Volcanic Islands

audiobook

Volcanic Islands

by Charles Darwin

EN·~6 hours·15 chapters

Chapters

15 total
1

Geological Observations on the Volcanic Islands - by Charles Darwin

0:04
2

Contents

0:25
3

EDITORIAL NOTE

1:04
4

VOLCANIC ISLANDS.

0:01
5

DETAILED TABLE OF CONTENTS - I.—ST. JAGO, IN THE CAPE DE VERDE ARCHIPELAGO.

4:12
6

GEOLOGICAL OBSERVATIONS ON VOLCANIC ISLANDS.

0:02
7

CRITICAL INTRODUCTION.

21:25
8

CHAPTER I. ST. JAGO, IN THE CAPE DE VERDE ARCHIPELAGO.

46:47
9

CHAPTER II. FERNANDO NORONHA; TERCEIRA; TAHITI, ETC.

23:43
10

CHAPTER III. ASCENSION.

1:24:14

Description

Step onto the windswept cliffs of St. Jago, explore the jagged peaks of Ascension, and wander the basaltic plains of the Galápagos as Charles Darwin records each stone, each fissure, and each whisper of ancient lava. In this collection of his original geological notes, the naturalist turns his keen eye to the formation, composition, and history of volcanic islands across the globe—from the Cape Verde archipelago to the remote shores of New Zealand. His detailed sketches of trachytic veins, obsidian layers, and fossil‑filled sediments reveal how these islands rise, change, and sometimes sink beneath the sea.

Beyond the raw data, Darwin weaves a narrative of curiosity, explaining why islands tend to line up in chains and how their rocks record the planet’s restless interior. The work remains a clear, engaging introduction to physical geology, showing how a brilliant mind approached the puzzles of Earth’s surface. Listeners will find both scientific insight and the wonder of early exploration, making the book a timeless companion for anyone fascinated by the forces that shape our world.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~6 hours (352K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2002-02-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Charles Darwin

Charles Darwin

1809–1882

A curious naturalist whose voyage on the HMS Beagle helped change how the world understands life on Earth, he became one of the most influential scientific writers of the 19th century. His clear, patient way of building an argument still makes his work remarkably readable today.

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