没有出版,就没有名气:重新评价阿诺德·古约(1807-1884)对冰川理论的开拓性贡献

IF 0.3 4区 哲学 Q4 GEOSCIENCES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Earth Sciences History Pub Date : 2023-01-01 DOI:10.17704/1944-6187-42.1.123
M. Wannier
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The level of detail in his work was unprecedented and has not been replicated since. Recognizing that erratic blocks of similar lithology could be followed along organized paths of deposition, Guyot could invalidate those theories that sought to explain their deposition by chaotic means, such as floods, debacles or drifting icebergs loaded with rock debris. Only moraines, composed of material transported by glaciers, could explain the mapped arrangements of erratic blocks.\n Geological proofs for extensive glaciations in central Europe had just been found, and Guyot could demonstrate them on his hand-drawn map. But, in 1848, a revolution broke out in Neuchâtel. The local academy where Guyot was engaged as a professor shut down and all staff were left without pay. Answering a call from Agassiz who had emigrated to the USA in 1846, Guyot departed Switzerland and joined his friend there in the fall of 1848. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

1838年夏天,路易斯·阿加西(Louis Agassiz)请阿诺德·盖约(Arnold Guyot)收集有关阿尔卑斯冰川的信息,目的是在9月份的法国地质学会年会上报告他们的发现。盖约在会议上口头报告了他对冰内部结构的观察和对冰川运动的解释,这对科学界来说是新的。不幸的是,由于所谓的疾病,盖约没有把他的手稿寄出去发表,也错过了他第一次被公认为冰川研究先驱的机会。在1841年至1847年间,居约发表了一系列笔记,详细介绍了他在阿尔卑斯中部地区、阿尔卑斯前陆和汝拉山脉追踪不稳定块体的野外工作结果。他工作的细节水平是前所未有的,从那以后就没有被复制过。认识到类似岩性的不稳定块体可以沿着有组织的沉积路径,盖约可以推翻那些试图通过混乱的方式解释它们的沉积的理论,比如洪水、崩塌或装载岩石碎片的漂流冰山。只有由冰川运输的物质组成的冰碛才能解释地图上不稳定冰块的排列。当时,人们刚刚发现了中欧大规模冰川作用的地质证据,盖约可以在他的手绘地图上证明这些证据。但是,1848年,一场革命在neuch特尔爆发。盖约担任教授的当地学院关闭了,所有员工都被无薪解雇。1846年,阿加西移民到美国,盖约接到阿加西的电话,于1848年秋天离开瑞士,与他的朋友会合。他的行李里装着有关他未完成项目的所有文件,包括他的地图,以及一整套古怪的岩石标本。抵达美国后,Guyot不得不开始新的职业生活,无法对不稳定块的主题投入大量精力。1849年,他展示了瑞士不稳定盆地的地图,并与美国科学促进会(AAAS)的多位成员讨论了他的结果;他还分享了他关于大型冰川形成所需的气候条件的新观点;然而,他没有正式发表他在阿尔卑斯山的工作成果,因此他失去了第二次获得更广泛同行认可和推动冰川理论接受的机会。直到1874年,在他到达美国26年后,阿加西去世一年后,盖约才打开他的高山岩石标本箱,并在新泽西学院(后来的普林斯顿大学)博物馆展示了他未发表的地图,他在那里担任教授。1883年,77岁的他对1838年未发表的关于冰川的报告的记忆仍在他的良心中,这最终促使他把它提交给neuch出版社印刷。然而,它基本上没有引起人们的注意,一年后,盖约去世了,他的名字没有因为他的原创、创新工作而得到认可。本文回顾了Guyot的工作,并分析了他与Agassiz在neuch tel工作时的关系。它试图评估他在冰川和不稳定块上的开创性工作。其中包括盖约绘制的瑞士不规则盆地地图的副本,至今仍保存在普林斯顿大学的档案中。
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NO PUBLICATION, NO FAME: REASSESSING ARNOLD GUYOT’S (1807–1884) PIONEERING CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE GLACIAL THEORY
In the summer of 1838, Arnold Guyot was asked by Louis Agassiz to gather information on Alpine glaciers, with the aim of reporting their findings in September, at the annual gathering of the French Geological Society. Guyot’s observations of the internal structure of the ice and interpretations on glacier movements, reported orally at the conference, were new to science. Unfortunately, because of purported illness, Guyot did not send his manuscript to be published and missed his first opportunity to be recognized as a pioneer in glacier studies. During the years 1841 to 1847, Guyot published a series of notes, detailing results of his field work in tracing erratic blocks in the central Alpine region, in the Alpine foreland and in the Jura Mountains. The level of detail in his work was unprecedented and has not been replicated since. Recognizing that erratic blocks of similar lithology could be followed along organized paths of deposition, Guyot could invalidate those theories that sought to explain their deposition by chaotic means, such as floods, debacles or drifting icebergs loaded with rock debris. Only moraines, composed of material transported by glaciers, could explain the mapped arrangements of erratic blocks. Geological proofs for extensive glaciations in central Europe had just been found, and Guyot could demonstrate them on his hand-drawn map. But, in 1848, a revolution broke out in Neuchâtel. The local academy where Guyot was engaged as a professor shut down and all staff were left without pay. Answering a call from Agassiz who had emigrated to the USA in 1846, Guyot departed Switzerland and joined his friend there in the fall of 1848. In his luggage were all the papers on his unfinished project, including his map, and a full collection of erratic rock specimens. After arrival in the USA, Guyot had to begin a new professional life and could not devote significant attention to the subject of erratic blocks. In 1849, he showed his map of the erratic basins of Switzerland and discussed his results with various members of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS); he also shared his novel ideas about the climatic conditions required for the formation of large glaciers; however, he did not formally publish the results of his work in the Alps, and he thus lost his second opportunity for wider peer recognition and for driving the acceptance of the glacial theory. Only in 1874, 26 years after his arrival in the USA and a year after Agassiz’s death, did Guyot open his boxes of alpine rock specimens and display his unpublished map in the Museum of the College of New Jersey (later Princeton University), where he was engaged as a professor. In 1883, at age 77, his memory of the unpublished 1838 report on glaciers was still in his conscience which finally pushed him to submit it for printing at Neuchâtel. It passed largely unnoticed, however, and Guyot died one year later without recognition attached to his name for his original, innovative work. This paper reviews Guyot’s work and analyses his relationship with Agassiz while both were working in Neuchâtel. It seeks to evaluate his pioneering work on glaciers and on erratic blocks. It includes a copy of Guyot’s map of the erratic basins of Switzerland, kept to this day in the archives of Princeton University.
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来源期刊
Earth Sciences History
Earth Sciences History GEOSCIENCES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-HISTORY & PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE
CiteScore
1.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
1
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Earth Sciences History promotes and publishes historical work on all areas of the earth sciences – including geology, geography, geophysics, oceanography, paleontology, meteorology, and climatology. The journal honors and encourages a variety of approaches to historical study: biography, history of ideas, social history, and histories of institutions, organizations, and techniques. Articles are peer reviewed.
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