In 1861, at the age of
twenty-two, James Geikie, as stated in Chapter II.,
became an officer of the Geological Survey and determined to devote
his life to scientific work.
For seventy years, ever since
the time of the great discussions about the theories of Hutton and Playfair
in the closing days of the eighteenth century, the inhabitants of Edinburgh
had been keenly alive to the attractions of geological speculation. These
older controversies had died down, and the science was gradually
establishing itself on a broad basis of recorded facts and observations. It
was not yet included among the subjects which had a place of honour in the
University curriculum, though the professors of natural history since the
time of Jameson had delivered lectures on geology (or geognosy as it was
often called). Prof. Edward Forbes, who succeeded Jameson, and Prof. Fleming
(of the Theological College) were both accomplished geologists. The
Edinburgh Geological Society had been established in 1834, and though it did
not as yet publish Transactions, it included many active geologists in the
list of its members. Geology, with its mixture of open-air activities, hard
facts of observation, and rich opportunities for speculative controversy,
has always possessed an attraction for Scotsmen, and many of them have
excelled in it. In the Scottish capital in the early sixties the burly
figure of Hugh Miller was very well known. His writings, with their curious
mixture of geological and theological matters, of fossil fishes and final
causes, were very widely read at that time, and the sad tragedy of his
death, the result of an overworked brain, was fresh in the memory of all.
A man of very different
qualities, but a brilliant and thoroughly reliable geologist, who held a
high place in the intellectual life of Edinburgh, was Charles Maclaren, one
of the founders and for many years the editor of the Scotsman newspaper. His
special field of work was the geology of the district around the Firth of
Forth, a region filled with the most striking examples of geological
structure and the effects of geological processes. Maclaren was constantly
exploring the phenomena of this neighbourhood, and the results of his
observations appeared regularly as articles in the Scotsman. No doubt this
kept the science prominently before the public; few newspapers at the
present time would venture to print columns of exact and rather technical
description of the geological features of the district in which they are
published. Maclaren died in August 1866, the year in which a second and much
enlarged edition of his volume on the Geology of Fife and the Lothians
was published. In the same year the Transactions of
the Edinburgh Geological Society began to appear, but the Royal Physical
Society, a successor of the Wernerian Society, had for several years been
issuing Proceedings. Archibald Geikie had read a paper on the Geology of
Strath in Skye to the Edinburgh Geological Society in 1853, and among the
geologists of note who attended the meetings were Rose, Dr Page, Prof.
Foster Heddle, and Dr Hunter of Carluke. Dr Page, afterwards Professor of
Geology at Newcastle-on-Tyne, was a well-known popular lecturer on geology,
and did a good deal to keep alive an interest in the science.
In later years James Geikie often
acknowledged his indebtedness to Prof. George Wilson, and the stimulus he
had received from him when a young man bent on scientific studies. Wilson
was Professor of Technology in Edinburgh University, a subject no longer
included in the University curriculum. It seems to have comprised parts of
dynamics, mechanical engineering and applied chemistry. Wilson was a man of
great personal charm, exceedingly well informed, and always willing to help
young students along the path of learning. He was interested in geology
also, and undertook to write the life of Edward Forbes, but finished only
the first six chapters, and the work was ultimately completed by Archibald
Geikie.
Although James Geikie was always a great
reader, it is not likely that he had more than an elementary knowledge of
geology when he joined the Survey in
1861. Trained geologists, however, in those days were much less common than
they are now, and the Survey was prepared to enrol men who had a good
general education and showed special inclination and aptitude for this line
of work. Careful personal selection must have been exercised, for many of
those who then joined its ranks rose subsequently to high eminence in
science. In field geology no better training could have been given than was
adopted for these young men. They were sent out day by day with surveyors
who had acquired a knowledge of field work, and were inspected regularly by
experienced geologists, who corrected their errors and helped to solve their
difficulties. As already noted in Part I. (see p. 20), his first work was
the addition of drift lines to the solid maps of parts of Fife and the
Lothians, and the drifts of the low grounds of Central Scotland remained to
the close of his life the subject which interested him above all others, and
with which he had the fullest acquaintance in the field..
