eG eee ee a Ss nls ei 
Prof. Agassiz on the Origin of Species. 145 
ductions and misrepresentations of the modern results of Geology and 
any one familiar with the subject may readily pereeive where the truth 
lies by confronting his assertions with the geological record itself. But 
since the question at issue is chiefly to be settled by paleontological evi- 
delicate to be preserved ; i 
opods, Cephalopods, and Trilobites could arise, must have been sufficiently 
when every geological formation teems with types 
ore. would ha 
ual improvement or of a slow decay.—He would have us believe that 
SECOND SERIES, Vor, XXX, No. 88.—JULY, 1860. 
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