登陆注册
15679700000060

第60章

The only sufficient cause we can imagine is the former connection of all the islands with the continent, and such a change is in perfect harmony with what we know of the earth's past history, and is rendered probable by the remarkable fact that a rise of only three hundred feet would convert the wide seas that separate them into an immense winding valley or plain about three hundred miles wide and twelve hundred long. It may, perhaps, be thought that birds which possess the power of flight in so pre-eminent a degree, would not be limited in their range by arms of the sea, and would thus afford few indications of the former union or separation of the islands they inhabit. This, however, is not the case. A very large number of birds appear to be as strictly limited by watery barriers as are quadrupeds; and as they have been so much more attentively collected, we have more complete materials to work upon, and are able to deduce from them still more definite and satisfactory results. Some groups, however, such as the aquatic birds, the waders, and the birds of prey, are great wanderers; other groups are little known except to ornithologists. I shall therefore refer chiefly to a few of the best known and most remarkable families of birds as a sample of the conclusions furnished by the entire class.

The birds of the Indo-Malay region have a close resemblance to those of India; for though a very large proportion of the species are quite distinct, there are only about fifteen peculiar genera, and not a single family group confined to the former district.

If, however, we compare the islands with the Burmese, Siamese, and Malayan countries, we shall find still less difference, and shall be convinced that all are closely united by the bond of a former union. In such well-known families as the woodpeckers, parrots, trogons, barbets, kingfishers, pigeons, and pheasants, we find some identical species spreading over all India, and as far as Java and Borneo, while a very large proportion are common to Sumatra and the Malay peninsula.

The force of these facts can only be appreciated when we come to treat the islands of the Austro-Malay region, and show how similar barriers have entirely prevented the passage of birds from one island to another, so that out of at least three hundred and fifty land birds inhabiting Java and Borneo, not more than ten have passed eastward into Celebes. Yet the Straits of Macassar are not nearly so wide as the Java sea, and at least a hundred species are common to Borneo and Java.

I will now give two examples to show how a knowledge of the distribution of animals may reveal unsuspected facts in the past history of the earth. At the eastern extremity of Sumatra, and separated from it by a strait about fifteen miles wide, is the small rocky island of Banca, celebrated for its tin mines. One of the Dutch residents there sent some collections of birds and animals to Leyden, and among them were found several species distinct from those of the adjacent coast of Sumatra. One of these was a squirrel (Sciurus bangkanus), closely allied to three other species inhabiting respectively the Malay peninsula, Sumatra, and Borneo, but quite as distinct from them all as they are from each other. There were also two new ground thrushes of the genus Pitta, closely allied to, but quite distinct from, two other species inhabiting both Sumatra and Borneo, and which did not perceptibly differ in these large and widely separated islands. This is just as if the Isle of Man possessed a peculiar species of thrush and blackbird, distinct from the birds which are common to England and Ireland.

These curious facts would indicate that Banca may have existed as a distinct island even longer than Sumatra and Borneo, and there are some geological and geographical facts which render this not so improbable as it would at first seem to be. Although on the map Banca appears so close to Sumatra, this does not arise from its having been recently separated from it; for the adjacent district of Palembang is new land, being a great alluvial swamp formed by torrents from the mountains a hundred miles distant.

Banca, on the other hand, agrees with Malacca, Singapore, and the intervening island of Lingen, in being formed of granite and laterite; and these have all most likely once formed an extension of the Malay peninsula. As the rivers of Borneo and Sumatra have been for ages filling up the intervening sea, we may be sure that its depth has recently been greater, and it is very probable that those large islands were never directly connected with each other except through the Malay peninsula. At that period the same species of squirrel and Pitta may have inhabited all these countries; but when the subterranean disturbances occurred which led to the elevation of the volcanoes of Sumatra, the small island of Banca may have been separated first, and its productions being thus isolated might be gradually modified before the separation of the larger islands had been completed.

As the southern part of Sumatra extended eastward and formed the narrow straits of Banca, many birds and insects and some Mammalia would cross from one to the other, and thus produce a general similarity of productions, while a few of the older inhabitants remained, to reveal by their distinct forms, their different origin. Unless we suppose some such changes in physical geography to have occurred, the presence of peculiar species of birds and mammals in such an island as Banca is a hopeless puzzle; and Ithink I have shown that the changes required are by no means so improbable as a mere glance at the map would lead us to suppose.

