Exploration Insights Great Geos ebook | Page 36

36 | Great Geologists By 1831, Sedgwick had begun field work in North Wales (he was “burnt as brown as a pack-saddle, and a little thin from excessive fatigue” he wrote to a friend), examining the region’s slaty, largely unfossiliferous rocks that he understood to be very old. Murchison placed great emphasis on fossil content; but, perhaps due to his mathematical background, Sedgwick was equally content developing an understanding of the structure of a region. This was to prove particularly useful in determining the stratigraphic position of much of the North Wales succession. Adam Sedgwick in 1832, aged 47, from a painting by Thomas Phillips. contributed to Wordworth’s “A Complete Guide to the English Lakes” with a section entitled “The geology of the Lake District in four letters addressed to W. Wordsworth, Esq.” Sedgwick formed an alliance with one of the younger fellows of the Geological Society, Roderick Murchison. From 1827 to around 1840, they were a prolific partnership that created the basis for understanding much of Paleozoic stratigraphy. Unfortunately, it was a partnership destined to end in acrimony and a complete severing of their friendship. Their first field trip, in 1827, visited the western and northern coasts of Scotland (mostly by boat and in a fairly superficial manner), the main aim being to understand the stratigraphic position of the red sandstones that formed significant portions of the outcrop. In 1834, he undertook what was to prove a definitive joint field trip with Murchison to the Welsh Borderlands. The result was a seminal statement on their Paleozoic geology: “On the Silurian and Cambrian Systems, Exhibiting the Order in which the Older Sedimentary Strata Succeeded Each Other in England and Wales” (read in 1835 and published in 1836). The term Cambrian was introduced for Sedgwick’s slates of North Wales, and Silurian for the younger fossiliferous rocks upon which Murchison had focused much of his attention. Ultimately, the boundary between the two systems was to prove divisive. Murchison (see seperate biography) possessed a vainglorious temperament. Styled by his admirers the “King of Siluria”, he sought to expand his Silurian “kingdom”, ultimately wishing to include rocks containing the oldest fossils. This included rocks that Sedgwick was adamant should be classified as Cambrian. Murchison persuaded the Geological Survey to colour much of their map of Wales as Silurian. This was too much for Sedgwick. He compared himself to a man who comes home to find “that a neighbour has turned out his furniture, taken possession, and locked the door upon him”. Murchison had “Silurianized the map of Wales”. The partnership was broken and the controversy only resolved by Charles Lapworth after the death of both Murchison and Sedgwick, when he introduced the Ordovician System, placed between Cambrian and Silurian. Before the schism between Murchison and Sedgwick, they collaborated on one important project that led to the creation of the Devonian system in 1839. Controversy existed regarding the stratigraphic position and nature of the “Grauwackes” present in the county of Devon in south-west England, that lay beneath Carboniferous limestones. Murchison’s initial position was to claim these for his Silurian System, but paleontological evidence suggested something more akin to Carboniferous strata. This dilemma was eventually resolved through the study of sections in Europe, especially in the Rhineland area, which indicated that these rocks represented a correlative with the Old Red Sandstone that warranted a separate stratigraphic term. Accordingly, “Devonian” was introduced in a joint paper by Sedgwick and Murchison in 1839. Sedgwick served as president of the Geological Society from 1829 to 1831. His presidency coincided with the publication of Principals of Geology by Charles Lyell, a book that did much to both popularise geology and provide an embracing theory to explain geological observations. Sedgwick was not taken with the uniformitarianism of Lyell. In his heart, he supported the more catastrophist views of Baron Georges Cuvier. He was greatly impressed by the work of the French geologist Jean-Baptiste Elie de Beaumont, whose recognition of angular unconformities in the mountain ranges of Europe seemed to provide evidence of sudden cataclysmic events in geological history. In his 1831 presidential address, whilst congratulating Lyell on his magnificent opus, Sedgwick did not hold back from criticising how, in the style of an advocate (which indeed Lyell was!), Lyell had sought observations to support his theory, rather than vice versa. Early in his career, Sedgwick was a “diluvianist”, interpreting widespread boulder clays as the result of deposition from the great flood of the bible. By 1831, Sedgwick had seen enough evidence