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There are few parts of India, which offer so many difficulties
to the scientific traveler, as that elevated track
difficulties of the country.
of mountains which borders the North-west
of British India,— the North-western Himalaya. Several portions
of this country, being partly independent or protected states, have
rarely, if ever, been visited by any European traveller. And such
visits as have been made have usually been in great haste, for the
resources of the country do not generally admit of any long stay
in one place. As a result of these great difficulties, we do not as
yet know much of the natural wealth of this portion of the Himalayan
ranges, although probably more of this, than of the n|ore Eastern
parts of this great system of mountains. It was not until 1851, that the first Geological section across
Strachey-s observations, the Himalaya, based on actual observation and
185U ' research by the able Captain (now Colonel) R.
Strachey was published This was a vast step, and everyone interested in Himalayan Geology .must greatly regret, that the author
has not since found time to make fully known to the public his
investigations, which, no doubt, have been since 1851-54 considerably
extended and corrected. TJir Geology of the Himalaya had not,‘ however, been altogether
neglected by previous travellers. The works of
Other travellers.
Moorcroft and Trebeck* of Herbert, Gerard,
Jacquemont, Thomson, Cunningham and others, contain several notes
of much Geological interest. Such notes, however brief they may be,
will always be of high value, while they are based on unaffected and
natural observations. Besides these cursory notes, I may also mention
other papers treating more particularly on that portion of the Northwestern
Himalaya, which we are about to describe more fully in the
following pages,—we mean, the Spiti valley. Dr. Gerard’s “ Observations on the Spiti valley” were published in
the Asiatic Researches (Vol. X V I I I nt. 2. p. 238).
Gerard, 1832. , , * r '
This paper contains only a few .notes, on the last
pages, regarding the occurrence of Ammonites in the Spiti valley.
The author was apparently not much acquainted with Geology and
does not go much into Geological questions. Captain Thomas Hutton’s “ Geological report on the valley of
' Spiti,” &c., appeared in the Journal of the Asiatic
Hutton, 8 Society of Bengal, 1841. p. 198. This report,
so far as it | based on Capt. Hutton’s own observations, and not on the
authority dt others, will, I think, always be found useful by any subsequent
traveller along.the same route. With regard, however, to his
ideas or theories, we would simply quote the words of the editors of the
Journal "for the views contained in this paper, the author alone is
answerable.” Indeed, no one who himself feels bound to progress in
natural science could be made answerable Tor theories such as are laid
down in this paper, with an assumption of infallibility. |
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