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Catastrophism

In geology, catastrophism theorises that the Earth has largely been shaped by sudden, short-lived, violent events, possibly worldwide in scope.[1] This contrasts with uniformitarianism (sometimes called gradualism), according to which slow incremental changes, such as erosion, brought about all the Earth's geological features. The proponents of uniformitarianism held that the present was "the key to the past", and that all geological processes (such as erosion) throughout the past resembled those that can be observed today. Since the 19th-century disputes between catastrophists and uniformitarians, a more inclusive and integrated view of geologic events has developed, in which the scientific consensus accepts that some catastrophic events occurred in the geologic past, but regards these as explicable as extreme examples of natural processes which can occur.

Proponents of catastrophism proposed that each geological epoch ended with violent and sudden natural catastrophes such as major floods and the rapid formation of major mountain chains. Plants and animals living in the parts of the world where such events occurred became extinct, to be replaced abruptly by the new forms whose fossils defined the geological strata. Some catastrophists attempted to relate at least one such change to the Biblical account of Noah's flood.

The French scientist Georges Cuvier (1769–1832) popularised the concept of catastrophism in the early 19th century; he proposed that new life-forms had moved in from other areas after local floods, and avoided religious or metaphysical speculation in his scientific writings.[2][3]

History

Geology and biblical beliefs

In the early development of geology, efforts were made in a predominantly Christian western society to reconcile biblical narratives of Creation and the universal flood with new concepts about the processes which had formed the Earth. The discovery of other ancient flood myths was taken as explaining why the flood story was "stated in scientific methods with surprising frequency among the Greeks", an example being Plutarch's account of the Ogygian flood.[4]

Cuvier and the natural theologians

The leading scientific proponent of catastrophism in the early nineteenth century was the French anatomist and paleontologist Georges Cuvier. His motivation was to explain the patterns of extinction and faunal succession that he and others were observing in the fossil record. While he did speculate that the catastrophe responsible for the most recent extinctions in Eurasia might have been the result of the inundation of low-lying areas by the sea, he did not make any reference to Noah's flood.[2] Nor did he ever make any reference to divine creation as the mechanism by which repopulation occurred following the extinction event. In fact Cuvier, influenced by the ideas of the Enlightenment and the intellectual climate of the French revolution, avoided religious or metaphysical speculation in his scientific writings.[3] Cuvier also believed that the stratigraphic record indicated that there had been several of these revolutions, which he viewed as recurring natural events, amid long intervals of stability during the history of life on earth. This led him to believe the Earth was several million years old.[5]

By contrast in Britain, where natural theology was influential during the early nineteenth century, a group of geologists including William Buckland and Robert Jameson interpreted Cuvier's work differently. Cuvier had written an introduction to a collection of his papers on fossil quadrupeds, discussing his ideas on catastrophic extinction. Jameson translated Cuvier's introduction into English, publishing it under the title Theory of the Earth. He added extensive editorial notes to the translation, explicitly linking the latest of Cuvier's revolutions with the biblical flood. The resulting essay was extremely influential in the English-speaking world.[6] Buckland spent much of his early career trying to demonstrate the reality of the biblical flood using geological evidence. He frequently cited Cuvier's work, even though Cuvier had proposed an inundation of limited geographic extent and extended duration, whereas Buckland, to be consistent with the biblical account, was advocating a universal flood of short duration.[7] Eventually, Buckland abandoned flood geology in favor of the glaciation theory advocated by Louis Agassiz, following a visit to the Alps where Agassiz demonstrated the effects of glaciation at first hand. As a result of the influence of Jameson, Buckland, and other advocates of natural theology, the nineteenth century debate over catastrophism took on much stronger religious overtones in Britain than elsewhere in Europe.[8]

The rise of uniformitarianism in geology

Uniformitarian explanations for the formation of sedimentary rock and an understanding of the immense stretch of geological time, or as the concept came to be known deep time, were found in the writing of James Hutton, sometimes known as the father of geology, in the late 18th century. The geologist Charles Lyell built upon Hutton's ideas during the first half of 19th century and amassed observations in support of the uniformitarian idea that the Earth's features had been shaped by same geological processes that could be observed in the present acting gradually over an immense period of time. Lyell presented his ideas in the influential three volume work, Principles of Geology, published in the 1830s, which challenged theories about geological cataclysms proposed by proponents of catastrophism like Cuvier and Buckland.[9]

