
The frontispiece from ''Principles of Geology''
'Sir Charles Lyell, 1st Baronet',
KT, (
November 14,
1797 –
February 22,
1875) was a
Scottish lawyer,
geologist, and populariser of
uniformitarianism.
Charles Lyell was born in
Kinnordy,
Angus, the eldest of ten children. Lyell's father, also named Charles, was a lawyer and
botanist of minor repute and first exposed the younger Charles to the study of nature. Charles spent much of his childhood at the family’s other home,
Bartley Lodge in the
New Forest,
England, where his interest in the natural world was sparked.
Having attended
Exeter College, Oxford ending in 1816, Lyell encountered
geology as a serious profession under the wing of the naturalist
William Buckland. Upon graduation he took a professional detour into the law, but dabbled in geology. His first paper, "On a Recent Formation of Freshwater Limestone in Forfarshire", was presented in 1822. By 1827, he had abandoned the law and embarked on a long geological career that would result in the widespread acceptance of the ideas proposed by
James Hutton a few decades before.
During the 1840s, he travelled to the
United States and
Canada, which resulted in his writing two popular travel-and-geology books: 1845's ''Travels in North America'' and ''A Second Visit to the United States'' (from 1849).
He won the
Copley Medal in 1858 and the
Wollaston Medal in 1866. After the
Great Chicago Fire, Lyell was one of the first to donate books to help found the
Chicago Public Library.
Upon his death in 1875, he was buried in
Westminster Abbey.
Lyell crater on the
Moon and a
crater on
Mars were named in his honour.
Career and major writings

Charles Lyell in his later years.
Virtually alone among leading British geologists of his era, Lyell supported himself by writing books about his scientific work. He came from a prosperous family, worked briefly as a lawyer in the 1820s, and held the post of Professor of Geology at
King's College London in the 1830s, but from 1830 onward his books provided both a comfortable living and growing fame. Each of his three major books was a work continually in progress. All three went through multiple editions during his lifetime, and Lyell used almost every edition as an opportunity to incorporate additional material, rearrange existing material, and revisit old conclusions in light of new evidence. These frequent, substantial revisions added significant value to new editions of Lyell's books, and helped to ensure robust sales to both the scientific community and the general public.
''
Principles of Geology'', Lyell's first book, was also his most famous, most influential, and most important. First published in three volumes in 1830-33, it established Lyell's credentials as an important geological theorist and introduced the doctrine of
uniformitarianism. The central argument in ''Principles'' was that "the present is the key to the past:" That geological remains from the distant past can, and should, be explained by reference to geological processes now in operation and thus directly observable. Lyell's interpretation of geologic change as the steady accumulation of minute changes over enormously long spans of time was also a central theme in the ''Principles'', and a powerful influence on the young
Charles Darwin, who was given Volume 1 of the first edition by
Robert FitzRoy, captain of
HMS ''Beagle'', just before they set out on the
voyage of the ''Beagle''. On their first stop ashore at
St Jago Darwin found rock formations which seen "through Lyell's eyes" gave him a revolutionary insight into the geological history of the island, an insight he applied throughout his travels. While in
South America Darwin received Volume 2 which firmly rejected the idea of organic
evolution, proposing "Centres of Creation" to explain diversity and territory of species. Darwin's ideas gradually moved beyond this, but in geology he was very much Lyell's disciple and sent home extensive evidence and theorising supporting Lyell's uniformitarianism, including Darwin's ideas about the formation of
atolls. On his return they became close friends. Lyell continued to firmly reject the idea of organic evolution in each of the first nine editions of the ''Principles''. Confronted with Darwin's ''
On The Origin of Species'', he finally offered a tepid endorsement of evolution in the tenth edition.
''
Elements of Geology'' began as the fourth volume of the third edition of ''
Principles'': A systematic, factual description of geological formations of different ages. The material grew so unwieldy, however, that Lyell split it off into a single volume under the ''Elements'' title in 1838. The book went through six editions, eventually growing to two volumes and ceasing to be the inexpensive, portable handbook that Lyell had originally envisioned. Late in his career, therefore, Lyell produced a condensed version titled ''Student's Elements of Geology'' that fulfilled the original purpose.
''
Geological Evidences of the Antiquity of Man'' brought together Lyell's views on three key themes from the geology of the
Quaternary Period of Earth history: glaciers, evolution, and the age of the human race. First published in 1863, it went through three editions that year, with a fourth and final edition appearing in 1873.
Scientific contributions
Lyell's geological interests ranged from
volcanoes and geological dynamics through
stratigraphy,
paleontology and
glaciology to topics that would now be classified as
prehistoric archaeology and
paleoanthropology. He is best known, however, for his role in popularising the doctrine of
uniformitarianism.
