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Neptunism

Neptunism is a superseded scientific theory of geology proposed by Abraham Gottlob Werner (1749–1817) in the late 18th century, who proposed that rocks formed from the crystallisation of minerals in the early Earth's oceans.

Abraham Gottlob Werner (1749–1817), the founder of neptunism

The theory took its name from Neptune, the ancient Roman god of the sea. There was considerable debate between its proponents (neptunists) and those favouring a rival theory known as plutonism which gave a significant role to volcanic origins, and which in modified form replaced neptunism in the early 19th century as the principle of uniformitarianism was shown to fit better with the geological facts as they became better known.

Modern geology acknowledges many different forms of rock formation, and explains the formation of sedimentary rock through processes very similar to those described by neptunism.

Historical development edit

In the mid-eighteenth century as the investigation of geology found evidence such as fossils, naturalists developed new ideas which diverged from the Genesis creation narrative. Georges de Buffon proposed that the Earth was over 75,000 years old, possibly much older, and showed signs of historical development in a series of distinct epochs.

Abraham Gottlob Werner was the inspector of mines and professor of mining and mineralogy at the Mining Academy in Freiberg (Saxony) which became dominant in late eighteenth-century geology. His Short Classification and Description of Rocks of 1787[1][2][3][4] and his lectures set out a classification of rocks on the basis of their age based on the sequence of layers of differing material, rather than by the types of minerals as had been previous practice.

He based his historical sequence of rock formation on the theory that the Earth had originally consisted of water. According to this account, the water contained material which settled out of suspension in a process of sedimentation to form the core of the planet and the continents as a series of layers, the oldest and hardest being granite while newer layers showed an increasing number of fossils. Volcanoes had a minor effect, modifying the continents and adding more sediment as well as some volcanic rocks, and successive lesser floods added more layers, so that most rocks resulted from precipitates settling out of water. There is no indication that any of the floods in Werner's cosmogony were Noah's flood.[5]

The neptunist–plutonist controversy edit

A rival theory known as plutonism (or vulcanism) held that rocks were formed in fire. This was originally proposed by Abbé Anton Moro (1687–1750) with reference to his studies of volcanic islands, and was taken up by James Hutton who put forward a uniformitarian theory of a rock cycle extending over infinite time in which rocks were worn away by weathering and erosion, then were re-formed and uplifted by heat and pressure.

Neptunists differed from the plutonists in holding that basalt was a sedimentary deposit which included fossils and so could not be of volcanic origin. Hutton correctly asserted that basalt never contained fossils and was always insoluble, hard, and crystalline. He found geological formations in which basalt cut through layers of other rocks, supporting his theory that it originated from molten rock under the Earth's crust.

The debate was not just between scientists. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, one of the most respected authors of the day, took sides with the neptunists. The fourth act of his famous work Faust contains a dialogue between a neptunist and a plutonist, the latter being Mephistopheles, the antagonist of the play who is a devil. Doing so he implicitly expressed his favour for the neptunist theory, though he also did so explicitly and sometimes even harshly elsewhere.[6]

The controversy lasted into the early years of the 19th century, but the works of Charles Lyell in the 1830s gradually won over support for the uniformitarian ideas of Hutton and the plutonists. However, sedimentary rocks such as limestone are considered to have resulted from processes like those described by the neptunists, and so modern theory can be seen as a synthesis of the two approaches.[according to whom?]

Notable neptunists edit

Fictional account edit

The theory, and its intellectual context, are treated in Daniel Kehlmann's fictionalised account of the travels of Alexander von Humboldt, Die Vermessung der Welt (Measuring the World) of 2006.

References edit

  1. ^ This probably should say "Short classification and description of the various rocks"; See e.g. Showing all editions for 'Short classification and description of the various rocks.'. OCLC. 1786. OCLC 205028.
  2. ^ See also (e.g.) Werner, Abraham Gottlob & Alexander M Ospovat (1971). Short classification and description of the various rocks : [translation and facsimile of original text (1786) in juxtaposition]. Hafner. OCLC 311498807.
  3. ^ See also (e.g.) Werner, Abraham Gottlob (1971). "(The "Google Books" entry for) [the book] Short Classification and Description of the Various Rocks". Retrieved August 9, 2015.
  4. ^ See also the first page (labeled "page 599") of "BOOK REVIEWS" (PDF). Mineralogical Society of America. 1972. (PDF) from the original on July 14, 2007. Retrieved August 9, 2015.
  5. ^ Ospovat, Alexander, "Werner, Abraham Gottlob," Dictionary of Scientific Biography, pp. 256–264.
  6. ^ Raman, V. V. (June 3, 2002), , The Global Spiral, vol. 6, no. 3, archived from the original on September 28, 2007, retrieved 2007-06-19

