Like every other branch of natural science founded on observation,
we observe that the great mixed masses of the earth's crust are
arranged in natural groups, and that the groups succeed in regular
order. In describing each group, we follow the methods of natural
history, whether we describe the animal species or their organic
content.
I cannot promise to teach you all geology, I can only fire your
imaginations.
Adam Sedgwick. Two undated fragments of his public lecture notes.
Adam Sedgwick wurde am 22. März 1785 als drittes von sieben
Kindern eines anglikanischen Vikars in in Dent, Yorkshire (England)
geboren. Seine Jugend erlebte Adam als eine glückliche Zeit.
Wie viele Geologen, durchstreifte Adam die Umgebung, schaute und
sammelte Steine und Fossilien. Trotz der bescheidenen Mittel seiner
Familie, besuchte Sedgwick die nahegelegene Sedbergh School und
trat danach in das Trinity College at Cambridge University. 1810
wurde er lehrender Assistent mit einem bescheidenen Einkommen.
Im Jahre 1818 wurde er "Woodwardian Professor of Geology" in
Cambridge, ein Lehramt, das vorher vom Naturkundler John Woodward
besetzt wurde. Obwohl er keine geologische Bildung besass, begann
er schon bald aktiv geologische und paläontologische Forschung
zu betreiben. Während seines Amtes bereicherte er die Sammlung
der Universität von Cambridge und führte in ganz England
Feldforschung durch.
Von Sedgwick erzählt man sich, er habe bei seiner Ernennung
zum Woodwardian Professor gesagt: "Hitherto I have never turned
a stone; henceforth I will leave no stone unturned."
Im Jahre 1822 begann er mit Feldarbeiten, welche die Untersuchung
der komplexen Geologie des "Lakes District" im Norden von England
zum Ziele hatten. Er konnte auf neue Entdeckungen und Untersuchungsmethoden
von William Smith abstützen.
Seine Vorlesungen in Cambridge waren enorm beliebt. Als fesselnder
Redner faszinierte er seine Zuhörer. Zu seinen Lesungen waren
- trotz gegenteiliger Tradition - auch Frauen zugelassen, die
von ihm viel lernen konnten.
Sein Erfolg führte ihn zu neuen Aufgaben: 1829 wurde er
Präsident der Geologischen Gesellschaft in London, 1845 stellvertretender
Rektor des Trinity College. In dieser Position öffnete er
Cambridge für Nicht-Engländer. Er wurde der Königin
Viktoria bekannt gemacht und dem Prinz Albert. Trotz seiner schwachen
Gesundheit 1850 hielt er seine Vorlesungen bis 1871.
Sedgwick was one of several great figures in what has been
called the Heroic Age of geology -- the time when the great geological
time periods were defined, and when much exploration and fundamental
research was carried out. Sedgwick's work placed him at the epicenter
of one of the most heated geological controversies of his day,
stemming from his work with the gentleman geologist Roderick Impey
Murchison. They explored the geology of Scotland in 1827, and
in 1839 they jointly presented their researches on certain rocks
in Devonshire, England, which had a distinctive fossil assemblage
that led them to propose a new division of the geological time
scale -- the Devonian. In the early 1830s, both men were working
on the rocks of Wales, which were and are very difficult to work
on due to extensive folding and faulting. However, they seemed
to be older than most of the sedimentary rocks farther east. Murchison
documented the presence of a distinctive set of fossils, one in
which very few fish were found, but that included numerous different
types of trilobites, brachiopods, and other such fossils. Murchison
named the system of rocks containing such fossils the Silurian,
after the Silures, a Celtic tribe living in the Welsh Borderlands
at the time of the Romans. Sedgwick, who had been working in central
Wales, proposed the existence of a separate system below the Silurian,
which he named the Cambrian -- after Cambria, the Latin name for
Wales. The two presented a joint paper in 1835, entitled "On the
Silurian and Cambrian Systems, exhibiting the order in which the
older sedimentary strata succeed each other in England and Wales."
Sedgwick's upper "Cambrian" overlapped with the lower part
of Murchison's "Silurian." Sedgwick had defined his "Cambrian"
using physical characters of the rocks, which were unique to Wales,
and had not relied extensively on fossils, which could be found
everywhere. Murchison, who had used fossils extensively in defining
the Silurian, claimed at first that the upper Cambrian, and then
the entire Cambrian, were really parts of the Silurian. The resulting
quarrel between the two men left them permanently estranged and
took years to resolve. There was more than a simple matter of
names involved. Both geologists wanted the honor of describing
the rocks that recorded the beginning of life on Earth, for no
fossils were known that were older than those of the Cambrian.
