Late 17th – Mid 18th Century Mineralogy (and a little Cosmology)
Structure of knowledge in the 18th century
- Reflected in Diderot’s classification of knowledge for the Encyclopedie.
- History: descriptive
- Philosophy: interpretive, explanations
- Poetry: creative
- Natural history separated from natural philosophy
The Cosmologists “Theories of the Earth”
- Popular from mid-17th into earliest 19th centuries
- Attempt to explain earth history in an overarching way
- Insufficient knowledge
- Changed over time
- Contributions include
- Strong move away from Scriptural time scale; usually consider natural history as far longer (Buffon being the extreme)
- Use natural processes and increasing observational information
Minerals and rocks
- Aristotle’s influence still strong in later 17th century
- Chemists regarded Aristotle’s elements (water, fire) are the main agents for lab investigations
- Believed that minerals had once been fluid and later rendered solid by removal of heat or water
- Classification became more chemistry based.
- Four classes
- Salts and Bitumens: congealed juices
- Metals
- Earths and Stones
- Sulfurs
- Analysis using Bunsen Burner and reactions with water
- Four classes
- Textural division
- Mixst: compound of unlike parts that can not be distinguished
- Aggregate: mixture of unlike parts that can be distiguished
- Consolidation materials
- Concretion: remove water
- Congelation: heating or cooling
- Crystallization: precipitation from water
- Petrification: replacement of organic matter by stony or metallic matter
Natural Waters
- Contain dissolved material that can make some stones
- Little silica in oceans or springs
- Sea level falling in the Baltic
“Archaic Time Scale”)
- Primary
- High elevations – mountains
- Underlie all the other strata
- Crystalline rocks: granite, schist, phyllite, marble, quartzite
- No real dip or widely variable, even vertical
- No fossils
- Secondary
- Intermediate elevations on flanks of primary
- Overlie Primary, overlain by Tertiary
- Steep dip next to Primary, flattens at lower elevations
- Mixture of rocks
- Crystalline: gypsum, limestone, basalt
- Particulate: sandstone, breccia, shale
- Usually fossiliferous
- Tertiary
- Low elevations
- Overlie and onlap base of Secondary
- Flat-lying
- Less consolidated, largely particulate rocks
- Fossiliferous
- Alluvial and Volcanoes
- Youngest deposits
- Superficial deposits: alluvium, modern volcanics
Standard knowledge circa 1760
- Study the earth as a natural object
- Figured stone or fossils are organic in origin
- Minerals classification shifted from Aristotle to a chemical basis
- Use reactions with water and flame to help identify
- Rocks made up of minerals
- Various consolidation processes rely on water or heat
- Mixsts and aggregates reflect different sized of constituents
- Rocks have varied origins
- Crystalline = precipitates
- Granite, schist, phyllite: from high temperature melts
- Gypsum, limestone: from dissolved material in water
- Stony = particulate, clastic
- Sandstone, breccia, shale
- Some would be problematic
- Crystalline = precipitates
- Rocks arranged in the “Archaic Time Scale” (see above)
- Primary
- Secondary
- Tertiary
- Alluvial and Volcanoes: young
- We overlooked two things (think of these a “news flashes“)
- Sea level falling in Scandinavia
- Some dissolved silica in trace amounts in some springs