Summary
The ocean, which fills a deep cavity in the globe and covers three-fourths of its surface, is so unequally distributed that there is three times more land in the northern than in the southern hemisphere. The torrid zone is chiefly occupied by sea, and only one twenty-seventh part of the land on one side of the earth has land opposite to it on the other. The form assumed by this immense mass of water is that of a spheroid flattened at the poles ; and as its mean level is always nearly the same, for anything we know to the contrary, it serves as a base for measuring the height of the land.
The bed of the ocean, like that of the land, of which it is the continuation, is diversified by plains and mountains, table-lands and valleys, sometimes barren, sometimes covered with marine vegetation, and teeming with life. Now it sinks into depths which the sounding-line has never fathomed, now it appears in chains of islands, or rises near to the surface in hidden reefs and shoals, perilous to the mariner. Springs of fresh water rise from the bottom, volcanos eject their lavas and scoriae, and earthquakes trouble the deep waters.
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- Physical Geography , pp. 233 - 262Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1848