The first stop of the voyage of the Beagle (1831-1836) was “Quail Island” (today Island of Santa Maria) – a small island located in the bay of Praia of the larger island of St.Jago (today Santiago, Cape Verde Islands). This visit is especially interesting as it provides some glimpses in Darwin’s geological background at the beginning of his adventure and his later “evolution” as geologist.
Darwin collected basic experience as geologist during a field trip across Wales and surely know the geological theories of the time, especially regarding the formation and age of the earth.
The notion of a 6.000 year old earth was already dismissed by scholars
and even the interpretation of gravel and sand deposits as the remains
of the biblical flood (the “Diluvium“) was questioned. However the notion of earth’s history of a succession of catastrophic events was still fiercely discussed.
Many geologists at the time proposed
that geologic processes in the past differed significantly from recent
processes; even certain types of rocks (and the formation of these
rocks) were limited to certain time periods, when today unknown
geological processes were shaping the earth. The lawyer Charles Lyell
challenged this interpretation of earth’s history, arguing that common
and slow processes still observable today also acted long time ago.
Captain FitzRoy offered Charles Lyell’s recently published and controversial “Principles of Geology”
as welcoming gift, but Darwin probably didn’t find time to read the
book in the first weeks of the expedition. His former mentor, botanist John S. Henslow, even “advised
me to get and study the first volume of Principles, which had then just
been published, but on no account to accept the views therein
advocated.“
It’s therefore even more surprising to read in Darwin’s autobiography (1876-1881) the following phrase:
“The very first place which I
examined, namely St. Jago, in the Cape de Verde islands, showed me
clearly the wonderful superiority of Lyell’s manner of treating geology.”
Darwin also emphasises how the visit of St.Jago converted him to Lyell’s geology:
“The geology of St. Jago is very
striking, yet simple: a stream of lava formerly flowed over the bed of
the sea, formed of triturated recent shells and corals, which it has
baked into a hard white rock.
Since then the whole island has been upheaved. But the line of
white rock revealed to me a new and important fact, namely that there
had been afterwards subsidence around the craters, which had since been
in action, and had poured forth lava. It then first dawned on me that I
might perhaps write a book on the geology of the various countries
visited, and this made me thrill with delight. That was a memorable hour
to me, and how distinctly I can call to mind the low cliff of lava
beneath which I rested, with the sun glaring hot, a few strange desert
plants growing near, and with living corals in the tidal pools at my
feet.“
Fig.1. Profile of the island of St. Jago as seen by Darwin in 1832. Darwin was the first to study the geology of the Cape Verde Islands (from DARWIN 1876). Darwin recognized three distinct layers of rocks, a lower series with volcanic rocks composed of volcanic breccias and magma dikes (deposited under water - identified with "A"), a limestone with fossils ("B") and finally a cover of basaltic lava ("C"). Darwin, trained by Sedgwick, noted also the contact metamorphism between the former hot molten lava and the earlier cool limestone.
It is curious to note that Darwin adopted the geological terms used by German (not British) geologists to describe the rocks observed in the field, here the strong influence of Alexander von Humboldt works, read by the young Charles, is recognizable
It is curious to note that Darwin adopted the geological terms used by German (not British) geologists to describe the rocks observed in the field, here the strong influence of Alexander von Humboldt works, read by the young Charles, is recognizable
Darwin uses in later publications the
similarity of the fossils found in the carbonate sediments (Darwin’s
line of white rock) and the still living animals on the shore as
evidence that no substantial change in the geologic processes forming
these rocks occurred over time.
However from the geological notes he made during the field trip on St. Jago it emerges that young geologist Darwin was still struggling to accept this idea. More important, accepting slow geological processes made it necessary also to accept a very old earth.
However from the geological notes he made during the field trip on St. Jago it emerges that young geologist Darwin was still struggling to accept this idea. More important, accepting slow geological processes made it necessary also to accept a very old earth.
During one of his daily excursions on St.Jago Darwin discovered a mature baobab-tree (gen. Adansonia) growing on the bottom of one of the large valleys carved into the hard basaltic rocks of the volcanic island.
“In this [one of the valleys north
of Praya] grows the celebrated Baobab or Adansonia; this tree only 45
feet high, measured two feet from the ground round the solid trunk.
