposed survival of plants through the Ice Age in Greenland is closely connected with that of the land bridge alluded to. Whether any plants survived, and what proportion of those previously existing, largely depends on the nature of the Ice Age or Glacial Epoch and on the former extension of the glaciers in Greenland. Professor James Geikie f maintains that it is a fair assumption that the ice of Greenland in Glacial times completely buried the land and, perhaps, protruded beyond it. It has recently been very clearly demonstrated, however, by the leader of the German Greenland Expedition, Dr. E. von Drygalski,J that the strip of land now free from ice on the west coast of Green- land has never been entirely invaded by glaciers. No doubt it can be proved, he remarks, that the ice in past times had a greater extension. All the same, glaciers never reached the cliffs and rock pinnacles which abound on all parts of the coast land of Greenland. No special reason can be adduced, therefore, why the pre- sent flora of Greenland should not have survived the Ice Age in that country, particularly as we have some grounds for the belief that the land in parts of the Arctic Regions then stood higher than it does now, and that consequently more land was * Spethmann, H., " Aufbau d. Insel Island," p. 8 t Geikie, J., " The Great Ice Age," p. 736. | Drygalski, E. von, " Grdnland Expedition," Vol. I., p. 385. DID ANIMALS SUKVIVE THE ICE AGE? 19 available for plant life. Indeed, Professor Vanhoffen * who describes the plants and animals observed during the expedi- tion, adopts this attitude. He not only believes in the survival of the flora of Greenland through the Ice Age, but he also argues that the great mass of the fauna is indigenous to the country. Though he does not deny the possibility of organisms being accidentally carried by birds, and other occasional means of transport, he protests against the assumption that the fauna of Greenland, as a whole, owes its origin to such a mode of conveyance. Dr. Brehmf quite concurs in this view. He is convinced that the fauna of Greenland is autochthonous. It is very generally believed that the climate of Greenland was much colder during the Glacial Epoch than it is now, although we possess no direct evidence that it was so. A mild climate in South Greenland during the existence of the land bridge is implied by the fact that a number of Euro- pean species found in north-western North America, and which no doubt travelled by way of Greenland, have since become extinct in the latter country. Greenland must, therefore, have passed through a phase during which existence became impossible for these species. Yet, for all we know, it may be only quite recently that the climate of Greenland has grown so inhospitable. It has been suggested by Professor Whitney, and more recently by Sir Henry Howorth, that the Arctic Kegions enjoyed temperate conditions during the Glacial Epoch and are only now passing through the more severe post-Glacial stage. In view of the accumulation of evidence pointing to a southward advance of the Arctic fauna and flora in Pleistocene times, such a sug- gestion may seem contrary to biological evidence. I shall endeavour to show, however, in the next few chapters that we possess a good deal of valuable testimony, principally of a biological nature, in support of Professor Whitney's and Sir Henry Howorth's contention. With regard to the species which I believe to have made use * Vanhoffen, E., " Gronland Expedition," Vol. II., p. 174. t Brehm, V., " Entomostraken d. Danmark Expedition," p. 316. c 2 20 ORIGIN OF LIFE IN AMERICA of the ancient north Atlantic land connection, and are sup- posed to have subsequently become extinct on the intermediate stations between the two continents, particular attention may be drawn to the range of the " running beetles " of the genus Carabus. They are of great value in aiding us to solve pro- blems of this nature, because, being usually found under stones and clods of earth, they are not liable to oc Glacial Epoch followed by a recent introduction from the * Heilprin, A., " Geographical Distribution of Animals," p. 179. t Arldt, Th., " Entwicklung der Kontinente," p. 293. t Dall, W. H., " Climatic Conditions at Nome," p 457. L.A. H 98 OKIGIN OF LIFE IN AMERICA south. If such an event had happened we should not have had such a large percentage of peculiar forms of animal life in Alaska, and more southern forms ought to have found their way there, such as the American deer and many Cithers./* It would seem, therefore, as if both the Atlantic and the Pacific Ocean became closed in the north simultaneously and remained so for a considerable time (Fig. 7). The southern shores of both the (great land bridges were then under the direct influence of warm ocean currents resulting in favourable con- ditions for the growth of vegetation and the food supply for large mammals. The northern shores of the land bridges, on the other hand, were in immediate contact with a closed Arctic Ocean, whose waters would naturally have remained frozen for the greater part of the year. During winter the