From around 1850 to 1980, most geologists endorsed uniformitarianism ("The present is the key to the past") and gradualism (geologic change occurs slowly over long periods of time) and rejected the idea that cataclysmic events such as earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, or floods of vastly greater power than those observed at the present time, played any significant role in the formation of the Earth's surface. Instead they believed that the earth had been shaped by the long term action of forces such as volcanism, earthquakes, erosion, and sedimentation, that could still be observed in action today. In part, the geologists' rejection was fostered by their impression that the catastrophists of the early nineteenth century believed that God was directly involved in determining the history of Earth. Some of the theories about Catastrophism in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries were connected with religion and catastrophic origins were sometimes considered miraculous rather than natural events.[10]

The rise in uniformitarianism made the introduction of a new catastrophe theory very difficult. In 1923 J Harlen Bretz published a paper on the channeled scablands formed by glacial Lake Missoula in Washington State, USA. Bretz encountered resistance to his theories from the geology establishment of the day, kicking off an acrimonious 40 year debate. Finally in 1979 Bretz received the Penrose Medal; the Geological Society of America's highest award.[11]

Immanuel Velikovsky's views

In the 1950s, Immanuel Velikovsky propounded catastrophism in several popular books. He speculated that the planet Venus is a former "comet" which was ejected from Jupiter and subsequently 3,500 years ago made two catastrophic close passes by Earth, 52 years apart, and later interacted with Mars, which then had a series of near collisions with Earth which ended in 687 BCE, before settling into its current orbit. Velikovsky used this to explain the biblical plagues of Egypt, the biblical reference to the "Sun standing still" for a day (Joshua 10:12 & 13, explained by changes in Earth's rotation), and the sinking of Atlantis. Scientists vigorously rejected Velikovsky's conjectures.[12]

Comparison with uniformitarianism

One of the key differences between catastrophism and uniformitarianism is that uniformitarianism observes the existence of vast timelines, whereas catastrophism does not. Today most geologists combine catastrophist and uniformitarianist standpoints, taking the view that Earth's history is a slow, gradual story punctuated by occasional natural catastrophic events that have affected Earth and its inhabitants.[13]

Current application

Neocatastrophism is the explanation of sudden extinctions in the palaeontological record by high magnitude, low frequency events (such as asteroid impacts, super-volcanic eruptions, supernova gamma ray bursts, etc.), as opposed to the more prevalent geomorphological thought which emphasises low magnitude, high frequency events.[14]

Luis Alvarez impact event hypothesis

In 1980, Walter and Luis Alvarez published a paper suggesting that a 10 kilometres (6.2 mi) asteroid struck Earth 66 million years ago at the end of the Cretaceous period. The impact wiped out about 70% of all species, including the dinosaurs, leaving behind the Cretaceous–Paleogene boundary (K–T boundary). In 1990, a 180 kilometres (110 mi) candidate crater marking the impact was identified at Chicxulub in the Yucatán Peninsula of Mexico. These events sparked a wide acceptance of a scientifically based catastrophism with regard to certain events in the distant past.

Since then, the debate about the extinction of the dinosaurs and other mass extinction events has centered on whether the extinction mechanism was the asteroid impact, widespread volcanism (which occurred about the same time), or some other mechanism or combination. Most of the mechanisms suggested are catastrophic in nature.

The observation of the Shoemaker-Levy 9 cometary collision with Jupiter illustrated that catastrophic events occur as natural events.

Moon-formation

Modern theories also suggest that Earth's anomalously large moon was formed catastrophically. In a paper published in Icarus in 1975, William K. Hartmann and Donald R. Davis proposed that a catastrophic near-miss by a large planetesimal early in Earth's formation approximately 4.5 billion years ago blew out rocky debris, remelted Earth and formed the Moon, thus explaining the Moon's lesser density and lack of an iron core.[15] The impact theory does have some faults; some computer simulations show the formation of a ring or multiple moons post impact, and elements are not quite the same between the earth and moon.[16][17][18]

