In The Very Centre Or Focus
Of The Great Curve Of Volcanoes Is Placed The Large Island Of
Borneo, In Which No Sign Of Recent Volcanic Action Has Yet Been
Observed, And Where Earthquakes, So Characteristic Of The
Surrounding Regions, Are Entirely Unknown.
The equally large
island of New Guinea occupies another quiescent area, on which no
sign of volcanic action has yet been discovered.
With the
exception of the eastern end of its northern peninsula, the large
and curiously-shaped island of Celebes is also entirely free from
volcanoes; and there is some reason to believe that the volcanic
portion has once formed a separate island. The Malay Peninsula is
also non-volcanic.
The first and most obvious division of the Archipelago would
therefore be into quiescent and volcanic regions, and it might,
perhaps, be expected that such a division would correspond to
some differences in the character of the vegetation and the forms
of life. This is the case, however, to a very limited extent; and
we shall presently see that, although this development of
subterranean fires is on so vast a scale - has piled up chains of
mountains ten or twelve thousand feet high - has broken up
continents and raised up islands from the ocean - yet it has all
the character of a recent action which has not yet succeeded in
obliterating the traces of a more ancient distribution of land
and water.
Contrasts of Vegetation. - Placed immediately upon the Equator and
surrounded by extensive oceans, it is not surprising that the
various islands of the Archipelago should be almost always
clothed with a forest vegetation from the level of the sea to the
summits of the loftiest mountains. This is the general rule.
Sumatra, New Guinea, Borneo, the Philippines and the Moluccas,
and the uncultivated parts of Java and Celebes, are all forest
countries, except a few small and unimportant tracts, due
perhaps, in some cases, to ancient cultivation or accidental
fires. To this, however, there is one important exception in the
island of Timor and all the smaller islands around it, in which
there is absolutely no forest such as exists in the other
islands, and this character extends in a lesser degree to Flores,
Sumbawa, Lombock, and Bali.
In Timor the most common trees are Eucalypti of several species,
also characteristic of Australia, with sandalwood, acacia, and
other sorts in less abundance. These are scattered over the
country more or less thickly, but, never so as to deserve the
name of a forest. Coarse and scanty grasses grow beneath them on
the more barren hills, and a luxuriant herbage in the moister
localities. In the islands between Timor and Java there is often
a more thickly wooded country abounding in thorny and prickly
trees. These seldom reach any great height, and during the force
of the dry season they almost completely lose their leaves,
allowing the ground beneath them to be parched up, and
contrasting strongly with the damp, gloomy, ever-verdant forests
of the other islands.
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