When Geikie began to map both
the solid and drift geology of a hitherto unsurveyed district, he was sent
to Ayrshire and West Lanarkshire, where he undertook the survey of a large
area stretching from Eaglesham southwards to New Cumnock. His brother was
mapping, or had already mapped,. a broad "strip extending inwards from the
coast-line and reaching from near Largs in the north to Dailly in the south,
while to the east of him was Peach engaged in the survey of Southern
Lanarkshire. In those days a fairly large area (several hundred square
miles) was assigned to each geologist. The whole district had to be very
carefully examined and the results recorded on topographical maps on the
scale of six inches to a mile. Each geologist was expected to make a
complete examination of his ground and to note all the particulars regarding
it. Petrology was as yet in its infancy, and no very minute classification
of volcanic rocks was to be expected; but the glacial geology and economic
geology were to be carefully investigated and fossil localities noted,
though, for the purpose of collecting fossils, the assistance of special
officers was provided. The determination of all fossils requiring critical
skill was in the hands of the Survey palaeontologists. Each geologist
surveyed from a hundred to a hundred and fifty miles in a field season,
which, allowing for holidays, amounted to seven or eight months, and to do
this required regular hard work, much strenuous walking, and the power of
concentrating on the general features, and not allowing one's attention to
be absorbed by inconsequent details.
James Geikie seems to have
had no difficulty whatever in picking up the essentials of field geology. He
was very diligent and had sufficient physical strength for his work. In time
he became a great walker, thinking nothing of covering fifty miles in a day.
The open-air life suited him perfectly. He had one of the gifts most
valuable to a field-geologist, sometimes described as "an eye for the
country," the faculty of interpreting
the geological meanings that
underlie surface features. Although never a professed palaeontologist he had
a working knowledge of Carboniferous fossils, and he was always a keen and
critical observer of rocks both in a fresh and in a weathered condition. His
early maps, judged even by the standards of the present day, were
astonishingly good, and always give the impression that he went thoroughly
into the evidence so far as it was available. He was cautious and thorough,
and as a result of this his maps show very few deletions due to changes of
opinion as fuller information was acquired during the progress of his work.
From the first he exhibited great ability as a draughtsman, and his maps and
sections are not only very clear, well-proportioned, and pleasing to the
eye, but show also an individuality which arose from natural gifts, and was
not acquired by copying models.
Although at that time
geologists on the Survey were not moved about the country so frequently as
is now the case, but settled down for several seasons in a well-defined
area, James Geikie had no reason to complain of a lack of variety in the
ground allotted to him. His early stations in Fife and Kinross included
stratified and igneous rocks of Old Red Sandstone and of Carboniferous Age,
and in Peeblesshire he made acquaintance with Silurian rocks, which at that
time were still very imperfectly understood, and presented many difficult
problems then unsolved. It was in Ayrshire, however, that his powers most
fully displayed themselves, and the long period of field work in that county
from 1865 to 1872 undoubtedly saw the development of his abilities as a
field-geologist. In after years many of the best illustrations both of
structural geology and of glacial geology that enlivened his books and his
lectures were culled from the note-books in which he constantly recorded the
results of his observations in that field. From his letters it seems that he
disliked the coalfield geology, which necessitated the examination of mining
plans, frequent attendance at colliery engineers' offices, and great
absorption in details which are of little general importance. But no one
would have suspected this from his. field maps, which, if we remember how
rapidly his work was done, show much detail of underground structures taken
from colliery plans.
In Ayrshire he had for
colleagues Sir Archibald Geikie and Dr Peach; one of these was ultimately to
select volcanic geology as his province, while the other attained great
eminence as a palaeontologist. Already James Geikie was absorbed in glacial
geology; and each of the trio of geologists, though doing ostensibly the
same work, had already chosen the special line of investigation in which he
was ultimately to become a master. He had a great affection, too, for the
warm-hearted, hospitable people of the west of Scotland, and in "braid
Scots" used to relate many humorous episodes in which the sturdy farmers and
"sma' lairds" displayed their pawky humour. No full or adequate account of
the work he did in Ayrshire in these years has ever been published.
The short descriptions of
sheets 22, 23, and 19, published by the Geological Survey, were in large
part written by James Geikie, but, owing to the necessities of official
publication entailing great brevity, they contain merely an outline of his
main conclusions. The geologists who revised that ground forty years after
the original survey are unanimous in regretting that more adequate
description of the evidence which James Geikie had collected was not placed
before the public.
