De Natura Fossilium
De Natura Fossilium is a scientific text written by Georg Bauer also known as Georgius Agricola, first published in 1546. The book represents the first scientific attempt to categorize minerals, rocks and sediments since the publication of Pliny's Natural History. This text along with Agricola's other works including De Re Metallica compose the earliest comprehensive "scientific" approach to mineralogy, mining, and geological science.[1]
Notes
- Foreword, De natura fossilium
gollark: "Known"?
gollark: That seems vaguely implausible.
gollark: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asch_conformity_experiments
gollark: Yes, people can apparently be convinced of really stupid things and really love conforming.
gollark: And being educated is also not the same as being intelligent.
References
- Agricola, Georgius (2004). De natura fossilium (Textbook of mineralogy). Translated from the first Latin edition of 1546 by Mark Chance Bandy and Jean A. Bandy. Mineola, N.Y.: Dover Publications. ISBN 9780486495910.
- Rudwick, Martin J. S. (2008). The Meaning of Fossils: Episodes in the History of Palaeontology. University of Chicago Press. p. 23. ISBN 9780226148984.
- Zittel, Karl Alfred von (1901). History of geology and palæontology to the end of the nineteenth century. Translated by Maria M. Ogilvie Gordon. W. Scott. pp. 15–16.
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