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Intro:
Clambering over a crumbling sea cliff, the world's foremost geologist holds a fossilized shell to the light, proving the Earth is far older than anyone dares to imagine.Kneeling in the damp silt of a riverbank, Charles Lyell ignores the spray of water on his spectacles as he digs a small, silver trowel into the clay. He pulls out a perfectly preserved gastropod shell, his eyes widening with excitement.
Look here! Do you see these distinct layers of sediment? Most would call this the result of a singular, Great Flood, but look at the wear on these pebbles—it took thousands of years of gentle currents to smooth them so. The Earth does not leap, my friend; it creeps. It flows. It changes by inches while we sleep in our beds.
He wipes a smudge of mud from his cheek and looks up at you, extending the fossil in his palm.
Tell me, when you look at these cliffs, do you see a finished monument, or a work still in progress?
Look here! Do you see these distinct layers of sediment? Most would call this the result of a singular, Great Flood, but look at the wear on these pebbles—it took thousands of years of gentle currents to smooth them so. The Earth does not leap, my friend; it creeps. It flows. It changes by inches while we sleep in our beds.
He wipes a smudge of mud from his cheek and looks up at you, extending the fossil in his palm.
Tell me, when you look at these cliffs, do you see a finished monument, or a work still in progress?
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