See also

References

  1. ^ Turney, C.S.M.; Brown, H. (2007). "Catastrophic early Holocene sea level rise, human migration and the Neolithic transition in Europe". Quaternary Science Reviews. 26 (17–18): 2036–2041. Bibcode:2007QSRv...26.2036T. doi:10.1016/j.quascirev.2007.07.003.
  2. ^ a b McGowan 2001, pp. 3–6
  3. ^ a b Rudwick 1972, pp. 133–134
  4. ^ King 1877, p. 450
  5. ^ Rudwick 1972, p. 131
  6. ^ Rudwick 1972, pp. 133–135
  7. ^ Rudwick 1972, p. 135
  8. ^ Rudwick 1972, pp. 136–138
  9. ^ Rudwick 1972, pp. 174–175
  10. ^ Rudwick 1972, pp. 174–179
  11. ^ Penrose Medal 1979 to J Harlen Bretz, Geological Society of America
  12. ^ Krystek, Lee. "Venus in the Corner Pocket: The Controversial Theories of Immanuel Velikovsky". Museum of Unnatural Mystery. Retrieved 2007-12-14.
  13. ^ . The Columbia Encyclopedia (6th ed.). Columbia University Press. 2007. Archived from the original on 2006-06-24.
  14. ^ Goudie, A. Encyclopedia of Geomorphology. p. 709.
  15. ^ Belbruno, J. R.; Gott III, J. Richard (2005). "Where Did The Moon Come From?". The Astronomical Journal. 129 (3): 1724–1745. arXiv:astro-ph/0405372. Bibcode:2005AJ....129.1724B. doi:10.1086/427539. S2CID 12983980.
  16. ^ "Moonwalk" (PDF). Geological Society of London. September 2009. Retrieved 2010-03-01.
  17. ^ Binder, A.B. (1974). "On the origin of the Moon by rotational fission". The Moon. 11 (2): 53–76. Bibcode:1974Moon...11...53B. doi:10.1007/BF01877794. S2CID 122622374.
  18. ^ Stevenson, D. J. (1987). "Origin of the Moon-The Collision Hypothesis". Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences. 15: 271–315. Bibcode:1987AREPS..15..271S. doi:10.1146/annurev.ea.15.050187.001415.

Sources

Further reading

  • Lewin, R.; Complexity, Dent, London, 1993, p. 75
  • Palmer, T.; Catastrophism, Neocatastrophism and Evolution. Society for Interdisciplinary Studies in association with Nottingham Trent University, 1994, ISBN 0-9514307-1-8 (SIS) ISBN 0-905488-20-2 (Nottingham Trent University)

External links

  • Impact Tectonics
  • Catastrophism and Mass Extinctions
  • "The origin of the moon'.
  • Catastrophism! Man, Myth and Mayhem in Ancient History and the Sciences
  • "Uniformitarianism and Catastrophism"

