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万物简史英文版_比尔·布莱森-第48部分

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today; the site of voorhies鈥檚 discovery is called ashfall fossil beds state park; and it has astylish new visitors鈥櫋enter and museum; with thoughtful displays on the geology of nebraskaand the history of the fossil beds。 the center incorporates a lab with a glass wall throughwhich visitors can watch paleontologists cleaning bones。 working alone in the lab on themorning i passed through was a cheerfully grizzled…looking fellow in a blue work shirt whomi recognized as mike voorhies from a bbc television documentary in which he featured。

they don鈥檛 get a huge number of visitors to ashfall fossil beds state park鈥攊t鈥檚 slightly inthe middle of nowhere鈥攁nd voorhies seemed pleased to show me around。 he took me to thespot atop a twenty…foot ravine where he had made his find。

鈥渋t was a dumb place to look for bones;鈥潯e said happily。 鈥渂ut i wasn鈥檛 looking for bones。 iwas thinking of making a geological map of eastern nebraska at the time; and really just kindof poking around。 if i hadn鈥檛 gone up this ravine or the rains hadn鈥檛 just washed out that skull;i鈥檇 have walked on by and this would never have been found。鈥潯e indicated a roofedenclosure nearby; which had bee the main excavation site。 some two hundred animalshad been found lying together in a jumble。

i asked him in what way it was a dumb place to hunt for bones。 鈥渨ell; if you鈥檙e looking forbones; you really need exposed rock。 that鈥檚 why most paleontology is done in hot; dry places。

it鈥檚 not that there are more bones there。 it鈥檚 just that you have some chance of spotting them。

in a setting like this鈥濃攈e made a sweeping gesture across the vast and unvarying prairie鈥斺測ou wouldn鈥檛 know where to begin。 there could be really magnificent stuff out there; butthere鈥檚 no surface clues to show you where to start looking。鈥

at first they thought the animals were buried alive; and voorhies stated as much in anational geographic article in 1981。 鈥渢he article called the site a 鈥榩ompeii of prehistoric animals;鈥櫋♀潯e told me; 鈥渨hich was unfortunate because just afterward we realized that theanimals hadn鈥檛 died suddenly at all。 they were all suffering from something calledhypertrophic pulmonary osteodystrophy; which is what you would get if you were breathing alot of abrasive ash鈥攁nd they must have been breathing a lot of it because the ash was feetthick for hundreds of miles。鈥潯e picked up a chunk of grayish; claylike dirt and crumbled itinto my hand。 it was powdery but slightly gritty。 鈥渘asty stuff to have to breathe;鈥潯e went on;鈥渂ecause it鈥檚 very fine but also quite sharp。 so anyway they came here to this watering hole;presumably seeking relief; and died in some misery。 the ash would have ruined everything。 itwould have buried all the grass and coated every leaf and turned the water into an undrinkablegray sludge。 it couldn鈥檛 have been very agreeable at all。鈥

the bbc documentary had suggested that the existence of so much ash in nebraska was asurprise。 in fact; nebraska鈥檚 huge ash deposits had been known about for a long time。 foralmost a century they had been mined to make household cleaning powders like et andajax。 but curiously no one had ever thought to wonder where all the ash came from。

鈥渋鈥檓 a little embarrassed to tell you;鈥潯oorhies said; smiling briefly; 鈥渢hat the first i thoughtabout it was when an editor at the national geographic asked me the source of all the ash andi had to confess that i didn鈥檛 know。 nobody knew。鈥

voorhies sent samples to colleagues all over the western united states asking if there wasanything about it that they recognized。 several months later a geologist named billbonnichsen from the idaho geological survey got in touch and told him that the ash matcheda volcanic deposit from a place called bruneau…jarbidge in southwest idaho。 the event thatkilled the plains animals of nebraska was a volcanic explosion on a scale previouslyunimagined鈥攂ut big enough to leave an ash layer ten feet deep almost a thousand miles awayin eastern nebraska。 it turned out that under the western united states there was a hugecauldron of magma; a colossal volcanic hot spot; which erupted cataclysmically every600;000 years or so。 the last such eruption was just over 600;000 years ago。 the hot spot isstill there。 these days we call it yellowstone national park。

we know amazingly little about what happens beneath our feet。 it is fairly remarkable tothink that ford has been building cars and baseball has been playing world series for longerthan we have known that the earth has a core。 and of course the idea that the continents moveabout on the surface like lily pads has been mon wisdom for much less than a generation。

鈥渟trange as it may seem;鈥潯rote richard feynman; 鈥渨e understand the distribution of matterin the interior of the sun far better than we understand the interior of the earth。鈥

the distance from the surface of earth to the center is 3;959 miles; which isn鈥檛 so very far。

it has been calculated that if you sunk a well to the center and dropped a brick into it; it wouldtake only forty…five minutes for it to hit the bottom (though at that point it would beweightless since all the earth鈥檚 gravity would be above and around it rather than beneath it)。

our own attempts to penetrate toward the middle have been modest indeed。 one or two southafrican gold mines reach to a depth of two miles; but most mines on earth go no more thanabout a quarter of a mile beneath the surface。 if the planet were an apple; we wouldn鈥檛 yethave broken through the skin。 indeed; we haven鈥檛 even e close。

until slightly under a century ago; what the best…informed scientific minds knew aboutearth鈥檚 interior was not much more than what a coal miner knew鈥攏amely; that you could dig down through soil for a distance and then you鈥檇 hit rock and that was about it。 then in 1906;an irish geologist named r。 d。 oldham; while examining some seismograph readings from anearthquake in guatemala; noticed that certain shock waves had penetrated to a point deepwithin the earth and then bounced off at an angle; as if they had encountered some kind ofbarrier。 from this he deduced that the earth has a core。 three years later a croatianseismologist named andrija mohorovi?i鈥瞔 was studying graphs from an earthquake in zagrebwhen he noticed a similar odd deflection; but at a shallower level。 he had discovered theboundary between the crust and the layer immediately below; the mantle; this zone has beenknown ever since as the mohorovi?i鈥瞔 discontinuity; or moho for short。

we were beginning to get a vague idea of the earth鈥檚 layered interior鈥攖hough it really wasonly vague。 not until 1936 did a danish scientist named inge lehmann; studyingseismographs of earthquakes in new zealand; discover that there were two cores鈥攁n innerone that we now believe to be solid and an outer one (the one that oldham had detected) thatis thought to be liquid and the seat of magnetism。

at just about the time that lehmann was refining our basic understanding of the earth鈥檚interior by studying the seismic waves of earthquakes; two geologists at caltech in californiawere devising a way to make parisons between one earthquake and the next。 they werecharles richter and beno gutenberg; though for reasons that have nothing to do with fairnessthe scale became known almost at once as richter鈥檚 alone。 (it has nothing to do with richtereither。 a modest fellow; he never referred to the scale by his own name; but always called it鈥渢he magnitude scale。鈥潱﹖he richter scale has always been widely misunderstood by nonscientists; though perhapsa little less so now than in its early days when visitors to richter鈥檚 office often asked to seehis celebrated scale; thinking it was some kind of machine。 the scale is of course more anidea than an object; an arbitrary measure of the earth鈥檚 tremblings based on surfacemeasurements。 it rises exponentially; so that a 7。3 quake is fifty times more powerful than a6。3 earthquake and 2;500 times more powerful than a 5。3 earthquake。

at least theoretically; there is no upper limit for an earthquake鈥攏or; e to that; a lowerlimit。 the scale is a simple measure of force; but says nothing about damage。 a magnitude 7quake happening deep in the mantle鈥攕ay; four hundred miles down鈥攎ight cause no surfacedamage at all; while a significantly smaller one happening just four miles under the surfacecould wreak widespread devastation。 much; too; depends on the nature of the subsoil; thequake鈥檚 duration; the frequency and severity of aftershocks; and the physical setting of theaffected area。 all this means that the most fearsome quakes are not necessarily the mostforceful; though force obviously counts for a lot。

the largest earthquake since the scale鈥檚 invention was (depending on which source youcredit) either one centered on prince william sound in alaska in march 1964; whichmeasured 9。2 on the richter scale; or one in the pacific ocean off the coast of chile in 1960;which was initially logged at 8。6 magnitude but later revised upward by some authorities(including the united states geological survey) to a truly grand…scale 9。5。 as you will gatherfrom this; measuring earthquak
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