scientist s who shaped our understa nding of the world

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Scientist Scientist s who s who shaped shaped our our understa understa nding of nding of the the world world

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Page 1: Scientist s who shaped our understa nding of the world

ScientistScientists whos who

shapedshapedourour

understaunderstanding ofnding of

thetheworldworld

Page 2: Scientist s who shaped our understa nding of the world

Scientists whoshaped our

understanding of theearth

18th and 19th

Century

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John Playfair

Scottish scientist best known for his book,“Illustrations of the Huttonian Theory of theEarth.” It was through this work that Hutton’sprinciple of uniformitarianism first reached awide audience. He accompanied Hutton to SiccarPoint.

(1748-1819)

James Hall (1761-1832)

Scottish geologist and geophysicist.His research on granite showed that is waspossible for molten rock to form non-conformities. He also accompanied Hutton toSiccar Point.

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Baron Georges Cuvier (1769–1832)

French naturalist and zoologist.

He studied and identified fossils of thehippopotamus, the cave-hyena, thepterodactyl, the extinct species of rhinoceros,the cave bear, the mastodont, the extinctspecies of elephant, fossil species of manateeand seals, fossil forms of crocodilians, fishes,and birds.He expounded a scientific theory ofCatastrophism to explain the fossil record asthe result of a series of catastrophes in themanner of the Biblical Flood.

William Smith (1769-1839)

Father of English Geology.

He drew some of the first geological maps andbegan the process of ordering rock strata (layers)by examining the fossils in them.

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William Buckland (1784-1856)

English geologist and palaeontologist.

Buckland wrote the first account of a fossildinosaur. He was a proponent of Old EarthCreationism and flood geology, andcatastrophism.

He investigated Kirkland Cave and Victoria Cavewhere he found fossil bones of rhinos, elephants,and hyenas. He believed the landscape and cave“proved” the deluge as described in the Bible. Healso believed that science and religion weremutually reinforcing.

He later changed his mind and became convincedof the glaciation theory of Louis Agassiz.

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Louis Agassiz (1807-1783)

Zoologist, glaciologist, and geologist

Agassiz was the first to scientifically propose thatthe Earth had been subject to a past ice age. In1840, he visited the mountains of Scotland withWilliam Buckland. Together they found clearevidence of ancient glacial action. 20,000 yearsago, Scotland was covered by at least 1 kilometerof ice.

Blackford Hill is one site Agassiz visited.

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Charles Lyell ( 1797-1875)

Scottish lawyer and geologist.

Lyell was a student of William Buckland. He,along with John Playfair, popularized the ideaof uniformitarianism. He believed that geologicprocessess needed millions of years to effectchanges, not catastrophes. Lyell wrote“Principles of Geology” a multi-volume bookthat Charles Darwin read on the ship, Beagle.

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Charles Darwin(1809-1882)

“Darwin was born in the static world of scripture,and he left us a turbulent world of perpetual change”Jonathan Weiner, Scientific American, March 2006, p.101

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Charles Darwin was an English naturalist whoproduced considerable evidence that speciesoriginated through evolutionary change andproposed the scientific theory that naturalselection is the mechanism by which suchchange occurs. This theory is now considereda cornerstone of biology and has changed thethinking in many scientific fields of study.

Darwin attended the University of Edinburgh.He sailed on the Beagle for five years in the1830s where his observations and writingbrought him fame as a popular writer. Hisbiological finds led him to develop his theory.He read “Principles of Geology” on thevoyage which explained geologic features asprocesses over time. He wrote that he wasseing landforms “as though he had the eyes ofLyell.”

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The Origin of the Species” was published in1859, 20 years after the trip on the Beagle.He was aware that his work would beextremely controversial. It turned out to be apivotal point in the history of science fromreligious and theological to secular science.