35.-Some of the same species in Africa were supposed by Adanson to reach
the enormous age of 6000 years.-The very appearance of the tree strikes
the beholder that it has lived during a large fraction of the time that
this world has existed.“
Darwin notes that a 6.000 year old tree
would have experienced a significant period of earth’s history, implying
that earth, despite older than proposed by scrupulous clergymen, would
be not much older. However the eroded valleys in the thick lava shields,
characterizing the landscape on St. Jago, need vast periods of time to
form, as he continues:
“Of course the valley must be older
& it is this one that has finally left the neighbourhood of Praya in
the state we now find it.-How long a time intervened between this
period and the deposition of former beach it is impossible to
say.-during it three great phenomena occurred, the flowing of the
lava.-the upheaving of the coast. & the great beds of diluvium
collected in the older valley.-To what a remote age does this in all
probability call us back & yet we find the shells [in the 'former
beach'] themselves & their habits the same as exist in the present
sea.“
In the final note Darwin considers the
possibility that the similarity between the fossil shells and the recent
ones could also be explained by a short interval of time between the
formation of the white rock and the deposition of modern beach deposits
(so there was no time for a faunal turnover).
However accepting a young age for the fossil beach deposits and the even younger eroded remains of the volcanic island of St. Jago (the coastal lava shields are covering Darwin´s white rocks and therefore according to stratigraphic principles are younger) would invoke some unknown – and presumably catastrophic – geological event in the not-too distant past to explain its actual deep incised valleys.
However accepting a young age for the fossil beach deposits and the even younger eroded remains of the volcanic island of St. Jago (the coastal lava shields are covering Darwin´s white rocks and therefore according to stratigraphic principles are younger) would invoke some unknown – and presumably catastrophic – geological event in the not-too distant past to explain its actual deep incised valleys.
“I conceive it to be clear, from the
pieces left standing and from the corresponding appearance on each side
of the valley, that the country was originally covered with a uniform
bed of this rock.-and that after being shattered by some great force:
these valleys were formed by the agency of large bodies of water: To
this latter force the valleys nearer the coast give abundant evidence.“
Darwin will admit in his diary “what a confusion for geologists.“
To be continued…
Bibliography:
CHIESURA, G. (2010): A Santiago sulle orme di Darwin. Darwin – Bimestrale di Scienze No.40: 32-36
CHIESURA, G. (2013): Isole di Darwin – Un curioso in mezzo al mare. CD-Rom
HERBERT, S. (2005): Charles Darwin, Geologist. Cornell University Press: 485
JOHNSON, M.E.; BAARLI, B.G.; CACHAO, M.; da SILVA, C.M.; LEDESMA-VAZQUEZ, J.; MAYORAL, E.J.; RAMALHO, R.S. & SANTOS, A. (2012): Rhodoliths, uniformitarianism, and Darwin: Pleistocene and Recent carbonate deposits in the Cape Verde and Canary archipelagos. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology Vol.329-330: 83-100
PEARSON, P.N. & NICHOLAS, C.J. (2007) : ‘Marks of extreme violence’: Charles Darwin’s geological observations at St Jago (Sao Tiago), Cape Verde islands. in WYSE JACKSON, P. N. (ed.) Four Centuries of Geological Travel: The Search for Knowledge on Foot, Bicycle, Sledge and Camel. Geological Society, London, Special Publications, 287: 239-253
CHIESURA, G. (2013): Isole di Darwin – Un curioso in mezzo al mare. CD-Rom
HERBERT, S. (2005): Charles Darwin, Geologist. Cornell University Press: 485
JOHNSON, M.E.; BAARLI, B.G.; CACHAO, M.; da SILVA, C.M.; LEDESMA-VAZQUEZ, J.; MAYORAL, E.J.; RAMALHO, R.S. & SANTOS, A. (2012): Rhodoliths, uniformitarianism, and Darwin: Pleistocene and Recent carbonate deposits in the Cape Verde and Canary archipelagos. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology Vol.329-330: 83-100
PEARSON, P.N. & NICHOLAS, C.J. (2007) : ‘Marks of extreme violence’: Charles Darwin’s geological observations at St Jago (Sao Tiago), Cape Verde islands. in WYSE JACKSON, P. N. (ed.) Four Centuries of Geological Travel: The Search for Knowledge on Foot, Bicycle, Sledge and Camel. Geological Society, London, Special Publications, 287: 239-253
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