Further reading edit

  • Erickson, Jon (2001) [1992]. Plate Tectonics. New York: Facts On File. ISBN 9780816043279.
  • Johnston, Ian (1999). . And Still We Evolve: A Handbook for the Early History of Modern Science (3rd ed.). Malaspina University-College, Nanaimo, BC. [Vancouver Island University]. Archived from the original on 2016-04-16. Retrieved 2017-06-01. Public domain{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Baigrie, Brian (2006). Scientific Revolutions. University of Toronto. ISBN 9780802084859. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)

neptunism, superseded, scientific, theory, geology, proposed, abraham, gottlob, werner, 1749, 1817, late, 18th, century, proposed, that, rocks, formed, from, crystallisation, minerals, early, earth, oceans, abraham, gottlob, werner, 1749, 1817, founder, neptun. Neptunism is a superseded scientific theory of geology proposed by Abraham Gottlob Werner 1749 1817 in the late 18th century who proposed that rocks formed from the crystallisation of minerals in the early Earth s oceans Abraham Gottlob Werner 1749 1817 the founder of neptunism The theory took its name from Neptune the ancient Roman god of the sea There was considerable debate between its proponents neptunists and those favouring a rival theory known as plutonism which gave a significant role to volcanic origins and which in modified form replaced neptunism in the early 19th century as the principle of uniformitarianism was shown to fit better with the geological facts as they became better known Modern geology acknowledges many different forms of rock formation and explains the formation of sedimentary rock through processes very similar to those described by neptunism Contents 1 Historical development 2 The neptunist plutonist controversy 3 Notable neptunists 4 Fictional account 5 References 6 Further readingHistorical development editIn the mid eighteenth century as the investigation of geology found evidence such as fossils naturalists developed new ideas which diverged from the Genesis creation narrative Georges de Buffon proposed that the Earth was over 75 000 years old possibly much older and showed signs of historical development in a series of distinct epochs Abraham Gottlob Werner was the inspector of mines and professor of mining and mineralogy at the Mining Academy in Freiberg Saxony which became dominant in late eighteenth century geology His Short Classification and Description of Rocks of 1787 1 2 3 4 and his lectures set out a classification of rocks on the basis of their age based on the sequence of layers of differing material rather than by the types of minerals as had been previous practice He based his historical sequence of rock formation on the theory that the Earth had originally consisted of water According to this account the water contained material which settled out of suspension in a process of sedimentation to form the core of the planet and the continents as a series of layers the oldest and hardest being granite while newer layers showed an increasing number of fossils Volcanoes had a minor effect modifying the continents and adding more sediment as well as some volcanic rocks and successive lesser floods added more layers so that most rocks resulted from precipitates settling out of water There is no indication that any of the floods in Werner s cosmogony were Noah s flood 5 The neptunist plutonist controversy editA rival theory known as plutonism or vulcanism held that rocks were formed in fire This was originally proposed by Abbe Anton Moro 1687 1750 with reference to his studies of volcanic islands and was taken up by James Hutton who put forward a uniformitarian theory of a rock cycle extending over infinite time in which rocks were worn away by weathering and erosion then were re formed and uplifted by heat and pressure Neptunists differed from the plutonists in holding that basalt was a sedimentary deposit which included fossils and so could not be of volcanic origin Hutton correctly asserted that basalt never contained fossils and was always insoluble hard and crystalline He found geological formations in which basalt cut through layers of other rocks supporting his theory that it originated from molten rock under the Earth s crust The debate was not just between scientists Johann Wolfgang von Goethe one of the most respected authors of the day took sides with the neptunists The fourth act of his famous work Faust contains a dialogue between a neptunist and a plutonist the latter being Mephistopheles the antagonist of the play who is a devil Doing so he implicitly expressed his favour for the neptunist theory though he also did so explicitly and sometimes even harshly elsewhere 6 The controversy lasted into the early years of the 19th century but the works of Charles Lyell in the 1830s gradually won over support for the uniformitarian ideas of Hutton and the plutonists However sedimentary rocks such as limestone are considered to have resulted from processes like those described by the neptunists and so modern theory can be seen as a synthesis of the two approaches according to whom Notable neptunists editAbraham Gottlob Werner 1749 1817 Juan Ignacio Molina 1740 1829 considered basalt a compacted slate Johann Wolfgang von Goethe 1749 1832 Robert Jameson 1774 1854 studied with Werner and supported neptunism Gustav Bischof 1792 1870 founder of geochemistryFictional account editThe theory and its intellectual context are treated in Daniel Kehlmann s fictionalised account of the travels of Alexander von Humboldt Die Vermessung der Welt Measuring the World of 2006 References edit This probably should say Short classification and description of the various rocks See e g Showing all editions for Short classification and description of the various rocks OCLC 1786 OCLC 205028 See also e g Werner Abraham Gottlob amp Alexander M Ospovat 1971 Short classification and description of the various rocks translation and facsimile of original text 1786 in juxtaposition Hafner OCLC 311498807 See also e g Werner Abraham Gottlob 1971 The Google Books entry for the book Short Classification and Description of the Various Rocks Retrieved August 9 2015 See also the first page labeled page 599 of BOOK REVIEWS PDF Mineralogical Society of America 1972 Archived PDF from the original on July 14 2007 Retrieved August 9 2015 Ospovat Alexander Werner Abraham Gottlob Dictionary of Scientific Biography pp 256 264 Raman V V June 3 2002 Ugandan Martyrs and James Hutton The Global Spiral vol 6 no 3 archived from the original on September 28 2007 retrieved 2007 06 19Further reading editErickson Jon 2001 1992 Plate Tectonics New York Facts On File ISBN 9780816043279 Johnston Ian 1999 Section Two The Early History of Modern Geology And Still We Evolve A Handbook for the Early History of Modern Science 3rd ed Malaspina University College Nanaimo BC Vancouver Island University Archived from the original on 2016 04 16 Retrieved 2017 06 01 Public domain a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Baigrie Brian 2006 Scientific Revolutions University of Toronto ISBN 9780802084859 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Neptunism amp oldid 1182224599, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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