My dear Hooker
I am specially obliged to you for sending me Haasts communications.2 They are very interesting, & grand about Glacial & drift or marine glacial.— I see he alludes to whole southern hemisphere.3 I wonder whether he has read the Origin.—4 Considering your facts on the Alpine plants of N. Zealand & remarks, I am particularly glad to hear of the geological evidence of glacial action.5 I presume he is sure to collect & send over the mountain “Rat” of which he speaks; I long to know what it is.6 A Frog & Rat together would to my mind prove former connection of N. Zealand to some continent;7 for I can hardly suppose that the Polynesians introduced the Rat as game, though so esteemed in the Friendly Islands.8
Ramsay sent me his paper & asked my opinion on it.9 I agree with you & think highly of it.10 I cannot doubt that it is to large extent true: my only doubt is that in a much disturbed country, I shd. have thought that some depressions, & consequently lakes, would have almost certainly have been left— I suggested a careful consideration of mountainous Tropical countries, such as Brazil, peninsula of India &c; if lakes are there very rare, I shd. fully subscribe to Ramsay’s views.11 What presumption, as it seems to me, in the Council of Geolog. Socy.: that it hesitated to publish the paper.—12
We return home on the 30th.— I have made up my mind, if I can keep up my courage, to start on the Saturday for Cambridge & stay the last few days of the Assoc.n there.13 I do so hope that you may be there then.—
Farewell | C. Darwin
Please cite as “DCP-LETT-3735,” in Ɛpsilon: The Charles Darwin Collection accessed on