1st Edition

The History of the Study of Landforms: Volume 1 - Geomorphology Before Davis (Routledge Revivals) or the Development of Geomorphology

    698 Pages
    by Routledge

    698 Pages 131 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This re-issue, first published in 1964, is the first of a seminal series analysing the development of the study of landforms, from both the geographical and geological point of view, with especial emphasis upon fluvial geomorphology. Volume 1 treats the subject up to the first important statement of the cycle of erosion by W. M. Davis in 1889, and attempts to identify the most significant currents of geomorphic thought, integrating them into the broader contemporary intellectual frameworks with which they were associated. As well as dealing with such key figures as Werner, De Saussure, Hutton, Playfair, Buckland, lyell, Agassiz, Ramsay, Dana, Peschel, Powell, Gilbert and Davis, attention is also given to many less important contributions by American, British and continental workers. A spirited biographical treatment, attractively set off by contemporary portraits, diagrams and sketches, will make this book of great interest to the historian of science, and indeed to the general reader, as well as to the student and scholar in geomorphology, hydrology and any other earth science. 

    Part 1: 'Worlds Without End'  Part 2: The Age of Lyell: 1820-1845  Part 3: Marine Versus Subaerial Erosionists: 1846-1875  Part 4: The Western Explorations  

    Biography

    Richard J. Chorley, Antony J. Dunn, Robert P. Beckinsale