snowfall all round the northern Atlantic and northern Pacific Oceans was probably considerable. The land being, moreover, at a higher level, this would have resulted in the production of local glaciers. Marine transgressions from the Arctic Ocean then seem to have taken place across northern Russia, as I described in my work on the History of the European Fauna,* and across the lowlands of arctic Canada as indicated on pp. 46 — 49. My views on the Glacial Epoch and its nature are thus at variance with those held by most geologists of the present time. They agree with those put forward by Sir William Dawson,f and are more in accordance with the current opinions at the time when the Glacial Epoch was spoken of as the " Diluvial Age." It is very generally believed, as I mentioned before, that the climate in northern Europe and northern North America was very cold, and that all that vast region which is covered by the deposit known as " Glacial drift " had been invaded during the Glacial Epoch by thick masses of land ice, so as to destroy practically all life or drive it far southward of the southern limits of the drift. I stated in another chapter (p. 77) that I did not intend to make a special point in discussing the origin of the Glacial Epoch. I only incidentally bring forward a * Scharff, E. F., ''History of European Fauna," p. 172—184. t Dawson, W., " Ice Age in Canada." V \ FlG. 7.- — Map of Northern portion of Northern Hemisphere, with supposed land connections in early part of Glacial Epoch (shaded) and extent of sea (white). [To face p. 98. BERING STKAIT LAND BRIDGE 99 theory of its origin and nature which appear to me to agree better with the geological history of the boreal fauna and flora, as far as we are able to ascertain them, than the hypotheses which have been so widely accepted by scientific men. Professor Shaler * reminds us that the extension of rela- tively warm climates which has occurred at certain stages of the Earth's history is perhaps explicable in an equally simple manner as that of the Glacial Epoch. He expresses the belief that if Bering Strait were as rea'dily open to the warm stream of the Pacific or " Kuroshiwo " as the Atlantic is open to the Gulf Stream, the temperature of the region a*bout the North Pole would be lifted by at least thirty degrees above its present mean annual. Indeed, if the Glacial Epoch had been due to a simultaneous closing of the Arctic Ocean to the genial influences of both Atlantic and Pacific, a mild climate all over the Arctic Regions must have coincided with a more copious flow of the " Kuroshiwo " into the Arctic Ocean. And here apparently lies the great stumbling block to my theory on the origin of the Glacial Epoch. If the warmer tempera- ture in the Arctic Regions in Miocene and Oligocene times had been due to a wider Bering Strait, and, consequently, to the fact that a greater volume of the " Kuroshiwo " then poured into the Arctic Ocean, how are we to account for the faunistic affinities existing between Asia and North America during this part of the Tertiary Era ? There are numbers of animals in North America which have an Asiatic ancestry, hut could not have entered the Continent with the great invasion that I described as crossing the Bering Strait land bridge. (These and many other facts point to the existence of a land bridge between Asia and North America in early Tertiary times. All the same, several important features imply that before the Pliocene Period the " Kuroshiwo " really sent its warm waters altogether to the Arctic Ocean. As I mentioned above, no Japanese affinities are recognis- able in the American Miocene marine fauna. On the other hand, there is some evidence that the Miocene floras of Sakhalin and Japan were intimately related to the Miocene flora of North America. These apparently contradictory * Shaler, N. S., " Nature and Man in America," p. 143. H2 TOO ORIGIN OF LIFE IN AMEKICA evidences can only be due to the fact that a portion of the Pacific coast of North America was connected by land in Mio- cene times with Sakhalin and Japan, whereas the " Kuro- shiwo " flowed northward between these islands and the main- land of Asia. In the subsequent chapters the evidence which has led me to these conclusions will be more fully dealt with. CHAPTER V THE ROCKY MOUNTAINS FROM Alaska we retrace our steps to Canada, 'by that magni- ficient mountain range popularly known as the " Rockies." I have already mentioned that the Rocky Mountains prac- tically end near the shores of the Arctic Ocean. They begin in northern Mexico. Although we can approximately fix the beginning and end of this vast range of mountains and even its eastern border, the western boundaries are more vague and indefinite. In British Columbia, which is so famed for its grand and impressive scenery, its rugged mountains and great forests, the northern spurs of the Cascade Moun- tains appear to merge into the Rockies, so that it becomes a matter of some difficulty to discriminate clearly between the two. Further south the Rocky Mountains cross the high plateau of Wyoming, sometimes spoken of as the " Laramie