The Story of the Malverns - With Appendices and Illustrations
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The Story of the Malverns - With Appendices and Illustrations - G. W. Hastings
Map
I. GEOLOGIC MALVERN
THE Malvern Hills run north and south for some twelve miles on the western side of the Severn valley, and form a singularly picturesque object to the eye, not being rounded like most English hills, but presenting a peaked and mountainous outline. Edmund Burke observed this peculiarity, and spoke of them as being the backbone of Gloucestershire. This was a mistake in geography, as nearly the whole of the range is the dividing line between the counties of Worcester and Hereford; but the description nevertheless was apt, for the appearance of the Hills, seen from a distance, somewhat resembles the spinal vertebrae. Byron, when brought as a boy by his mother to Cheltenham, pined for the Highland mountains of his childhood, and used to climb the Cotswolds behind the town to look on the Malverns with tears in his eyes. It was not known to the future poet, nor does it occur to many even in this scientific age, that the peculiar aspect of the Malverns is owing to their volcanic origin. But it is with this fact that their history must begin.
When the late Sir James Dawson, Principal of the M’Gill University at Montreal, delivered at the Birmingham Town Hall, in 1881, his address as President of the British Association, he gave his opinion that the Malvern Hills were undoubtedly the most ancient land in Great Britain, and were probably older than any mountain range in Europe. It may be observed that a day or two before his address Dawson had been on the Hills with the writer, and had shown himself fully cognizant of their geological origin. That origin dates from the Silurian sea which, at a period of remotest antiquity, flowed deep and unbroken over what now is Britain. Its age cannot be known, but looking to the statement by Sir Robert Ball that our planet must have been in existence for 100 millions of years, and to the opinion of Sir Charles Lyell that its geological record is of double that number, it would be difficult to compute the period of that primeval sea at less than many millions of the amount. Let us, in saying this, consider a few only of the many geological events which have succeeded the subsidence of its waves.
Take, for instance, some of the secondary formations. Out of the several Limestone deposits, all produced by the slow action of carbonate of lime on sand and water, all full of marine fossils, shells, corals, star-fishes, crustacea (of which in fact whole mountain ranges are made up), proving the time that must have been required for their deposition, take, let us say, the Carboniferous Limestone. It is the making of this formation which has supplied the world with coal, by depositing layers of vegetable matter, year after year, century after century, age after age, solidifying them by heat and pressure and converting them into fuel. Who can reckon the time required for such slow deposition and such subsequent process over vast areas and at mighty depths? Take again the wide plains of the Permian Sandstone laid down later than the Limestones, the sand all formed from small fragments washed or torn from pre-existing rock, rounded by the action of moving water and deposited, bed by bed, at the bottom of the sea, there to be, by weight and pressure, compacted into rock. These sandstones are frequently found to be many hundreds of feet in depth. Who will count the years that were spent upon their growth? Then again the Lias formation, with its wide diffusion, its multiplicity of new animal forms, reptilian and marsupial, claims another mighty draft upon time for its development and subsequent declension. But more wonderful still is the Chalk, spread over a wide surface, both terrestrial and submerged, all created by the silent, unceasing work of minute organisms, the foraminifera, each secreting from sea-water its tiny shell which drops to the bottom as its owner dies, thus laying down in their fleeting but innumerable lives whole continents of the future, as they are doing now in the bed of the Atlantic, and did ages since in the deep, still waters of ancient seas. Look at our chalk cliffs, remember that they are only the rim of the great trench which holds the Channel, of the wide basins in which Paris and London stand, and then, considering their slow growth by the tiniest influences, say whether the mind can number the duration of these awful immensities in the past.
The above is a very brief and imperfect review of some of the secondary rocks, with their chief characteristics. All that have been mentioned were subsequent to the Silurian age. There still remains the Tertiary epoch, with its prolonged history, divided by Sir Charles Lyell into its Eocene, Miocene, and Pleistocene periods, as it approached in its organisms and products, its fauna and flora, to the earth as it appears in its human age. We should tremble did we think of enumerating the changes and transitions, the events and catastrophes which fill, in man’s imperfect view, its varied annals. Near to this epoch occurred, over our northern hemisphere, the cataclysm of at least one Ice Age, when the climate grew more and more arctic, until by far the greater part of Britain was covered with an ice-cap like that which now enshrouds Greenland. It may be taken as certain that while the cold was increasing, with glaciers forming on the hills and icebergs floating down from the north-west, there was simultaneously a gradual sinking of the land, probably prolonged till the highest peaks in our island were submerged, and there ensued the covering of its surface with a vast amount of clay and boulders, the deposition of which by floating ice is to be traced to this day in various parts of our country. Then came a change; the land rose again, the climate grew milder, the ice receded, vegetation resumed its sway, and all around favoured the reappearance of animal life in its thousand varieties. Such an oscillation may probably have occurred more than once, but any way this slow process of sinking and rising, this change to arctic climate, and this return to temperate conditions, must have occupied a vastly prolonged period, a period compared with which the subsequent history of man sinks into insignificance. Yet this was only one of the concluding scenes in the mighty drama. Well might the French philosopher exclaim that the work of creation had been carried out with ‘the sublime slowness of an Eternal Being’. Yet all the changes which have been thus imperfectly described, this long succession of deposited strata, these countless evolutions of myriads of species, took place subsequent to the movements in that old Silurian sea where the Malvern Hills took their origin. Can there then be any error in dating that origin by many millions of years? Or can any one impugn the opinion of Sir James Dawson that those Hills are the most ancient land in Britain?
That primitive Silurian sea must, conjecturally, have been somewhat shallow, receiving drift of some sort with consequent deposition, and in that deposit were, as usual, the sundry forms of marine life then existent in the locality. We know that volcanic energy was at work in the sea-bed, and by its agency a mass of igneous rock consisting mainly of syenite, but with quartz and some mica intermixed, was protruded, thus forming a submarine reef. There is no trace of any crater, nor is there actual indication of any outpour of lava, though at a low point of the Hills (Wind’s Point) there may be some possible appearances of that nature; and it was in that locality that the late Dr. Holl, a scientific observer, correlated the geological conditions with those of the Laurentian rocks of Canada. But on the whole it may be taken as certain that the line of plutonic rock was pushed bodily, by subterranean forces, into the waters of the Silurian sea; that it was gradually, and probably with long periods of quiescence between the repeated movements of upheaval, raised from a submarine reef to the altitude of a marine mountain. It was in this way, and through this incalculable time, that the Malvern Hills took their form and growth.
But then at some indeterminate date during their formation, probably an early date, certainly one within the submarine reef period, a curious event or rather series of events occurred, the discovery of which in our own day has caused the origin of the Malverns to become clear to apprehension. The tale of the wonder must be told as it was brought to light. Rather more than half a century since, it was determined to construct a railway from Worcester to Hereford; the line as laid down by the engineers, wisely or unwisely, was to pass through the Hills a little to the south of Great Malvern, and it thus became necessary to bore a long tunnel. Perhaps the opinion of no geologist had been taken as to the qualities of plutonic rock; perhaps the engineers employed had experience only of