Oxford University Museum of Natural History (Editor)
Palmer, Douglas (Contributor)
Robert Macfarlane (Contributor)
Lavishly illustrated with full-color geological maps, tables of strata, geological cross-sections, photographs, and fossil illustrations from the archives of the Oxford University Museum of Natural History, the Geological Society, the London Natural History Museum, and others, Strata provides the first complete presentation of the revolutionary work of nineteenth-century geologist William Smith, the so-called father of English geology. It illustrates the story of his career, from apprentice to surveyor for hire and fossil collector, from his 1799 geological map of Bath and table of strata to his groundbreaking 1815 geological strata map, and from his imprisonment for debt to his detailed stratigraphical county maps. This sumptuous volume begins with an introduction by Douglas Palmer that places Smith’s work in the context of earlier, concurrent, and subsequent ideas regarding the structure and natural processes of the earth, geographical mapping, and biostratigraphical theories. The book is then organized into four parts, each beginning with four sheets from Smith’s hand-colored, 1815 strata map, accompanied by related geological cross-sections and county maps, and followed by fossil illustrations by Smith contemporary James Sowerby, all organized by strata. Essays between each section explore the aims of Smith’s work and its application in the fields of mining, agriculture, cartography and hydrology. Strata concludes with reflections on Smith’s later years as an itinerant geologist and surveyor, plagiarism by a rival, receipt of the first Wollaston Medal in recognition of his achievements, and the influence of his geological mapping and biostratigraphical theories on the sciences—all of which culminated in the establishment of the modern geological timescale. Featuring a foreword by Robert Macfarlane, Strata is a glorious testament to the lasting geological and illustrative genius of William Smith, a collection as colossal and awe-inspiring as the layers of the Earth themselves.
...MoreReview Paul D. Brinkman (2022) Review of "Strata: William Smith’s Geological Maps". Archives of Natural History (pp. 221-221).
Book
Peter Wigley;
(2019)
William Smith's Fossils Reunited: Strata Identied by Organized Fossils and A Stratigraphical System of Organized Fossils by William Smith
(/isis/citation/CBB361792007/)
Article
Roy W. McIntyre;
(2020)
A look at 'Part of Scotland' on William Smith's 1815 map
(/isis/citation/CBB323898242/)
Article
Roy W. McIntyre;
(2020)
A comparison between 'Part of Scotland' on William Smith's maps and contemporary maps of Scotland by Louis-Albert Necker and Jean-François Berger
(/isis/citation/CBB136056221/)
Chapter
Chapman, Mike;
(2008)
City and Landscape: The Mapping of Bath
(/isis/citation/CBB001022816/)
Book
Freeman, Michael J.;
(2004)
Victorians and the Prehistoric: Tracks to a Lost World
(/isis/citation/CBB000520147/)
Book
Paul Henderson;
(2015)
James Sowerby: The Enlightenment's Natural Historian
(/isis/citation/CBB129548231/)
Article
Kólbl-Ebert, Martina;
(2012)
Sketching Rocks and Landscape: Drawing as a Female Accomplishment in the Service of Geology
(/isis/citation/CBB001251742/)
Chapter
Rudwick, Martin;
(1997)
Smith, Cuvier et Brongniart, et la reconstruction de la géohistoire
(/isis/citation/CBB000078028/)
Article
Rudwick, Martin;
(1996)
Cuvier and Brongniart, William Smith, and the reconstruction of geohistory
(/isis/citation/CBB000068008/)
Article
Henderson, Paul;
(2013)
James Sowerby: Meteorites and His Meteoritic Sword Made for the Emperor of Russia, Alexander I, in 1814
(/isis/citation/CBB001320592/)
Article
Cleevely, R. J.;
(2012)
The Collaboration of the French Naturalist Charles de Gerville with the Sowerby Family and Its Contribution to Early Nineteenth-Century Geology
(/isis/citation/CBB001220857/)
Article
McIntyre;
(2019)
Late revisions to William Smith's 1815 map in the vicinity of Canonbie and Bewcastle in the Borderlands
(/isis/citation/CBB376027717/)
Article
Patrick N. Wyse Jackson;
(2016)
William Smith and Ireland: Sources of Irish Geological Information on His Geological Map of 1820
(/isis/citation/CBB905762938/)
Book
Winchester, Simon;
(2001)
The Map that Changed the World: William Smith and the Birth of Modern Geology
(/isis/citation/CBB000630875/)
Book
Rudwick, Martin J. S.;
(2014)
Earth's Deep History: How It Was Discovered and Why It Matters
(/isis/citation/CBB001422030/)
Thesis
Bigelow, Allison Margaret;
(2012)
Mining Empire, Planting Empire: The Colonial Scientific Literatures of the Americas
(/isis/citation/CBB001561024/)
Article
Francesco Luzzini;
(2015)
Il tesoro umile, il tesoro ignorato. I fontanili della Pianura Padana
(/isis/citation/CBB394054680/)
Article
Anderson, Gemma;
(2014)
Endangered: A Study of Morphological Drawing in Zoological Taxonomy
(/isis/citation/CBB001201296/)
Article
Lukas Rieppel;
(2015)
Prospecting for Dinosaurs on the Mining Frontier: The Value of Information in America’s Gilded Age
(/isis/citation/CBB570078874/)
Book
Douglas, Kirsty;
(2010)
Pictures of Time Beneath: Science, Heritage and the Uses of the Deep Past
(/isis/citation/CBB001033602/)
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