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CHAP. VI.
CAINOZOIC STRATA.
267
Middle group. | Bordeaux; Dax; Touraine, Turin; Baden; Vienna; Angers; Ronca. The Viennese and Baden fossils are a general type for Moravia, Hungary, Cracovia, Volhynia, Podolia, and Transylvania.
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Lower group. | Paris, London, Hants, Valognes, Belgium. (The fossils of Castel, Gomberto and Pauliac are the same nearly as those of the basin of Paris.
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From each of these localities, the ratio of the species now living has been determined by M. Deshayes as under:—
Upper group. General proportion of living species. 49 per cent. (Allowance being made for occurrence at more than one locality.) | ||||||
Sicily has yielded | 226 | species, of which | 216, | or | 95.0 | per cent, are living. |
Subapennine | 569 | 238 | 41.8 | |||
Crag | 111[1] | 45 | 40.1 | |||
Middle group. General proportion of living species, 18 per cent. | ||||||
Vienna has yielded | 124 | species, of which | 35, | or | 28.2 | per cent, are living. |
Baden | 99 | 26 | 26.2 | |||
Bordeaux and Dax | 594 | 136 | 22.9 | |||
Touraine | 298 | 68 | 227 | |||
Turin | 97 | 17 | 17.5 | |||
Angers | 166 | 25 | 15.0 | |||
Lower group.—General proportion of living species, 3½ per cent | ||||||
Ronca[2] has yielded | 40 | species, of which | 3, | or, | 7.5 | per cent are living. |
London | 239 | 12 | 5.0 | |||
Paris | 1122 | 38 | 3.4 |
Mr. Lyell, by independent researches, was induced to class the Sicilian deposits as a separate formation from the rest of the upper group of Deshayes; but in other respects his scheme of nomenclature subjoined is perfectly in accordance with Deshayes' results.
Newer pleiocene of Lyell | — | Sicilian deposits, with 95 per cent recent species. |
Elder pleiocene | — | Italian and crag deposits, with 41. |
Meiocene | — | Vienna, Bordeaux, Turin, &c. 18. |
Eocene | — | Paris, London, Belgium, 3½. |
The terms are derived from the Greek καινος, recent, combined with ήως, the dawn, μειῶν, less, and πλειῶν, more.
- ↑ There are above 450 species of fossils in the crag, and on the relation of its shells to recent types, Dr. Beck of Copenhagen holds a different opinion from M. Deshayes. See also Mr. Charlesworth on the crag formation, in Phil. Mag. and Annals, 1836.
- ↑ Placed by Deshayes in the middle group, but with hesitation.