메뉴 건너뛰기




Volumn 37, Issue 3, 1999, Pages 283-318

A plea for applied geology

(1)  Lucier, Paul a  

a NONE

Author keywords

[No Author keywords available]

Indexed keywords


EID: 0043137580     PISSN: 00732753     EISSN: None     Source Type: Journal    
DOI: 10.1177/007327539903700302     Document Type: Article
Times cited : (8)

References (232)
  • 1
    • 0042880861 scopus 로고
    • The present standing of applied geology
    • Frederick Leslie Ransome, "The present standing of applied geology", Economic geology, i (1905), 1-10, p. 3.
    • (1905) Economic Geology , vol.1 , pp. 1-10
    • Ransome, F.L.1
  • 4
    • 85034127741 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • In 1893, the journal Zeitschrift für Praktische Geologie was established in Germany with a strong international editorial board.
  • 5
    • 0002357445 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Knowledge from underground: Leibniz mines the Enlightenment
    • E. P. Hamm, "Knowledge from underground: Leibniz mines the Enlightenment", Earth sciences history, xvi (1997), 77-99, p. 82.
    • (1997) Earth Sciences History , vol.16 , pp. 77-99
    • Hamm, E.P.1
  • 6
    • 84973695394 scopus 로고
    • The science-technology relationship: A model and a query
    • Barry Barnes, "The science-technology relationship: A model and a query", Social studies of science, xii (1982), 166-71.
    • (1982) Social Studies of Science , vol.12 , pp. 166-171
    • Barnes, B.1
  • 7
    • 0040272704 scopus 로고
    • Through the looking-glass, or News from Lake Mirror image
    • Edwin T. Layton, Jr, "Through the looking-glass, or News from Lake Mirror image", Technology and culture, xxviii (1987), 594-607. The best discussion of the science-technology relation is still John M. Staudenmaier, Technology's storytellers: Reweaving the human fabric (Cambridge, Mass, 1985), ch. 3.
    • (1987) Technology and Culture , vol.28 , pp. 594-607
    • Layton E.T., Jr.1
  • 8
    • 0003749216 scopus 로고
    • Cambridge, Mass, ch. 3
    • Edwin T. Layton, Jr, "Through the looking-glass, or News from Lake Mirror image", Technology and culture, xxviii (1987), 594-607. The best discussion of the science-technology relation is still John M. Staudenmaier, Technology's storytellers: Reweaving the human fabric (Cambridge, Mass, 1985), ch. 3.
    • (1985) Technology's Storytellers: Reweaving the Human Fabric
    • Staudenmaier, J.M.1
  • 10
    • 0004043284 scopus 로고
    • Cambridge
    • Crosbie Smith and M. Norton Wise have convincingly and elegantly shown the unity of theory and practice in the life and work of the British physicist William Thomson; see their Energy & empire: A biographical study of Lord Kelvin (Cambridge, 1989).
    • (1989) Energy & Empire: a Biographical Study of Lord Kelvin
    • Thomson, W.1
  • 11
    • 0031615403 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Winecraft and chemistry in 18th-century France: Chaptal and the invention of chaptalization
    • J. B. Gough, "Winecraft and chemistry in 18th-century France: Chaptal and the invention of chaptalization", Technology and culture, xxxix (1998), 74-104, p. 78. Ransome would agree, "The economic geologist of the present day occupies a domain which cannot easily be definitely marked off from that of the general geologist on the one hand and that of the mining engineer on the other" (Ransome, "Applied geology" (ref. 1), 2).
    • (1998) Technology and Culture , vol.39 , pp. 74-104
    • Gough, J.B.1
  • 13
    • 0031615403 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 1
    • J. B. Gough, "Winecraft and chemistry in 18th-century France: Chaptal and the invention of chaptalization", Technology and culture, xxxix (1998), 74-104, p. 78. Ransome would agree, "The economic geologist of the present day occupies a domain which cannot easily be definitely marked off from that of the general geologist on the one hand and that of the mining engineer on the other" (Ransome, "Applied geology" (ref. 1), 2).
    • Applied Geology , pp. 2
    • Ransome1
  • 14
    • 0003427311 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Chicago and London
    • Collision zone might be an overly active metaphor. Peter L. Galison has introduced the idea of a trading zone to describe the interactions of various subcultures, in his case within twentieth-century American physics; see Galison, Image and logic: A material culture of microphysics (Chicago and London, 1997).
    • (1997) Image and Logic: a Material Culture of Microphysics
    • Galison1
  • 16
    • 0003804146 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Princeton
    • The finest cultural studies remain histories of British geology; see, for example, James A. Secord, Controversy in Victorian geology: The Cambrian-Silurian dispute (Princeton, 1986); Martin J. S. Rudwick, The Great Devonian controversy: The shaping of scientific knowledge among gentlemanly specialists (Chicago, 1985); and Nicolaas Rupke, The great chain of history: William Buckland and the English school of geology (1814-1849) (Oxford, 1983).
    • (1986) Controversy in Victorian Geology: the Cambrian-Silurian Dispute
    • Secord, J.A.1
  • 17
    • 0003796679 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Chicago
    • The finest cultural studies remain histories of British geology; see, for example, James A. Secord, Controversy in Victorian geology: The Cambrian-Silurian dispute (Princeton, 1986); Martin J. S. Rudwick, The Great Devonian controversy: The shaping of scientific knowledge among gentlemanly specialists (Chicago, 1985); and Nicolaas Rupke, The great chain of history: William Buckland and the English school of geology (1814-1849) (Oxford, 1983).
    • (1985) The Great Devonian Controversy: the Shaping of Scientific Knowledge among Gentlemanly Specialists
    • Rudwick, M.J.S.1
  • 18
    • 0003452811 scopus 로고
    • Oxford
    • The finest cultural studies remain histories of British geology; see, for example, James A. Secord, Controversy in Victorian geology: The Cambrian-Silurian dispute (Princeton, 1986); Martin J. S. Rudwick, The Great Devonian controversy: The shaping of scientific knowledge among gentlemanly specialists (Chicago, 1985); and Nicolaas Rupke, The great chain of history: William Buckland and the English school of geology (1814-1849) (Oxford, 1983).
    • (1983) The Great Chain of History: William Buckland and the English School of Geology (1814-1849)
    • Rupke, N.1
  • 20
    • 0003852035 scopus 로고
    • reprinted Cambridge, Mass.
    • Some historians of science seem to prefer the discipline of physics as the model for the development of American science. As a result, little worthwhile happened in the nineteenth century (in terms of theory), and American science becomes significant only in the first decades of the twentieth. In Daniel J. Kevles, The physicists: The history of a scientific community in modern America (reprinted Cambridge, Mass., 1995) less than one-fifth of the book deals with the nineteenth century. See also Nathan Reingold, "American indifference to basic research: A reappraisal", in George H. Daniels (ed.), Nineteenth-century American science: A reappraisal (Evanston, 1972), 38-62; and John Servos, "Mathematics and the physical sciences in America, 1800-1930", Isis, lxxvii (1986), 611-29.
    • (1995) The Physicists: the History of a Scientific Community in Modern America
    • Kevles, D.J.1
  • 21
    • 0042379837 scopus 로고
    • American indifference to basic research: A reappraisal
    • George H. Daniels (ed.), Evanston
    • Some historians of science seem to prefer the discipline of physics as the model for the development of American science. As a result, little worthwhile happened in the nineteenth century (in terms of theory), and American science becomes significant only in the first decades of the twentieth. In Daniel J. Kevles, The physicists: The history of a scientific community in modern America (reprinted Cambridge, Mass., 1995) less than one-fifth of the book deals with the nineteenth century. See also Nathan Reingold, "American indifference to basic research: A reappraisal", in George H. Daniels (ed.), Nineteenth-century American science: A reappraisal (Evanston, 1972), 38-62; and John Servos, "Mathematics and the physical sciences in America, 1800-1930", Isis, lxxvii (1986), 611-29.
    • (1972) Nineteenth-century American Science: a Reappraisal , pp. 38-62
    • Reingold, N.1
  • 22
    • 0039027075 scopus 로고
    • Mathematics and the physical sciences in America, 1800-1930
    • Some historians of science seem to prefer the discipline of physics as the model for the development of American science. As a result, little worthwhile happened in the nineteenth century (in terms of theory), and American science becomes significant only in the first decades of the twentieth. In Daniel J. Kevles, The physicists: The history of a scientific community in modern America (reprinted Cambridge, Mass., 1995) less than one-fifth of the book deals with the nineteenth century. See also Nathan Reingold, "American indifference to basic research: A reappraisal", in George H. Daniels (ed.), Nineteenth-century American science: A reappraisal (Evanston, 1972), 38-62; and John Servos, "Mathematics and the physical sciences in America, 1800-1930", Isis, lxxvii (1986), 611-29.
    • (1986) Isis , vol.77 , pp. 611-629
    • Servos, J.1
  • 23
    • 0010483655 scopus 로고
    • History of geology
    • More than ten years ago Mott Greene blasted the American history of science community for ignoring the science of geology. Mott T. Greene, "History of geology", Osiris, 2nd series, i (1985), 97-116. Since then some good biographical work has been done, for example: Patsy Gerstner, Henry Darwin Rogers, 1808-1866: American geologist (Tuscaloosa, 1994); David N. Livingston, Nathaniel Southgate Shaler and the culture of American science (Tuscaloosa, 1994); and Peggy Champlin, Raphael Pumpelly: Gentleman geologist of the Gilded Age (Tuscaloosa, 1994). But in general, the neglect explains, to a great degree, why American contributions are absent from general histories of geology. A recent example is Gabriel Gohau, A history of geology (New Brunswick, 1996). The exception is David Oldroyd, Thinking about the earth: A history of ideas in geology (London, 1996) which does, comparatively speaking, have a good discussion of American geology.
    • (1985) Osiris, 2nd Series , vol.1 , pp. 97-116
    • Greene, M.T.1
  • 24
    • 0041377831 scopus 로고
    • Tuscaloosa
    • More than ten years ago Mott Greene blasted the American history of science community for ignoring the science of geology. Mott T. Greene, "History of geology", Osiris, 2nd series, i (1985), 97-116. Since then some good biographical work has been done, for example: Patsy Gerstner, Henry Darwin Rogers, 1808-1866: American geologist (Tuscaloosa, 1994); David N. Livingston, Nathaniel Southgate Shaler and the culture of American science (Tuscaloosa, 1994); and Peggy Champlin, Raphael Pumpelly: Gentleman geologist of the Gilded Age (Tuscaloosa, 1994). But in general, the neglect explains, to a great degree, why American contributions are absent from general histories of geology. A recent example is Gabriel Gohau, A history of geology (New Brunswick, 1996). The exception is David Oldroyd, Thinking about the earth: A history of ideas in geology (London, 1996) which does, comparatively speaking, have a good discussion of American geology.
    • (1994) Henry Darwin Rogers, 1808-1866: American Geologist
    • Gerstner, P.1
  • 25
    • 0042379849 scopus 로고
    • Tuscaloosa
    • More than ten years ago Mott Greene blasted the American history of science community for ignoring the science of geology. Mott T. Greene, "History of geology", Osiris, 2nd series, i (1985), 97-116. Since then some good biographical work has been done, for example: Patsy Gerstner, Henry Darwin Rogers, 1808-1866: American geologist (Tuscaloosa, 1994); David N. Livingston, Nathaniel Southgate Shaler and the culture of American science (Tuscaloosa, 1994); and Peggy Champlin, Raphael Pumpelly: Gentleman geologist of the Gilded Age (Tuscaloosa, 1994). But in general, the neglect explains, to a great degree, why American contributions are absent from general histories of geology. A recent example is Gabriel Gohau, A history of geology (New Brunswick, 1996). The exception is David Oldroyd, Thinking about the earth: A history of ideas in geology (London, 1996) which does, comparatively speaking, have a good discussion of American geology.
    • (1994) Nathaniel Southgate Shaler and the Culture of American Science
    • Livingston, D.N.1
  • 26
    • 0038617664 scopus 로고
    • Tuscaloosa
    • More than ten years ago Mott Greene blasted the American history of science community for ignoring the science of geology. Mott T. Greene, "History of geology", Osiris, 2nd series, i (1985), 97-116. Since then some good biographical work has been done, for example: Patsy Gerstner, Henry Darwin Rogers, 1808-1866: American geologist (Tuscaloosa, 1994); David N. Livingston, Nathaniel Southgate Shaler and the culture of American science (Tuscaloosa, 1994); and Peggy Champlin, Raphael Pumpelly: Gentleman geologist of the Gilded Age (Tuscaloosa, 1994). But in general, the neglect explains, to a great degree, why American contributions are absent from general histories of geology. A recent example is Gabriel Gohau, A history of geology (New Brunswick, 1996). The exception is David Oldroyd, Thinking about the earth: A history of ideas in geology (London, 1996) which does, comparatively speaking, have a good discussion of American geology.
    • (1994) Raphael Pumpelly: Gentleman Geologist of the Gilded Age
    • Champlin, P.1
  • 27
    • 0003885864 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • New Brunswick
    • More than ten years ago Mott Greene blasted the American history of science community for ignoring the science of geology. Mott T. Greene, "History of geology", Osiris, 2nd series, i (1985), 97-116. Since then some good biographical work has been done, for example: Patsy Gerstner, Henry Darwin Rogers, 1808-1866: American geologist (Tuscaloosa, 1994); David N. Livingston, Nathaniel Southgate Shaler and the culture of American science (Tuscaloosa, 1994); and Peggy Champlin, Raphael Pumpelly: Gentleman geologist of the Gilded Age (Tuscaloosa, 1994). But in general, the neglect explains, to a great degree, why American contributions are absent from general histories of geology. A recent example is Gabriel Gohau, A history of geology (New Brunswick, 1996). The exception is David Oldroyd, Thinking about the earth: A history of ideas in geology (London, 1996) which does, comparatively speaking, have a good discussion of American geology.
    • (1996) A History of Geology
    • Gohau, G.1
  • 28
    • 0003982639 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • London
    • More than ten years ago Mott Greene blasted the American history of science community for ignoring the science of geology. Mott T. Greene, "History of geology", Osiris, 2nd series, i (1985), 97-116. Since then some good biographical work has been done, for example: Patsy Gerstner, Henry Darwin Rogers, 1808-1866: American geologist (Tuscaloosa, 1994); David N. Livingston, Nathaniel Southgate Shaler and the culture of American science (Tuscaloosa, 1994); and Peggy Champlin, Raphael Pumpelly: Gentleman geologist of the Gilded Age (Tuscaloosa, 1994). But in general, the neglect explains, to a great degree, why American contributions are absent from general histories of geology. A recent example is Gabriel Gohau, A history of geology (New Brunswick, 1996). The exception is David Oldroyd, Thinking about the earth: A history of ideas in geology (London, 1996) which does, comparatively speaking, have a good discussion of American geology.
    • (1996) Thinking about the Earth: a History of Ideas in Geology
    • Oldroyd, D.1
  • 29
    • 0003464926 scopus 로고
    • reprinted New York, ch. 9
    • One could easily begin a review with the work of Georgius Agricola. Frank Dawson Adams began with Aristotle; see Adams. The birth and development of the geological sciences (reprinted New York, 1954), ch. 9.
