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Approximate Correlation of Silurian Rocks.
Graptolite Zones (Britain). |
England and Wales. |
Scotland. | Scandinavian. | Baltic Region. |
Bohemia. | Western Europe. |
E. Alps. | North America (New York). |
Canada. | Nova Scotia. |
New Brunswick. |
Asia. | Australia. |
Monograptus leintwardinensis. |
Downton and Ludlow groups. |
Downtonian and Raeberry Castle beds. |
Upper Cardiola | Eurypterus beds. |
Stage E2 of J. Barrande. |
Manlius limestone. |
beds and upper
Cephalopod or
Rondout
M. bohemicus.
Gothland limestone.
Limestones with
Water Lime. Cobleskill
cephalopods.
limestone.
M. Nilssoni.
Red sandstone.
Upper Oesel
Salina beds of
Lower cephalopod
beds:
Onondaga
limestone.
dolomite
with
Crinoid and coral
and
rock salt
limestone.
limestones.
and
gypsum.
Lower Cardiola
shales and Mega-
lomus limestones.
M. testis.
Wen lock
Riccarton,
Cyrtograptus
Lower Oesel
Crinoid
Guelph
and
Blair,
shales and lower
beds :
limestones.
dolomite.
Cyrtograptus
Wool hope
and
brachiopod and
dolomite
Linnarssoni.
groups.
Straiton
coral limestone
and
Lockport
Cyrtograptus
beds.
with sandstone.
marl.
limestone.
In a
Murchisoni,
Rochester
shales.
Clinton beds.
Rastriles
Tarannon,
Queensberry
Rastrites shales
Pentamerus
Stage Ei of
maximus.
Llandovery,
beds.
and Strickland-
beds.
J. Barrande.
Medina
and
inia marls.
Graptolite
sandstone.
M. spinigerus.
May Hill
Birkhill shales
shales
groups.
and
with
Oneida
851
M. grcgarius.
Graptolitic beds
diabase
conglomerate.
of the at the base. Diphgraptus
Girvan area.
Shawangunk
vesiculosus.
grit
Diplo^raptus atuminatus.
Receptaculites and Ischadites occur in the Silurian. Foraminifera and radiolaria also left their remains in the rocks. The most highly organized animals of the Silurian period were the fishes which had already made their appearance in the Ordovician rocks of Colorado and Russia. The Silurian fish include selachians (Onchus, Thyestis), and the occurrence of remains of the obscure backboned ostracoderms (placoderms) is particularly worthy of notice (Pteraspis, Cephalaspis, Tremataspis, Cyathaspis, Thelodus, Lanarkia, Eukeraspis). Scorpions (Palaesphonus) have been found in Lanark, Gothland and New York. Plant remains are very fully represented; land plants have been recorded from the Harz and Kellerwald (H. Potonie, 1901), and large silicified stems—up to 2 ft. in diameter—perhaps representing a gigantic seaweed (Nematophycus), have been found in Wales and in Canada. Pachytheca is a small spherical body often associated with Nematophycus. Girvanella is another obscure algal plant.
As a natural result of the open character of the great Silurian periarctic sea referred to above, there are many points of resemblance between the fauna of the several regions of the N. hemisphere; this has been specially noticed in the community not only of genera but of species between Britain, Sweden and the interior of N. America (Iowa, Wisconsin, Illinois). Goniophyllum pyramidale is common to Iowa and Gothland ; Atrypa reticularis, Orthoceras annulatum and not a few others are common to Europe and N. America. An extremely interesting circumstance is the admixture of a periarctic and Bohemian fauna in the Australasian region.
In a general sense the Silurian period was one of comparative quiescence as regards crustal disturbances, and a relative sinking of the land was followed by a relative elevation affecting wide areas in the N. hemisphere. Local oscillations, such as those taking part in the formation of the Salina beds, &c., were naturally taking place, but the folding of the Scandinavian mountains and in the N. highlands of Scotland continued throughout the period accompanied by a great amount of thrusting. Volcanic activity was quite subordinate in Silurian times; flows of diabase occurred at the commencement of the period in Bohemia, and evidence of minor basaltic flows and tuffs is found at Tortworth in Gloucestershire and at a few localities in N. America.
For further information, see articles on the Cambrian, Ordovician, Llandovery, Wenlock, Ludlow Systems and Groups. (J. A. H.)
SILVA, ANTONIO JOSÉ DA (1705–1739), Portuguese dramatist, known as “the Jew,” was born at Rio de Janeiro, but came to Portugal at the age of eight. His parents, Joao Mendes da Silva and Lourença Coutinho, were descended from Portuguese Jews who had emigrated to Brazil to escape the Inquisition, but in 1702 that tribunal began to persecute the Marranos in Rio,
and in October 1712 Lourença Coutinho fell a victim. Her husband and children accompanied her to Portugal, where she figured among the "reconciled" in the auto-da-fé of the 9th of July 1713, after undergoing the torment only. Her husband, having then acquired a fixed domicile in Lisbon, settled down to advocacy with success, and he was able to send Antonio to the university of Coimbra, where he matriculated in the faculty of law. In 1726 Antonio was suddenly imprisoned along with his mother on the 8th of August; on the 16th he suffered the first
interrogation, and on the 23rd of September he was put to the torment, with the result that three weeks later he could not sign his name. He confessed to having followed the practices of the Mosaic law, and this saved his life. He went through the great auto-da-fé held on the 23rd of October in the presence of King John V. and his court, abjured his errors, and was set at liberty.
His mother was only released from prison in October 1729, after she had undergone torture and figured as a penitent in another auto-da-fé. Meanwhile Antonio had gone back to Coimbra, and finishing his course in 1728–1729 he returned to Lisbon and became associated with his father as an advocate. He found an ignorant and corrupt society ruled by an immoral yet fanatical
monarch, who wasted millions on unprofitable buildings though the country was almost without roads and the people had become the most backward in Europe. As his plays show, the spectacle struck Antonio's observation, but he had to criticize with caution. He produced his first play or opera in 1733, and the next year he married a cousin, D. Leonor Maria de Carvalho, whose parents had been burnt by the Inquisition, while she
herself had gone through an auto-da-fé in Spain and been exiled on account of her religion. A daughter was born to them in 1734, but the years of their happiness and of Silva 's dramatic career were few, for on the 5th of October 1737 husband and wife were both imprisoned on the charge of "judaizing." A slave of theirs had denounced them to the Holy Office, and though the details of the accusation against them seem trivial and even contradictory, Antonio, was condemned to death. On the 18th of October he was beheaded and his body burnt in an auto-da-fé;