476 



r. C. CHAMBERLIN 



themselves opposing factors (VII of previous article)' so poised 

 as to permit a ready shifting of dominance from one side of the 



TABLE I 



The Solar. Dependents Graded by Size and Grouped by Physical Properties 



balance to the other, thus giving rise to a series of widely varying 

 effects which at the extremes even became contrasted. The pre- 

 ponderance in the upper end of the series lay markedly on the 



' " Selective Segregation of Material in the Formation of the Earth and Its 

 Neighbors," Jour. Geol., Vol. XXVIII (1920), pp. 126-57. 