    • (1954) The Birth and Development of the Geological Sciences
    • Adams1
  • 30
    • 0003758298 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 12, ch. 5
    • Laudan, From mineralogy to geology (ref. 12), ch. 5; Alexander M. Ospovat, "Introduction", in A. G. Werner, Short classification and description of the various rocks (New York, 1971); idem, "Reflections on A. G. Werner's 'Kurze Klassification'", in Cecil Schneer (ed.), Toward a history of geology (Cambridge, Mass., 1969), 242-56; idem, "The place of the Kurze Klassification in the work of A. G. Werner", Isis, lviii (1967), 90-95; and V. A. Eyles, "Abraham Gottlob Werner (1749-1817) and his position in the history of the mineralogical and geological sciences", History of science, iii (1964), 102-15.
    • From Mineralogy to Geology
    • Laudan1
  • 31
    • 0042880872 scopus 로고
    • Introduction
    • A. G. Werner, New York
    • Laudan, From mineralogy to geology (ref. 12), ch. 5; Alexander M. Ospovat, "Introduction", in A. G. Werner, Short classification and description of the various rocks (New York, 1971); idem, "Reflections on A. G. Werner's 'Kurze Klassification'", in Cecil Schneer (ed.), Toward a history of geology (Cambridge, Mass., 1969), 242-56; idem, "The place of the Kurze Klassification in the work of A. G. Werner", Isis, lviii (1967), 90-95; and V. A. Eyles, "Abraham Gottlob Werner (1749-1817) and his position in the history of the mineralogical and geological sciences", History of science, iii (1964), 102-15.
    • (1971) Short Classification and Description of the Various Rocks
    • Ospovat, A.M.1
  • 32
    • 0009132145 scopus 로고
    • Reflections on A. G. Werner's 'Kurze Klassification
    • Cecil Schneer (ed.), Cambridge, Mass.
    • Laudan, From mineralogy to geology (ref. 12), ch. 5; Alexander M. Ospovat, "Introduction", in A. G. Werner, Short classification and description of the various rocks (New York, 1971); idem, "Reflections on A. G. Werner's 'Kurze Klassification'", in Cecil Schneer (ed.), Toward a history of geology (Cambridge, Mass., 1969), 242-56; idem, "The place of the Kurze Klassification in the work of A. G. Werner", Isis, lviii (1967), 90-95; and V. A. Eyles, "Abraham Gottlob Werner (1749-1817) and his position in the history of the mineralogical and geological sciences", History of science, iii (1964), 102-15.
    • (1969) Toward a History of Geology , pp. 242-256
    • Ospovat, A.M.1
  • 33
    • 0042880797 scopus 로고
    • The place of the Kurze Klassification in the work of A. G. Werner
    • Laudan, From mineralogy to geology (ref. 12), ch. 5; Alexander M. Ospovat, "Introduction", in A. G. Werner, Short classification and description of the various rocks (New York, 1971); idem, "Reflections on A. G. Werner's 'Kurze Klassification'", in Cecil Schneer (ed.), Toward a history of geology (Cambridge, Mass., 1969), 242-56; idem, "The place of the Kurze Klassification in the work of A. G. Werner", Isis, lviii (1967), 90-95; and V. A. Eyles, "Abraham Gottlob Werner (1749-1817) and his position in the history of the mineralogical and geological sciences", History of science, iii (1964), 102-15.
    • (1967) Isis , vol.58 , pp. 90-95
    • Ospovat, A.M.1
  • 34
    • 0042880801 scopus 로고
    • Abraham Gottlob Werner (1749-1817) and his position in the history of the mineralogical and geological sciences
    • Laudan, From mineralogy to geology (ref. 12), ch. 5; Alexander M. Ospovat, "Introduction", in A. G. Werner, Short classification and description of the various rocks (New York, 1971); idem, "Reflections on A. G. Werner's 'Kurze Klassification'", in Cecil Schneer (ed.), Toward a history of geology (Cambridge, Mass., 1969), 242-56; idem, "The place of the Kurze Klassification in the work of A. G. Werner", Isis, lviii (1967), 90-95; and V. A. Eyles, "Abraham Gottlob Werner (1749-1817) and his position in the history of the mineralogical and geological sciences", History of science, iii (1964), 102-15.
    • (1964) History of Science , vol.3 , pp. 102-115
    • Eyles, V.A.1
  • 35
    • 0042148660 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Geology in peace time: An English visit to study German mineralogy and geology (and visit Goethe. Werner and Raumer)
    • ed. by Bernhard Fritscher and Fergus Henderson Algorismus, Munich
    • Hugh Torrens has questioned the reputed usefulness of Werner's theories and methods; see Torrens, "Geology in peace time: An English visit to study German mineralogy and geology (and visit Goethe. Werner and Raumer)", Toward a history of mineralogy, petrology, and geochemistry, ed. by Bernhard Fritscher and Fergus Henderson (Algorismus, xxiii (Munich, 1998)), 147-75.
    • (1998) Toward a History of Mineralogy, Petrology, and Geochemistry , vol.23 , pp. 147-175
    • Torrens1
  • 36
    • 85034154348 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Science, technology, and the Industrial Revolution
    • Christine Rider and Míchéal Thompson (eds), Malabar, Fl., forthcoming ;
    • For a review of the literature see Paul Lucier, "Science, technology, and the Industrial Revolution", in Christine Rider and Míchéal Thompson (eds), The Industrial Revolution in comparative perspective (Malabar, Fl., forthcoming) ; and Margaret C. Jacob, Scientific culture and the making of the industrial West (New York, 1997).
    • The Industrial Revolution in Comparative Perspective
    • Lucier, P.1
  • 37
    • 0003730197 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • New York
    • For a review of the literature see Paul Lucier, "Science, technology, and the Industrial Revolution", in Christine Rider and Míchéal Thompson (eds), The Industrial Revolution in comparative perspective (Malabar, Fl., forthcoming) ; and Margaret C. Jacob, Scientific culture and the making of the industrial West (New York, 1997).
    • (1997) Scientific Culture and the Making of the Industrial West
    • Jacob, M.C.1
  • 38
    • 84965906814 scopus 로고
    • The emergence of geology as a scientific discipline
    • Martin Guntau, "The emergence of geology as a scientific discipline", History of science, xvi (1978), 280-90, p. 281. See also Theodore M. Porter, "The promotion of mining and the advancement of science: The Chemical Revolution and mineralogy", Annals of science, xxxviii (1981), 543-70.
    • (1978) History of Science , vol.16 , pp. 280-290
    • Guntau, M.1
  • 39
    • 0041312766 scopus 로고
    • The promotion of mining and the advancement of science: The Chemical Revolution and mineralogy
    • Martin Guntau, "The emergence of geology as a scientific discipline", History of science, xvi (1978), 280-90, p. 281. See also Theodore M. Porter, "The promotion of mining and the advancement of science: The Chemical Revolution and mineralogy", Annals of science, xxxviii (1981), 543-70.
    • (1981) Annals of Science , vol.38 , pp. 543-570
    • Porter, T.M.1
  • 40
    • 85034122909 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 5
    • E. P. Hamm ascribed this drop in interest in mining to the emergence of Romanticism in German-speaking lands. I think this explanation is open to further investigation. Hamm, "Knowledge from underground" (ref. 5), 93-95.
    • Knowledge from Underground , pp. 93-95
    • Hamm1
  • 41
    • 0041010306 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • transl. by Maria M. Ogilvie-Gordon London
    • Karl Alfred von Zittel, for example, in his discussion of the fourth period in the development of geology, roughly after 1820, identified universities and surveys as the key institutions, but even he omitted mining academies. Zittel, History of geology and paleontology, transl. by Maria M. Ogilvie-Gordon (London, 1901).
    • (1901) History of Geology and Paleontology
    • Zittel1
  • 42
    • 0003874482 scopus 로고
    • Ithaca
    • Recent work in nineteenth- and early twentieth-century German science has been attuned to this issue of research institutions (university and non-university) and the inter-relations of science, industry, and the government; see, for example, Kathryn M. Olesko, Physics as a calling: Discipline and practice in the Königsberg Seminar for Physics (Ithaca, 1991); David Cahan, An institute for an empire: The Physikalisch-Technische Reichsanstalt, 1871-1918 (Cambridge and New York, 1989); and Jeffrey Allan Johnson, The Kaiser's chemists: Science and modernization in Imperial Germany (Chapel Hill and London, 1990).
    • (1991) Physics as a Calling: Discipline and Practice in the Königsberg Seminar for Physics
    • Olesko, K.M.1
  • 43
    • 0008885312 scopus 로고
    • Cambridge and New York
    • Recent work in nineteenth- and early twentieth-century German science has been attuned to this issue of research institutions (university and non-university) and the inter-relations of science, industry, and the government; see, for example, Kathryn M. Olesko, Physics as a calling: Discipline and practice in the Königsberg Seminar for Physics (Ithaca, 1991); David Cahan, An institute for an empire: The Physikalisch-Technische Reichsanstalt, 1871-1918 (Cambridge and New York, 1989); and Jeffrey Allan Johnson, The Kaiser's chemists: Science and modernization in Imperial Germany (Chapel Hill and London, 1990).
    • (1989) An Institute for an Empire: the Physikalisch-Technische Reichsanstalt, 1871-1918
    • Cahan, D.1
  • 44
    • 0004009771 scopus 로고
    • Chapel Hill and London
    • Recent work in nineteenth- and early twentieth-century German science has been attuned to this issue of research institutions (university and non-university) and the inter-relations of science, industry, and the government; see, for example, Kathryn M. Olesko, Physics as a calling: Discipline and practice in the Königsberg Seminar for Physics (Ithaca, 1991); David Cahan, An institute for an empire: The Physikalisch-Technische Reichsanstalt, 1871-1918 (Cambridge and New York, 1989); and Jeffrey Allan Johnson, The Kaiser's chemists: Science and modernization in Imperial Germany (Chapel Hill and London, 1990).
    • (1990) The Kaiser's Chemists: Science and Modernization in Imperial Germany
    • Johnson, J.A.1
  • 45
    • 0042880875 scopus 로고
    • Mining schools in the United States
    • According to one observer, about one-fourth of the students at Freiberg were Americans who contributed roughly half of the academy's revenue. John A. Church, "Mining schools in the United States", North American review, cxii (1871), 62-81.
    • (1871) North American Review , vol.112 , pp. 62-81
    • Church, J.A.1
  • 47
    • 0022240160 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • The Geological Atlas of Guettard, Lavoisier, and Monnet: Conflicting views of the nature of geology
    • Schneer (ed.), ref. 18
    • There were, of course, earlier examples of mapping projects. In the second half of the eighteenth century, Jean-Étienne Guettard's mineralogical surveys of France successfully combined commercial and scientific interests under government auspices. Rhoda Rappaport, "The Geological Atlas of Guettard, Lavoisier, and Monnet: Conflicting views of the nature of geology", in Schneer (ed.), Toward a history of geology (ref. 18), 272-87; and Kenneth L. Taylor, "Early geoscience mapping, 1700-1830", Proceedings of the Geoscience Information Sociery, xv (1985), 15-49.
    • Toward a History of Geology , pp. 272-287
    • Rappaport, R.1
  • 48
    • 0022240160 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Early geoscience mapping, 1700-1830
    • There were, of course, earlier examples of mapping projects. In the second half of the eighteenth century, Jean-Étienne Guettard's mineralogical surveys of France successfully combined commercial and scientific interests under government auspices. Rhoda Rappaport, "The Geological Atlas of Guettard, Lavoisier, and Monnet: Conflicting views of the nature of geology", in Schneer (ed.), Toward a history of geology (ref. 18), 272-87; and Kenneth L. Taylor, "Early geoscience mapping, 1700-1830", Proceedings of the Geoscience Information Sociery, xv (1985), 15-49.
    • (1985) Proceedings of the Geoscience Information Sociery , vol.15 , pp. 15-49
    • Taylor, K.L.1
  • 49
    • 0041010306 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 23
    • After completion of the general survey, Élie de Beaumont became General Inspector of Mines and continued to conduct special geological surveys of mining districts. Zittel, History of geology and paleontology (ref. 23), 150, 299.
    • History of Geology and Paleontology , pp. 150
    • Zittel1
  • 50
    • 0042880802 scopus 로고
    • The survey in nineteenth-century American geology: The evolution of a form of patronage
    • Stephen P. Turner, "The survey in nineteenth-century American geology: The evolution of a form of patronage", Minerva, xxv (1987), 282-330, and James A. Secord, "The Geological Survey of Great Britain as a research school, 1839-1855", History of science, xxiv (1986), 223-75.
    • (1987) Minerva , vol.25 , pp. 282-330
    • Turner, S.P.1
  • 51
    • 84965489260 scopus 로고
    • The Geological Survey of Great Britain as a research school, 1839-1855
    • Stephen P. Turner, "The survey in nineteenth-century American geology: The evolution of a form of patronage", Minerva, xxv (1987), 282-330, and James A. Secord, "The Geological Survey of Great Britain as a research school, 1839-1855", History of science, xxiv (1986), 223-75.
    • (1986) History of Science , vol.24 , pp. 223-275
    • Secord, J.A.1
  • 52
    • 84927766958 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Secord referred to this assumption as the constraint of professional science, ibid., 223. David Oldroyd discussed the "mapping mentality"; see Oldroyd, Thinking about the earth (ref. 16), 123-30.
    • History of Science , pp. 223
  • 53
    • 85034144408 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Secord referred to this assumption as the constraint of professional science, ibid., 223. David Oldroyd discussed the "mapping mentality"; see Oldroyd, Thinking about the earth (ref. 16), 123-30.
    • Mapping Mentality
    • Oldroyd, D.1
  • 54
    • 0003982639 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 16
    • Secord referred to this assumption as the constraint of professional science, ibid., 223. David Oldroyd discussed the "mapping mentality"; see Oldroyd, Thinking about the earth (ref. 16), 123-30.
    • Thinking about the Earth , pp. 123-130
    • Oldroyd1
  • 55
    • 0003525754 scopus 로고
    • London
    • For Britain, see Edward Bailey, Geological Survey of Great Britain (London, 1952); and John Smith Flett, The first hundred years of the Geological Survey of Great Britain (London, 1937). For the United States, see the four volumes of Mary C. Rabbit, Minerals, lands, and geology for the common defense and general welfare (Washington, D.C., 1979-86). On Canada, see Morris Zaslow, Reading the rocks: The story of the Geological Survey of Canada, 1842-1972 (Toronto, 1975). For additional discussion of Canada, see Suzanne Zeller, Inventing Canada: Early Victorian science and the idea of a transnational nation (Toronto, 1987); and William E. Eagan, "The Canadian Geological Survey: Hinterland between two metropolises", Earth science history, xii (1993), 99-106.
    • (1952) Geological Survey of Great Britain
    • Bailey, E.1
  • 56
    • 0042733632 scopus 로고
    • London
    • For Britain, see Edward Bailey, Geological Survey of Great Britain (London, 1952); and John Smith Flett, The first hundred years of the Geological Survey of Great Britain (London, 1937). For the United States, see the four volumes of Mary C. Rabbit, Minerals, lands, and geology for the common defense and general welfare (Washington, D.C., 1979-86). On Canada, see Morris Zaslow, Reading the rocks: The story of the Geological Survey of Canada, 1842-1972 (Toronto, 1975). For additional discussion of Canada, see Suzanne Zeller, Inventing Canada: Early Victorian science and the idea of a transnational nation (Toronto, 1987); and William E. Eagan, "The Canadian Geological Survey: Hinterland between two metropolises", Earth science history, xii (1993), 99-106.
