Henry Darwin Rogers, 1808–1866: American Geologist
by Patsy Gerstner
University of Alabama Press, 1994 eISBN: 978-0-8173-8840-9 | Paper: 978-0-8173-5819-8 | Cloth: 978-0-8173-0735-6 Library of Congress Classification QE22.R64G47 1994 Dewey Decimal Classification 550.92
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC
ABOUT THIS BOOK
Henry Darwin Rogers was one of the first professional geologists in the United States. He directed two of the earliest state geological surveys--New Jersey and Pennsylvania--in the mid-1830s. His major interest was Pennsylvania, with its Appalachian Mountains, which Rogers saw as great folds of sedimentary rock. He belived that an interpretation of these folds would lead to an understanding of the dynamic processes that had shaped the earth. From Rogers' efforts to explain these Pennsylvania folds came the first uniquely American theory of mountain elevation, a theory that Rogers personally considered his most significant achievement.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Patsy Gerstner is Chief Curator, Historical Division, Cleveland Health Sciences Library, and Adjunct Associate Professor of History at Case Western Reserve University.
REVIEWS
"Patsy Gerstner ably and clearly presents geologist Henry Darwin Rogers and his professional aspirations, most notably his successes and frustrations with the Pennsylvania Geological Survey, in the context of the scientific institutions and rivalries of his day."--Anne Millbrooke, University of Hartford.
"Meticulously documented, this life of Henry Darwin Rogers demonstrates the challenges of geological research in the formative period of theory building, at a time when there were no policies and only unclear precedents governing science at the state level."
—The Journal of American History
“Gerstner excels in describing the growing pains of the fledgling American scientific community in the mid-nineteenth century complete with its squabbling, backbiting, jealousies, and intricate ‘pecking order’…. The scholarship is impeccable, and for a student of American nineteenth-century geology, the bibliography is valuable.”
—Journal of the Early Republic
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
Figures
Preface
1.
To Have Some Certain and Definite Object in View, 1808–1829
2.
Acquiring an Intimacy with Geology, 1829–1833
3.
Promoting an Interesting Branch of Science, 1833–1835
4.
Field Research of a Scientific Kind, 1835–1836
5.
Questions of the Highest Importance, 1836–1837
6.
Cautious and Laborious Research, 1838–1840
7.
A Capricious Master, 1840–1842
8.
A Theory So Much More Satisfactory, 1842–1843
9.
Names Make General Propositions Possible, 1843–1844
10.
A Mind and a Heart with Scope to Unfold, 1843–1845
Henry Darwin Rogers, 1808–1866: American Geologist
by Patsy Gerstner
University of Alabama Press, 1994 eISBN: 978-0-8173-8840-9 Paper: 978-0-8173-5819-8 Cloth: 978-0-8173-0735-6
Henry Darwin Rogers was one of the first professional geologists in the United States. He directed two of the earliest state geological surveys--New Jersey and Pennsylvania--in the mid-1830s. His major interest was Pennsylvania, with its Appalachian Mountains, which Rogers saw as great folds of sedimentary rock. He belived that an interpretation of these folds would lead to an understanding of the dynamic processes that had shaped the earth. From Rogers' efforts to explain these Pennsylvania folds came the first uniquely American theory of mountain elevation, a theory that Rogers personally considered his most significant achievement.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Patsy Gerstner is Chief Curator, Historical Division, Cleveland Health Sciences Library, and Adjunct Associate Professor of History at Case Western Reserve University.
REVIEWS
"Patsy Gerstner ably and clearly presents geologist Henry Darwin Rogers and his professional aspirations, most notably his successes and frustrations with the Pennsylvania Geological Survey, in the context of the scientific institutions and rivalries of his day."--Anne Millbrooke, University of Hartford.
"Meticulously documented, this life of Henry Darwin Rogers demonstrates the challenges of geological research in the formative period of theory building, at a time when there were no policies and only unclear precedents governing science at the state level."
—The Journal of American History
“Gerstner excels in describing the growing pains of the fledgling American scientific community in the mid-nineteenth century complete with its squabbling, backbiting, jealousies, and intricate ‘pecking order’…. The scholarship is impeccable, and for a student of American nineteenth-century geology, the bibliography is valuable.”
—Journal of the Early Republic
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
Figures
Preface
1.
To Have Some Certain and Definite Object in View, 1808–1829
2.
Acquiring an Intimacy with Geology, 1829–1833
3.
Promoting an Interesting Branch of Science, 1833–1835
4.
Field Research of a Scientific Kind, 1835–1836
5.
Questions of the Highest Importance, 1836–1837
6.
Cautious and Laborious Research, 1838–1840
7.
A Capricious Master, 1840–1842
8.
A Theory So Much More Satisfactory, 1842–1843
9.
Names Make General Propositions Possible, 1843–1844
10.
A Mind and a Heart with Scope to Unfold, 1843–1845
11.
Faithful Labours Cruelly Repaid, 1846–1848
12.
A Spirit Oppressed, 1848–1851
13.
In Pursuit of a Great Objective, 1845–1852
14.
Few to Take an Interest in My Volumes, 1852–1855
15.
To Leave a Land Sterile of Friendship, 1855–1857
16.
The Facts Are Better than the Theory, 1857–1858
17.
A Greatly Respected Man, 1859–1866
Abbreviations
Notes
Bibliography
Index
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC