William BucklandWilliam Buckland is remembered as the first man to identify and name a dinosaur (although the name dinosaur had not yet been coined by Richard Owen). This was the megalosaur. Partly in response to the controversial works of Cuvier, Buckland wrote Reliquiae Diluvianae (1823) in which he argued that the evidence of geology alone demonstrated that a great flood had covered the entire globe. This move helped to make geology look more respectable in a religiously conservative England and perhaps to advance Buckland's own career at Oxford by making geology appear to be a respectable companion to the classics.

Buckland was also one of the authors chosen to write a Bridgewater treatise.

Further reading

Buckland. Reliquiae Diluvianae; or, Observations on the Organic Remains Contained in Caves, Fissures, and Diluvial Gravel, and on other Geological Phenomena, Attesting the Action of an Universal Deluge (1823).

Rudwick , M. The Great Devonian Controversy

Rudwick , M. The Meaning of Fossil

Secord, J. Controversy in Victorian Geology: The Cambrian-Silurian Debate. Princeton, 1986


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