    • (1937) The First Hundred Years of the Geological Survey of Great Britain
    • Flett, J.S.1
  • 57
    • 0041878527 scopus 로고
    • Washington, D.C.
    • For Britain, see Edward Bailey, Geological Survey of Great Britain (London, 1952); and John Smith Flett, The first hundred years of the Geological Survey of Great Britain (London, 1937). For the United States, see the four volumes of Mary C. Rabbit, Minerals, lands, and geology for the common defense and general welfare (Washington, D.C., 1979-86). On Canada, see Morris Zaslow, Reading the rocks: The story of the Geological Survey of Canada, 1842-1972 (Toronto, 1975). For additional discussion of Canada, see Suzanne Zeller, Inventing Canada: Early Victorian science and the idea of a transnational nation (Toronto, 1987); and William E. Eagan, "The Canadian Geological Survey: Hinterland between two metropolises", Earth science history, xii (1993), 99-106.
    • (1979) Minerals, Lands, and Geology for the Common Defense and General Welfare
    • Rabbit, M.C.1
  • 58
    • 0041377843 scopus 로고
    • Toronto
    • For Britain, see Edward Bailey, Geological Survey of Great Britain (London, 1952); and John Smith Flett, The first hundred years of the Geological Survey of Great Britain (London, 1937). For the United States, see the four volumes of Mary C. Rabbit, Minerals, lands, and geology for the common defense and general welfare (Washington, D.C., 1979-86). On Canada, see Morris Zaslow, Reading the rocks: The story of the Geological Survey of Canada, 1842-1972 (Toronto, 1975). For additional discussion of Canada, see Suzanne Zeller, Inventing Canada: Early Victorian science and the idea of a transnational nation (Toronto, 1987); and William E. Eagan, "The Canadian Geological Survey: Hinterland between two metropolises", Earth science history, xii (1993), 99-106.
    • (1975) Reading the Rocks: the Story of the Geological Survey of Canada, 1842-1972
    • Zaslow, M.1
  • 59
    • 0004130910 scopus 로고
    • Toronto
    • For Britain, see Edward Bailey, Geological Survey of Great Britain (London, 1952); and John Smith Flett, The first hundred years of the Geological Survey of Great Britain (London, 1937). For the United States, see the four volumes of Mary C. Rabbit, Minerals, lands, and geology for the common defense and general welfare (Washington, D.C., 1979-86). On Canada, see Morris Zaslow, Reading the rocks: The story of the Geological Survey of Canada, 1842-1972 (Toronto, 1975). For additional discussion of Canada, see Suzanne Zeller, Inventing Canada: Early Victorian science and the idea of a transnational nation (Toronto, 1987); and William E. Eagan, "The Canadian Geological Survey: Hinterland between two metropolises", Earth science history, xii (1993), 99-106.
    • (1987) Inventing Canada: Early Victorian Science and the Idea of a Transnational Nation
    • Zeller, S.1
  • 60
    • 0042880804 scopus 로고
    • The Canadian Geological Survey: Hinterland between two metropolises
    • For Britain, see Edward Bailey, Geological Survey of Great Britain (London, 1952); and John Smith Flett, The first hundred years of the Geological Survey of Great Britain (London, 1937). For the United States, see the four volumes of Mary C. Rabbit, Minerals, lands, and geology for the common defense and general welfare (Washington, D.C., 1979-86). On Canada, see Morris Zaslow, Reading the rocks: The story of the Geological Survey of Canada, 1842-1972 (Toronto, 1975). For additional discussion of Canada, see Suzanne Zeller, Inventing Canada: Early Victorian science and the idea of a transnational nation (Toronto, 1987); and William E. Eagan, "The Canadian Geological Survey: Hinterland between two metropolises", Earth science history, xii (1993), 99-106.
    • (1993) Earth Science History , vol.12 , pp. 99-106
    • Eagan, W.E.1
  • 62
    • 84971947671 scopus 로고
    • Gentlemen and geology: The emergence of a scientific career, 1660-1920
    • Secord, op. cit. (ref. 29), and Roy Porter, "Gentlemen and geology: The emergence of a scientific career, 1660-1920", The historical journal, xxi (1978), 809-36.
    • (1978) The Historical Journal , vol.21 , pp. 809-836
    • Porter, R.1
  • 64
    • 85034148168 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • In the 1850s and 1860s the Survey mapped the coalfields of Lancashire, Yorkshire, Durham, Northumberland, and Cumberland. Under Ramsay, attention focused on Scottish coalfields, beginning with Midlothian.
  • 67
    • 0003882069 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 33.
    • Stafford, Scientist of empire (ref. 33). On India see Andrew Grout, "Geology and India, 1775- 1805: An episode in colonial science", South Asia research, x (1990), 1-18. On Australia see R. K. Johns, History and role of Government geological surveys in Australia (Adelaide, 1976). There is also very good work on Ireland; see G. L. Herries-Davies, Sheets of many colours: The mapping of Irish rocks, 1750-1890 (Dublin, 1983), and North from the Hook: 150 years of the Geological Survey of Ireland (Dublin, 1995).
    • Scientist of Empire
    • Stafford1
  • 68
    • 0025592005 scopus 로고
    • Geology and India, 1775-1805: An episode in colonial science
    • Stafford, Scientist of empire (ref. 33). On India see Andrew Grout, "Geology and India, 1775-1805: An episode in colonial science", South Asia research, x (1990), 1-18. On Australia see R. K. Johns, History and role of Government geological surveys in Australia (Adelaide, 1976). There is also very good work on Ireland; see G. L. Herries-Davies, Sheets of many colours: The mapping of Irish rocks, 1750-1890 (Dublin, 1983), and North from the Hook: 150 years of the Geological Survey of Ireland (Dublin, 1995).
    • (1990) South Asia Research , vol.10 , pp. 1-18
    • Grout, A.1
  • 69
    • 0041377842 scopus 로고
    • Adelaide
    • Stafford, Scientist of empire (ref. 33). On India see Andrew Grout, "Geology and India, 1775- 1805: An episode in colonial science", South Asia research, x (1990), 1-18. On Australia see R. K. Johns, History and role of Government geological surveys in Australia (Adelaide, 1976). There is also very good work on Ireland; see G. L. Herries-Davies, Sheets of many colours: The mapping of Irish rocks, 1750-1890 (Dublin, 1983), and North from the Hook: 150 years of the Geological Survey of Ireland (Dublin, 1995).
    • (1976) History and Role of Government Geological Surveys in Australia
    • Johns, R.K.1
  • 70
    • 0041377916 scopus 로고
    • Dublin
    • Stafford, Scientist of empire (ref. 33). On India see Andrew Grout, "Geology and India, 1775- 1805: An episode in colonial science", South Asia research, x (1990), 1-18. On Australia see R. K. Johns, History and role of Government geological surveys in Australia (Adelaide, 1976). There is also very good work on Ireland; see G. L. Herries-Davies, Sheets of many colours: The mapping of Irish rocks, 1750-1890 (Dublin, 1983), and North from the Hook: 150 years of the Geological Survey of Ireland (Dublin, 1995).
    • (1983) Sheets of Many Colours: the Mapping of Irish Rocks, 1750-1890
    • Herries-Davies, G.L.1
  • 71
    • 0038939669 scopus 로고
    • Dublin
    • Stafford, Scientist of empire (ref. 33). On India see Andrew Grout, "Geology and India, 1775- 1805: An episode in colonial science", South Asia research, x (1990), 1-18. On Australia see R. K. Johns, History and role of Government geological surveys in Australia (Adelaide, 1976). There is also very good work on Ireland; see G. L. Herries-Davies, Sheets of many colours: The mapping of Irish rocks, 1750-1890 (Dublin, 1983), and North from the Hook: 150 years of the Geological Survey of Ireland (Dublin, 1995).
    • (1995) North from the Hook: 150 Years of the Geological Survey of Ireland
  • 72
    • 85034125386 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • Logan's mapping skills attracted the attention of De la Beche, who hired him when the British Survey entered South Wales in 1837.
  • 75
    • 33645806904 scopus 로고
    • Contributions to a history of American state geological and natural history surveys
    • Smithsonian Institution, United States National Museum, Washington, D.C.
    • Merrill also published something of a source book comprising government documents and geologists' accounts in Contributions to a history of American state geological and natural history surveys (Smithsonian Institution, United States National Museum, Bulletin 109; Washington, D.C., 1920).
    • (1920) Bulletin , vol.109
    • Merrill1
  • 76
    • 0002412032 scopus 로고
    • Cambridge
    • Historians have not failed to explain in general terms the political economy of government surveys. See, for example, Hugh Richard Slotten, Patronage, practice, and the culture of American science: Alexander Dallas Bache and the US Coast Survey (Cambridge, 1994); Howard S. Miller, Dollars for research: Science and its patrons in nineteenth-century America (Seattle, 1970); and Walter B. Hendrickson, "Nineteenth-century state geological surveys: Early Government support of science", Isis, lii (1961), 357-71.
    • (1994) Patronage, Practice, and the Culture of American Science: Alexander Dallas Bache and the us Coast Survey
    • Slotten, H.R.1
  • 77
    • 0039733673 scopus 로고
    • Seattle
    • Historians have not failed to explain in general terms the political economy of government surveys. See, for example, Hugh Richard Slotten, Patronage, practice, and the culture of American science: Alexander Dallas Bache and the US Coast Survey (Cambridge, 1994); Howard S. Miller, Dollars for research: Science and its patrons in nineteenth-century America (Seattle, 1970); and Walter B. Hendrickson, "Nineteenth-century state geological surveys: Early Government support of science", Isis, lii (1961), 357-71.
    • (1970) Dollars for Research: Science and Its Patrons in Nineteenth-century America
    • Miller, H.S.1
  • 78
    • 0009191956 scopus 로고
    • Nineteenth-century state geological surveys: Early Government support of science
    • Historians have not failed to explain in general terms the political economy of government surveys. See, for example, Hugh Richard Slotten, Patronage, practice, and the culture of American science: Alexander Dallas Bache and the US Coast Survey (Cambridge, 1994); Howard S. Miller, Dollars for research: Science and its patrons in nineteenth-century America (Seattle, 1970); and Walter B. Hendrickson, "Nineteenth-century state geological surveys: Early Government support of science", Isis, lii (1961), 357-71.
    • (1961) Isis , vol.52 , pp. 357-371
    • Hendrickson, W.B.1
  • 79
    • 84971818724 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Edward Hitchcock, the director of the first geological survey of Massachusetts and the first state geologist to publish his results, might be credited with setting the pattern. He divided his report into two halves: the first on "Economical" geology and the second entitled "Scientific".
    • Scientific
    • Hitchcock, E.1
  • 81
    • 0041377837 scopus 로고
    • American indifference to basic science during the nineteenth century
    • Geology is central to the long-standing debate on the style of American science. See, for example, Richard H. Shryock, "American indifference to basic science during the nineteenth century", Archives internationales d'histoire des sciences, xxviii (1948), 3-18; and Reingold, op. cit. (ref. 15).
    • (1948) Archives Internationales D'histoire des Sciences , vol.28 , pp. 3-18
    • Shryock, R.H.1
  • 82
    • 85034136623 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 15
    • Geology is central to the long-standing debate on the style of American science. See, for example, Richard H. Shryock, "American indifference to basic science during the nineteenth century", Archives internationales d'histoire des sciences, xxviii (1948), 3-18; and Reingold, op. cit. (ref. 15).
    • Medical History , vol.36
    • Reingold1
  • 83
    • 85034125483 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Michele L. Aldrich, "American state geological surveys, 1820-1845" and William M. Jordan, "Geology and the industrial revolution in early to mid nineteenth century Pennsylvania", in Cecil J. Schneer (ed.), Two hundred years of geology in America (Hanover, N.H., 1979), 91- 103 and 133-43 respectively.
    • American State Geological Surveys, 1820-1845
    • Aldrich, M.L.1
  • 84
    • 0006512073 scopus 로고
    • Geology and the industrial revolution in early to mid nineteenth century Pennsylvania
    • Cecil J. Schneer (ed.), Hanover, N.H.
    • Michele L. Aldrich, "American state geological surveys, 1820-1845" and William M. Jordan, "Geology and the industrial revolution in early to mid nineteenth century Pennsylvania", in Cecil J. Schneer (ed.), Two hundred years of geology in America (Hanover, N.H., 1979), 91-103 and 133-43 respectively.
    • (1979) Two Hundred Years of Geology in America , pp. 91-103
    • Jordan, W.M.1
  • 85
    • 85027755244 scopus 로고
    • William Barton Rogers and the Virginia Geological Survey, 1835-1842
    • James X. Corgan (ed.), Tuscaloosa
    • Michele L. Aldrich and Alan E. Leviton, "William Barton Rogers and the Virginia Geological Survey, 1835-1842", in James X. Corgan (ed.), The geological sciences in the Antebellum South (Tuscaloosa, 1982), 83-104; and R. C. Milici and C. R. B. Hobbs, "William Barton Rogers and the first Geological Survey of Virginia, 1835-1841", Earth sciences history, vi (1987), 3-13.
    • (1982) The Geological Sciences in the Antebellum South , pp. 83-104
    • Aldrich, M.L.1    Leviton, A.E.2
  • 86
    • 0041878531 scopus 로고
    • William Barton Rogers and the first Geological Survey of Virginia, 1835-1841
    • Michele L. Aldrich and Alan E. Leviton, "William Barton Rogers and the Virginia Geological Survey, 1835-1842", in James X. Corgan (ed.), The geological sciences in the Antebellum South (Tuscaloosa, 1982), 83-104; and R. C. Milici and C. R. B. Hobbs, "William Barton Rogers and the first Geological Survey of Virginia, 1835-1841", Earth sciences history, vi (1987), 3-13.
    • (1987) Earth Sciences History , vol.6 , pp. 3-13
    • Milici, R.C.1    Hobbs, C.R.B.2
  • 88
    • 0006494355 scopus 로고
    • 2 vols, Philadelphia
    • Rogers did publish six annual reports from 1836 to 1842 ranging from 100 to 250 pages. Henry D. Rogers, The geology of Pennsylvania (2 vols, Philadelphia, 1858).
    • (1858) The Geology of Pennsylvania
    • Rogers, H.D.1
  • 89
    • 0041878614 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 40, esp.
    • Merrill, Contributions (ref. 40), esp. 390-7.
    • Contributions , pp. 390-397
    • Merrill1
  • 90
    • 77949310924 scopus 로고
    • The conflict between pure and applied science in nineteenth-century public policy: The California Geological Survey, 1860-1874
    • Whitney became the Sturgiss-Hooper Professor of Geology in the School of Mines and Practical Geology. Raphael Pumpelly was the Professor of Mining. The School was established 1865 and terminated, for lack of students, in 1875. Gerald D. Nash, "The conflict between pure and applied science in nineteenth-century public policy: The California Geological Survey, 1860-1874", Isis, liv (1963), 174-85; and Champlin, Raphael Pumpelly (ref. 16).
    • (1963) Isis , vol.54 , pp. 174-185
    • Nash, G.D.1
  • 91
    • 0041377850 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 16
    • Whitney became the Sturgiss-Hooper Professor of Geology in the School of Mines and Practical Geology. Raphael Pumpelly was the Professor of Mining. The School was established 1865 and terminated, for lack of students, in 1875. Gerald D. Nash, "The conflict between pure and applied science in nineteenth-century public policy: The California Geological Survey, 1860- 1874", Isis, liv (1963), 174-85; and Champlin, Raphael Pumpelly (ref. 16).
