Informative #scicomm for learning about the #geology of the #tourdeFrance. Stage 10 #volcanoes

@geotdf "The Geo-Sports initiative aims to provide a diverse range of Earth Scientists with a platform to share their knowledge and insight with unsuspecting sports enthusiasts."

Link to Site: https://www.geo-sports.org/blogs/

#earthobservation #geologicalmap #massifcentral #geospatial #geoscience #citizenscience #France #GeoTdF

Geo-Sports | Geology of Sport Events

The Tour de France is one big geological field trip. Dinosaur footsteps, volcanoes and giant clams. It's all here on the Tour de France route.

Geo-Sports
@MelJLeng What a nicely presented map, clean and neat, were you involved in its creation? #geology #GeologicalMap #Malta #MalteseIslands #Gozo #BritishGeologicalSurvey #map

“To cross the southern coast of England, west to east, is thus to travel forwards - and at breathtaking chronological speed - in a self-propelled time-machine. With every few hundred yards of eastward progress one passes through hundreds of thousands of years of geological time: a million years of history goes by with every couple of miles march.”
― Simon Winchester, The Map That Changed the World: William Smith and the Birth of Modern Geology

In 1793, William Smith, was a surveyor by trade and trained in mapping and geometry. He apprenticed under England’s master surveyor, and traveled all over England surveying for canals. Smith became an expert in England’s rocks noting that they, and the fossils they contained, occurred in vertical layering representing successively older rocks the deeper he dug, and that the fossils within changed the deeper he went. Smith realized that the same sequences of rock could be correlated over vast horizontal distances, indeed over the entirety of England, and could be used to trace the underpinning rock to facilitate mapping. His epiphany became the Principle of Faunal Succession and became the key to unlocking Deep Time.
https://www.earthobservatory.nasa.gov/features/WilliamSmith/page3.php

Smith began traveling all across England while surveying for minerals, noting the rocks and fossils and began recording and mapping the rocks, choosing a different color for each rock type and estimating the extent and boundaries it covered. In 1815 he published his geological map which covered England, Wales, and part of Scotland and contained a stratigraphical analysis with the fossil index of each layer. It was the largest geological map of its time and contained a geological cross-section that revealed the 3D geometry of the rock beds.

Sadly, William Smith fell upon rough times, and it wasn’t until 1831 that he became widely recognized as the Father of English Geology and Stratigraphy, and he was bestowed with honorary degrees, titles, and a pension for the rest of his life. His beautiful map remains today as one of the greatest breakthroughs in Geology.

#WilliamSmith #geology #stratigraphy #StrataOfEnglandWalesAndScotland #fossils #rocks #GeologicalMap #map

William Smith (1769-1839)

William Smith discovered that he could identify rock layers by the unique fossils they held. His discovery helped later generations of scientists to understand the history of life on Earth.

One thing leads to another in an archive. This was the end result, finding a very interesting geological map "MS Geological Map of Northern Scotland" "Made during a tour of the Highlands in 1827" by Murchison and possibly Sedgewick. It is thought most of the notes are by Murchison himself.
#HistoryOfGeology #GeologicalMap #Scotland #geology #archives #BritishGeologicalSurvey