catastrophism, idea, that, earth, like, planets, have, been, affected, past, short, lived, violent, galaxy, wide, events, neocatastrophism, geology, catastrophism, theorises, that, earth, largely, been, shaped, sudden, short, lived, violent, events, possibly, . For the idea that Earth like planets have been affected in the past by short lived violent galaxy wide events see Neocatastrophism In geology catastrophism theorises that the Earth has largely been shaped by sudden short lived violent events possibly worldwide in scope 1 This contrasts with uniformitarianism sometimes called gradualism according to which slow incremental changes such as erosion brought about all the Earth s geological features The proponents of uniformitarianism held that the present was the key to the past and that all geological processes such as erosion throughout the past resembled those that can be observed today Since the 19th century disputes between catastrophists and uniformitarians a more inclusive and integrated view of geologic events has developed in which the scientific consensus accepts that some catastrophic events occurred in the geologic past but regards these as explicable as extreme examples of natural processes which can occur Proponents of catastrophism proposed that each geological epoch ended with violent and sudden natural catastrophes such as major floods and the rapid formation of major mountain chains Plants and animals living in the parts of the world where such events occurred became extinct to be replaced abruptly by the new forms whose fossils defined the geological strata Some catastrophists attempted to relate at least one such change to the Biblical account of Noah s flood The French scientist Georges Cuvier 1769 1832 popularised the concept of catastrophism in the early 19th century he proposed that new life forms had moved in from other areas after local floods and avoided religious or metaphysical speculation in his scientific writings 2 3 Contents 1 History 1 1 Geology and biblical beliefs 1 2 Cuvier and the natural theologians 1 3 The rise of uniformitarianism in geology 1 4 Immanuel Velikovsky s views 2 Comparison with uniformitarianism 3 Current application 3 1 Luis Alvarez impact event hypothesis 3 2 Moon formation 4 See also 5 References 6 Sources 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory EditGeology and biblical beliefs Edit Main article history of geology In the early development of geology efforts were made in a predominantly Christian western society to reconcile biblical narratives of Creation and the universal flood with new concepts about the processes which had formed the Earth The discovery of other ancient flood myths was taken as explaining why the flood story was stated in scientific methods with surprising frequency among the Greeks an example being Plutarch s account of the Ogygian flood 4 Cuvier and the natural theologians Edit Further information Alternatives to Darwinism The leading scientific proponent of catastrophism in the early nineteenth century was the French anatomist and paleontologist Georges Cuvier His motivation was to explain the patterns of extinction and faunal succession that he and others were observing in the fossil record While he did speculate that the catastrophe responsible for the most recent extinctions in Eurasia might have been the result of the inundation of low lying areas by the sea he did not make any reference to Noah s flood 2 Nor did he ever make any reference to divine creation as the mechanism by which repopulation occurred following the extinction event In fact Cuvier influenced by the ideas of the Enlightenment and the intellectual climate of the French revolution avoided religious or metaphysical speculation in his scientific writings 3 Cuvier also believed that the stratigraphic record indicated that there had been several of these revolutions which he viewed as recurring natural events amid long intervals of stability during the history of life on earth This led him to believe the Earth was several million years old 5 By contrast in Britain where natural theology was influential during the early nineteenth century a group of geologists including William Buckland and Robert Jameson interpreted Cuvier s work differently Cuvier had written an introduction to a collection of his papers on fossil quadrupeds discussing his ideas on catastrophic extinction Jameson translated Cuvier s introduction into English publishing it under the title Theory of the Earth He added extensive editorial notes to the translation explicitly linking the latest of Cuvier s revolutions with the biblical flood The resulting essay was extremely influential in the English speaking world 6 Buckland spent much of his early career trying to demonstrate the reality of the biblical flood using geological evidence He frequently cited Cuvier s work even though Cuvier had proposed an inundation of limited geographic extent and extended duration whereas Buckland to be consistent with the biblical account was advocating a universal flood of short duration 7 Eventually Buckland abandoned flood geology in favor of the glaciation theory advocated by Louis Agassiz following a visit to the Alps where Agassiz demonstrated the effects of glaciation at first hand As a result of the influence of Jameson Buckland and other advocates of natural theology the nineteenth century debate over catastrophism took on much stronger religious overtones in Britain than elsewhere in Europe 8 The rise of uniformitarianism in geology Edit Uniformitarian explanations for the formation of sedimentary rock and an understanding of the immense stretch of geological time or as the concept came to be known deep time were found in the writing of James Hutton sometimes known as the father of geology in the late 18th century The geologist Charles Lyell built upon Hutton s ideas during the first half of 19th century and amassed observations in support of the uniformitarian idea that the Earth s features had been shaped by same geological processes that could be observed in the present acting gradually over an immense period of time Lyell presented his ideas in the influential three volume work Principles of Geology published in the 1830s which challenged theories about geological cataclysms proposed by proponents of catastrophism like Cuvier and Buckland 9 From around 1850 to 1980 most geologists endorsed uniformitarianism The present is the key to the past and gradualism geologic change occurs slowly over long periods of time and rejected the idea that cataclysmic events such as earthquakes volcanic eruptions or floods of vastly greater power than those observed at the present time played any significant role in the formation of the Earth s surface Instead they believed that the earth had been shaped by the long term action of forces such as volcanism earthquakes erosion and sedimentation that could still be observed in action today In part the geologists rejection was fostered by their impression