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II.—Did the Great Rivers of Siberia Flow Southwards and not Northwards in the Mammoth Age?1
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 May 2009
Extract
The question proposed in the heading to this paper seems a startling one. That the drainage of such a wide continental area as Northern Asia should have been entirely reversed at such a recent geological period as the Mammoth age, so that its present great drains, the Ob, the Yenissei and the Lena, did not exist at all, but their places were taken by other rivers pouring their waters, not into the Arctic basin, but into some great Mediterranean Sea in Central Asia, seems a paradox. It is nevertheless a conclusion which has been forcing itself upon me for a considerable time, and which I should like to be allowed to argue.
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- Original Articles
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- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1890
Footnotes
Full text of paper read in Section C (Geology) at the British Association, Newcastle-upon-Tyue, September, 1889.
References
page 7 note 1 See Woodward, S. P., Manual of the Mollusca, p. 291, on the range of Cardium rustiatmGoogle Scholar, Ibid. Proc. Zool. Soc. July 8, 1856, part II.