230 THE DOCTRINE OF DESCENT. 



volcanic and coral islands only such animals will be 

 encountered as reached them by swimming or flying. 

 The presence of Mammals pre-supposes human agency 

 or extraordinary accidents. The older the islands, the 

 richer are they in organisms. Islands detached from 

 continents will, on the contrary, be rich in proportion 

 as they are recent, of which Great Britain bears witness. 

 The more divergent is their fauna, the longer must be 

 the time which has elapsed since their separation. Thus, 

 for instance, we may view the relations of Tasmania 

 and Australia ; and if New Zealand was ever connected 

 with the old Australian continent, the separation occur- 

 red at an epoch so remote that it throws no light upon 

 the physiognomy of the animal world of New Zealand, 

 and vice versa. 



In the account of his travels in the Malay Archipelago, 

 Wallace has given a pattern of animal-geographical 

 research. Years before, G. Windsor Earl had pointed 

 out that the great islands of Sumatra, Borneo, and Java, 

 are connected with the Asiatic continent by a shallower 

 sea ; while a similar shallow sea assigns New Guinea 

 and several adjacent islands to Australia, with which 

 they have a common characteristic in the Marsupials. 

 Wallace has defined this partition more minutely with 

 a line marked by a deeper submergence of the sea- 

 bottom. It is drawn below the Philippine Islands, 

 and, having Celebes to the south, passes through the 

 straits of Macassar and separates the two small islands 

 of Bali ^nd Lombok. We will now follow Wallace's 

 description ("Malay Archipelago"), with various omis- 

 sions. 



" It is now generally admitted that the present di> 



