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An Account of the Basalts of Saxony
With Observations on the Origin of Basalt in General

This 1803 paper by a student of Abraham Werner provides a fascinating example of the arguments of nineteenth-century Neptunists.

Jean François d'Aubuisson de Voisins (Author), Patrick Neill (Edited and translated by)

9781108048422, Cambridge University Press

Paperback / softback, published 5 September 2013

316 pages
21.6 x 14 x 1.8 cm, 0.4 kg

Jean-François Daubuisson (1769–1841), geologist and engineer, was an Officer of the Légion d'Honneur, Knight of St Louis and Chief Engineer at the Royal Mining Corps. He published numerous papers on geology, mining and hydraulics, and is best known for his textbooks, Traité de géognosie and Traité d'hydraulique. He studied geology and mineralogy in Freiburg with Abraham Werner, the key proponent of Neptunism, the theory that all rocks had an aqueous origin. Later in his career Daubuisson was to side with the Plutonists, who argued that basalts formed from molten rock. However, in this paper, published in French in 1803, he describes his observations of the basalts of Saxony and argues that they, and all basalts, are sedimentary. This English translation by the Secretary of the Wernerian Natural History Society was published in 1814, and provides a fascinating insight into this discredited but once influential theory of the Earth.

Preface by the translator
Introduction
1. Preliminary definitions
2. Of the basalts of Saxony
3. Inferences respecting the formation of the basalts of Saxony
4. Proofs that the basaltic rocks of Saxony are not of volcanic origin
Observations on the origin of basalt in general
5. Inferences respecting basalt in general
Account of the properties of basalt
Notes.

Subject Areas: Earth sciences [RB]

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