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 316 to those of Kirkdale, and among which hyænas' bones and teeth abound. We may therefore admit, as a thing sufficiently proved on the evidence of caves and ossiferous gravel beds, that Kirkdale, and some parts of the neighbouring country, were dry land in the "elephantine period" of the northern zones of the world. But was the whole of this part of Yorkshire dry land? or was the vale of Pickering a lake, as Dr. Buckland conjectures, on whose margins lived elephants, hippopotami, &c.? an arm of the sea, as the occurrence of a raised shelly beach at Speeton may perhaps lead some to suppose? or a strait connecting the German Ocean with the water which may be imagined to have flowed down the vale of York from the Tees to the Humber, according to the views of some authors on the distribution of diluvium?

Whatever may have been the condition of these comparatively low lands, there can be no doubt that, above the level of Kirkdale Cave (itself only 200 feet above the level of the sea), the land in the N.E. of Yorkshire was wholly dry at the period of the existence of elephants; and this is a point of great importance among the many partial truths which must be established before we can look for a general theory of diluvial deposits.

It will appear from what has been said, that we look upon the erratic blocks, ossiferous gravel and clays, bone caves, and fissures, as phenomena related to a certain geological period, and a particular set of dynamical agencies. Taken as a whole, such a combination of effects is not, at this day, in progress; nor, in general, can we conceive the possibility of their being combined by the concurrence of existing agencies operating with their present intensities, or in their present directions. But considered analytically, there is, perhaps, no single phenomenon of the "northern drift" and the associated gravelly and ossiferous deposits which does not meet a