region." We also meet here the complex mountain groups to which the name of " Stony Mountains " has been applied. South of the plateau the mountains again grow more irregular and lofty than to the north of it. Another great plateau covers part of southern Utah, western Colorado', New Mexico land northern Arizona. With a height of over 6,000 feet above sea-level, this region has suffered great erosion, and is deeply, trenched by fantastic gorges which intersect it in every direc- tion. The most famous of them, the Colorado Canon, is a clean-cut chasm, which, in the course of ages, has been slowly carved by the river to the stupendous depth of 6,000 feet in the horizontal strata. It is not only the lover of scenery, but particularly the naturalist and palaeontologist who appreciate the unrivalled attractions of the Rocky Mountains. These mountains, more over, have been the direct means of exposing what are probably 102 OKIGIN OF LIFE IN AMERICA the most valuable and extensive deposits of fossils in existence.* As we enter the United States, proceeding along the Rocky Mountains, we soon find ourselves in the midst of the Miocene and the lower Oligocene beds (White River) of Montana. Further south, in Wyoming, we come to the Wind River beds, while on our left to the feast lie the Wasatch deposits, both of which belong to the lower Eocene. Westward we cross into the middle Eocene Bridger and Washakie beds of Wyoming, and also the upper Eocene Uinta of Utah. Much further south we finally meet with the famous Puerco, Tor- rejon and Wasatch formations of the San Juan basin in New Mexico, which are held to be of basal and lower Eocene age. Owing to the labours chiefly of Leidy, Marsh, Cope, Scott, Osborn, Wortman, Matthew, Hatcher, and others, a most re- markable assemblage of fossils has been obtained among these immensely rich deposits. Our knowledge of the former inhabitants of North America has thus greatly increased within recent years, and has aided us in tracing the gradual changes of land and water that the continent has undergone in past times. Great efforts are now being made to work out the correlation of the North American mammal -bear ing horizons. I propose to return to this subject later on, and need not dwell on it any longer at present. Although glaciers have now almost entirely disappeared from the Rocky Mountains, abundant proofs have been left of their past presence in the shape of moraines, and polished as well as striated surfaces. These signs of former glaciation are very different from the thick mantle of drift that we noticed in Canada, and which is likewise attributed to the action of glaciers. Only the highest summits and the most elevated valleys of the Rocky Mountains were ever occupied by ice, and there does not appear to be any sign of a 'deposit in the whole range resembling the northern drift.f These glaciers, no doubt, owed their existence to a greatly increased precipitation of moisture in the Rocky Mountains during the Ice Age, for we possess quite an unmistakable * Russell, I. C., " North America," pp. 122—136. t Whitney, J. D., " Climatic Changes," pp. 64—72. GEEAT SALT LAKE BASIN 103 record of a past humid period in the basin of the Great Salt Lake in Utah. All round the present lake we find a most interesting series of terraces at varying heights, which clearly represent ancient shore -lines. It has thus been established that in Pleistocene times, during its greatest development, the lake had the enormous area of more than 19,000 square miles, that is, nearly the size of Lake Michigan, with a depth of about 1,000 feet. This ancient " Lake Bonneville," as it has been called, has since been greatly reduced in size by the slowly increasing aridity of the country. Its diminutive descendant, the Great Salt Lake, is rapidly drying up, ita average depth being only twenty feet. Other large fresh-water lakes existed in the Great Basin during the Glacial Epoch. Sometimes it is customary to include the western Sierra Nevada and Cascade Mountains under the term " Rocky Mountains." Asa Gray and Sir Joseph Hooker have even added to this area that of the Great Basin in their account of the Kocky Mountain flora. More recently the distinctive- ness of these two mountain systems is being more generally recognised. The forests of the Kocky Mountains are dis- tinguished from those of the eastern States by the prevalence of the pyramidal evergreen conifers, whereas in the east the trees are round-headed and mostly deciduous. The endemic flora, consisting of thirty-three per cent, of all the plants found in the Rocky Mountains, forms a prominent element.* We have noticed that some of the alpine plants inhabiting the White Mountains are unknown in western America, for instance, Diapensia lapponica and Loiseleuria procumbens. On the other hand, a large number of the alpine Kocky Moun- tain species do not occur in the east, whereas a few, such as Rhododendron lapponicum, Arctostaphylos alpina, Rubus chamaemorus and Veronica alpina, are common to both, point- ing to the great antiquity of this element in the flora.f Many of the plants occur also in Asia ; others are closely related to arctic-alpine species. Most of the endemic element of the Rocky Mountain flora has clearly been derived from that * Gray, A., and J. D. Hooker, "Vegetation des Eocky Mountain Gebietes," p. 267. t Eydberg, P. A., "Composition of Rocky Mountain Flora," p. 870. 