Having just gotten back from a very long car trip, I thought I'd propose a few fun things to do to pass the time.



On this view we can understand the relationship with very little identity, between the productions of North America and Europe--a relationship which is highly remarkable, considering the distance of the two areas, and their separation by the whole Atlantic Ocean.

We can further understand the singular fact remarked on by several observers that the productions of Europe and America during the later tertiary stages were more closely related to each other than they are at the present time; for during these warmer periods the northern parts of the Old and New Worlds will have been almost continuously united by land, serving as a bridge, since rendered impassable by cold, for the intermigration of their inhabitants.

During the slowly decreasing warmth of the Pliocene period, as soon as the species in common, which inhabited the New and Old Worlds, migrated south of the Polar Circle, they will have been completely cut off from each other.

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