tl' 



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 I'll 



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212 



RELICS OF PRIMEVAL LIFE 



to Eozoon or to Archaeospherinae, and I have found 

 fragmental Eozoon in specimens collected by Favre 

 in the supposed Archaean nucleus of the Alps. 



Giimbel also found in the Finnish and Bavarian 

 limestones knotted chambers, like those of Went- 

 worth abcwe mentioned (Fig. 55), which he regards 

 as belonging to some other organism than Eozoon ; 

 and flocculi having tubes, pores, and reticulations 

 which would seem to point to the presence of 

 structures akin to sponges or possibly remains of 



Fig. 55. — Archi£ospherin(B from Pargas in Finland. (After Gttmbel.) 



(Magnified.) 



seaweeds. These observations Giimbel has ex- 

 tended into other localities in Bavaria and Bohemia, 

 and also in Silesia and Sweden, establishing the 

 existence of Eozoon fossils in all the Laurentian 

 limestones of the middle and north of Europe. 



Giimbel has further found in beds overlying the 

 older Eozoic series, and probably of the same age 

 with the Canadian Huronian, a different species of 

 Eozoon, with smaller and more contracted cham- 

 bers, and still finer and more crowded canals. This, 



i!^ ill 