104 OEIGIN OF LIFE IN AMEEICA of the lower slopes of the mountains, and to it belong the typically American alpine species. They reach their greatest development in the southern portion of the Eockies. One of the most remarkable features, which I shall have occasion to draw attention to again in another chapter, is the occurrence in the Eocky Mountains of some species of plants, which reappear in the southern Andes, without being repre- sented either in the Mexican highlands or in the tropical Andes. Among these, Professor Engler * mentions the dwarf gentian (Gentiana prostrata), the mealy primrose (Primula farinosa), the hoary draba (Draba incana) and the alpine foxtail (Alopecurus alpinus). All these are common well-known European species. A few more have since been added by Professor Bray f This small group of species is of peculiar interest, not only because some- what analogous instances of distribution occur among insects, but also because this feature is by no means limited to mountain forms. In another chapter I shall allude to :a number of species inhabiting the arid regions of south- western North America that likewise are quite unknown in the moist tropical and sub -tropical belts of country to the south, yet reappear in the extreme south of South America. Whether all these species possess particular facilities for dispersal over wide areas or whether former conditions of land and water were more suitable than they are at present for dis- persal will be discussed later on (p. 414). The fauna of the Eocky Mountains resembles the flora in its composition, except that among the higher animals, at any rate, the species are almost all endemic. Two kinds of animals in particular are associated with the Rocky Mountains in sportsmen's minds, namely, the mountain sheep, or big-horn, and the Eocky Mountain goat. The former used to. be known as Ovis canadensis. But from the systematic mill of the zoologist, as Dr. A. E. Brown J puts it, have been produced1 seven new species and sub-species, all very closely re- lated to one another. As already stated, the Kamchatkan * Engler, A., "Entwicklungsgeschichte," II., p. 256. t Bray, W. L., " Eolations of North American Flora," p. 713. J Brown, A. E., " Zoology of North American Big Game," p. 69. AMEEICAN MOUNTAIN SHEEP 105 sheep (Ovis nivicola) is more nearly akin to the American sheep than it is to other Asiatic ones, and the occurrence on both sides of Bering Strait of such near relations forms one of the strongest buttresses for the belief in a geologically recent land connection between Asia and North America in the neighbourhood of Bering Sea. The various forms of American sheep are entirely confined to the western mountain region, where they are found from the Alaska mountains to the mountains on the long peninsula of Lower California, and eastward as far as Yellowstone Park. The home of the big-horn is the loftiest rim-rock of the high mountain plateaux, or the most rugged and forbidding bad- lands of the middle altitudes. In summer, says Dr. Horna- day,* its favourite pastures are the treeless slopes above the timber-line, and in winter it paws through the snows of the mountain meadows to reach the tallest spears of grass. When the raging storms and deep snows of winter drive the elk and deer down into the villages for food and shelter, the mountain sheep makes no perceptible change in its habitat. Its agility is nothing short of marvellous, and, from its wariness and diffi- culty of approach, it is a favourite object of pursuit of the experienced hunter. If, as it seems likely, the American mountain sheep has entered North America from north-eastern Asia within recent geological times, the fact of its having spread to Lower Cali- fornia and developed several distinct forms is an argument in favour of a pre- Glacial immigration. That sheep had already penetrated to North' America in Pliocene times is also proved by the discovery of the horn cores of a sheep (Ovis scaphoceras) in northern Nicaragua. f The comparatively dull-witted Kocky Mountain goat (Ore- amnos montanus) shares with the big-horn the almost inac- cessible peaks and ridges of the Rocky Mountains, but, being clumsy and slow, it rarely ventures far from its usual haunts. Unlike the sheep, the Rocky Mountain goat has a very local and discontinuous range. £ It seems almost as if its original home had been in the coast ranges of Oregon and Washington, * Hornaday, W. T., " Notes on the Mountain Sheep," p. 77. t Lucas, F. A., " Fossil Bison of North America," p. 756. t Grant, Madison, "The Eocky Mountain Goat," p. 9. 106 ORIGIN OF LIFE IN AMERICA and that it had then spread northward to British Columbia and southern Alaska, and eastward to the Rocky Mountains. Its whole distribution is thus confined to the north-western United States and western Canada.