A paper of great ability has lately been communicated to the Royal
Society by Archdeacon Pratt, in which the disturbing effects of the
mass of high land north of the valley of the Ganges, upon the
apparent astronomical latitudes of the principal stations of the
Indian Arc of Meridian, are investigated. It is not my intention here
to comment upon the mathematical methods used by the author of that
paper, or upon the physical measures on which the numerical
calculation of his formulae is based, but only to call attention to
the principal result; namely, that the attraction of the
mountain-ground, thus computed on the theory of gravitation, is
considerably greater than is necessary to explain the anomalies
observed. This singular conclusion, I confess, at first surprised me
very much.
Yet upon considering the theory of the earth's figure as affected
by disturbing causes, with the aid of the best physical hypothesis
(imperfect as it must be) which I am able to apply to it, it appears
to me, not only that there is nothing surprising in Archdeacon Pratt
s conclusion, but that it ought to have been anticipated; and that,
Instead of a positive attraction of a large mountain mass upon a
station at a considerable distance from it, we ought to be prepared
to expect no effect whatever, or in some cases even a small negative
effect. The reasoning upon which this opinion Is founded, Inasmuch as
it must have some application to almost every investigation of
geodesy, may perhaps merit the attention of the Royal
Society.
Although the surface of the earth consists everywhere of a hard
crust, with only enough water lying upon it to give us everywhere a
couche de niveau (sea level), and to enable us to estimate the
heights of the mountains in some places, and the depths of the basins
in others,
yet the smallness of those elevations and depths, the
correctness with which the hard part of the earth has assumed the
spheroidal form, and the absence of any particular preponderance
either of land or of water at the equator as compared with the poles,
have induced most physicists to suppose, either that the interior of
the earth is now fluid, or that it was fluid when the mountains took
their present forms. This fluidity may be very imperfect; it may be
mere viscidity; it may even be little more than that degree
of
NOTE: This diagram was not doable by the scanner
yielding which (as is well known to miners) shows itself by
changes in the floors of subterraneous chambers at a great depth when
their width exceeds 20 or 30 feet; and this yielding may be
sufficient for my present explanation. However, in order to present
my ideas in the clearest form, I will suppose the interior to be
perfectly fluid.
In the accompanying diagram, fig. 1 [Fig. 20], suppose the outer
circle, as far as it is complete, to represent the spheroidal surface
of the earth, conceived to be free from basins or mountains except in
one place; and suppose the prominence in the upper part to represent
a table-land, 100 miles broad in its smaller horizontal dimension,
and two miles high. And suppose the inner circle to represent the
concentric spheroidal inner surface of the earth's crust, that inner
spheroid being filled with a fluid of greater density than the
crust, which, to avoid circumlocution, I will call labia To
fix our ideas, suppose the thickness of the crust to be ten miles
through the greater part of the circumference, and therefore twelve
miles at the place of the table-land.
Now I say, that this state of things is impossible: the weight of
the table-land would break the crust through its whole depth from the
top of the table-land to the surface of the lava, and either the
whole or only the middle part would sink into the lava.
In order to prove this, conceive the rocks to be separated by
vertical fissures at the places represented by the dotted lines;
conceive the fissures to be opened as they would be by a sinking of
the middle of the mass, the two halves turning upon their lower
points of connection with the rest of the crust, as on hinges; and
investigate the measure of the force of cohesion at the fissures,
which is necessary to prevent the middle from sinking. Let C be the
measure of cohesion; C being the height, in miles, of a column of
rock which the cohesion would support. The weight which tends to
force either half of the table-land downwards, is the weight of that
part of it which is above the general level, or is represented by 50
X 2. Its momentum is 50 X 2 X 25 = 2500. The momenta of the
"couples," produced at the two extremities of one half, by the
cohesions of the opening surfaces and the corresponding thrusts of
the angular points which remain in contact, are respectively C X 12 X
6 and C X 10 X 5; their sum is C X 122 Equating this with the former,
C = 20 nearly; that is, the cohesion must be such as would support
a hanging column of rock twenty miles long. 1 need not say
that there is no such thing in nature.