Murchison felt that the fossils of Sedgwick's "Cambrian" were
not different enough from his "Silurian" forms to merit the naming
of a geologic time period, and it was some time before truly distinctive
Cambrian fossils were documented. Today, following the solution
worked out in 1879 by Sedgwick's colleague Charles Lapworth, geologists
use both time periods, with a third one -- the Ordovician, also
named for a Celtic tribe in Wales -- between the Cambrian and
the Silurian, equivalent to the disputed "upper Cambrian-lower
Silurian" beds. Each one of these is now known to be characterized
by distinct fossil assemblages.
For one summer of his work in Wales which was to lead to
this controversy, Sedgwick made a fateful choice of field assistant:
a young Cambridge graduate named Charles Darwin. Darwin had passed
his examinations for the Bachelor of Arts degree in January 1831,
and began attending Sedgwick's geology lectures, which he found
fascinating. That summer, the two men explored the rocks of north
Wales; Darwin got a "crash course" in field geology from Sedgwick,
an experience that would stand him in good stead over the next
five years, on the round-the-world voyage of H.M.S. Beagle. During
this voyage, Darwin sent rocks and fossils from South America
back to Sedgwick, as well as descriptions of the geology of South
America. These impressed Sedgwick, who wrote in a letter to Darwin's
family:
He is doing admirably in S. America & has already sent
home a Collection above all praise. -- It was the best thing in
the world for him that he went out on the Voyage of Discovery...
In November 1835, before Darwin had returned to England, Sedgwick
read some of Darwin's work on South American geology to the Geological
Society of London. This greatly improved Darwin's reputation as
a scientist; he was inducted into the Society shortly after his
return. The two stayed friends until Sedgwick's death, but Sedgwick
was upset and disappointed by Darwin's theory of evolution by
natural selection. After reading The Origin of Species, Sedgwick
candidly wrote to Darwin on November 24, 1859:
If I did not think you a good tempered & truth loving man I
should not tell you that. . . I have read your book with more
pain than pleasure. Parts of it I admired greatly; parts I laughed
at till my sides were almost sore; other parts I read with absolute
sorrow; because I think them utterly false & grievously mischievous--
You have deserted-- after a start in that tram-road of all solid
physical truth-- the true method of induction...
Sedgwick's own geological views were generally catastrophic
-- he believed that the history of the Earth had been marked by
a series of cataclysmic events which had destroyed much of the
Earth's life. In this belief he followed Cuvier, and he was opposed
to Charles Lyell's models of slow, gradual geological change and
a more or less steady-state Earth. However, Sedgwick was interested
in the possibility that at least some of the "catastrophic" changes
implied by the rock record might be shown to be gradual. He originally
followed his collegue William Buckland in believing that the uppermost
Pleistocene deposits had been laid down by the Biblical Flood,
but retracted this belief after many of these deposits turned
out to have been formed by glaciers, not floods. Sedgwick also
did not object to evolution, or "development" as such theories
were called then, in the broad sense -- to the fact that the life
on Earth had changed over time. Nor was he a young-Earth creationist;
he believed that the Earth must be extremely old. As Darwin wrote
of Sedgwick's lectures, "What a capital hand is Sedgewick [sic]
for drawing large cheques upon the Bank of Time!"
However, Sedgwick believed in the Divine creation of life over
long periods of time, by "a power I cannot imitate or comprehend
-- but in which I believe, by a legitimate conclusion of sound
reason drawn from the laws of harmonies of nature." What Sedgwick
objected to was the apparent amoral and materialist nature of
Darwin's proposed mechanism, natural selection, which he thought
degrading to humanity's spiritual aspirations. His letter of November
24 went on to state:
This view of nature you have stated admirably; tho' admitted
by all naturalists & denied by no one of common sense. We all
admit development as a fact of history; but how came it about?
Here, in language, & still more in logic, we are point blank at
issue-- There is a moral or metaphysical part of nature as well
as a physical. A man who denies this is deep in the mire of folly.
Tis the crown & glory of organic science that it does thro' final
cause, link material to moral. . . You have ignored this link;
&, if I do not mistake your meaning, you have done your best in
one or two pregnant cases to break it. Were it possible (which
thank God it is not) to break it, humanity in my mind, would suffer
a damage that might brutalize it--& sink the human race into a
lower grade of degradation than any into which it has fallen since
its written records tell us of its history.