Terra Australis - the southern continent had been “discovered” by Europeans already in 1606, but
only in 1642 the size of the new “island” becomes clear and the first geological observations were made only in the early 19th century.
October 1800 two ships – the “Geographe” and the “Naturaliste” – set sail from the harbor of Le Havre, France. Under the command of Captain Nicolas Baudin (1754-1803) geographers, astronomers, artists, naturalists, zoologists, botanists, and 2 mineralogists – Louis Depuch (1774-1803) and Charles Bailly (1777-1844)
– were instructed to explore, map and eventually claim for France new
territories of this new world. In the last moment also the young
zoologist, and trained paleontologist, Francois Auguste Peron (1775-1810) joined the expedition.
The geological observations made by
Depuch (died during the expedition) are known from various reports send
to Baudin. Bailly will publish some notes after his return to France and
Peron included his research in the official report of the expedition.
In May 27, 1801 the bare land of Cape Leeuwin was in sight and the naturalists went on land along the Wonnerup Inlet, where they collected the first specimens of Australian animals, plants and rocks.
Fig.1.
The “Baudin” – expedition, route drawn on Louis de Freycinet´s
(1779-1842) “Carte générale de la Nouvelle Hollande”, published in 1811
as part of the results of the 1800-1804 expedition.
A storm forced the men to remain on land
for several days and one man died during a failed attempt to reach the
ships (during the entire expedition 32 men died, 13% of the crew, a
surprising low percentage considering the period). The storm separated
the two ships, the “Naturaliste” proceeded to the island of
Timor, a Dutch colony at the time, where the crew fell ill with Malaria
and other tropical diseases. The “Geographe” approached in November 1801 the island of Tasmania, where the expedition will stay for three months.
April 1802 the “Geographe” meet the British vessel “Investigator“. The expedition of the “Investigator” will map large parts of South-Australia and prove that Australia is one large continent, not two islands separated by a sea strait, as some geographers assumed. This was a disappointing discovery for captain Baudin, as there was no apparent geographic separation between the territories already claimed by British explorers, the entire continent had to be considered of British domain.
April 1802 the “Geographe” meet the British vessel “Investigator“. The expedition of the “Investigator” will map large parts of South-Australia and prove that Australia is one large continent, not two islands separated by a sea strait, as some geographers assumed. This was a disappointing discovery for captain Baudin, as there was no apparent geographic separation between the territories already claimed by British explorers, the entire continent had to be considered of British domain.
Captain Baudin, the crew and the
naturalists could now only hope to gain some fame with the scientific
results of the expedition...
The geologists Depuch and Bailly used a rock classification scheme, developed by the famous French geologist Déodat de Dolomieu, with four categories. They recognized primary rocks, such as granite; secondary rocks, such as stratified sandstone and limestone; alluvium (recent deposits) and volcanic rocks,
such as basalt. The presence of these rocks in Australia was an
important discovery, it proved that the classification scheme developed
in Europe could be applied worldwide.
Fig.2. Charles-Alexandre Lesueur´s and Nicolas-Martin Petit´s depiction of Van-Diemen´s-Land for the “Voyage de decouvertes aux Terres Australes“.
The two young men – unskilled workers at the beginning of the
expedition - were invited by Baudin to illustrate the logbook - both
will become the most skilled artists for animal- and plantlife of the
time. The granitic rocks found on the island of Tasmania convinced Peron
and the other geologists that the most ancient – the primary – rock was
Granite, forming the basement of all continents.
Paleontologist Peron noted along the west coast of Australia horizontal sand- and limestone layers (the Tamala-Limestone)
and concluded, based on similarities to recent sediments, that these
layers were deposited along an ancient beach, implying substantial
variations in the sea level during geologic time:
“One of the greatest achievements of
modern geology research and also one of its most indisputable, is the
certain knowledge that, in the past, the level of the sea was higher
than at the present time. At almost all places in the old and the new
world is the proof of this phenomenon as numerous as it is evident. Only
in les Terres australes was this still to be ascertained as, by virtue
of its immense areal extent, it could have proved to be an important
exception to the universality of the former domination of the ocean over
the land.”
(PERON & FREYCINET 1816)
Unfortunately the return to France will
be disappointing for Peron. Captain Baudin dies on the island of Timor
and French authorities will show little interest in the 220.000 samples
of animals, plants and rocks, the 73 living animals, 3 kangaroos, 2 emus
and 3 wombats brought back to Europe.
Peron publish his report “Voyage de decouvertes aux Terres Australes”
only in 1807, after a long struggle for money and dies just three
years later, before the completion of the second volume. However the sea
shells collected during the expedition will be studied by an important
French naturalist – Jean-Baptiste de Lamarck. In 1804 Lamarck
publishes his theory about the transmutation of species, based in part
of the observation that the fossil shells found in the sediments of
France are similar, but not identical, to shells of living molluscs
collected in Australia.
Fig.3.
Peron discovers on the shores of Tasmania a living clam with a peculiar
triangular shape – Trigonia antarctica – a genus of bivalve known only
from fossils found in the sediments of the basin of Paris. He notes the
similarities of this living specimen with fossil specimens – an
important step to consider a relationship between fossil and extant
species. Image of Trigonia sp. from Cretaceous sediments of Bavaria.
Unfortunately for Lamarck – and the
naturalists of the Baudin expedition – he mixed his careful observations
with wild speculations. Lamarck noted variations of organisms in time,
however he could not explain why such variations occur or why certain
organisms went extinct or survived – apart invoking a final cause and
implying a sort of supernatural scheme. Geologist Charles Darwin will later regard Lamarck’s work as “useless“...
Fig.4. Geological map by Jules Grange, published in 1850, surprisingly little was known of the geology of Australia until the 20th century.
Fig.4. Geological map by Jules Grange, published in 1850, surprisingly little was known of the geology of Australia until the 20th century.
Bibliography:
GLAUBRECHT, M. & MERMET, G. (2007): Josephines Emu oder Die Geschichte einer vergessenen Expedition. GEO Nr.6/2007: 98-122
MAYER, W. (2008): Early geological investigations of the Pleistocene Tamala Limestone, Western Australia. from GRAPES, R.H.; OLDROYD, D. & GRIGELIS, A. (eds) History of Geomorphology and Quaternary Geology. Geological Society, London, Special Publications 301: 279-293
MAYER, W. (2009): The Geological Work of the Baudin Expedition in Australia (1801-1803): The Mineralogists, the Discoveries and the Legacy. Earth Sciences History Vol.28 (2): 293-324
RUDWICK, M.J.S. (2005): Bursting the limits of time – The reconstruction of Geohistory in the Age of Revolution. The University of Chicago Press, Chicago, London: 708
MAYER, W. (2008): Early geological investigations of the Pleistocene Tamala Limestone, Western Australia. from GRAPES, R.H.; OLDROYD, D. & GRIGELIS, A. (eds) History of Geomorphology and Quaternary Geology. Geological Society, London, Special Publications 301: 279-293
MAYER, W. (2009): The Geological Work of the Baudin Expedition in Australia (1801-1803): The Mineralogists, the Discoveries and the Legacy. Earth Sciences History Vol.28 (2): 293-324
RUDWICK, M.J.S. (2005): Bursting the limits of time – The reconstruction of Geohistory in the Age of Revolution. The University of Chicago Press, Chicago, London: 708
No comments:
Post a Comment
Markup Key:
- <b>bold</b> = bold
- <i>italic</i> = italic
- <a href="http://www.fieldofscience.com/">FoS</a> = FoS