After leaving Ayrshire he was
transferred to Kelso, and subsequently to the district ranging from Perth to
Dunkeld. From a geological point of view this ground was considerably less
varied; but as his note-books show, he was by this time deeply absorbed in
glacial and Pleistocene geology, and every scrap of information regarding
the latest stages in the physical history of Scotland was most carefully
recorded and its importance weighed. Many of the conclusions he had already
arrived at in Ayrshire were confirmed by fresh evidence in these years. And
the estuary of the Tay, with its rich succession of late-glacial and
post-glacial accumulations, became of great importance in his interpretation
of the "glacial succession," a subject to which the remainder of his life
was devoted more than to any other.
The circumstances that
determined his bent towards the investigation of glacial geology cannot
perhaps be fully elucidated now in the absence of any statement from his own
pen, but it is not difficult to find many reasons that may have influenced
him. In considering this subject we may glance briefly at the state of
knowledge of this department of geology at the time when he began field
work. The years 1861 to 1865 saw a very remarkable development of interest
in glacial geology, occasioned by a sudden appreciation of the importance of
many facts previously well known but imperfectly understood. Many active
geologists in Scotland were coming for the first time to adopt the views
which have ultimately obtained acceptance in regard to the Pleistocene
history of Scotland, and the change of opinion which was going on was
somewhat similar to the still greater change which took place when evolution
first began to take the form of a working hypothesis or even an established
law of Nature, and to sweep away a great many honoured and treasured
theories that had long held sway over the minds of men.
The superficial deposits of
sand, clay, and stones that cover the solid rocks in the lower grounds of
Scotland, often to a depth of many feet, were considered by most geologists
as being of somewhat mysterious origin. It was well known that they
contained boulders transported from a distance. Around Edinburgh and
Glasgow, for example, large blocks of rock which must have been carried from
the Southern Highlands, fifty miles or more, were familiar to those
interested in geology. That the surfaces of the rocks on which the drift or
boulder-clay rested were striated, grooved, and fluted, was also a
well-known fact. Early in the nineteenth century a favourite explanation of
these deposits, which had been supported by the celebrated Dean Buckland,
was that they were the remains of the Deluge as described in Genesis. This
theory, however, was soon discarded though the name " Diluvial," still used
by some writers to designate these strata, bears witness to the former
acceptance of that hypothesis. For a long time they continued to be
considered as flood deposits, laid down by " debacles " of obscure origin.
No rational explanation for these powerful "waves of translation" could be
formulated, and they failed completely to account for the remarkable
scratched surfaces on which the boulder-clay rested. As the study of
glaciers advanced, it became clear that moving ice, bearing debris with it,
could produce striations exactly like those in question, and the
boulder-clay gradually came to be considered a glacial deposit. Very
important confirmation of this hypothesis came from the observations of Mr
Smith of Jordanhill on the recent shelly clays of the west of Scotland. Many
of the mollusca which these clays contained proved to be of species now
living in Arctic seas, and the inference was obvious that at no very distant
epoch a glacial climate had prevailed in Scotland. About the year 1837
Agassiz had been led by his investigation of the boulder-clay of Switzerland
to the conclusion that at one time the glaciers had extended far beyond
their present limits, and had covered the plains at the foot of the Alps
with a vast confluent sheet of ice. Agassiz, in 1840, visited Scotland with
Dean Buckland, and as the result of his observations had not hesitated to
declare that Scotland also had been swathed in an ice-sheet. British
geologists, however, were slow to accept his conclusions, and the favourite
explanation of the " drifts" was that they had been laid down at the bottom
of a sea in which icebergs floated, transporting great rock boulders from
one place to another.
In 1866 the veteran geologist
Charles Maclaren, then at the age of eighty-four, published the second
edition of his Geology of Fife and the Lothians, and in his account of the
"alluvial phenomena" of the district he shows the transitional state in
which opinion then was passing from the iceberg hypothesis to the land-ice
hypothesis. "The dressed surfaces as well as the 'Till' or Diluvium [the
lower boulder-clay] seem to have been mainly due to a great envelope of ice
acting for ages; the newer alluvium, on the other hand [the upper
boulder-clay], appears to have been chiefly due to icebergs and ocean
currents. In thus attributing so much to the action of ice during a long
glacial period, it must ever be borne in mind that oceanic currents preceded
this ice action, and that similar currents must have been in existence to
transport the icebergs to which we ascribe the erratic blocks and boulders.
Alternate submergence and elevation of the north of Europe, combined with
ice on land and ice on water (in my opinion), must satisfactorily explain
these diluvial phenomena, which, as unsettled problems, are still engaging
the attention of younger geologists."
One of the ablest champions
of the land-ice hypothesis was Robert Chambers, who was widely known as a
historian and a member of the famous Edinburgh publishing firm. As early as
1852 he ranged himself on the side of Agassiz, declaring that floating
icebergs and currents of water could not possibly be accepted as a
satisfactory explanation of the boulder-clay and striated rock-surfaces. Mr
T. F. Jamieson of Ellon was making a very careful study of the drifts of
Aberdeenshire and the adjacent counties, and had little hesitation in
accepting the theory of an extensive ice-sheet, covering these districts and
filling up all the valleys, as the explanation most in accordance with the
facts which he had observed. He admitted, however, that subsequently there
had been a great submergence during which many of the uppermost drift
deposits had been laid down.
Sir Charles Lyell, whose
authority on questions of theoretical geology at that time was paramount,
was also willing to accept the former existence of glaciers over very
extensive regions of the British Isles, and described moraines that occur in
the upland valleys of Forfarshire, though he considered the drifts of the
lower grounds as mainly at any rate deposited in cold seas in which icebergs
floated. Much more important than Lyell, or at least much more likely to
exert influence on the mind of James Geikie at an early stage in his career,
was Sir Andrew Ramsay, then local Director of the Geological Survey. Ramsay
was a man after James Geikie's own heart, and therecan be no doubt that his
influence on Geikie was very great. We should not be far wrong, in fact, in
regarding Geikie as the direct successor of Ramsay in the line of scientific
thought. Through his whole life James Geikie hardly departed from the
position taken up by Ramsay on glacial geology, though of course he
developed many new and important fields of investigation. There was a
remarkable similarity in their outlook; they both relied on very much the
same class of evidence, depending specially on field geology as a basis, but
prepared to build up far-reaching deductions from the facts they had
observed. Most of the theories enunciated by Ramsay were strongly and
consistently maintained by James Geikie up to the close of his career.
Ramsay also was more than a glacialist. He left a deep mark in the study of
physiography, the origin and history of British scenery, and in structural
geology; and in these subjects also James Geikie found continual
inspiration.
When Geikie joined the
Survey, Ramsay was at the zenith of his powers. He had been for twenty years
an active field-geologist on the Survey staff; had travelled very
extensively over Great Britain on geological work; was a well-known man in
London scientific circles; and from his official position had unrivalled
opportunities of making himself acquainted with the field evidence bearing
on all geological questions then under review. He was endowed with great
energy and a warm imagination; a genial and hearty comrade, very fond of a
joke; well read in poetical and romantic literature; but withal a hard,
untiring worker who never spared himself or any member of his staff where
duty was concerned. The two men were in many ways alike, and no doubt they
were very soon on terms of close friendship; and to the latest days of his
life James Geikie spoke of Ramsay with deep affection and respect.
To the influence of Ramsay we
must add that of his brother. Archibald Geikie was already widely known for
his geological work, and second only to Ramsay as an authority on
theoretical questions affecting British geology. He had been appointed to
the staff of the Geological Survey in 1855, six years before James Geikie,
and had rapidly risen into prominence. Although at first he had given his
adhesion to the iceberg theory, his views had changed under the influence of
Ramsay, and in a classic paper which he read to the Geological Society of
Glasgow in 1862 he had described the glacial deposits of Scotland in an
exhaustive manner. This paper, so full in its details and so lucid and
moderate in statement, produced a great impression, at any rate in Scotland,
and clearly marked out the way along which future progress was to be made.
Though Sir Archibald Geikie subsequently made few contributions to glacial
geology, deserting this field for the study of volcanoes, and of other parts
of physical and historical geology, he did a very great service to science
in so clearly defining his position on a much debated subject by publishing
this paper.
As time went on, some of the
younger geologists who had joined the Survey after James Geikie became
enthusiastic workers at glacial science, and came to earn a reputation only
second to Geikie himself in this department of geology. Of these, we may
specially mention Dr John Home and Dr Benjamin N. Peach, both of whom-
became eminent authorities on the glacial geology of Scotland. In early
years they were James Geikie's most intimate friends; their observations
were always at his service, and their criticism and advice he greatly
valued.