<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XX">CHAPTER XX</h2>
<h3>THE AGE OF REPTILES</h3>
<p class="tdc">(<i>Continued.</i>)</p>
</div>
<p>The Triassic period in its later stages was very like the
earlier period of the era which followed it, and the
reptiles which were characteristic of the close of the
first were continued in some cases with only slight differentiation
in the second. The Plesiosaurs and Ichthyosaurs
are associated with the Trias, and we may therefore
describe them now. Though some of these large aquatic
creatures must have measured thirty feet from snout to
tail, they do not equal in size the great aquatic mammals
of to-day—the whales. In life the Plesiosaur had a body
like the hull of a submarine with four great paddles
attached—the fore and the hind legs. It had a long
neck like a gigantic swan, and an elongated head provided
with powerful jaws armed with numerous pointed teeth.
It probably could swim under water as well as on the
surface, and when floating could snap small lizards from
the land. The paddles have a definite structure like
legs, with five toes, wrist or ankle, forearm or foreleg, and
upper arm or thigh. A great number of these Plesiosaurs
have been found in the Lias formation of the south of
England; and slabs containing whole skeletons have
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">-236-</span>
frequently been obtained. They and two similarly
embedded and flattened skeletons of different kinds of
Ichthyosaurs may be seen in quantity on the wall of the
gallery of fossil reptiles in the Natural History Museum
at South Kensington.</p>
<p>The Ichthyosaurs were much more fish-like or whale-like
in form than the Plesiosaurs. "They were, indeed,"
says Sir E. Ray Lankester, "singularly like the porpoises
and grampuses among living whales and stand in the
same relation to land-living reptiles that the porpoises
do to land-living mammals. Their fish-like appearance and
fins are not primitive characters and do not indicate any
closer blood relationship to fishes than that possessed by
other reptiles. They are the offspring of four-legged terrestrial
reptiles which have become specially modified and
adapted to submarine life." Like many whales, they had
a fin on the back devoid of bony support. The Ichthyosaur
had a ring of bony plates supporting the eyeball
(as birds also have), and these are often preserved in the
fossil specimens.</p>
<p>At the end of the Triassic period some strata were laid
down which have been called "Beds of passage." We
have seen that the Triassic strata were probably deposited,
altogether or in part, in extensive salt lakes or inland
seas. At the close of the Triassic period the waters of
the ocean were admitted to these areas by the sinking of
the land at some point or other of their margins. With
the sea-water came many living things—fishes, shells,
etc.—and the very scanty life of the Triassic lake was
replaced by an abundance of marine life. These beds were
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">-237-</span>
called the Rhætic beds because they were first found in
the old Roman province of Rhætia, which occupied an
Alpine district between Bavaria and Lombardy. Here
they were thickest, 3000 feet of limestones and shales;
but they have since been found either thicker or thinner
everywhere in England, and in the United States, as well
as in other parts of Europe wherever we can find the
Lias lying on the Trias. They are especially interesting,
because they contain the teeth of the earliest known traces
of the highest division of the animal kingdom—the
mammals. These early mammals belonged to the lowest
of all the mammalian tribes—the Marsupials, or pouched
animals, now so common in Australia. The little banded
ant-eater of South America, which lives upon insects and
is about the size of a rat, is probably something like the
first mammal, the <i>Microlestes</i>, in habit and appearance.</p>
<p>Let us now return, however, to the reptiles of the
Jurassic period. It is so called from the Jura Mountains
which occupy the north-west of Switzerland, separating
that country from France. They are composed of a
thick series of clays, shales, and limestones, to which, in
1829, the name Jurassic was given by the French geologist
Brogniart. It was soon found, however, that the
lower rocks of this period were very different from the
upper. The lower rocks were very shaly and clayey with
thinnish layers of limestone. These were called Lias. The
name Lias is derived from "layers"—pronounced broadly
by the Somerset quarrymen as "lyers"—a very suitable
name for the lower beds of the Lias especially, since the
alternation of thin beds of limestone and of shale gives
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">-238-</span>
to the rock a banded or ribbon-like appearance, which
may well cause the workmen to describe it as occurring
in "lyers."</p>
<p>To the upper Jurassic beds, which contained much
more limestone and also occasional beds of sandstone,
the name of Oolite was given. The Oolitic strata have
a special interest for English geologists, for it was in
them that William Smith, the west of England surveyor,
first made out (about the year 1790) the <i>order
of succession</i> of the strata, and by this was led to his
great discovery that "strata could be identified by their
organic remains," that is by their fossils. He noticed
that some of the limestone beds of the strata we are
about to describe consisted of small rounded grains,
which made them resemble the roe of a fish—indeed,
they were called "roestone" by the workmen. Hence
Smith—when seeking a name for this set of strata—bethought
himself of the term "Oolite," which means
"egg-stone" (Gr. <i>oon</i>, an egg, and <i>lithos</i>, a stone).
Where the grains are very large the limestone is called
"pea-grit" or <i>pisolite</i> (Lat. <i>pisum</i>, a pea). Some beds
which contain numerous and irregularly shaped fragments
of shells, corals, etc., are called <i>rag-stones</i>.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG class="w100" src="images/fpage238.png" width-obs="689" height-obs="490" alt="" /> <div class="figcaption"> <p class="tdc smcap">Plesiosaurs</p>
<p>Different species ranged from ten to forty feet in length.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">-239-</span></p>
<p>The Jurassic strata of Great Britain were sediments
laid down in warm seas surrounding an archipelago of
which Dartmoor, Wales, and Cumberland formed some
of the islands. The whole of Western Europe was
sinking and had sunk; and the waters of the open
ocean were admitted into and mingled with the salt
mineral waters of the great Triassic lakes. The change
was at first very like what would happen at the present
day if the coast of Palestine were depressed, so
that the waters of the Mediterranean flowed into the Dead
Sea. The few fish of the salt lakes were killed; and as
the land continued to sink, the sea at last flowed all
over Central and West England, bringing with it an
abundance of marine life. But the reptiles were far
from being finished with; and the progress of the small
mammals was extremely slow.</p>
<p>First, as to the reptiles. The whale-shaped Ichthyosaurs
continued to develop in the seas, and grew
larger and larger till some of which we have found traces
reached a length of forty feet. The long-necked Plesiosaurs
also advanced from strength to strength, and
some types grew larger. But by this time new breeds
were developing, with shorter necks and larger heads
(and consequently larger brain-power), which had a
better chance of surviving in the struggle for existence
than the unwieldy and slow-witted reptiles which preceded
them. The Ichthyosaurs became more and more
fish-like, and some of them developed the habit of breeding
at sea instead of having to return to the land to
deposit their eggs, as do the sea-going turtles and crocodiles.
Descended from quite a different stock, the
Plesiosaurs adapted themselves to sea life in their own
fashion. Instead of adopting the flowing lines of a fish,
the body took on a form more like that of a turtle,
while the lengthened neck gave rise to the description
applied to him since that they had the "body of a
turtle strung on a snake." At their longest their necks
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">-240-</span>
had as many as seventy-six bones, or vertebræ, which is
more than any other animal living or extinct ever possessed.
A smaller order of crocodiles appeared and
flourished for a time; and the ancestors of the sea
turtles, which were to enjoy so long a reign, began to
make their first appearance.</p>
<p>Among the land animals the Dinosaurs<SPAN name="FNanchor_16" href="#Footnote_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</SPAN> (or the "fearful"
saurians) attained remarkable size and diversity, and
their dominant species were easily lords of the reptile
horde. They developed not only as flesh-eating monsters,
but also in vegetable-eating species. Of the flesh-eaters
the <i>Ceratosaurus</i> was the most terrific. It was only seventeen
feet long, but when standing on its powerful hind legs
it could have looked in at most first-floor windows, and it
used its cruel fore limbs for seizing and holding prey.
Imagine a kangaroo with the teeth of a crocodile, the
size of an elephant, and the ferocity of a tiger and you
will have a fair idea of what you would have met in a
<i>Ceratosaurus</i>.</p>
<div class="footnote">
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_16" href="#FNanchor_16" class="label">[16]</SPAN> From Gr. "<i>deinos</i>," fearful.</p>
</div>
<p>The vegetarian Dinosaurs first became known in this
system, but their development was so extraordinary that
they soon outranked the flesh-eaters both in size and
diversity. Among these the <i>Brontosaurus</i> attained the
extraordinary length of sixty feet, and possibly more. It
walked on its four legs, and is one of the largest known of
all land animals. This enormous creature in spite of all
its size and bulk was yet rather weak than strong. Its
general organisation was unwieldy; the head was very
small, and the brain hardly bigger than a walnut. The
task of providing food for such a body must have been a
severe tax on so small a head. The inconvenience of its
bulkiness was perhaps reduced by living in and about
water; but from the excellent preservation of some of the
skeletons it has been thought that its life was often ended
by sinking in some quicksand or shoal, from which its own
massiveness forbade that the <i>Brontosaurus</i> should extricate
itself.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG class="w100" src="images/fpage240.png" width-obs="584" height-obs="453" alt="" /> <div class="figcaption"> <p><span class="smcap">Ornitholestes</span> <span class="smcap">Diplodoci Carnegiei</span></p>
<p>From skeletons found in Jurassic strata in Wyoming, U.S.A.</p>
<p>(These reptiles attained a length of about 80 feet.)</p>
</div>
</div>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">-241-</span></p>
<p>Not greatly removed in habit or appearance from the
<i>Brontosaurus</i> was the <i>Diplodocus</i>, a magnificent specimen
of which has been set up in Pittsburg, and a fine replica,
owing to the generosity of Mr. Andrew Carnegie, in the
Natural History Museum. The <i>Diplodocus</i>, a harmless
placid beast, was over eighty feet from the tip of his snout
to the end of his enormous tail. It has been calculated that
impulses travel along the nerves to the brain at the rate
of about twelve yards a second. The rate may have been
less in the case of the sluggish <i>Diplodocus</i>, but in any case
it would evidently take at least two seconds for a nerve
impulse to travel the length of this reptile; so that if any
enemy attacked him at the end of his tail it would be two
seconds before the <i>Diplodocus</i> would realise the fact, and
perhaps four seconds before he could begin to turn round
to defend himself. Even larger than these was the tremendous
<i>Brachiosaurus</i>, who weighed as much as a steam-engine
and whose thigh-bone was nearly eight feet high.
