Cuvier’s “Revolution of the Globe”
Main contributions
- Widely read, influential work
- Goal of expanding/reforming geognosy by incorporating fossils; helped set an international research agenda
- Included analogies with study of human history
Main points
- Revolutions
- Mental tour of transect from plains to mountains
- Fossils throughout Tertiary and Secondary strata
- Fossils change
- Marine invertebrates vs. Terrestrial quadrapeds
- Different terrestrial faunas through Tertiary
- Sudden: some quadrapeds preserved in ice with skin, hair, flesh
- Also inferred for Primary but no fossil evidence
- Suggests upheaval (new feature)
- Infer abrupt changes “revolutions”
- Former land areas inundated
- Cause widespread extinction of terrestrial animals
- Modern Processes
- Inventory
- Landslides, alluvia, dunes, cliffs
- Deposits under water
- Precipitates
- Corals
- Volcanoes
- Conclude none are sufficient to cause faunal revolutions and disruption of strata: “The thread of operations is broken; nature has changed course, and none of the agents she now employs today would have been sufficient to produce her former works.”
- Inventory
- Geological Systems
- Older Systems: Cosmologists
- Varied stories that use Creation and Deluge in some form (some allegorical) to bring earth into its current state
- Modern Systems: mid-late 18th century
- Incorporate more chemistry and field observations
- Problem with all: Too much speculation, not enough data
- Older Systems: Cosmologists
- How to make progress
- Focus on observations and collect data
- Expand study of strata to include fossils that can give evidence of changing environments and revolutions
- Use of fossils
- Which are most reliable?
- Marine invertebrates
- Respond to environmental changes
- Less affected by revolutions since these involve flooding of landscape
- Not fully possible to know if ancient forms are extinct since much of ocean floor unstudied
- Terrestrial quadrapeds
- Fairly rapid turnover in section
- Affected by the marine inundations associated with revolutions
- Large quadrapeds are likely to be known, so extinction can be proven
- Terrestrial record is more reliable for detecting revolutions
- Marine invertebrates
- Which are most reliable?
- Nature of fossil record
- As we move downward in the section
- Youngest deposits contain modern species
- Slightly older have new species of extent genera
- Older have species of unknown genera
- Transmutation
- Cuvier does not accept this for the reasons
- No known mechanism
- Comparisions of ancient (Egypt) and modern show no changes
- Hard to imagine transitions because animals are all-integrated structures
- Cuvier does not accept this for the reasons
- Fossil Progression
- Humans absent except in most superficial deposits
- Mammals are limited to the most recent beds (Tertiary)
- Reptiles and amphibians are older (Secondary)
- As we move downward in the section
- Human History and the Last Revolution
- Written records of human history all end about 5-6,000 years in the past
- Natural chronometers (De Luc) all suggest that the present landscape is quite young
- Lake sediments, talus slopes, etc.
- Human remains limited
- Infer that human history postdates the last revolution
- Agenda for future research
- Focus on field work, not speculation
- Extend geognosy to include fossils along with lithology
- Focus on work on Secondary and Tertiary strata
- Compare different basins, particularly above the Chalk (i.e., Tertiary)
- Study recent processes to better understand strata