    • Raphael Pumpelly
    • Champlin1
  • 92
    • 84895099618 scopus 로고
    • Henry Darwin Rogers and William Barton Rogers on the nomenclature of the American paleozoic rocks
    • Schneer (ed.), ref. 44
    • Other state surveys, principally Pennsylvania and Virginia, developed stratigraphic nomenclature systems, but these were not adopted by other geologists. Patsy A. Gerstner, "Henry Darwin Rogers and William Barton Rogers on the nomenclature of the American paleozoic rocks", in Schneer (ed.), op. cit. (ref. 44), 175-86.
    • (1987) Medical History , vol.41 , pp. 175-186
    • Gerstner, P.A.1
  • 93
    • 85034126919 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • The General Land Office, a branch of the Department of Interior, commissioned geologists to examine public lands. Those designated as agricultural could be bought, whereas mineral lands could only be leased. David Dale Owen surveyed territory in Iowa, Illinois and Wisconsin, roughly 11,000 square miles, in 1839, and between 1848 and 1850, Owen covered the Chippewa Land District (western Wisconsin and eastern Minnesota). In 1847, Charles T. Jackson began a study of the Lake Superior Land District (Michigan), but because of conflict with copper mining interests, Jackson was removed and John Wells Foster and Josiah Dwight Whitney completed the survey in 1850.
  • 94
    • 0004326286 scopus 로고
    • New York
    • The surveys were published by the War Department, under Jefferson Davis, Secretary of War, in thirteen massive volumes entitled Pacific railroad reports. Certainly the time has come to reevaluate William H. Goetzmann's devastating dismissal of the science found in these reports as "non-accumulative. That is, it led nowhere". Goetzmann, Exploration and empire: The explorer and the scientist in the winning of the American West (New York, 1966), 330.
    • (1966) Exploration and Empire: the Explorer and the Scientist in the Winning of the American West , pp. 330
    • Goetzmann1
  • 95
    • 0010812866 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 52.
    • This was the only explicitly military operation: however, civilian scientists were attached to the survey. On relations between the military and civilians see Goetzmann, Exploration and empire (ref. 52).
    • Exploration and Empire
    • Goetzmann1
  • 100
    • 85034121047 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • Besides directing the USGS, King took part in the Tenth Census of the United States, which undertook a systematic review of mineral resources. The massive volumes on precious metals, iron ores, and petroleum are a treasure trove of economic geology waiting to be mined.
  • 101
    • 0041878527 scopus 로고
    • Washington, D.C., ch. 1, for a summary of the USGS's economic geology
    • Walcott's research program on metals, particularly gold, production of which had declined precipitously throughout the 1880s, was impressive and won for the USGS Congressional recognition and continued support. Studies of gold deposits in Colorado (1893-94), Utah (1894), and Alaska (1895, a year before the rush) as well as the cyanidation process for reducing the ores resolved the US gold crisis by 1900. In addition, the USGS began detailed studies of copper mining in Montana (1896) and Utah (1897). In 1893, the USGS undertook the study of aluminum ores in Georgia and Alabama, and in 1900 those in Arkansas. See Mary C. Rabbit, Minerals, lands, and geology for the common defense and general welfare, iii: 1904-1939 (Washington, D.C., 1979), ch. 1, for a summary of the USGS's economic geology.
    • (1979) Minerals, Lands, and Geology for the Common Defense and General Welfare, III: 1904-1939
    • Rabbit, M.C.1
  • 104
    • 0042379835 scopus 로고
    • The American countercurrent - Eastward flow of geologists and their ideas in the late nineteenth century
    • As many scholars have noted, the scientific contributions of the USGS were of the first order. R. H. Dott, Jr, "The American countercurrent - Eastward flow of geologists and their ideas in the late nineteenth century", Earth sciences history, ix (1990), 158-62; Stephen J. Pyne, Grove Karl Gilbert: A great engine of research (Austin, 1980); and John W. Servos, "The intellectual basis of specialization: Geochemistry in America, 1890-1915", in John Parascandola and James C. Whorton (eds), Chemistry in modern society: Historical essays in honor of Aaron J. Ihde (Washington, D.C., 1983), 1-19.
    • (1990) Earth Sciences History , vol.9 , pp. 158-162
    • Dott R.H., Jr.1
  • 105
    • 0003671020 scopus 로고
    • Austin
    • As many scholars have noted, the scientific contributions of the USGS were of the first order. R. H. Dott, Jr, "The American countercurrent - Eastward flow of geologists and their ideas in the late nineteenth century", Earth sciences history, ix (1990), 158-62; Stephen J. Pyne, Grove Karl Gilbert: A great engine of research (Austin, 1980); and John W. Servos, "The intellectual basis of specialization: Geochemistry in America, 1890-1915", in John Parascandola and James C. Whorton (eds), Chemistry in modern society: Historical essays in honor of Aaron J. Ihde (Washington, D.C., 1983), 1-19.
    • (1980) Grove Karl Gilbert: a Great Engine of Research
    • Pyne, S.J.1
  • 106
    • 0042880805 scopus 로고
    • The intellectual basis of specialization: Geochemistry in America, 1890-1915
    • John Parascandola and James C. Whorton (eds), Washington, D.C.
    • As many scholars have noted, the scientific contributions of the USGS were of the first order. R. H. Dott, Jr, "The American countercurrent - Eastward flow of geologists and their ideas in the late nineteenth century", Earth sciences history, ix (1990), 158-62; Stephen J. Pyne, Grove Karl Gilbert: A great engine of research (Austin, 1980); and John W. Servos, "The intellectual basis of specialization: Geochemistry in America, 1890-1915", in John Parascandola and James C. Whorton (eds), Chemistry in modern society: Historical essays in honor of Aaron J. Ihde (Washington, D.C., 1983), 1-19.
    • (1983) Chemistry in Modern Society: Historical Essays in Honor of Aaron J. Ihde , pp. 1-19
    • Servos, J.W.1
  • 107
    • 85034141986 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 1
    • Ransome, "Applied geology" (ref. 1), 6. Another economic geologist, James Furman Kemp, went even further in his praise of the USGS: "The geologists of the United States Geological Survey, who have been engaged in the study of our great mining regions, especially in the West, have laid the whole scientific world under debt of gratitude, and in this country have probably been the most potent influences toward the right geological conceptions regarding ores." J. F. Kemp, The ore deposits of the United States and Canada (New York, 1906), p. vi.
    • Applied Geology , pp. 6
    • Ransome1
  • 108
    • 0042379787 scopus 로고
    • New York
    • Ransome, "Applied geology" (ref. 1), 6. Another economic geologist, James Furman Kemp, went even further in his praise of the USGS: "The geologists of the United States Geological Survey, who have been engaged in the study of our great mining regions, especially in the West, have laid the whole scientific world under debt of gratitude, and in this country have probably been the most potent influences toward the right geological conceptions regarding ores." J. F. Kemp, The ore deposits of the United States and Canada (New York, 1906), p. vi.
    • (1906) The ore Deposits of the United States and Canada
    • Kemp, J.F.1
  • 109
    • 0041878533 scopus 로고
    • Ideas and organizations in British geology: A case study in institutional history
    • Rachel Laudan has even argued that gentlemen of the Geological Society, in contrast to practical men, hindered the development of geology in the early years of the nineteenth century. Laudan, "Ideas and organizations in British geology: A case study in institutional history", Isis, lxviii (1977), 527-38.
    • (1977) Isis , vol.68 , pp. 527-538
    • Laudan1
  • 110
    • 0002247502 scopus 로고
    • Patronage and problems: Banks and the earth sciences
    • R. E. R. Banks et al. (eds), London
    • H. S. Torrens, "Patronage and problems: Banks and the earth sciences", in R. E. R. Banks et al. (eds), Sir Joseph Banks: A global perspective (London, 1994), 49-75; idem, "Arthur Aikin's mineralogical survey of Shropshire 1796-1816 and the contemporary audience for geological publications", The British journal for the history of science, xvi (1983), 111-53;
    • (1994) Sir Joseph Banks: a Global Perspective , pp. 49-75
    • Torrens, H.S.1
  • 111
    • 84972343602 scopus 로고
    • Arthur Aikin's mineralogical survey of Shropshire 1796-1816 and the contemporary audience for geological publications
    • H. S. Torrens, "Patronage and problems: Banks and the earth sciences", in R. E. R. Banks et al. (eds), Sir Joseph Banks: A global perspective (London, 1994), 49-75; idem, "Arthur Aikin's mineralogical survey of Shropshire 1796-1816 and the contemporary audience for geological publications", The British journal for the history of science, xvi (1983), 111-53;
    • (1983) The British Journal for the History of Science , vol.16 , pp. 111-153
    • Torrens, H.S.1
  • 113
    • 0041878537 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Le 'Nouvel Art de Prospection Minière' de William Smith et le 'Projet de Houillère de Breham': Un essai malencontreux de recherche de charbon dans le Sud-Ouest de l'Angleterre, entre 1803 et 1810
    • Paris
    • William Smith's contributions are well-known and discussed by many historians. See, for example, Hugh S. Torrens, "Le 'Nouvel Art de Prospection Minière' de William Smith et le 'Projet de Houillère de Breham': Un essai malencontreux de recherche de charbon dans le Sud-Ouest de l'Angleterre, entre 1803 et 1810", in Livre jubilaire pour François Ellenberger (Paris, 1998), 101-18; and Joan M. Eyles, "William Smith: Some aspects of his life and works", in Schneer (ed.), Toward a history of geology (ref. 18), 142-58.
    • (1998) Livre Jubilaire Pour François Ellenberger , pp. 101-118
    • Torrens, H.S.1
  • 114
    • 0006867853 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • William Smith: Some aspects of his life and works
    • Schneer (ed.), ref. 18
    • William Smith's contributions are well-known and discussed by many historians. See, for example, Hugh S. Torrens, "Le 'Nouvel Art de Prospection Minière' de William Smith et le 'Projet de Houillère de Breham': Un essai malencontreux de recherche de charbon dans le Sud-Ouest de l'Angleterre, entre 1803 et 1810", in Livre jubilaire pour François Ellenberger (Paris, 1998), 101-18; and Joan M. Eyles, "William Smith: Some aspects of his life and works", in Schneer (ed.), Toward a history of geology (ref. 18), 142-58.
    • Toward a History of Geology , pp. 142-158
    • Eyles, J.M.1
  • 115
    • 0005764096 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Minerals, strata and fossils
    • N. Jardine, J. A. Secord and E. C. Spary (eds), Cambridge
    • Rudwick argued for the central role of Alexandre Brongniart and Georges Cuvier in the emergence of stratigraphical or geohistorical geology; see Rudwick, "Minerals, strata and fossils", in N. Jardine, J. A. Secord and E. C. Spary (eds), Cultures of natural history (Cambridge, 1996); and idem, "Cuvier and Brongniart, William Smith, and the reconstruction of geohistory", Earth sciences history, xv (1996), 25-36.
    • (1996) Cultures of Natural History
    • Rudwick1
  • 116
    • 0041377844 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Cuvier and Brongniart, William Smith, and the reconstruction of geohistory
    • Rudwick argued for the central role of Alexandre Brongniart and Georges Cuvier in the emergence of stratigraphical or geohistorical geology; see Rudwick, "Minerals, strata and fossils", in N. Jardine, J. A. Secord and E. C. Spary (eds), Cultures of natural history (Cambridge, 1996); and idem, "Cuvier and Brongniart, William Smith, and the reconstruction of geohistory", Earth sciences history, xv (1996), 25-36.
    • (1996) Earth Sciences History , vol.15 , pp. 25-36
    • Rudwick1
  • 117
    • 0041377845 scopus 로고
    • Joseph Harrison Fryer (1777-1855): Geologist and mining engineer, in England 1803-1825 and South America 1826-1828. a study in failure
    • Silvia Fernanda de Mendonça Figueirôa and Maria Margaret Lopes (eds), Campinas, SP, Brazil
    • The exception is Hugh Torrens who has done a great deal of biographical work on eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century mineral prospectors; see, for example, his "Joseph Harrison Fryer (1777-1855): Geologist and mining engineer, in England 1803-1825 and South America 1826-1828. A study in failure", in Silvia Fernanda de Mendonça Figueirôa and Maria Margaret Lopes (eds), Geological sciences in Latin America: Scientific relations and exchanges (Campinas, SP, Brazil, 1994), 29-46.
    • (1994) Geological Sciences in Latin America: Scientific Relations and Exchanges , pp. 29-46
    • Torrens, H.1
  • 118
    • 0012260246 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Economic and ornamental geology: The Geological and Polytechnic Society of the West Riding of Yorkshire, 1837-53
    • Ian Inkster and Jack Morrell (eds), Philadelphia
    • Jack Morrell, "Economic and ornamental geology: The Geological and Polytechnic Society of the West Riding of Yorkshire, 1837-53", in Ian Inkster and Jack Morrell (eds), Metropolis and province: Science in British culture 1780-1850 (Philadelphia, 1983), 231-56, p. 233. See, also, Roy Porter, The making of geology: Earth science in Britain, 1660-1815 (Cambridge, 1977); idem, "Gentlemen and geology" (ref. 32); and Jean G. O'Connor and A. J. Meadows, "Specialization and professionalization in British geology", Social studies of science, vi (1976), 77-89.
    • (1983) Metropolis and Province: Science in British Culture 1780-1850 , pp. 231-256
    • Morrell, J.1
  • 119
    • 0012260246 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Cambridge
    • Jack Morrell, "Economic and ornamental geology: The Geological and Polytechnic Society of the West Riding of Yorkshire, 1837-53", in Ian Inkster and Jack Morrell (eds), Metropolis and province: Science in British culture 1780-1850 (Philadelphia, 1983), 231-56, p. 233. See, also, Roy Porter, The making of geology: Earth science in Britain, 1660-1815 (Cambridge, 1977); idem, "Gentlemen and geology" (ref. 32); and Jean G. O'Connor and A. J. Meadows, "Specialization and professionalization in British geology", Social studies of science, vi (1976), 77-89.
    • (1977) The Making of Geology: Earth Science in Britain, 1660-1815
    • Porter, R.1
  • 120
    • 0012260246 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 32
    • Jack Morrell, "Economic and ornamental geology: The Geological and Polytechnic Society of the West Riding of Yorkshire, 1837-53", in Ian Inkster and Jack Morrell (eds), Metropolis and province: Science in British culture 1780-1850 (Philadelphia, 1983), 231-56, p. 233. See, also, Roy Porter, The making of geology: Earth science in Britain, 1660-1815 (Cambridge, 1977); idem, "Gentlemen and geology" (ref. 32); and Jean G. O'Connor and A. J. Meadows, "Specialization and professionalization in British geology", Social studies of science, vi (1976), 77-89.
    • Gentlemen and Geology
    • Porter, R.1
  • 121
    • 84977236615 scopus 로고
    • Specialization and professionalization in British geology
    • Jack Morrell, "Economic and ornamental geology: The Geological and Polytechnic Society of the West Riding of Yorkshire, 1837-53", in Ian Inkster and Jack Morrell (eds), Metropolis and province: Science in British culture 1780-1850 (Philadelphia, 1983), 231-56, p. 233. See, also, Roy Porter, The making of geology: Earth science in Britain, 1660-1815 (Cambridge, 1977); idem, "Gentlemen and geology" (ref. 32); and Jean G. O'Connor and A. J. Meadows, "Specialization and professionalization in British geology", Social studies of science, vi (1976), 77-89.
