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Timeline of geology

Timeline of geology

Early works

  • – al-Biruni publishes the Kitāb fÄ« TaḥqÄ«q mā li-l-Hind (Researches on India), in which he discusses the geology of India and hypothesizes that it was once a sea.
  • 1027 – Avicenna publishes The Book of Healing, in which he hypothesizes on two causes of mountains.

16th and 17th centuries

  • Portuguese and Spanish explorers systematically measure magnetic declination to estimate the geographical longitude
  • 1556 – Agricola publishes De re metallica. This book acts as the standard mining and assaying text for the next 250 years.
  • 1596 – Abraham Ortelius, Flemish-Spanish cartographer, first envisages the continental drift theory.
  • 1603 – Ulisse Aldrovandi coins the term Geology.
  • 1669 – Nicolas Steno puts forward his theory that sedimentary strata had been deposited in former seas, and that fossils were organic in origin

18th century

  • 1701 – Edmond Halley suggests using the salinity and evaporation of the Mediterranean to determine the age of the Earth
  • 1743 – Dr Christopher Packe produces a geological map of south-east England
  • 1746 – Jean-Étienne Guettard presents the first mineralogical map of France to the French Academy of Sciences.
  • 1760 – John Michell suggests earthquakes are caused by one layer of rocks rubbing against another
  • 1776 – James Keir suggests that some rocks, such as those at the Giant's Causeway, might have been formed by the crystallisation of molten lava
  • 1779 – Comte de Buffon speculates that the Earth is older than the 6,000 years suggested by the Bible
  • 1785 – James Hutton presents paper entitled Theory of the Earth – Earth must be old
  • 1799 – William Smith produces the first large scale geological map, of the area around Bath

19th century

  • 1809 – William Maclure conducts the first geological survey of the eastern United States
  • 1813 – Georges Cuvier publishes his Essay on the Theory of the Earth, proposing catastrophism on the basis of his work in biostratigraphy
  • 1830 – Sir Charles Lyell publishes book, Principles of Geology, which describes the world as being several hundred million years old
  • 1837 – Louis Agassiz begins his glaciation studies which eventually demonstrate that the Earth has had at least one ice age
  • 1841 – August Breithaupt, Vollstandiges Handbuch der Mineralogie
  • 1848 – James Dwight Dana, Manual of Mineralogy
  • 1862 – Lord Kelvin attempts to find the age of the Earth by examining its cooling time and estimates that the Earth is between 20 and 400 million years old
  • 1884 – Marcel Alexandre Bertrand, Nappe and Thrust fault theory

20th century

21st century

See also

References