Roderick Murchison

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Sir Roderick Murchison
Sir Roderick Murchison
Sir Roderick Impey Murchison posing with cane, not dated
Sir Roderick Impey Murchison posing with cane, not dated

Sir Roderick Impey Murchison, 1st Baronet KCB FRS (19 February 1792 - 22 October 1871), was an influential Scottish geologist who first described and investigated the Silurian system.

[edit] Early life

He was born at Tarradale, Ross and Cromarty, Scotland, the son of Kenneth Murchison (died 1796). He attended Durham School , and then the military college at Great Marlow to be trained for the army. In 1808 he landed with Wellesley in Galicia, and was present at the actions of Roliça and Vimeiro. Subsequently under Sir John Moore he took part in the retreat to Corunna and the final battle there.

[edit] Geology

After eight years of service he left the army, and married the daughter of General Hugonin, of Nursted House, Hampshire. They spent two years in mainland Europe, particularly in Italy. They then settled in Barnard Castle, County Durham, England in 1818. when Murchison made the acquaintance of Sir Humphry Davy, who urged him to turn his energy to science, after hearing that he wasted his time riding to hounds and shooting. He became fascinated by the young science of geology. He joined the Geological Society of London and soon showed himself one of its most active members. His colleagues there included Adam Sedgwick, William Conybeare, William Buckland, William Fitton, Charles Lyell and Charles Darwin.

Exploring with his wife, he studied the geology of the south of England, devoting special attention to the rocks of the north-west of Sussex and the adjoining parts of Hampshire and Surrey, on which, aided by Fitton, he wrote his first scientific paper, read to the society in 1825. Turning his attention to Continental geology, he explored with Lyell the volcanic region of Auvergne, parts of southern France, northern Italy, Tyrol and Switzerland. A little later, with Sedgwick as his companion, he attacked the difficult problem of the geological structure of the Alps, and their joint paper giving the results of their study is one of the classics in the literature of Alpine geology.

[edit] Silurian system

In 1831 he went to the border of England and Wales, to attempt to discover whether the greywacke rocks underlying the Old Red Sandstone could be grouped into a definite order of succession. The result was the establishment of the Silurian system under which were grouped for the first time a remarkable series of formations, each replete with distinctive organic remains other than and very different from those of the other rocks of England. These researches, together with descriptions of the coal-fields and overlying formations in south Wales and the English border counties, were embodied in The Silurian System (1839).

The establishment of the Silurian system was followed by that of the Devonian system, an investigation in which Murchison assisted, both in the south-west of England and in the Rhineland. Soon afterwards Murchison projected an important geological campaign in Russia with the view of extending to that part of the Continent the classification he had succeeded in elaborating for the older rocks of western Europe. He was accompanied by Edouard de Verneuil (1805 - 1873) and Count Alexander von Keyserling (1815 - 1891), in conjunction with whom he produced a work on Russia and the Ural Mountains. The publication of this monograph in 1845 completes the first and most active half of Murchison’s scientific career.

In 1846 he was knighted, and in the same year he presided over the meeting of the British Association at Southampton. During the later years of his life a large part of his time was devoted to the affairs of the Royal Geographical Society, of which he was in 1830 one of the founders, and he was president 1843-1845, 1851-1853, 1856-1859 and 1862-1871.

[edit] Scotland

The chief geological investigation of the last decade of his life was devoted to the Highlands of Scotland, where he wrongly believed he had succeeded in showing that the vast masses of crystalline schists, previously supposed to be part of what used to be termed the Primitive formations, were really not older than the Silurian period, for that underneath them lay beds of limestone and quartzite containing Lower Silurian (Cambrian) fossils. James Nicol recognised the fallacy in the Murchison's extant theory and propounded his own ideas, but these were subsequently superseded by the correct theory of Charles Lapworth which was corroborated by Benjamin Peach and John Horne. Their subsequent research showed that the infraposition of the fossiliferous rocks is not their original place, but had been brought about by a gigantic system of dislocations, whereby successive masses of the oldest gneisses, have been torn up from below and thrust bodily over the younger formations.

In 1855 Murchison was appointed director-general of the British Geological Survey and director of the Royal School of Mines and the Museum of Practical Geology in Jermyn Street, London, in succession to Sir Henry De la Beche, who had been the first to hold these offices. Official routine now occupied much of his time, but he found opportunity for the Highland researches just alluded to, and also for preparing successive editions of his work Siluria (1854, ed. 5, 1872), which was meant to present the main features of the original Silurian System together with a digest of subsequent discoveries, particularly of those which showed the extension of the Silurian classification into other countries.

Funerary monument, Brompton Cemetery, London
Funerary monument, Brompton Cemetery, London

[edit] Later life

In 1863 he was made a KCB, and three years later was created a baronet. The learned societies of his own country bestowed their highest rewards upon him: the Royal Society gave him the Copley medal, the Geological Society its Wollaston medal, and the Royal Society of Edinburgh its Brisbane Medal. There was hardly a foreign scientific society of note which had not his name enrolled among its honorary members. The French Academy of Sciences awarded him the prix Cuvier, and elected him one of its eight foreign members in succession to Michael Faraday.

One of the closing public acts of Murchison’s life was the founding of a chair of geology and mineralogy at the University of Edinburgh. Under his will there was established the Murchison Medal and a geological fund (The Murchison Fund) to be awarded annually by the council of the Geological Society in London.

Murchison died in 1871, and is buried in Brompton Cemetery, London.[1]

[edit] Personal life

He was married to Charlotte Hugonin (8 April 1788 - 9 February 1869), only daughter of General Hugonin.

[edit] Legacy

The Murchison crater on the Moon and at least fifteen geographical locations on Earth are named after him.

Mount Murchison, just west of Squamish, British Columbia, Canada, and tiny Murchison Island in the Queen Charlotte Islands in the same province, were named for him, as were Murchison Falls (Uganda) and the Murchison River in Western Australia.[1]

[edit] Memorial tablet

Memorial tablet
Memorial tablet

The memorial tablet of Murchison was installed November 3, 2005, in front of School #9 in Perm ([2], [3]). It consists of stone of irregular form about 2 meters long and a dark stone plate with inscription:

To Roderick Impey Murchison, Scottish geologist, explorer of Perm Krai, who gives to the last period of Paleozoic era the name of Perm.

The decision to perpetuate explorer's name was accepted by the school administration and pupils in connection with discussion of idea to establish in Perm a pillar or an arch devoted to Roderick Murchison.

[edit] Works

  • Geology of Cheltenham (1834)
  • The Silurian System (1839)
  • On the Geological Structure of the Northern and Central Regions of Russia in Europe (1841)
  • Geology of Russia in Europe and the Ural Mountains (1845)

[edit] Literature

  • Geikie, Life of Sir Roderick I. Murchison (London, 1875)

[edit] References

  • John L. Morton, King of Siluria — How Roderick Murchison Changed the Face of Geology (Brocken Spectre Publishing, 2004, ISBN 0-9546829-0-4)
  • This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.
  • Martin J. S. Rudwick, The Great Devonian Controversy: The Shaping of Scientific Knowledge among Gentlemanly Specialists (University of Chicago Press, 1985) — the rise of Murchison to power
  • James A. Secord, Controversy in Victorian Geology: The Cambrian-Silurian Dispute (Princeton University Press, 1986) — documents the battle between Murchison and Adam Sedgwick