    • (1976) Social Studies of Science , vol.6 , pp. 77-89
    • O'Connor, J.G.1    Meadows, A.J.2
  • 122
    • 85034128046 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • edited with an introduction by James A. Secord London
    • Secord made this point with respect to Charles Lyell's attempt to make geology a science by making it respectable. See Charles Lyell, Principles of geology, edited with an introduction by James A. Secord (London, 1997), p. xvi.
    • (1997) Principles of Geology
    • Lyell, C.1
  • 123
    • 85034140661 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 66
    • Morrell, for instance, noted in passing that the English geologist John Phillips surveyed the Ingleton area of Yorkshire for coal as a commission; see Morrell, "Economic and ornamental geology" (ref. 66), 232-3. John Phillips, A report on the probability of the occurrence of coal and other minerals in the vicinity of Lancaster. Addressed to the Lancaster Mining Company (Lancaster, 1837).
    • Economic and Ornamental Geology , pp. 232-233
    • Morrell1
  • 125
    • 0041377901 scopus 로고
    • Commercial interests and scientific disinterestedness: Consulting geologists in Antebellum America
    • Paul Lucier, "Commercial interests and scientific disinterestedness: Consulting geologists in Antebellum America", Isis, lxxxvi (1995), 245-67.
    • (1995) Isis , vol.86 , pp. 245-267
    • Lucier, P.1
  • 128
    • 0017014611 scopus 로고
    • The German model of chemical education in America: Ira Remsen at Johns Hopkins (1876-1913)
    • Owen Hannaway, "The German model of chemical education in America: Ira Remsen at Johns Hopkins (1876-1913)", Ambix, xxiii (1976), 145-64; George H. Daniels, "The pure science ideal and democratic culture", Science, xv (1967), 699-1705; and Henry Rowland, "Plea for pure science", Science, xxix (1883), 242-50.
    • (1976) Ambix , vol.23 , pp. 145-164
    • Hannaway, O.1
  • 129
    • 0038031710 scopus 로고
    • The pure science ideal and democratic culture
    • Owen Hannaway, "The German model of chemical education in America: Ira Remsen at Johns Hopkins (1876-1913)", Ambix, xxiii (1976), 145-64; George H. Daniels, "The pure science ideal and democratic culture", Science, xv (1967), 699-1705; and Henry Rowland, "Plea for pure science", Science, xxix (1883), 242-50.
    • (1967) Science , vol.15 , pp. 699-1705
    • Daniels, G.H.1
  • 130
    • 0017014611 scopus 로고
    • Plea for pure science
    • Owen Hannaway, "The German model of chemical education in America: Ira Remsen at Johns Hopkins (1876-1913)", Ambix, xxiii (1976), 145-64; George H. Daniels, "The pure science ideal and democratic culture", Science, xv (1967), 699-1705; and Henry Rowland, "Plea for pure science", Science, xxix (1883), 242-50.
    • (1883) Science , vol.29 , pp. 242-250
    • Rowland, H.1
  • 135
    • 85034149048 scopus 로고
    • ed. by H. J. Gluskoter, D. D. Rice and R. B. Taylor Boulder
    • The three minerals roughly correspond to three different types of occurrence: as strata or beds, veins, and liquid and gases. Iron occurred in bedded sedimentary strata and in veins - in other words, sometimes in the manner of coal and other times like ore deposits. It has been excluded here only because its general geology might be subsumed within the other two broad categories. This tripartite division was also adopted by the Geological Society of America; see The geology of North America, vol. P-2: Economic geology, U.S., ed. by H. J. Gluskoter, D. D. Rice and R. B. Taylor (Boulder, 1991). Of course, one could choose other examples of the mutual relationship of practical and scientific geology; see William M. Jordan, "Application as stimulus in geology: Some examples from the early years of the Geological Society of America", in Geologists and ideas: A history of North American geology, ed. by Ellen T. Drake and William M. Jordan (Boulder, 1985), 443-52.
    • (1991) The Geology of North America, Vol. P-2: Economic Geology, U.S. , vol.P-2
  • 136
    • 0041878585 scopus 로고
    • Application as stimulus in geology: Some examples from the early years of the Geological Society of America
    • ed. by Ellen T. Drake and William M. Jordan Boulder
    • The three minerals roughly correspond to three different types of occurrence: as strata or beds, veins, and liquid and gases. Iron occurred in bedded sedimentary strata and in veins - in other words, sometimes in the manner of coal and other times like ore deposits. It has been excluded here only because its general geology might be subsumed within the other two broad categories. This tripartite division was also adopted by the Geological Society of America; see The geology of North America, vol. P-2: Economic geology, U.S., ed. by H. J. Gluskoter, D. D. Rice and R. B. Taylor (Boulder, 1991). Of course, one could choose other examples of the mutual relationship of practical and scientific geology; see William M. Jordan, "Application as stimulus in geology: Some examples from the early years of the Geological Society of America", in Geologists and ideas: A history of North American geology, ed. by Ellen T. Drake and William M. Jordan (Boulder, 1985), 443-52.
    • (1985) Geologists and Ideas: a History of North American Geology , pp. 443-452
    • Jordan, W.M.1
  • 137
    • 0041377900 scopus 로고
    • The fuss about coal: Troubled relations between paleobotany and geology
    • D. J. Carr and S. G. M. Carr (eds), Sydney
    • I do not mean to suggest that coal was important only in the nineteenth century or petroleum only in the twentieth. Certainly, research on each of these minerals continued throughout the last two centuries, but I think historians can, and geologists at the time did, prioritize these minerals, and that ranking reflected the economic and social importance of the corresponding industries. See Tom Vallance, "The fuss about coal: Troubled relations between paleobotany and geology", in D. J. Carr and S. G. M. Carr (eds), Plants and animals in Australia (Sydney, 1981), 136-76.
    • (1981) Plants and Animals in Australia , pp. 136-176
    • Vallance, T.1
  • 139
    • 0003796679 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 13
    • As Rudwick and Secord have shown, the limit of stratigraphical knowledge until the 1830s was marked by the Coal Measures, below which the rocks were not clearly identifiable by characteristic fossils. Above the Coal Measures, the rocks contained ample fossil evidence to order the units structurally and chronologically, and to map them, as William Smith showed. Rudwick, Great Devonian Controversy (ref. 13); and Secord, Controversy in Victorian geology (ref. 13). Charles Lyell recognized the importance of coal for global correlations and took a keen interest in it, especially the massive deposits of Pennsylvania and Nova Scotia, during his visits to America. A study of Lyell's role in the debates over coal would be a valuable contribution to the history of geology. Charles Lyell, Travels in North America, in the years 1841-2: With geological observations on the United States, Canada, and Nova Scotia (New York, 1845); idem, A second visit to the United States of North America (2 vols, New York, 1849); Hubert C. Skinner (ed.), Charles Lyell on North American geology (Albany, N.Y., 1929); Robert H. Silliman, "The Hamlet affair: Charles Lyell and the North Americans", Isis, lxxxvi (1995), 541-61; and Robert H. Dott, Jr, "Lyell in America - His lectures, field work, and mutual influences, 1841-1853", Earth sciences history, xv (1996), 101-40. am aware that Leonard Wilson has recently published a sequel to his first study of Charles Lyell which should address some of these issues. See his Lyell in America: Transatlantic geology, 1841- 1853 (Baltimore and London, 1998). It is unfortunate that I was unable to consult this book before this article went to press.
    • Great Devonian Controversy
    • Rudwick1
  • 140
    • 0003804146 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 13.
    • As Rudwick and Secord have shown, the limit of stratigraphical knowledge until the 1830s was marked by the Coal Measures, below which the rocks were not clearly identifiable by characteristic fossils. Above the Coal Measures, the rocks contained ample fossil evidence to order the units structurally and chronologically, and to map them, as William Smith showed. Rudwick, Great Devonian Controversy (ref. 13); and Secord, Controversy in Victorian geology (ref. 13). Charles Lyell recognized the importance of coal for global correlations and took a keen interest in it, especially the massive deposits of Pennsylvania and Nova Scotia, during his visits to America. A study of Lyell's role in the debates over coal would be a valuable contribution to the history of geology. Charles Lyell, Travels in North America, in the years 1841-2: With geological observations on the United States, Canada, and Nova Scotia (New York, 1845); idem, A second visit to the United States of North America (2 vols, New York, 1849); Hubert C. Skinner (ed.), Charles Lyell on North American geology (Albany, N.Y., 1929); Robert H. Silliman, "The Hamlet affair: Charles Lyell and the North Americans", Isis, lxxxvi (1995), 541-61; and Robert H. Dott, Jr, "Lyell in America - His lectures, field work, and mutual influences, 1841-1853", Earth sciences history, xv (1996), 101-40. am aware that Leonard Wilson has recently published a sequel to his first study of Charles Lyell which should address some of these issues. See his Lyell in America: Transatlantic geology, 1841- 1853 (Baltimore and London, 1998). It is unfortunate that I was unable to consult this book before this article went to press.
    • Controversy in Victorian Geology
    • Secord1
  • 141
    • 84926130483 scopus 로고
    • New York
    • As Rudwick and Secord have shown, the limit of stratigraphical knowledge until the 1830s was marked by the Coal Measures, below which the rocks were not clearly identifiable by characteristic fossils. Above the Coal Measures, the rocks contained ample fossil evidence to order the units structurally and chronologically, and to map them, as William Smith showed. Rudwick, Great Devonian Controversy (ref. 13); and Secord, Controversy in Victorian geology (ref. 13). Charles Lyell recognized the importance of coal for global correlations and took a keen interest in it, especially the massive deposits of Pennsylvania and Nova Scotia, during his visits to America. A study of Lyell's role in the debates over coal would be a valuable contribution to the history of geology. Charles Lyell, Travels in North America, in the years 1841-2: With geological observations on the United States, Canada, and Nova Scotia (New York, 1845); idem, A second visit to the United States of North America (2 vols, New York, 1849); Hubert C. Skinner (ed.), Charles Lyell on North American geology (Albany, N.Y., 1929); Robert H. Silliman, "The Hamlet affair: Charles Lyell and the North Americans", Isis, lxxxvi (1995), 541-61; and Robert H. Dott, Jr, "Lyell in America - His lectures, field work, and mutual influences, 1841-1853", Earth sciences history, xv (1996), 101-40. am aware that Leonard Wilson has recently published a sequel to his first study of Charles Lyell which should address some of these issues. See his Lyell in America: Transatlantic geology, 1841- 1853 (Baltimore and London, 1998). It is unfortunate that I was unable to consult this book before this article went to press.
    • (1845) Travels in North America, in the Years 1841-2: with Geological Observations on the United States, Canada, and Nova Scotia
    • Lyell, C.1
  • 142
    • 0003966170 scopus 로고
    • 2 vols, New York
    • As Rudwick and Secord have shown, the limit of stratigraphical knowledge until the 1830s was marked by the Coal Measures, below which the rocks were not clearly identifiable by characteristic fossils. Above the Coal Measures, the rocks contained ample fossil evidence to order the units structurally and chronologically, and to map them, as William Smith showed. Rudwick, Great Devonian Controversy (ref. 13); and Secord, Controversy in Victorian geology (ref. 13). Charles Lyell recognized the importance of coal for global correlations and took a keen interest in it, especially the massive deposits of Pennsylvania and Nova Scotia, during his visits to America. A study of Lyell's role in the debates over coal would be a valuable contribution to the history of geology. Charles Lyell, Travels in North America, in the years 1841-2: With geological observations on the United States, Canada, and Nova Scotia (New York, 1845); idem, A second visit to the United States of North America (2 vols, New York, 1849); Hubert C. Skinner (ed.), Charles Lyell on North American geology (Albany, N.Y., 1929); Robert H. Silliman, "The Hamlet affair: Charles Lyell and the North Americans", Isis, lxxxvi (1995), 541-61; and Robert H. Dott, Jr, "Lyell in America - His lectures, field work, and mutual influences, 1841-1853", Earth sciences history, xv (1996), 101-40. am aware that Leonard Wilson has recently published a sequel to his first study of Charles Lyell which should address some of these issues. See his Lyell in America: Transatlantic geology, 1841- 1853 (Baltimore and London, 1998). It is unfortunate that I was unable to consult this book before this article went to press.
    • (1849) A Second Visit to the United States of North America
  • 143
    • 0042880864 scopus 로고
    • Albany, N.Y.
    • As Rudwick and Secord have shown, the limit of stratigraphical knowledge until the 1830s was marked by the Coal Measures, below which the rocks were not clearly identifiable by characteristic fossils. Above the Coal Measures, the rocks contained ample fossil evidence to order the units structurally and chronologically, and to map them, as William Smith showed. Rudwick, Great Devonian Controversy (ref. 13); and Secord, Controversy in Victorian geology (ref. 13). Charles Lyell recognized the importance of coal for global correlations and took a keen interest in it, especially the massive deposits of Pennsylvania and Nova Scotia, during his visits to America. A study of Lyell's role in the debates over coal would be a valuable contribution to the history of geology. Charles Lyell, Travels in North America, in the years 1841-2: With geological observations on the United States, Canada, and Nova Scotia (New York, 1845); idem, A second visit to the United States of North America (2 vols, New York, 1849); Hubert C. Skinner (ed.), Charles Lyell on North American geology (Albany, N.Y., 1929); Robert H. Silliman, "The Hamlet affair: Charles Lyell and the North Americans", Isis, lxxxvi (1995), 541-61; and Robert H. Dott, Jr, "Lyell in America - His lectures, field work, and mutual influences, 1841-1853", Earth sciences history, xv (1996), 101-40. am aware that Leonard Wilson has recently published a sequel to his first study of Charles Lyell which should address some of these issues. See his Lyell in America: Transatlantic geology, 1841- 1853 (Baltimore and London, 1998). It is unfortunate that I was unable to consult this book before this article went to press.
    • (1929) Charles Lyell on North American Geology
    • Skinner, H.C.1
  • 144
    • 0041878594 scopus 로고
    • The Hamlet affair: Charles Lyell and the North Americans
    • As Rudwick and Secord have shown, the limit of stratigraphical knowledge until the 1830s was marked by the Coal Measures, below which the rocks were not clearly identifiable by characteristic fossils. Above the Coal Measures, the rocks contained ample fossil evidence to order the units structurally and chronologically, and to map them, as William Smith showed. Rudwick, Great Devonian Controversy (ref. 13); and Secord, Controversy in Victorian geology (ref. 13). Charles Lyell recognized the importance of coal for global correlations and took a keen interest in it, especially the massive deposits of Pennsylvania and Nova Scotia, during his visits to America. A study of Lyell's role in the debates over coal would be a valuable contribution to the history of geology. Charles Lyell, Travels in North America, in the years 1841-2: With geological observations on the United States, Canada, and Nova Scotia (New York, 1845); idem, A second visit to the United States of North America (2 vols, New York, 1849); Hubert C. Skinner (ed.), Charles Lyell on North American geology (Albany, N.Y., 1929); Robert H. Silliman, "The Hamlet affair: Charles Lyell and the North Americans", Isis, lxxxvi (1995), 541-61; and Robert H. Dott, Jr, "Lyell in America - His lectures, field work, and mutual influences, 1841-1853", Earth sciences history, xv (1996), 101-40. am aware that Leonard Wilson has recently published a sequel to his first study of Charles Lyell which should address some of these issues. See his Lyell in America: Transatlantic geology, 1841- 1853 (Baltimore and London, 1998). It is unfortunate that I was unable to consult this book before this article went to press.