同类推荐
  • The Malay Archipelago

    The Malay Archipelago

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 佛说善法方便陀罗尼经

    佛说善法方便陀罗尼经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • David Elginbrod

    David Elginbrod

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 兰丛诗话

    兰丛诗话

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 书证

    书证

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 猎君心

    猎君心

    御前初见,岳蘅是靖国公府的贵女,一箭倾人心,他,只是个有幸一睹英姿的普通人;重逢之时,岳蘅家国两亡,满心仇恨,他,位高权重,深藏惊喜。我为你复仇,你将心给我,可好?
  • 风之纹章风之契

    风之纹章风之契

    看着熟睡中的若琪,常轩适摸摸她那柔顺的长发,微微笑着:“还是无法成为你这一世的羁绊吗?你要记得,轮回未灭,我亦未去。”
  • 风舞门

    风舞门

    叶风流是一个人,一个普普通通的人,他甚至连普通人的生活都没有,因为他是一个孤儿。他没有傲人的脸庞,也没有傲人的身材,但是却总是那么讨女孩子欢喜,那只因为他眼神中的忧郁。他不经常笑,笑起来却充满致命的魅力,他从不大笑,他的笑也很特别,别人笑的时候都是从脸上看出来的,可是他笑的时候,眼睛中的笑意,却比脸上的笑容还要多,你可以轻易的从他眼神中看出那带着一丝忧郁的笑意,但他的嘴角却只是轻轻的勾起。他的一生中充满了色彩,他遇到的稀奇古怪的事情,你一辈子也没有听说过,他引领着风舞门在天地间浮沉,风舞门这三个字永远是那么让人尊敬,这三个字的本身就已经充满了光芒。但他只是一个人,就连神都奈何不了的人。他一生中不知道有多少女人为他伤心,也不知有多少女人让他伤心。
  • 煽

    本书为随笔集。书中收入了海岩关于做人、处世、谈情及成功的的文章,配有图片。
  • EXO你是信仰:三生石

    EXO你是信仰:三生石

    新作,希望诸位书友们喜欢!书友群因为没人说话被我解散惹,嘿嘿(?﹃??)……想加我的书友们可以去我首页上加我欢迎加入沐梵新建的书友群,群聊号码:793916035
  • 古剑奇谭:古剑江湖

    古剑奇谭:古剑江湖

    《古剑奇谭》的后续小说,慕容旭尧,一个聪明过人、风流倜傥的男人,却不善言语,前世和紫胤真人有过些许师徒关系,一件件危及朋友性命的事不断发生,幕后主使竟是他父亲!!!究竟是什么原因导致父子两人反目成仇……
  • 大明活财神

    大明活财神

    崇祯年间,大明叛乱时期,民不聊生。徐涅横空出世,以商人的敏锐嗅觉和铁血的施政手腕,一步步让大明从衰弱走向强盛。在徐涅眼中,大明的天下,就没有贫穷的地方!看徐涅给你指出财富之路,造就财富神话!
  • 重生之云浮

    重生之云浮

    她是世上唯一一个真仙,莫名魂穿到阳盛帝国七公主的身上,在光鲜亮丽的头衔背后却暗藏杀机,待她重修成仙,一定要先找到那个夺走她初吻的男人!
  • 锦衣救国

    锦衣救国

    橘子洲头,大江东去。丰臣秀吉修武琵琶逗秋雨,坐拥天下踞雄关。凌烟阁下,紫禁城中。万历皇帝醉舞春风弄美人,铁马扬鞭成霸业。钟鼓都城,雕栏丘墟。一位粗衣陋衫的少年郎看着落日余晖中的日本武士,露出了笑容,拔出了手中的绣春刀……封侯霸业,驱除外虏。中国血战日本,两大帝国弭兵论战,围绕东南亚霸主之争的饕餮盛宴!万历皇帝剑指丰臣父子,蓄谋已久的侵略阴谋!锦衣卫对战日本北辰一刀流忍者,大明铁骑名将VS日本战国强兵悍将;中华帝国傲视日本安土桃山,一场被日本歪曲掩盖了四百年的惊天真相;大明王朝最后的绝唱!中国史上,汉人皇朝最后一次的扬兵域外!宁予家奴不予外贼的誓死决心!拓万里波涛,将国威布于八荒四海。
  • 一川烟水

    一川烟水

    鱼沉雁杳,只留天涯路。往日残梦,莫念旧时人。身转魂移,却看乱世绯。不问天道,寄狂朱户心。修玄!她定要立于世界之巅,不覆前路,护她所爱之人!灭她所恨之人!凌万物,掌千权,控百纪,越十位,伴一人!旧时恨,此世定不会再犯,被人掌控的权利,她会一点一点夺回来!理不存,那她便重改天理;天不允,那她就逆天而行!既然到了一个如此逆天的地方,为何要墨守成规!既然有逆天的力量,为何不闹它一闹?