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THE JOURNAL OF GEOLOGY.

Analogous subdivisions in pre-Pleistocene formations have been frequently recognized.

(2) The application of the time element is hardly susceptible of quantitative statement. We are inclined to think that it would be generally agreed that, with a given amount of recession of the ice, its re-advance would be more properly regarded as a distinct glacial epoch if the interval which had elapsed since the first advance were long. Whether a longer time between the separate advances might reduce the amount of recession necessary in order to constitute the second advance a second epoch, we are not prepared to assert; but we are inclined to think it might.

(3) The third element is perhaps somewhat more tangible than the second. If, during the retreat of the ice, the climate of a region which was twice glaciated became as temperate as that of the present day in the same locality, we should be inclined to regard the preceding and succeeding glaciations as distinct ice epochs, especially if the intervening recession were great and its duration long.

Unfortunately for simplicity and ease of determination, there are difficulties in determining with precision how far the ice retreated between successive maxima of advance, how long the interval during which it remained in retreat, and the extent to which the climate was ameliorated, as compared with that which went before and that which followed.

(4) If changes of any sort which interrupt the continuity of geological processes intervened between successive maxima of advance of the ice, the separation of the later advance from the earlier, as a distinct ice epoch, would be favored. How great the intervening changes should be in order to constitute the re-advance a distinct ice epoch, is a point concerning which there might be difference of opinion. But it is altogether possible that such changes might intervene as alone to give sufficient basis for the separation. Orographic movements, resulting either in continental changes of altitude or attitude are among the events which might come in to separate one ice