Central Events in the Earth Sciences
Year | Country | Event |
---|---|---|
520 BCE | Greece | Pythagoras of Samos argues that the earth is spherical. |
300 BCE | Greece | Pytheas of Massilia describes the ocean tides and their relationship to the moon. |
240 BCE | Alexandria | Eratosthenes calculates values for the circumference and diameter of the earth accurate to within about 15 percent of the true values. |
1546 | Germany | Agricola’s De Natura Fossilium classifies minerals, founding mineralogy. The term fossil is introduced for anything dug from the ground. |
1544 | Germany, England | Georg Hartman discovers magnetic “dip,” or inclination, rediscovered in 1576 by Robert Norman. |
1568 | Belgium | Mercator invents the Mercator projection for maps. |
1668 | England | Robert Hooke proposes that fossils can be used as a source of information about the earth’s history. |
1669 | Denmark | Nicolaus Steno diagrams six levels of stratification, arguing that shifts in earth’s strata caused the formation of mountains. |
1669 | Denmark | Nicolaus Steno identifies fossils as ancient creatures. |
1671 | France | Jean Picard’s Mesure de la Terre gives an estimate of the size of the earth accurate to within about 90 feet. |
1680 | England | Robert Boyle develops the silver nitrate test for sea water, founding chemical oceanography. |
1725 | Italy | Luigi Marsigli’s Histoire Physique de la Mer is the first treatise on oceanography, discussing topography, circulation, ocean plants and animals, along with many measurements. |
1746 | France | Jean-Etienne Guettard prepares the first true geological maps, showing rocks and minerals arranged in bands. |
1752 | France | Jean-Etienne Guettard identifies heat as the causative factor of change in the earth’s landforms. |
1756 | Germany | Johann Lehmann’s Versuch einer Geschichte von Flotz-Geburgcn describes earth’s crust as a structured sequence of strata. |
1760 | England | John Michell writes “Essay on the Causes and Phenomena of Earthquakes,” beginning the systematic study of seismology. |
1770 | USA | Benjamin Franklin prepares the first scientific chart of the Gulf Stream. |
1779 | Switzerland | Horace Saussure writes Voyage dans les Alpes, describing his geological, meteorological, and botanical studies, and coining the term geology. |
1785 | Scotland | James Hutton’s “Concerning the System of the Earth” is the first statement of the uniformitarian view of earth’s development. |
1798 | England | James Hall demonstrates that lavas can be fused into glass, explaining otherwise puzzling geologic formations and founding experimental geology. |
1799 | England | William Smith discovers ways in which fossils can be used to identify correspondences between strata in different regions. |
1811 | France | Georges Cuvier’s and Alexandre Brongniart’s maps of formations in the Paris region establish the basic principles of paleontological stratigraphy. |
1812 | France | Georges Cuvier’s Recherches sur les Ossemens Fossiles systematically analyzes and classifies extinct forms of life, founding vertebrate paleontology. |
1812 | France | Georges Cuvier’s Recherches sur les Ossemens Fossiles introduces catastrophism as an explanation for extinctions. |
1815 | England | William Smith prepares the first geologic map showing relationships on a large scale, including England, Wales, and part of Scotland. |
1830 | England | Charles Lyell’s Principles of Geology argues that geological formations are created over millions of years, creating a new time frame for other disciplines as well and founding modern geology. |
1835 | France | Gaspard de Coriolis discovers the Coriolis effect, the deflection of a moving body caused by the earth’s rotation. |
1837 | USA | Louis Agassiz’s “Discourse at Neuchatel” is the first presentation of the Ice Age theory. |
1838 | Scotland | Roderick Murchison describes the Silurian System, establishing the sequence of early Paleozoic rocks. |
1842 | England | Richard Owen coins the word dinosaur and describes two new genera. |
1847 | USA | Matthew Maury publishes the first extensive oceanographic and weather charts. |
1855 | USA | Matthew Maury writes Physical Geography of the Sea, the first textbook of oceanography. |
1866 | France | Gabriel Daubree presents his theory that the earth has a nickel iron core. |
1880 | England | John Milne invents the first precise seismograph, founding modern seismology. |
1883 | USA | Edward Cope's The Vertebrata of the Tertiary Formations of the West reports the discovery of the first complete remains of dinosaurs of the Cretaceous. |
1902 | England, USA | Oliver Heaviside and Arthur Kennelly independently predict the existence of a layer in the atmosphere that permits long-distance radio transmission, confirmed in 1924 by Edward Appleton. |
1902 | France | Leon Teisserenc de Bort describes the atmosphere as divided into the troposphere and stratosphere. |
1909 | Croatia | Andrija Mohorovicic discovers the Mohorovicic discontinuity in the earth’s crust that separates the outermost crust from a more rigid layer. |
1913 | France | Charles Fabry discovers ozone in the upper atmosphere and demonstrates that it filters out solar ultraviolet radiation. |
1914 | USA | Beno Gutenberg discovers the Gutenberg Discontinuity in the earth’s structure, separating a liquid core from a solid mantle. |
1915 | Germany | Alfred Wegener’s Die Entstehung dev Kontinente uttd Ozeaite presents evidence for a primordial continent, Pangaea, and subsequent continental drift. |
1920 | Norway | Jakob and Vilhelm Bjerknes describe air masses and fronts, and their use in weather prediction. |
1924 | England | Edward Appleton discovers the ionosphere. |
1924 | South Africa | Raymond Dart discovers Australopithecus and categorizes it as a hominid, neither human nor ape. |
1930 | USA | Charles Beebe’s first bathysphere reaches a depth of 417 meters, allowing the first direct access to the ocean depths. |
1931 | Switzerland | Auguste Piccard and Paul Kipfer use a high altitude balloon to reach the stratosphere. |
1935 | USA | Charles Richter invents the Richter scale for measuring the magnitude of earthquakes. |