If, instead of supposing the crust ten miles thick, we had
supposed it 100 miles thick, the necessary value for cohesion would
have been reduced to 1/5th of a mile nearly. This small value would
have been as fatal to the supposition as the other. Every rock has
mechanical clefts through it, or has mineralogical veins less closely
connected with it than its particles arc among themselves; and these
render the cohesion of the firmest rock, when considered in reference
to large masses, absolutely insignificant. The miners in Cornwall
know well the danger of a "fall" of the firmest granite or killas
where it is undercut by working a lode at an inclination Or 30 or 40
to the vertical.
We must therefore give up the supposition that the state of things
below a table-land of any great magnitude can be represented by such
a diagram as fig. 1. And we may now inquire what the state of things
really must be.
The impossibility of the existence of the state represented in
fig. 1 has arisen from the want of a sufficient support of the
tableland from below. Yet the table-land does exist in its elevation,
and therefore it is supported from below. What can the nature of its
support be?
I conceive that there can be no other support than that arising
from the downward projection of the earth's light crust into the
dense lava; the horizontal extent of that projection corresponding
rudely with the horizontal extent of the table-land, and the depth of
its projection downwards being such that the increased power of
floatation thus gained is roughly equal to the increase of weight
above from the prominence of the table-land. It appears to me that
the state of the earth's crust lying upon the lava may be compared
with perfect correctness to the state of a raft of timber floating
upon water; in which, if we remark one log whose upper surface floats
much higher than the upper surfaces of the others, we are certain
that its lower surface lies deeper in the water than the lower
surfaces of the others.
This state of things then will be represented by fig. 2 [Fig. 20].
Adopting this as the true representation of the arrangement of masses
beneath a table-land; let us consider what will be its effect in
disturbing the direction of gravity at different points in its
proximity. It will be remarked that the disturbance depends on two
actions; the positive attraction produced by the elevated tableland;
and the diminution of attraction, or negative attraction, produced by
the substitution of a certain volume of light crust (in the lower
projection) for heavy lava.
The diminution of attractive matter below, produced by the
substitution of light crust for heavy lava, will be sensibly equal to
the increase of attractive matter above. The difference of the
negative attraction of one and the positive attraction of the other,
as estimated in the direction of a line perpendicular to that joining
the centres of attraction of the two masses (or as estimated in a
horizontal line), u ill be proportional to the difference of the
inverse cubes of the distances of the attracted point from the two
masses....
The general conclusion then is this. In all cases, the real
disturbance will be less than that found by computing the effect of
the mountains, on the law of gravitation. Near to the elevated
country, the part which is to be subtracted from the computed effect
is a small proportion of the whole. At a distance from the elevated
country, the part which is to be subtracted is so nearly equal to the
whole, that the remainder may be neglected as insignificant, even in
cases where the attraction of the elevated country itself would be
considerable. But in our ignorance of the depth at which the downward
immersion of the projecting crust into the lava takes place, we
cannot give greater precision to the statement.
In all the latter inferences, it is supposed that the crust is
floating in a state of equilibrium. But in our entire ignorance of
the modus operandi of the forces which have raised submarine
strata to the tops of high mountains, we cannot insist on this as
absolutely true. We know (from the reasoning above) that it will be
so to the limits of breakage of the table-lands; but within
those limits there may be some range of the conditions either way. It
is quite as possible that the immersion of the lower projection in
the lava may be too great, as that the elevation may be too great;
and in the former of these cases, the attraction on the distant
stations would be negative.
Again reverting to the condition of breakage of the
table-lands, as dominating through the whole of this reasoning, it
will be seen that it does not apply in regard to such computations as
that of the attraction of Schehallien and the like. It applies only
to the computation of the attractions of high tracts of very great
horizontal extent, such as those to the north of India.