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Revolutions in the earth

James Hutton and the true age of the world

By Stephen Baxter

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Publish Date

2003

Publisher

Weidenfeld & Nicolson,Orion Publishing Group, Limited

Language

eng

Pages

245

Description:

"In the eighteenth century, the received wisdom, following Bishop Ussher's careful biblical calculations, was that the Earth was just six thousand years old. James Hutton, a gentleman farmer with legal and medical training and a passion for rocks, knew that this could not be the case. Looking at the formation of irregular strata in the layers of the Earth he deduced that a much deeper abyss of time would be required for the landscape he saw to have evolved. In the turbulent world of Enlightenment Scotland he set out to prove it." "He could not have achieved this without his friends. Hutton's entourage in Edinburgh would turn out to be the leading thinkers of the age, including Erasmus Darwin, Adam Smith, James Watt, David Hume and Joseph Black. These brilliant thinkers would work together to develop the nascent science of geology but would also make spectacular advances in agriculture, economics, philosophy, chemistry, steam engines and military tactics." "Hutton's geological theory of the Earth would cause a profound religious debate as well as provoking decades of criticism. His revelation, however, was ultimately one of the most extraordinary and essential moments in scientific history - for without it, the work of the nineteenth-century evolutionists would have had no context, and the labour of the dinosaur hunters would have been in vain. Hutton's discovery of deep time changed our view of humanity's place in the universe forever." "This is the little-known story of a man who fought hard against orthodox beliefs to prove the antiquity of the Earth and of the dedicated loyalty of an enlightened circle of friends."--BOOK JACKET.