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Mini
Biographies of Scots and Scots Descendants (H)
Hutton,
James |
1726-97, Scottish geologist,
chemist, and naturalist. He was initially attracted to chemistry; he
entered the legal profession at the Univ. of Edinburgh; turned to
medicine, as it closely resembled chemistry; and then became a farmer to
allow him to study rocks and be able to pursue his interests in geology.
He formulated controversial theories of the origin of the earth and of
atmospheric changes (see uniformitarianism)
that paved the way to modern geological science. After 1768, he moved to
Edinburgh to discuss his ideas with other scholars including the physician
and mathematician John Playfair, and chemist Joseph Black. Hutton started
a controversy by standing against the popular Neptunists (rocks developed
in a great flood) and the Plutonists (all rocks are of igneous origin)
schools, proposing the theory of uniformity of causes, concluding that the
earth's history can be explained by observing the geological forces now at
work, because these forces are identical to the ones that operated in the
past. By studying the Devonian Old Red Sandstone along the Scotland coast,
he discovered that sedimentary rocks originated from, not a single flood,
but a series of successive floods; noted that the intrusion of igneous
rocks were distinct from sedimentary deposits; recorded the gradual
actions of geomorphic processes; and discussed the lengths of geologic
time. His ideas influenced Charles Lyell's
Principles of Geology, which in turn influenced Charles Darwin's
theories of adaptive evolution. Hutton's great work was The
Theory of the Earth (2 vol., 1795; MS fragment for Vol. III ed. by
Archibald Geikie, 1899); it was simplified by John Playfair as Illustrations
of the Huttonian Theory of the Earth (1802).
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