The Continental Drift Controversy (The Continental Drift Controversy 4 Volume Hardback Set)
Cambridge University Press, 4/26/2012
EAN 9780521875042, ISBN10: 0521875048
Hardcover, 625 pages, 24.7 x 17.4 x 3.2 cm
Language: English
Resolution of the sixty year debate over continental drift, culminating in the triumph of plate tectonics, changed the very fabric of Earth science. This four-volume treatise on the continental drift controversy is the first complete history of the origin, debate and gradual acceptance of this revolutionary theory. Based on extensive interviews, archival papers and original works, Frankel weaves together the lives and work of the scientists involved, producing an accessible narrative for scientists and non-scientists alike. This first volume covers the period in the early 1900s when Wegener first pointed out that the Earth's major landmasses could be fitted together like a jigsaw and went on to propose that the continents had once been joined together in a single landmass, which he named Pangaea. It describes the reception of Wegener's theory as it splintered into sub-controversies and geoscientists became divided between the 'fixists' and 'mobilists'.
1. How the mobilism debate was structured
2. Wegener and Taylor develop their theories of continental drift
3. Sub-controversies in the drift debate, 1920s–50s
4. The mechanism sub-controversy
1921–51
5. Arthur Holmes and his theory of substratum convection, 1915–55
6. Regionalism and the reception of mobilism
South Africa, India and South America from the 1920s through the early 1950s
7. Regional reception of mobilism in North America
1920s through the 1950s
8. Reception and development of mobilism in Europe
1920s through the 1950s
9. Fixism's popularity in Australia
1920s to middle 1960s
Index.