Abstract
IN the session of 1876, Mr. John Murray communicated to this Society a paper on the distribution of volcanic debris over the floor of the ocean,2 and in it announced the discovery of cosmic dust in deep-sea deposits. It was shown that at points where neither the action of waves, rivers, or currents can transport the debris of continents, volcanic materials play the most important role in the formation of the mineral constituents of the deep-sea deposits. It was pointed out that pumice, on account of its structure, was able to float to great distances, but in time became waterlogged and sank to the bottom, there to decompose. On the other hand, incoherent volcanic matters, ejected in the form of lapilli, sand, and ashes, into the higher regions of the atmosphere, may, cœteris paribus, be conveyed, in consequence of their small dimensions and structure, to greater distances than other mineral particles derived from the continents. The possibility was also admitted that submarine volcanic eruptions might also contribute to the accumulation of those silicates and pyrogeneous minerals and rocks whose microscopic characters and distribution at the bottom of the sea we shall presently point out.
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References
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Proc. Roy. Soc. Edic.
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Volcanic Ashes and Cosmic Dust 1 . Nature 29, 585–590 (1884). https://doi.org/10.1038/029585a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/029585a0