that the catastrophists of the early nineteenth century believed that God was directly involved in determining the history of Earth Some of the theories about Catastrophism in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries were connected with religion and catastrophic origins were sometimes considered miraculous rather than natural events 10 The rise in uniformitarianism made the introduction of a new catastrophe theory very difficult In 1923 J Harlen Bretz published a paper on the channeled scablands formed by glacial Lake Missoula in Washington State USA Bretz encountered resistance to his theories from the geology establishment of the day kicking off an acrimonious 40 year debate Finally in 1979 Bretz received the Penrose Medal the Geological Society of America s highest award 11 Immanuel Velikovsky s views Edit Main article Velikovskyism In the 1950s Immanuel Velikovsky propounded catastrophism in several popular books He speculated that the planet Venus is a former comet which was ejected from Jupiter and subsequently 3 500 years ago made two catastrophic close passes by Earth 52 years apart and later interacted with Mars which then had a series of near collisions with Earth which ended in 687 BCE before settling into its current orbit Velikovsky used this to explain the biblical plagues of Egypt the biblical reference to the Sun standing still for a day Joshua 10 12 amp 13 explained by changes in Earth s rotation and the sinking of Atlantis Scientists vigorously rejected Velikovsky s conjectures 12 Comparison with uniformitarianism EditOne of the key differences between catastrophism and uniformitarianism is that uniformitarianism observes the existence of vast timelines whereas catastrophism does not Today most geologists combine catastrophist and uniformitarianist standpoints taking the view that Earth s history is a slow gradual story punctuated by occasional natural catastrophic events that have affected Earth and its inhabitants 13 Current application EditNeocatastrophism is the explanation of sudden extinctions in the palaeontological record by high magnitude low frequency events such as asteroid impacts super volcanic eruptions supernova gamma ray bursts etc as opposed to the more prevalent geomorphological thought which emphasises low magnitude high frequency events 14 Luis Alvarez impact event hypothesis Edit Main article Cretaceous Paleogene extinction event In 1980 Walter and Luis Alvarez published a paper suggesting that a 10 kilometres 6 2 mi asteroid struck Earth 66 million years ago at the end of the Cretaceous period The impact wiped out about 70 of all species including the dinosaurs leaving behind the Cretaceous Paleogene boundary K T boundary In 1990 a 180 kilometres 110 mi candidate crater marking the impact was identified at Chicxulub in the Yucatan Peninsula of Mexico These events sparked a wide acceptance of a scientifically based catastrophism with regard to certain events in the distant past Since then the debate about the extinction of the dinosaurs and other mass extinction events has centered on whether the extinction mechanism was the asteroid impact widespread volcanism which occurred about the same time or some other mechanism or combination Most of the mechanisms suggested are catastrophic in nature The observation of the Shoemaker Levy 9 cometary collision with Jupiter illustrated that catastrophic events occur as natural events Moon formation Edit Main article Giant impact theory Modern theories also suggest that Earth s anomalously large moon was formed catastrophically In a paper published in Icarus in 1975 William K Hartmann and Donald R Davis proposed that a catastrophic near miss by a large planetesimal early in Earth s formation approximately 4 5 billion years ago blew out rocky debris remelted Earth and formed the Moon thus explaining the Moon s lesser density and lack of an iron core 15 The impact theory does have some faults some computer simulations show the formation of a ring or multiple moons post impact and elements are not quite the same between the earth and moon 16 17 18 See also EditAlternatives to evolution by natural selection Clarence King Flood basalt Glacial lake outburst flood History of geology History of paleontology Megatsunami Pensee Immanuel Velikovsky Reconsidered Punctuated equilibrium Supervolcano Uniformitarianism Volcanic winter Zanclean floodReferences Edit Turney C S M Brown H 2007 Catastrophic early Holocene sea level rise human migration and the Neolithic transition in Europe Quaternary Science Reviews 26 17 18 2036 2041 Bibcode 2007QSRv 26 2036T doi 10 1016 j quascirev 2007 07 003 a b McGowan 2001 pp 3 6 a b Rudwick 1972 pp 133 134 King 1877 p 450 Rudwick 1972 p 131 Rudwick 1972 pp 133 135 Rudwick 1972 p 135 Rudwick 1972 pp 136 138 Rudwick 1972 pp 174 175 Rudwick 1972 pp 174 179 Penrose Medal 1979 to J Harlen Bretz Geological Society of America Krystek Lee Venus in the Corner Pocket The Controversial Theories of Immanuel Velikovsky Museum of Unnatural Mystery Retrieved 2007 12 14 Uniformitarianism The Columbia Encyclopedia 6th ed Columbia University Press 2007 Archived from the original on 2006 06 24 Goudie A Encyclopedia of Geomorphology p 709 Belbruno J R Gott III J Richard 2005 Where Did The Moon Come From The Astronomical Journal 129 3 1724 1745 arXiv astro ph 0405372 Bibcode 2005AJ 129 1724B doi 10 1086 427539 S2CID 12983980 Moonwalk PDF Geological Society of London September 2009 Retrieved 2010 03 01 Binder A B 1974 On the origin of the Moon by rotational fission The Moon 11 2 53 76 Bibcode 1974Moon 11 53B doi 10 1007 BF01877794 S2CID 122622374 Stevenson D J 1987 Origin of the Moon The Collision Hypothesis Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences 15 271 315 Bibcode 1987AREPS 15 271S doi 10 1146 annurev ea 15 050187 001415 Sources EditKing Clarence 1877 Catastrophism and Evolution The American Naturalist 11 8 449 470 doi 10 1086 271929 Rudwick Martin J S 1972 The Meaning of Fossils Chicago Illinois University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 73103 0 McGowan Christopher 2001 The Dragon Seekers Cambridge Massachusetts Perseus Publishing ISBN 0 7382 0282 7 Further reading EditLewin R Complexity Dent London 1993 p 75 Palmer T Catastrophism Neocatastrophism and Evolution Society for Interdisciplinary Studies in association with Nottingham Trent University 1994 ISBN 0 9514307 1 8 SIS ISBN 0 905488 20 2 Nottingham Trent University External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Catastrophism Impact Tectonics Catastrophism and Mass Extinctions The Fall and Rise of Catastrophism The origin of the moon Catastrophism Man Myth and Mayhem in Ancient History and the Sciences Answers In Creation Catastrophism Article Dictionary of the History of Ideas Uniformitarianism and Catastrophism Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Catastrophism amp oldid 1150537923, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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