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The History and Philosophy of Earthquakes
Accompanied by John Michell's 'Conjectures Concerning the Cause, and Observations upon the Phænomena of Earthquakes'
Two of the most important scientific works published in the aftermath of the devastating 1755 Lisbon earthquake.
Member of the Royal Academy of Berlin (Edited by)
9781108059909, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 22 August 2013
432 pages
21.6 x 14 x 2.4 cm, 0.55 kg
The aftershocks of the devastating Lisbon earthquake of 1755 were not only physical: the scientific investigations undertaken in its wake formed the basis of the science of seismology. Published in 1757, the present work is, in the words of its presumed editor, John Bevis (1695–1771), 'a repertory of all that has been written of earthquakes and their causes', and includes several recent papers published by the Royal Society. At the time, scientists suggested subterranean fires or electrical shocks in the atmosphere as possible causes of earthquakes. This reissue also incorporates a brief 1760 work by John Michell (1724/5–93), which uses Bevis' collection as a source and suggests that earthquakes were caused by seismic waves through the earth: it was one of the first to propose that tsunamis were the result of undersea earthquakes. Both these works rank as important steps in the developing understanding of one of nature's most destructive phenomena.
A methodical account of earthquakes J. C. Sturmius
Of the nature of earthquakes M. Lister
Discourses concerning earthquakes R. Hooke
Earthquakes caused by some accidental obstruction of a continual subterranean heat J. Woodward
A physicochymical explanation of subterraneous fires, earthquakes, etc. M. Lemery
Of the volcanos and earthquakes in Peru M. Bouguer
The natural history of volcanos and earthquakes M. Buffon
A summary of the causes of the alterations which have happened to the face of the earth J. Ray
Some considerations on the causes of earthquakes S. Hales
The philosophy of earthquakes W. Stukeley
Phaenomena of the great earthquake of November 1, 1755, in various parts of the globe.
Subject Areas: Geology & the lithosphere [RBG]
