Abstract
I HAVE just read in NATURE, vol. ix. p. 62, Captain Hutton's letter to the Rev. Osmond Fisher on the “Elevation of Mountains and Volcanic Theories.” I was also indebted some time since to the courtesy of Captain Hutton for a copy of his lecture on the Formation of Mountains, delivered at Wellington, New Zealand, November, 1872. Without entering at present into a discussion upon the particular theory which finds favour with him, I may be permitted to call attention to the fact that Sir William Thomson's views as to the rigidity of the earth have been distinctly called in question in a former number of this journal, which has probably not reached Captain Hutton. I refer to my communication entitled “The Rigidity of the Earth,” printed in NATURE, vol. vii. p. 288. Captain Hutton expresses his belief that the theory of internal rigidity has probably a weak point somewhere. I venture to think that its weak points are so many as to make it a theory too brittle to form a support to any geological superstructure.
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HENNESSY, H. The Elevation of Mountains and the Internal Condition of the Earth. Nature 9, 103 (1873). https://doi.org/10.1038/009103c0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/009103c0
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