Abstract
It is needless to recapitulate, for the information of the readers of the GEOLOGICAL MAGAZINE, all the incidents which are known to accompany the formation of new land by rivers, or to repeat the descriptions which have been given of the more remarkable instances of them, such as those of the Nile, the Mississippi, the Ganges, the Rhone, the Po, and the Danube. These have been scientifically discussed long ago, by Lyell in his Principles. The object of this paper is rather to suggest how a careful collation of such facts as may be learned in connexion with the formation of modern deposits at the mouths of great rivers, or in great estuarine areas (such as the Wash), which receive a number of streams from widely-extended inland catchment-basins, may throw light upon the history of older formations of the same kind, and more especially of those of Tertiary times, during which many important changes were wrought in the physiography of the continent of Europe.

This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: