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Darwin Correspondence Project

From T. C. Brown   12 May 1875

Further Barton, | Cirencester.

12 May 1875

Dear Sir

On looking over your new Edition of “Coral Reefs” which embraces not only your own discoveries respecting them, but also observations of other Corallists, I find it relates exclusively to recent and living Reefs, and does not enter upon Fossil Coral Reefs.1 I am quite aware that most of the latter do not exist in well preserved distinct Reefs, and therefore only offer to the Geologist a disjointed collection of Corals—for description of which we have the Paleon Books of the French Corallists Edwardes & Haime, continued by Dr Duncan, which are valuable as containing descriptions of various species, but are defective in a very important part which forms the basis of your work on Coral Reefs—viz Coral History—2 This therefore leaves a vacuum to be filled, in Fossil Coral Reefs, and which if you were young, might afford delightful employment and greatly help to establish the truths of all Coral History. My object in thus addressing you, is to inform you, that I discovered in the upper beds of the Great Oolite a distinct Coral Reef, and it being located near my residence, I have during the last four years, been collecting the Corals, numbering nearly 100 species and varieties, and having been the sole collector, have secured almost every kind by the aid of the Quarry Men.3 The result has astonished and delighted me, for I found the Reef contained almost every class, from Nullipora & Millipora to the ordinary species, and also Parasitic Corals.—4 It likewise clearly shews the cause of extinction of life, vizt By lime mud5 on depression of the Reef. So important did I consider the result that I thought it my duty to make it known, in order to encou⁠⟨⁠r⁠⟩⁠age Geologists located on other formations, to do as I had done—study any local Reef and preserve every specimen—more than this, I found I could not do, for I was not qualified to give scientific descriptions, or get up a popular illustrated work of my Reef. I have therefore endeavoured to enlist my friend Pr. Prestwich now located at Oxford on the Oolites, and I hope he will give Geologist by and by a History of a fossil Reef.6 To enable him to do this I hope this summer to shew him the Reef, and I have deposited in the Oxford Museum specimens of all found up to January last, which I mention, as you are more likely to visit Oxford than Cirencester, with the specimens I sent a catalogue illustrated by my pen, in which some profound Geologi⁠⟨⁠ca⁠⟩⁠l questions connected with Fossil Reefs are noticed.7 To give you an idea of a Nullipora, I have slipped into the envelope my nos. 1 & 2.8

1 shewing what I suppose to be an early stage of a Coral that must have been a hollow sphere, into which in life water entered, and when by degrees the coral marble filled it. No 2 being the same coral filled up. No 1 shews the Oolitic matter which must have been injected on depression.

Yours | Thos C Brown |

Charles Darwin Esq

PS after writing my letter I thought you would like to read my views on “Origins” & have sent it by the Book post.9

Footnotes

Coral reefs 2d ed. was published in 1874 (Publishers’ circular, 1 July 1874). CD’s book focused on coral reefs from a geological perspective, and did not discuss the coral species present in the formations; the only mention of semi-fossil coral (on one of highest mountains of Tahiti) occurs on page 183.
Henri Milne-Edwards and Jules Haime’s A monograph of the British fossil corals was continued by Peter Martin Duncan; both series were published by the Palaeontographical Society (Milne-Edwards and Haime 1850–4 and P. M. Duncan 1866–72).
The Great Oolite near Chichester is a limestone formation dating from the Middle (or Bathonian) Jurassic.
The genera Nullipora and Millepora (also known as fire coral) had long been considered to be primitive corals (see Lamarck 1801, pp. 373 and 374), but neither is a true coral. In Coral reefs 2d ed., pp. 93 and 105, CD suggested that reefs were formed by many different species of coral adapted to live at different depths and dependent upon specific external conditions.
Lime mud is a carbonate sediment derived from sources such as calcareous algae, and occurs in a wide range of marine zones, from pelagic to intertidal (Allaby 2013).
Joseph Prestwich had been appointed professor of geology at Oxford University in 1874; Oxford lies in the centre of outcrops of Oolitic limestone that cross Britain from the south west to the north east. Oxfordian Oolitic limestone belongs to the Late Jurassic Corallian Group (Challinor 1978, s.v. Jurassic system). Brown had suggested that Prestwich publish a scientific account of the specimens from the fossil reef in November 1874 (see letter from T. C. Brown to Joseph Prestwich, 24 November 1874, Archive Collections of the Oxford University Museum of Natural History).
The fossils from the Upper Bathonian strata of the Middle Jurassic period collected by Brown from a site three miles west of Cirencester are in the Earth Collections of the Oxford Natural History Museum; some were presented to the museum via John Phillips in 1873 and the others via Prestwich in January 1875 (www.oum.ox.ac.uk (accessed 3 February 2014)). Brown’s catalogue is in the Archive Collections of the Oxford University Museum of Natural History.
These enclosures have not been found in the Darwin Archive–CUL.
CD would have returned the book to Brown; he did not make use of any comments by Brown in the revised edition of Origin that was published in 1876 (Origin (1876)).

Bibliography

Allaby, Michael, ed. 2013. A dictionary of earth sciences. 4th edition. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Challinor, John. 1978. A dictionary of geology. 5th edition. Cardiff: University of Wales Press.

Coral reefs 2d ed.: The structure and distribution of coral reefs. By Charles Darwin. Revised edition. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1874.

Duncan, Peter Martin. 1866–72. A monograph of the British fossil corals. Second series. Being a supplement to the ‘Monograph of the British fossil corals,’ by MM. Milne-Edwards and Jules Haime. London: Palaeontographical Society.

Lamarck, Jean Baptiste Pierre Antoine de Monet de. 1801. Système des animaux sans vertèbres: ou tableau général des classes, des ordres et des genres de ces animaux; … Précédé du discours d’ouverture du cours de zoologie, donné dans le Muséum national d’histoire naturelle l’an 8 de la République. Paris: Deterville.

Origin (1876): The origin of species by means of natural selection, or the preservation of favoured races in the struggle for life. 6th edition, with additions and corrections to 1872. By Charles Darwin. London: John Murray. 1876.

Origin: On the origin of species by means of natural selection, or the preservation of favoured races in the struggle for life. By Charles Darwin. London: John Murray. 1859.

Summary

Notes absence of material on fossil coral reefs in CD’s 2d edition [Coral reefs (1874)]. Has been collecting specimens from a fossil reef near his home for four years; gave many to Oxford.

Letter details

Letter no.
DCP-LETT-9976
From
Thomas Crowther Brown
To
Charles Robert Darwin
Sent from
Cirencester
Source of text
DAR 160: 324
Physical description
ALS 4pp

Please cite as

Darwin Correspondence Project, “Letter no. 9976,” accessed on 20 April 2024, https://www.darwinproject.ac.uk/letter/?docId=letters/DCP-LETT-9976.xml

Also published in The Correspondence of Charles Darwin, vol. 23

letter