These were the largest reptiles ever known, and may be
taken as reaching the point when bulk becomes a burden,
and as signalising an approach to the limit of evolution
in the line of size. Less bulky than these were the
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">-242-</span>
<i>Stegosaurs</i>, which were also four-footed. They were
curiously armoured, and formed a group of very remarkable
creatures found in England and Western America.
While they were less gigantic than some of those we have
just described, they found compensation in protective
plates, spines, and similar modes of defence. A <i>Stegosaurus</i>
found in Wyoming was probably the most hideous
to look upon; but like his relatives he had an extraordinarily
small head and brain, and was a sluggish creature
depending on his ugliness and armour for protection.
Very likely this small size of the brain of great extinct
reptiles had to do with the fact of their ceasing to
exist. Animals with bigger and ever-increasing brains
outdid them in the struggle for existence.</p>
<p>It has already been noted that the crowding of the
land may have led some reptiles to take to the sea. The
same influence may have led others to take to the air and
thereby escape the monsters of the swamps, jungles,
and forests. Whatever the cause, the most striking and
wonderful feature of this period was the development of
flying reptiles. They had just been seen in the Trias.
In the Jurassic they appeared fully developed. They
doubtless sprang from some agile hollow-boned saurian,
more or less akin to the slender leaping Dinosaurs. Between
the ponderous Brontosaurs and the airy Pterodactyls
was the most striking of contrasts. At first these
bird-like reptiles were small, but later their wings had a
spread of as much as twenty feet, veritable flying dragons.
They were not adorned with feathers, but like bats had
leathery membranes stretched from the fore limbs to the
body and to the hind limbs. Their heads were bird-like,
and their jaws at first were set with teeth. They had
true powers of flight, as is shown by the discovery of their
remains in places where they must have been far out at
sea when they sank and were buried. Later Pterodactyls
had no teeth, and were, perhaps, milder in habits.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG class="w100" src="images/fpage242.png" width-obs="422" height-obs="618" alt="" /> <div class="figcaption"><span class="smcap">Archæopteryx</span> (the earliest known fossil bird), and <span class="smcap">Compsognathus</span> (a small Dinosaur)</div>
</div>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">-243-</span></p>
<p>It seems natural to pass from the fossil reptiles to the
birds. But as a matter of fact the birds are not very
closely related to the Pterodactyls, and seem to have
been descended from some other very special form of
reptiles, so peculiar as to be considered a distinct class.
It may actually have been descended from those reptiles
among the Dinosaurs which walked on their hind
legs and had only three toes to the foot. The first bird
found belongs to Jurassic times; and its skeleton, found in
some slate remains at Solenhofen in Bavaria, is now to be
seen in the Natural History Museum. There is another
one in Berlin. This bird, called the <i>Archæopteryx</i>, was
of the size of a large pigeon, had a short head apparently
without a beak, and its jaws were armed with teeth.
Whereas living birds have the fingers of their "hands" tied
together in their wings, this bird has three distinct
fingers at the corner of its wings, each armed with a claw.
Its legs were like those of living birds, and it had four
toes. Its tail was unlike that of any living bird, and like
that of a lizard. Whereas the bony part of the tail of
living birds is very short and bears the tail feathers set
across it fanwise, the <i>Archæopteryx</i> had a long bony
tail made up of many bones, and the feathers were set in
a series one behind the other till the tail looked like the
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">-244-</span>
leaf of a date palm in shape. Strange as this little
creature appears it was a genuine bird, for it had these
feathers well developed, as the two fossil specimens showed.
There are two sets of feathers forming the wings, and the
thighs were also covered with feathers.</p>
<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">-245-</span></p>
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