DISTRIBUTION OF ANIMALS. 22; 



and Riitimeyer, in his treatise already cited. In what 

 follov/s we may essentially adhere to the latter. 



Our knowledge of the regions of distribution of the 

 animal world is still extraordinarily deficient. What do 

 we know, for instance, of the occurrence of marine ani- 

 mals ? Few years only have elapsed since the depths ot 

 the sea were rendered accessible to research, and the 

 result has almost entirely upset our earlier notions of 

 the geological significance of the sea-bottom and its 

 habitability. After the strong impulse given by Maury 

 to the investigation of the physical condition of the sea, 

 we are now occupied in ascertaining the submarine tem- 

 peratures and currents, the constitution of the sea-bottom, 

 the occurrence of deep-sea organisms, and the conditions 

 of their existence. We are therefore just beginning to 

 collect the material for a future geography of marine 

 organisms. Among terrestrial animals, certain groups 

 of which the actual distribution can be defined, are use- 

 less for our general purpose. 



Butterflies, for instance, which are an easy prey to 

 currents of air, defy geological barriers, and, above all, 

 that important partition which from the tertiary era 

 has been erected, or rather excavated in the bottom of 

 the sea, between Australia and India.^' It is the same 

 with bats, and also with migratory, predatory, and 

 aquatic birds; while, as Wallace shows, the other orders 

 of this class are in tropical regions very reliable and 

 stable inhabitants of their often limited districts, seem- 

 ingly suggestive of migration. Exclusive of these, 

 there remains therefore little more than the IMammaliaj 

 whose extraction may be inferred with certainty from 

 a comparison of their present cantonments (Cantonirung), 



i6 