    • (1995) Isis , vol.86 , pp. 541-561
    • Silliman, R.H.1
  • 145
    • 0042880803 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Lyell in America - His lectures, field work, and mutual influences, 1841-1853
    • As Rudwick and Secord have shown, the limit of stratigraphical knowledge until the 1830s was marked by the Coal Measures, below which the rocks were not clearly identifiable by characteristic fossils. Above the Coal Measures, the rocks contained ample fossil evidence to order the units structurally and chronologically, and to map them, as William Smith showed. Rudwick, Great Devonian Controversy (ref. 13); and Secord, Controversy in Victorian geology (ref. 13). Charles Lyell recognized the importance of coal for global correlations and took a keen interest in it, especially the massive deposits of Pennsylvania and Nova Scotia, during his visits to America. A study of Lyell's role in the debates over coal would be a valuable contribution to the history of geology. Charles Lyell, Travels in North America, in the years 1841-2: With geological observations on the United States, Canada, and Nova Scotia (New York, 1845); idem, A second visit to the United States of North America (2 vols, New York, 1849); Hubert C. Skinner (ed.), Charles Lyell on North American geology (Albany, N.Y., 1929); Robert H. Silliman, "The Hamlet affair: Charles Lyell and the North Americans", Isis, lxxxvi (1995), 541-61; and Robert H. Dott, Jr, "Lyell in America - His lectures, field work, and mutual influences, 1841-1853", Earth sciences history, xv (1996), 101-40. am aware that Leonard Wilson has recently published a sequel to his first study of Charles Lyell which should address some of these issues. See his Lyell in America: Transatlantic geology, 1841- 1853 (Baltimore and London, 1998). It is unfortunate that I was unable to consult this book before this article went to press.
    • (1996) Earth Sciences History , vol.15 , pp. 101-140
    • Dott R.H., Jr.1
  • 146
    • 85034152775 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Baltimore and London
    • As Rudwick and Secord have shown, the limit of stratigraphical knowledge until the 1830s was marked by the Coal Measures, below which the rocks were not clearly identifiable by characteristic fossils. Above the Coal Measures, the rocks contained ample fossil evidence to order the units structurally and chronologically, and to map them, as William Smith showed. Rudwick, Great Devonian Controversy (ref. 13); and Secord, Controversy in Victorian geology (ref. 13). Charles Lyell recognized the importance of coal for global correlations and took a keen interest in it, especially the massive deposits of Pennsylvania and Nova Scotia, during his visits to America. A study of Lyell's role in the debates over coal would be a valuable contribution to the history of geology. Charles Lyell, Travels in North America, in the years 1841-2: With geological observations on the United States, Canada, and Nova Scotia (New York, 1845); idem, A second visit to the United States of North America (2 vols, New York, 1849); Hubert C. Skinner (ed.), Charles Lyell on North American geology (Albany, N.Y., 1929); Robert H. Silliman, "The Hamlet affair: Charles Lyell and the North Americans", Isis, lxxxvi (1995), 541-61; and Robert H. Dott, Jr, "Lyell in America - His lectures, field work, and mutual influences, 1841-1853", Earth sciences history, xv (1996), 101-40. am aware that Leonard Wilson has recently published a sequel to his first study of Charles Lyell which should address some of these issues. See his Lyell in America: Transatlantic geology, 1841-1853 (Baltimore and London, 1998). It is unfortunate that I was unable to consult this book before this article went to press.
    • (1998) Lyell in America: Transatlantic Geology, 1841-1853
    • Lyell, C.1
  • 147
    • 0041377912 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 70, ch. 3
    • Lucier, Scientists and swindlers (ref. 70), ch. 3; and Mott T. Greene, Geology in the nineteenth century: Changing views of a changing world (Ithaca and London, 1982), ch. 5.
    • Scientists and Swindlers
    • Lucier1
  • 149
    • 0037648234 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Court and controversy: Patenting science in the nineteenth century
    • Of course, these three "types" do not exhaust the possible varieties of coal. There was every gradation between graphite and asphaltum, as well as some types of bituminous substances that did not seem to fit a linear system, such as petroleum. Classification of types produced an extended and at times heated debate. See Paul Lucier, "Court and controversy: Patenting science in the nineteenth century", The British journal of the history of science, xxix (1996), 139-54. Alfred D. Chandler, Jr, "Anthracite coal and the beginnings of the industrial revolution in the United States", Business history review, xlvi (1972), 143-81.
    • (1996) The British Journal of the History of Science , vol.29 , pp. 139-154
    • Lucier, P.1
  • 150
    • 84972278182 scopus 로고
    • Anthracite coal and the beginnings of the industrial revolution in the United States
    • Of course, these three "types" do not exhaust the possible varieties of coal. There was every gradation between graphite and asphaltum, as well as some types of bituminous substances that did not seem to fit a linear system, such as petroleum. Classification of types produced an extended and at times heated debate. See Paul Lucier, "Court and controversy: Patenting science in the nineteenth century", The British journal of the history of science, xxix (1996), 139-54. Alfred D. Chandler, Jr, "Anthracite coal and the beginnings of the industrial revolution in the United States", Business history review, xlvi (1972), 143-81.
    • (1972) Business History Review , vol.46 , pp. 143-181
    • Chandler A.D., Jr.1
  • 153
    • 0040194566 scopus 로고
    • Ithaca
    • Rogers and Lesley divided the anthracite fields as follows: a northern basin (running from Wilkesbarre to Scranton to Carbondale), a middle basin (centred on Hazelton), an eastern basin (Shamokin and Mahanoy), and a southern basin (Broad Mountain, Mauch Chunk and Pottsville). These divisions reflected the principal mining regions. On anthracite mining and the role of geology, see Anthony F. C. Wallace, St. Clair: A nineteenth-century coal town's experience with a disaster-prone industry (Ithaca, 1988).
    • (1988) St. Clair: a Nineteenth-century Coal Town's Experience with a Disaster-prone Industry
    • Wallace, A.F.C.1
  • 154
    • 0042880863 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • William B. Rogers, "On the age of the coal rocks of Eastern Virginia", Henry D. Rogers, "An inquiry into the origin of the Appalachian coal strata, bituminous and anthracitic", and W. B. and H. D. Rogers, "On the physical structure of the Appalachian chain, as exemplifying the laws which have regulated the elevation of great mountain chains, generally", in Reports of the first, second, and third Meetings of the Association of American Geologists and Naturalists at Philadelphia, in 1840 and 1841, and at Boston in 1842 (reprinted New York, 1978), 298- 316, 433-74 and 474-531 respectively. The term used today for describing the process of forming coal is, aptly, 'coalification'. See Peter J. McCabe, "Geology of coal: Environments of deposition", and Heinz H. Damberger, "Coalification in North American coal fields", in Gluskoter, Rice and Taylor (eds), The geology of North America, vol. P-2 (ref. 75), 469-82 and 503-22, respectively.
    • On the Age of the Coal Rocks of Eastern Virginia
    • Rogers, W.B.1
  • 155
    • 85034130205 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • William B. Rogers, "On the age of the coal rocks of Eastern Virginia", Henry D. Rogers, "An inquiry into the origin of the Appalachian coal strata, bituminous and anthracitic", and W. B. and H. D. Rogers, "On the physical structure of the Appalachian chain, as exemplifying the laws which have regulated the elevation of great mountain chains, generally", in Reports of the first, second, and third Meetings of the Association of American Geologists and Naturalists at Philadelphia, in 1840 and 1841, and at Boston in 1842 (reprinted New York, 1978), 298- 316, 433-74 and 474-531 respectively. The term used today for describing the process of forming coal is, aptly, 'coalification'. See Peter J. McCabe, "Geology of coal: Environments of deposition", and Heinz H. Damberger, "Coalification in North American coal fields", in Gluskoter, Rice and Taylor (eds), The geology of North America, vol. P-2 (ref. 75), 469-82 and 503-22, respectively.
    • An Inquiry into the Origin of the Appalachian Coal Strata, Bituminous and Anthracitic
    • Rogers, H.D.1
  • 156
    • 85034130019 scopus 로고
    • On the physical structure of the Appalachian chain, as exemplifying the laws which have regulated the elevation of great mountain chains, generally
    • W. B. reprinted New York
    • William B. Rogers, "On the age of the coal rocks of Eastern Virginia", Henry D. Rogers, "An inquiry into the origin of the Appalachian coal strata, bituminous and anthracitic", and W. B. and H. D. Rogers, "On the physical structure of the Appalachian chain, as exemplifying the laws which have regulated the elevation of great mountain chains, generally", in Reports of the first, second, and third Meetings of the Association of American Geologists and Naturalists at Philadelphia, in 1840 and 1841, and at Boston in 1842 (reprinted New York, 1978), 298-316, 433-74 and 474-531 respectively. The term used today for describing the process of forming coal is, aptly, 'coalification'. See Peter J. McCabe, "Geology of coal: Environments of deposition", and Heinz H. Damberger, "Coalification in North American coal fields", in Gluskoter, Rice and Taylor (eds), The geology of North America, vol. P-2 (ref. 75), 469-82 and 503-22, respectively.
    • (1978) Reports of the First, Second, and Third Meetings of the Association of American Geologists and Naturalists at Philadelphia, in 1840 and 1841, and at Boston in 1842 , pp. 298-316
    • Rogers, H.D.1
  • 157
    • 0008308938 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • William B. Rogers, "On the age of the coal rocks of Eastern Virginia", Henry D. Rogers, "An inquiry into the origin of the Appalachian coal strata, bituminous and anthracitic", and W. B. and H. D. Rogers, "On the physical structure of the Appalachian chain, as exemplifying the laws which have regulated the elevation of great mountain chains, generally", in Reports of the first, second, and third Meetings of the Association of American Geologists and Naturalists at Philadelphia, in 1840 and 1841, and at Boston in 1842 (reprinted New York, 1978), 298- 316, 433-74 and 474-531 respectively. The term used today for describing the process of forming coal is, aptly, 'coalification'. See Peter J. McCabe, "Geology of coal: Environments of deposition", and Heinz H. Damberger, "Coalification in North American coal fields", in Gluskoter, Rice and Taylor (eds), The geology of North America, vol. P-2 (ref. 75), 469-82 and 503-22, respectively.
    • Geology of Coal: Environments of Deposition
    • McCabe, P.J.1
  • 158
    • 85034135994 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Coalification in North American coal fields
    • Gluskoter, Rice and Taylor (eds), ref. 75
    • William B. Rogers, "On the age of the coal rocks of Eastern Virginia", Henry D. Rogers, "An inquiry into the origin of the Appalachian coal strata, bituminous and anthracitic", and W. B. and H. D. Rogers, "On the physical structure of the Appalachian chain, as exemplifying the laws which have regulated the elevation of great mountain chains, generally", in Reports of the first, second, and third Meetings of the Association of American Geologists and Naturalists at Philadelphia, in 1840 and 1841, and at Boston in 1842 (reprinted New York, 1978), 298- 316, 433-74 and 474-531 respectively. The term used today for describing the process of forming coal is, aptly, 'coalification'. See Peter J. McCabe, "Geology of coal: Environments of deposition", and Heinz H. Damberger, "Coalification in North American coal fields", in Gluskoter, Rice and Taylor (eds), The geology of North America, vol. P-2 (ref. 75), 469-82 and 503-22, respectively.
    • The Geology of North America , vol.P-2 , pp. 469-482
    • Damberger, H.H.1
  • 159
    • 0006494355 scopus 로고
    • 2 vols, Philadelphia
    • Henry Darwin Rogers, The geology of Pennsylvania (2 vols, Philadelphia, 1858); Patsy A. Gerstner, "A dynamic theory of mountain building: Henry Darwin Rogers, 1842", Isis. lxvi (1975), 26- 37; and idem, Henry Darwin Rogers, 1808-1866: American geologist (Tuscaloosa, 1994).
    • (1858) The Geology of Pennsylvania
    • Rogers, H.D.1
  • 160
    • 0041377757 scopus 로고
    • A dynamic theory of mountain building: Henry Darwin Rogers, 1842
    • Henry Darwin Rogers, The geology of Pennsylvania (2 vols, Philadelphia, 1858); Patsy A. Gerstner, "A dynamic theory of mountain building: Henry Darwin Rogers, 1842", Isis. lxvi (1975), 26-37; and idem, Henry Darwin Rogers, 1808-1866: American geologist (Tuscaloosa, 1994).
    • (1975) Isis. , vol.66 , pp. 26-37
    • Gerstner, P.A.1
  • 161
    • 0041377831 scopus 로고
    • Tuscaloosa
    • Henry Darwin Rogers, The geology of Pennsylvania (2 vols, Philadelphia, 1858); Patsy A. Gerstner, "A dynamic theory of mountain building: Henry Darwin Rogers, 1842", Isis. lxvi (1975), 26- 37; and idem, Henry Darwin Rogers, 1808-1866: American geologist (Tuscaloosa, 1994).
    • (1994) Henry Darwin Rogers, 1808-1866: American Geologist
    • Gerstner, P.A.1
  • 162
    • 0009205578 scopus 로고
    • Freiberg
    • A. G. Werner, Neue Theorie von der Entstehung der Gänge, mit Anwendung auf den Bergbau (Freiberg, 1791); subsequently translated as New theory of the formation of veins; with its application to the art of working mines (Edinburgh, 1809). A. Hallam, Great geological controversies, 2nd edn (Oxford, 1989), ch. 1; and W. Nieuwenkamp, "Trends in nineteenth century petrology", Janus, lxii (1975), 235-69.
    • (1791) Neue Theorie Von der Entstehung der Gänge, Mit Anwendung Auf Den Bergbau
    • Werner, A.G.1
  • 163
    • 0009133664 scopus 로고
    • Edinburgh
    • A. G. Werner, Neue Theorie von der Entstehung der Gänge, mit Anwendung auf den Bergbau (Freiberg, 1791); subsequently translated as New theory of the formation of veins; with its application to the art of working mines (Edinburgh, 1809). A. Hallam, Great geological controversies, 2nd edn (Oxford, 1989), ch. 1; and W. Nieuwenkamp, "Trends in nineteenth century petrology", Janus, lxii (1975), 235-69.
    • (1809) New Theory of the Formation of Veins; with Its Application to the Art of Working Mines
  • 164
    • 0003468292 scopus 로고
    • Oxford, ch. 1
    • A. G. Werner, Neue Theorie von der Entstehung der Gänge, mit Anwendung auf den Bergbau (Freiberg, 1791); subsequently translated as New theory of the formation of veins; with its application to the art of working mines (Edinburgh, 1809). A. Hallam, Great geological controversies, 2nd edn (Oxford, 1989), ch. 1; and W. Nieuwenkamp, "Trends in nineteenth century petrology", Janus, lxii (1975), 235-69.
    • (1989) Great Geological Controversies, 2nd Edn
    • Hallam, A.1
  • 165
    • 0041377851 scopus 로고
    • Trends in nineteenth century petrology
    • A. G. Werner, Neue Theorie von der Entstehung der Gänge, mit Anwendung auf den Bergbau (Freiberg, 1791); subsequently translated as New theory of the formation of veins; with its application to the art of working mines (Edinburgh, 1809). A. Hallam, Great geological controversies, 2nd edn (Oxford, 1989), ch. 1; and W. Nieuwenkamp, "Trends in nineteenth century petrology", Janus, lxii (1975), 235-69.
    • (1975) Janus , vol.62 , pp. 235-269
    • Nieuwenkamp, W.1
  • 167
    • 0041377905 scopus 로고
    • London
    • The next major work in English was J. Arthur Phillips, A treatise on ore deposits (London, 1884). On American mining there was J. D. Whitney, The metallic wealth of the United States (Philadelphia, 1854), but it was more descriptive and statistical than von Cotta's work.
    • (1884) A Treatise on ore Deposits
    • Arthur Phillips, J.1
  • 168
    • 0003508359 scopus 로고
    • Philadelphia
    • The next major work in English was J. Arthur Phillips, A treatise on ore deposits (London, 1884). On American mining there was J. D. Whitney, The metallic wealth of the United States (Philadelphia, 1854), but it was more descriptive and statistical than von Cotta's work.
    • (1854) The Metallic Wealth of the United States
    • Whitney, J.D.1
  • 170
    • 85034149767 scopus 로고
    • Biographical notice of Samuel Franklin Emmons
    • ed. by Samuel Franklin Emmons New York
    • George F. Becker, "Biographical notice of Samuel Franklin Emmons", in Ore-deposits, ed. by Samuel Franklin Emmons (New York, 1913), pp. xxix-xlvii, on p. xl.
    • (1913) Ore-deposits
    • Becker, G.F.1
  • 171
    • 0003541587 scopus 로고
    • The influence of the polarizing microscope on late nineteenth century geology
    • By the 1860s and 1870s, other British geologists, including David Forbes, Clifton Ward and Frank Rutley, began using the method. See Beryl M. Hamilton, "The influence of the polarizing microscope on late nineteenth century geology", Janus, lxix (1982), 51-68.
    • (1982) Janus , vol.69 , pp. 51-68
    • Hamilton, B.M.1
  • 172
    • 0041377892 scopus 로고
    • The beginnings of microscopic petrography in the United States, 1870-1885
    • According to Carl-Henry Geschwind, Zirkel's and Rosenbusch's work was pursued "mostly for its own sake", presumably without regard to practical problems or questions from mining interests. Geschwind, "The beginnings of microscopic petrography in the United States, 1870-1885", Earth sciences history, xiii (1994), 35-46, p. 35. Julianne P. Mahler and Hermann W. Pfefferkorn, "The influence of the University of Heidelberg on the development of geology in North America between 1860 and 1913", Earth sciences history, vii (1988), 33-43.
    • (1994) Earth Sciences History , vol.13 , pp. 35-46
    • Geschwind1
  • 173
    • 0024251917 scopus 로고
    • The influence of the University of Heidelberg on the development of geology in North America between 1860 and 1913
    • According to Carl-Henry Geschwind, Zirkel's and Rosenbusch's work was pursued "mostly for its own sake", presumably without regard to practical problems or questions from mining interests. Geschwind, "The beginnings of microscopic petrography in the United States, 1870- 1885", Earth sciences history, xiii (1994), 35-46, p. 35. Julianne P. Mahler and Hermann W. Pfefferkorn, "The influence of the University of Heidelberg on the development of geology in North America between 1860 and 1913", Earth sciences history, vii (1988), 33-43.
    • (1988) Earth Sciences History , vol.7 , pp. 33-43
    • Mahler, J.P.1    Pfefferkorn, H.W.2
  • 174
    • 0041878614 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 40
    • In Michigan, state geologists concentrated solely on the Upper Peninsula after 1871, because investigations of the Lower Peninsula, in which copper and iron had not been found, "did not seem to promise very important additional results". Merrill, Contributions (ref. 40), 232.
    • Contributions , pp. 232
    • Merrill1
  • 175
    • 85034142304 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 92
    • Thomas Benton Brooks, for example, surveyed the iron-bearing rocks in Michigan and established a stratigraphical series for the Marquette, Menominee, and Penokee districts that could aid miners in exploration. For more on Brooks's work, see Geschwind, "The beginnings of microscopic petrography in the United States" (ref. 92).
    • The Beginnings of Microscopic Petrography in the United States
    • Geschwind1
  • 176
    • 84948734434 scopus 로고
    • The paragenesis and derivation of copper and its associates on Lake Superior
    • R. Pumpelly, "The paragenesis and derivation of copper and its associates on Lake Superior", American journal of science, ii (1871), 428-32; and "Copper-bearing rocks", in Geological survey of Michigan, Upper Peninsula, 1869-1873 (2 vols, New York, 1873). In his approach Pumpelly followed the work of his teacher Breithaupt. For a clear explanation of Pumpelly's geology see Champlin, Raphael Pumpelly (ref. 16).
    • (1871) American Journal of Science , vol.2 , pp. 428-432
    • Pumpelly, R.1
  • 177
    • 85034152389 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Copper-bearing rocks
    • 2 vols, New York, 1873.
    • R. Pumpelly, "The paragenesis and derivation of copper and its associates on Lake Superior", American journal of science, ii (1871), 428-32; and "Copper-bearing rocks", in Geological survey of Michigan, Upper Peninsula, 1869-1873 (2 vols, New York, 1873). In his approach Pumpelly followed the work of his teacher Breithaupt. For a clear explanation of Pumpelly's geology see Champlin, Raphael Pumpelly (ref. 16).
    • Geological Survey of Michigan, Upper Peninsula, 1869-1873
  • 178
    • 0041377850 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 16
    • R. Pumpelly, "The paragenesis and derivation of copper and its associates on Lake Superior", American journal of science, ii (1871), 428-32; and "Copper-bearing rocks", in Geological survey of Michigan, Upper Peninsula, 1869-1873 (2 vols, New York, 1873). In his approach Pumpelly followed the work of his teacher Breithaupt. For a clear explanation of Pumpelly's geology see Champlin, Raphael Pumpelly (ref. 16).
    • Raphael Pumpelly
    • Champlin1
  • 179
  • 180
    • 0002870321 scopus 로고
    • U.S. Tenth Census, xv; Washington, D.C.
    • Pumpelly later studied the classification, geographical and geological distribution, manner of occurrence, and the chemical character of different varieties of iron ores for the Tenth Census of the United States. R. Pumpelly, Report on the mining industries of the United States (exclusive of the precious metals) (U.S. Tenth Census, xv; Washington, D.C., 1886).
    • (1886) Report on the Mining Industries of the United States (Exclusive of the Precious Metals)
    • Pumpelly, R.1
  • 182
    • 0041377907 scopus 로고
    • Washington, D.C.
    • Silver-lead ore had been discovered in 1864, but profitable mining did not begin until 1869. For fifteen years afterwards the Eureka district was in its prime. The Eureka district was also the focus of a number of important and heated court cases between the Eureka and Richmond mining companies. Argued in July 1877 before the US Supreme Court, the case addressed the question of whether the deposits found in the limestone constituted a "lode" by definition of the western mining laws. Arnold Hague, Geology of the Eureka District, Nevada (Monographs of the U.S. Geological Survey, xx; Washington, D.C., 1892).
    • (1892) Geology of the Eureka District, Nevada Monographs of the U.S. Geological Survey , vol.20
    • Hague, A.1
  • 184
    • 85034142304 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 92.
    • Cross was later instrumental in persuading the Carnegie Institution of Washington to establish a Geophysical Laboratory for the experimental investigation of rocks at high temperatures and pressures. Geschwind, "The beginnings of microscopic petrography in the United States" (ref. 92). For more on the Geophysical Laboratory, see Carl-Henry Geschwind, "Becoming interested in experiments; American igneous petrologists and the Geophysical Laboratory, 1905-1965". Earth sciences history, xiv (1995), 47-61; and John Servos, "To explore the borderland: The foundation of the Geophysical Laboratory of the Carnegie Institution of Washington", Historical studies in the physical sciences, xiv (1983), 147-85.
    • The Beginnings of Microscopic Petrography in the United States
    • Geschwind1
  • 185
    • 0003070645 scopus 로고
    • Becoming interested in experiments; American igneous petrologists and the Geophysical Laboratory, 1905-1965
    • Cross was later instrumental in persuading the Carnegie Institution of Washington to establish a Geophysical Laboratory for the experimental investigation of rocks at high temperatures and pressures. Geschwind, "The beginnings of microscopic petrography in the United States" (ref. 92). For more on the Geophysical Laboratory, see Carl-Henry Geschwind, "Becoming interested in experiments; American igneous petrologists and the Geophysical Laboratory, 1905-1965". Earth sciences history, xiv (1995), 47-61; and John Servos, "To explore the borderland: The foundation of the Geophysical Laboratory of the Carnegie Institution of Washington", Historical studies in the physical sciences, xiv (1983), 147-85.
    • (1995) Earth Sciences History , vol.14 , pp. 47-61
    • Geschwind, C.-H.1
  • 186
    • 84968240714 scopus 로고
    • To explore the borderland: The foundation of the Geophysical Laboratory of the Carnegie Institution of Washington
    • Cross was later instrumental in persuading the Carnegie Institution of Washington to establish a Geophysical Laboratory for the experimental investigation of rocks at high temperatures and pressures. Geschwind, "The beginnings of microscopic petrography in the United States" (ref. 92). For more on the Geophysical Laboratory, see Carl-Henry Geschwind, "Becoming interested in experiments; American igneous petrologists and the Geophysical Laboratory, 1905-1965". Earth sciences history, xiv (1995), 47-61; and John Servos, "To explore the borderland: The foundation of the Geophysical Laboratory of the Carnegie Institution of Washington", Historical studies in the physical sciences, xiv (1983), 147-85.
    • (1983) Historical Studies in the Physical Sciences , vol.14 , pp. 147-185
    • Servos, J.1
  • 187
    • 0041377887 scopus 로고
    • Washington, D.C.
    • Leadville was a new silver-lead district. Discovered in 1874, it marked the beginning of the Colorado era of western mining. In the 1890s, Emmons worked on the copper deposits of Butte, Montana, where he added to his ideas on lateral secretion with a theory of secondary enrichment, a chemical process in which pyrites were replaced by sulphides of other metals, especially copper. S. F. Emmons, Geology and mining industry of Leadville, Colorado (Monographs of the U.S. Geological Survey, xii; Washington, D.C., 1886).
    • (1886) Geology and Mining Industry of Leadville, Colorado Monographs of the U.S. Geological Survey , vol.12
    • Emmons, S.F.1
  • 188
    • 85034137626 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 59
    • Unlike many of his contemporaries, Van Hise did not have the benefit of a German education. He learned his geology in the field as an assistant on the Wisconsin state survey and later with the USGS where he rose to the position of geologist-in-charge of the Lake Superior region (1888-1900) and then chief of the Division of PreCambrian and Metamorphic Geology. For more on Van Hise's chemical geology see Servos, "The intellectual basis of specialization" (ref. 59).
    • The Intellectual Basis of Specialization
    • Servos1
  • 189
    • 85034147407 scopus 로고
    • Attitudes towards natural resources: Geologists and mining engineers 1850-1900
    • Bucharest
    • Lindgren was a graduate of Freiberg, who had begun his career as an assistant to Raphael Pumpelly on the Northern Transcontinental Survey, a railroad survey between 1881 and 1884 primarily interested in locating coal. Lindgren then started fieldwork in the western mining districts for the USGS. In 1905 he became head of the USGS section on mineral resources and in 1908 chief geologist of the Division of Metalliferous Geology. From 1912 to 1933, Lindgren was the professor of economic geology at MIT. James F. Kemp, W. H. Weed and J. E. Spurr were among the other leading economic geologists who challenged Emmons and Van Hise. For a thought-provoking explanation of the different theories and their proponents, see Anders Lundgren, "Attitudes towards natural resources: Geologists and mining engineers 1850-1900", paper delivered at the XVIth International Congress on the History of Science, Bucharest, 1981.
    • (1981) XVIth International Congress on the History of Science
    • Lundgren, A.1
  • 190
    • 85034128658 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 101.
    • The presence of water in magmas was essential to understanding ore deposits; and this was a principal reason for why the initial work of the Carnegie Institute on 'dry' magmas was not well received. Geschwind, "Becoming interested in experiments" (ref. 101).
    • Becoming Interested in Experiments
    • Geschwind1
  • 191
    • 0007734866 scopus 로고
    • Petroleum: What is it good for?
    • There is much debate about America's and the world's "first" oil well. Certainly petroleum was found in other parts of the world, and it had been used for centuries for various purposes. Paul Lucier, "Petroleum: What is it good for?", American heritage of invention and technology, vii (1991), 56-63; R. J. Forbes, Studies in early petroleum history (Leiden, 1958); idem, More studies in early petroleum history (Leiden, 1959); Ernest C. Miller, An investigation of North America's first oil well: Who drilled it? (Rutland, Vt., 1964); and Paul Giddens, The birth of the oil industry (New York, 1938).
    • (1991) American Heritage of Invention and Technology , vol.7 , pp. 56-63
    • Lucier, P.1
  • 192
    • 0003458067 scopus 로고
    • Leiden
    • There is much debate about America's and the world's "first" oil well. Certainly petroleum was found in other parts of the world, and it had been used for centuries for various purposes. Paul Lucier, "Petroleum: What is it good for?", American heritage of invention and technology, vii (1991), 56-63; R. J. Forbes, Studies in early petroleum history (Leiden, 1958); idem, More studies in early petroleum history (Leiden, 1959); Ernest C. Miller, An investigation of North America's first oil well: Who drilled it? (Rutland, Vt., 1964); and Paul Giddens, The birth of the oil industry (New York, 1938).
    • (1958) Studies in Early Petroleum History
    • Forbes, R.J.1
  • 193
    • 0003458067 scopus 로고
    • Leiden
    • There is much debate about America's and the world's "first" oil well. Certainly petroleum was found in other parts of the world, and it had been used for centuries for various purposes. Paul Lucier, "Petroleum: What is it good for?", American heritage of invention and technology, vii (1991), 56-63; R. J. Forbes, Studies in early petroleum history (Leiden, 1958); idem, More studies in early petroleum history (Leiden, 1959); Ernest C. Miller, An investigation of North America's first oil well: Who drilled it? (Rutland, Vt., 1964); and Paul Giddens, The birth of the oil industry (New York, 1938).
    • (1959) More Studies in Early Petroleum History
    • Forbes, R.J.1
  • 194
    • 0041377890 scopus 로고
    • Rutland, Vt.
    • There is much debate about America's and the world's "first" oil well. Certainly petroleum was found in other parts of the world, and it had been used for centuries for various purposes. Paul Lucier, "Petroleum: What is it good for?", American heritage of invention and technology, vii (1991), 56-63; R. J. Forbes, Studies in early petroleum history (Leiden, 1958); idem, More studies in early petroleum history (Leiden, 1959); Ernest C. Miller, An investigation of North America's first oil well: Who drilled it? (Rutland, Vt., 1964); and Paul Giddens, The birth of the oil industry (New York, 1938).
    • (1964) An Investigation of North America's First Oil Well: Who Drilled It?
    • Miller, E.C.1
  • 195
    • 0042379826 scopus 로고
    • New York
    • There is much debate about America's and the world's "first" oil well. Certainly petroleum was found in other parts of the world, and it had been used for centuries for various purposes. Paul Lucier, "Petroleum: What is it good for?", American heritage of invention and technology, vii (1991), 56-63; R. J. Forbes, Studies in early petroleum history (Leiden, 1958); idem, More studies in early petroleum history (Leiden, 1959); Ernest C. Miller, An investigation of North America's first oil well: Who drilled it? (Rutland, Vt., 1964); and Paul Giddens, The birth of the oil industry (New York, 1938).
    • (1938) The Birth of the Oil Industry
    • Giddens, P.1
  • 199
    • 0041878614 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 40, 537-8
    • The budget of the second Pennsylvania state survey (1874-88) amounted to roughly $643,000 and 87 persons (geologists, draughtsmen, mineralogists, chemists, palaeontologists, and various assistants) were employed at one time or another. Merrill, Contributions (ref. 40), 444-5, 537-8.
    • Contributions , pp. 444-445
    • Merrill1
  • 201
    • 84896242344 scopus 로고
    • Anniversary address
    • The Director of the British Geological Survey, Archibald Geikie, noted that Lesley was the originator and master of what he called "topographical geology": Geikie, "Anniversary address", Quarterly journal of the Geological Society of London, lx (1904), pp. xlix-lv.
    • (1904) Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society of London , vol.60
    • Geikie1
  • 202
    • 0041377888 scopus 로고
    • Edward Orton: Pioneer in petroleum geology
    • The best evidence for this came from the second Ohio survey under the direction of Edward Orton, who is often given credit for establishing the anticlinal theory. There was very stubborn opposition to this theory from Lesley and the Pennsylvania survey. Keith L. Miller, "Edward Orton: Pioneer in petroleum geology", Earth sciences history, xii (1993), 54-59; John T. Galey, "The anticlinal theory of oil and gas accumulation: Its role in the inception of the natural gas and modern oil industries", in Ellen T. Drake and William M. Jordan (eds), Geologists and ideas: A history of North American geology (Boulder, 1985), 423-42; and Stephen F. Peckham, Report on the production, technology, and uses of petroleum and its products, x: U.S. Tenth Census (U.S. Congress 2nd Session, H.R. Misc. Doc. 42; Washington, D.C., 1884).
    • (1993) Earth Sciences History , vol.12 , pp. 54-59
    • Miller, K.L.1
  • 203
    • 0041377895 scopus 로고
    • The anticlinal theory of oil and gas accumulation: Its role in the inception of the natural gas and modern oil industries
    • Ellen T. Drake and William M. Jordan (eds), Boulder
    • The best evidence for this came from the second Ohio survey under the direction of Edward Orton, who is often given credit for establishing the anticlinal theory. There was very stubborn opposition to this theory from Lesley and the Pennsylvania survey. Keith L. Miller, "Edward Orton: Pioneer in petroleum geology", Earth sciences history, xii (1993), 54-59; John T. Galey, "The anticlinal theory of oil and gas accumulation: Its role in the inception of the natural gas and modern oil industries", in Ellen T. Drake and William M. Jordan (eds), Geologists and ideas: A history of North American geology (Boulder, 1985), 423-42; and Stephen F. Peckham, Report on the production, technology, and uses of petroleum and its products, x: U.S. Tenth Census (U.S. Congress 2nd Session, H.R. Misc. Doc. 42; Washington, D.C., 1884).
    • (1985) Geologists and Ideas: a History of North American Geology , pp. 423-442
    • Galey, J.T.1
  • 204
    • 85034121049 scopus 로고
    • U.S. Congress 2nd Session, H.R. Misc. Doc. 42; Washington, D.C.
    • The best evidence for this came from the second Ohio survey under the direction of Edward Orton, who is often given credit for establishing the anticlinal theory. There was very stubborn opposition to this theory from Lesley and the Pennsylvania survey. Keith L. Miller, "Edward Orton: Pioneer in petroleum geology", Earth sciences history, xii (1993), 54-59; John T. Galey, "The anticlinal theory of oil and gas accumulation: Its role in the inception of the natural gas and modern oil industries", in Ellen T. Drake and William M. Jordan (eds), Geologists and ideas: A history of North American geology (Boulder, 1985), 423-42; and Stephen F. Peckham, Report on the production, technology, and uses of petroleum and its products, x: U.S. Tenth Census (U.S. Congress 2nd Session, H.R. Misc. Doc. 42; Washington, D.C., 1884).
    • (1884) Report on the Production, Technology, and Uses of Petroleum and Its Products, X: U.S. Tenth Census
    • Peckham, S.F.1
  • 206
    • 0037746593 scopus 로고
    • Sur l'origine des carbures et des combustibles minéraux
    • M. Berthelot, "Sur l'origine des carbures et des combustibles minéraux", Annales de chimie et de physique, ix (1866), 481-3.
    • (1866) Annales de Chimie et de Physique , vol.9 , pp. 481-483
    • Berthelot, M.1
  • 207
    • 0030507323 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 70, ch. 9
    • Lucier, Scientists and swindlers (ref. 70), ch. 9; and Owen, Trek of the oil finders (ref. 108), esp. 1395-7; cf. Simon A. Cole, "Which came first, the fossil or the fuel?", Social studies of science, xxvi (1996), 733-66.
    • Scientists and Swindlers
    • Lucier1
  • 208
    • 0030507323 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 108, esp.
    • Lucier, Scientists and swindlers (ref. 70), ch. 9; and Owen, Trek of the oil finders (ref. 108), esp. 1395-7; cf. Simon A. Cole, "Which came first, the fossil or the fuel?", Social studies of science, xxvi (1996), 733-66.
    • Trek of the Oil Finders , pp. 1395-1397
    • Owen1
  • 209
    • 0030507323 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Which came first, the fossil or the fuel?
    • Lucier, Scientists and swindlers (ref. 70), ch. 9; and Owen, Trek of the oil finders (ref. 108), esp. 1395-7; cf. Simon A. Cole, "Which came first, the fossil or the fuel?", Social studies of science, xxvi (1996), 733-66.
    • (1996) Social Studies of Science , vol.26 , pp. 733-766
    • Cole, S.A.1
  • 210
    • 0041377891 scopus 로고
    • Seventy-five years of progress in mining geology
    • A. B. Parsons (ed.), New York, esp. 14-17
    • Some economic geologists worked for mining companies in the early twentieth century. The first company to establish a geology department was the Anaconda company of Butte, Montana; in 1906 R. H. Sales became their chief geologist and director of what became known as the "Anaconda school". See L. C. Graton, "Seventy-five years of progress in mining geology", in A. B. Parsons (ed.), Seventy-five years of progress in the mineral industry, 1871-1946 (New York, 1947), 1-39, esp. 14-17.
    • (1947) Seventy-five Years of Progress in the Mineral Industry, 1871-1946 , pp. 1-39
    • Graton, L.C.1
  • 211
    • 84927005348 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Exploratory geophysics
    • ref. 2, esp. 563ff
    • The years 1925-29 marked a period of "explosive expansion" and "brilliant development" according to one of the pre-eminent geophysicists of the time; see Donald C. Barton, "Exploratory geophysics", in Geology, 1888-1938 (ref. 2), 549-69, esp. 563ff.
    • Geology, 1888-1938 , pp. 549-569
    • Barton, D.C.1
  • 212
    • 84972714381 scopus 로고
    • Drilling for dollars: The making of US petroleum reserve estimates, 1921-25
    • Michael Aaron Dennis referred to this as the occupational style of petroleum geologists; see Dennis, "Drilling for dollars: The making of US petroleum reserve estimates, 1921-25", Social studies of science, xv (1985), 241-65.
    • (1985) Social Studies of Science , vol.15 , pp. 241-265
    • Dennis1
  • 213
    • 0042880849 scopus 로고
    • Likewise, the Society of Economic Paleontology and Mineralogy was founded in 1926. For a brief history of the geophysical society see the special issue of Geophysics, xlv (1980).
    • (1980) Geophysics , vol.45
  • 214
    • 0003690822 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 108
    • By 1960 the membership had grown to slightly more than 15,000; Owen, Trek of the oil finders (ref. 108), 1570; and Harold T. Morley, A history of the American Association of Petroleum Geologists: First fifty years (Tulsa, 1966).
    • Trek of the Oil Finders , pp. 1570
    • Owen1
  • 216
    • 84970715488 scopus 로고
    • Science in society: Petroleum engineers and the oil fraternity in Texas, 1925-65
    • On the different roles of petroleum geologists and engineers, see Edward W. Constant II, "Science in society: Petroleum engineers and the oil fraternity in Texas, 1925-65", Social studies of science, xix (1989), 439-72.
    • (1989) Social Studies of Science , vol.19 , pp. 439-472
    • Constant E.W. II1
  • 217
    • 0003697423 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 107
    • Harold F. Williamson and Arnold R. Daum provided perhaps the most ludicrous example when they asserted that geology was "useless" to early petroleum discovery because "basic geological principles were in dispute" as evidenced by Louis Agassiz, who "denied the validity" of Charles Darwin's theory of evolution by natural selection. Williamson and Daum, The American petroleum industry, 1859-1899 (ref. 107), 90.
    • The American Petroleum Industry, 1859-1899 , pp. 90
    • Williamson1    Daum2
  • 218
    • 0004296719 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 26
    • Geologists often served as expert witnesses in apex litigation in the western mining regions of the United States. According to U.S. federal law, the discoverer of a mineral vein had the right to exploit it downward to any depth. The difficulty, of course, came in deciding where a vein ended and the next began. Spence, Mining engineers & the American West (ref. 26), 195-230.
    • Mining Engineers & the American West , pp. 195-230
    • Spence1
  • 219
    • 0041878591 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Pennsylvania
    • ed. Merrill (ref. 110)
    • The Second Pennsylvania Geological Survey is a good example of this. J. Peter Lesley, "Pennsylvania", in Contributions, ed. Merrill (ref. 110), 428-56, p. 436. On the Geological Survey of Britain's response to gold rushes in Australia and other colonies see Stafford, Scientist of empire (ref. 33).
    • Contributions , pp. 428-456
    • Peter Lesley, J.1
  • 220
    • 0003882069 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 33
    • The Second Pennsylvania Geological Survey is a good example of this. J. Peter Lesley, "Pennsylvania", in Contributions, ed. Merrill (ref. 110), 428-56, p. 436. On the Geological Survey of Britain's response to gold rushes in Australia and other colonies see Stafford, Scientist of empire (ref. 33).
    • Scientist of Empire
    • Stafford1
  • 222
    • 85034129828 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Biographical notice of Samuel Franklin Emmons
    • ref. 90
    • According to George Becker, Emmons's Leadville monograph "has been of enormous importance to miners, [and] it has been of material advantage to the Geological Survey as an evidence of what geology can do for industry; and it has set an example to younger geologists of the mode of treatment proper to such a problem". Becker, "Biographical notice of Samuel Franklin Emmons", in Ore-deposits (ref. 90), p. xxxvii.
    • Ore-deposits
    • Becker1
  • 224
    • 0039249683 scopus 로고
    • The rise of American mining engineers: A case study of the Colorado School of Mines
    • Although increasingly companies relied upon continuous technical expertise from mining engineers for efficient exploitation of proved discoveries. Kathleen H. Ochs, "The rise of American mining engineers: A case study of the Colorado School of Mines", Technology and culture, xxxiii (1992), 278-301.
    • (1992) Technology and Culture , vol.33 , pp. 278-301
    • Ochs, K.H.1
  • 225
    • 0042379825 scopus 로고
    • Chemical geology or geological chemistry?
    • L. J. Jordanova and Roy S. Porter (eds), Chalfont St Giles
    • William Brock has observed that it was in practical settings - he cited American geological surveys - that interdisciplinary studies emerged. Brock has discussed the geochemical work of F. D. Adams (Geological Survey of Canada) and F. W. Clarke (USGS). W. H. Brock, "Chemical geology or geological chemistry?" in L. J. Jordanova and Roy S. Porter (eds), Images of the Earth: Essays in the history of the environmental sciences (Chalfont St Giles, 1979), 147-70; cf. R. W. Boyle, "Geochemistry in the Geological Survey of Canada, 1842- 1952", Earth sciences history, xii (1993), 129-41; and Servos, "The intellectual basis of specialization" (ref. 59).
    • (1979) Images of the Earth: Essays in the History of the Environmental Sciences , pp. 147-170
    • Brock, W.H.1
  • 226
    • 0041878544 scopus 로고
    • Geochemistry in the Geological Survey of Canada, 1842-1952
    • William Brock has observed that it was in practical settings - he cited American geological surveys - that interdisciplinary studies emerged. Brock has discussed the geochemical work of F. D. Adams (Geological Survey of Canada) and F. W. Clarke (USGS). W. H. Brock, "Chemical geology or geological chemistry?" in L. J. Jordanova and Roy S. Porter (eds), Images of the Earth: Essays in the history of the environmental sciences (Chalfont St Giles, 1979), 147-70; cf. R. W. Boyle, "Geochemistry in the Geological Survey of Canada, 1842-1952", Earth sciences history, xii (1993), 129-41; and Servos, "The intellectual basis of specialization" (ref. 59).
    • (1993) Earth Sciences History , vol.12 , pp. 129-141
    • Boyle, R.W.1
  • 227
    • 85034137626 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 59
    • William Brock has observed that it was in practical settings - he cited American geological surveys - that interdisciplinary studies emerged. Brock has discussed the geochemical work of F. D. Adams (Geological Survey of Canada) and F. W. Clarke (USGS). W. H. Brock, "Chemical geology or geological chemistry?" in L. J. Jordanova and Roy S. Porter (eds), Images of the Earth: Essays in the history of the environmental sciences (Chalfont St Giles, 1979), 147-70; cf. R. W. Boyle, "Geochemistry in the Geological Survey of Canada, 1842- 1952", Earth sciences history, xii (1993), 129-41; and Servos, "The intellectual basis of specialization" (ref. 59).
    • The Intellectual Basis of Specialization
    • Servos1
  • 228
    • 0003430261 scopus 로고
    • Baltimore and London, esp. chs 8 and 9
    • Charles E. Rosenberg's work remains, I think, the clearest and most eloquent explanation of these ideas; see Rosenberg, No other gods: On science and American social thought (Baltimore and London, 1976), esp. chs 8 and 9; and Rosenberg, "Towards the ecology of knowledge: On discipline, context, and history", in Alexandra Oleson and John Voss (eds), The organization of knowledge in modern America, 1860-1920 (Baltimore, 1979), 440-55.
    • (1976) No Other Gods: on Science and American Social Thought
    • Rosenberg1
  • 229
    • 0002843092 scopus 로고
    • Towards the ecology of knowledge: On discipline, context, and history
    • Alexandra Oleson and John Voss (eds), Baltimore
    • Charles E. Rosenberg's work remains, I think, the clearest and most eloquent explanation of these ideas; see Rosenberg, No other gods: On science and American social thought (Baltimore and London, 1976), esp. chs 8 and 9; and Rosenberg, "Towards the ecology of knowledge: On discipline, context, and history", in Alexandra Oleson and John Voss (eds), The organization of knowledge in modern America, 1860-1920 (Baltimore, 1979), 440-55.
    • (1979) The Organization of Knowledge in Modern America, 1860-1920 , pp. 440-455
    • Rosenberg1
  • 231


* 이 정보는 Elsevier사의 SCOPUS DB에서 KISTI가 분석하여 추출한 것입니다.