Uniformitarianism
From
1830 to
1833 his multi-volume ''
Principles of Geology'' was published. The work's subtitle was "An Attempt to Explain the Former Changes of the Earth's Surface by Reference to Causes now in Operation", and this explains Lyell's impact on science. He was, along with the earlier
John Playfair, the major advocate of the then-controversial idea of
uniformitarianism, that the earth was shaped entirely by slow-moving forces acting over a very long period of time. This was in contrast to
catastrophism, a geologic idea that went hand-in-hand with age of the earth as implied by biblical chronology. In various revised editions (twelve in all, through
1872), ''Principles of Geology'' was the most influential geological work in the middle of the 19th century, and did much to put geology on a modern footing. For his efforts he was knighted in
1848, then made a baronet in
1864.
Volcanoes and geological dynamics
Stratigraphy
Lyell's most important specific work was in the field of
stratigraphy. In
1828, he travelled to the south of
France and to
Italy, where he realised that the recent strata could be categorised according to the number and proportion of marine shells encased within. Based on this he proposed dividing the
Tertiary period into three parts, which he named the
Pliocene,
Miocene, and
Eocene.
Glaciers
In ''Principles of Geology'' Lyell proposed that icebergs could be the means of transport for erratics. During periods of global warming, ice breaks off the poles and floats across submerged continents, carrying debris with it, he conjectured. When the iceberg melts, it rains down sediments upon the land. Because this theory could account for the presence of diluvium, the word "drift" became the preferred term for the loose, unsorted material, today called "till." Furthermore, Lyell believed that the accumulation of fine angular particles covering much of the world (today called loess) was a deposit settled from mountain flood water.
Evolution
Charles Darwin was a close personal friend, and Lyell was one of the first prominent scientists to support ''
The Origin of Species''—though he never fully accepted
natural selection as the driving engine behind evolution. In fact, Lyell was instrumental in arranging the peaceful co-publication of the theory of natural selection by Darwin and
Alfred Russel Wallace in
1858, reflecting the fact that each had arrived at the theory independently (Darwin long before Wallace, however). Lyell's own ''The Geological Evidence of the Antiquity of Man'' followed a few years later in
1863. Lyell's data was important because Darwin thought that populations of an organism changed very slowly, requiring what is now known as "geologic time".
Bibliography
Principles of Geology
Main articles: Principles of Geology
★ ''Principles of Geology'' 1st vol. 1st edition, Jan. 1830 (
John Murray, London).
★ ''Principles of Geology'' 1st vol. 2nd edition, 1832
★ ''Principles of Geology'' 2nd vol. 1st edition, Jan. 1832
★ ''Principles of Geology'' 2nd vol. 2nd edition, Jan. 1833
★ ''Principles of Geology'' 3rd vol. 1st edition, May 1833
★ ''Principles of Geology'' 4 vols. 3rd edition, May 1834
★ ''Principles of Geology'' 4 vols. 4th edition, June 1835
★ ''Principles of Geology'' 4 vols. 5th edition, March 1837
★ ''Principles of Geology'' 3 vols. 6th edition, June 1840
★ ''Principles of Geology'' 1 vol. 7th edition, Feb. 1847
★ ''Principles of Geology'' 1 vol. 8th edition, May 1850
★ ''Principles of Geology'' 1 vol. 9th edition, June 1853
★ ''Principles of Geology'' 10th edition, 1866-68
★ ''Principles of Geology'' 11th edition, 1872
★ ''Principles of Geology'' 2 vols. 12th edition, 1875 (published posthumously)
Elements of Geology
★ ''Elements of Geology'' 1 vol. 1st edition, July 1838 (John Murray, London)
★ ''Elements of Geology'' 2 vols. 2nd edition, July 1841
★ ''Elements of Geology (Manual of Elementary Geology)'' 1 vol. 3rd edition, Jan. 1851
★ ''Elements of Geology (Manual of Elementary Geology)'' 1 vol. 4th edition, Jan. 1852
★ ''Elements of Geology'' 1 vol. 5th edition, ????
★ ''Elements of Geology'' 6th edition, 1865
★ ''Student's Elements of Geology'', 1871
Travels in North America
★ ''Travels in North America'' 2 vols., 1845 (John Murray, London)
★ ''A Second Visit to the United States of North America'' 2 vols., 1849 (John Murray, London)
Antiquity of Man
★ ''Geological Evidences of the Antiquity of Man'' 1 vol. 1st edition, Feb. 1863 (John Murray, London)
★ ''Geological Evidences of the Antiquity of Man'' 1 vol. 2nd edition, April 1863
★ ''Geological Evidences of the Antiquity of Man'' 1 vol. 3rd edition, Nov. 1863
★ ''Geological Evidences of the Antiquity of Man'' 1 vol. 4th edition, May 1873
Life, Letters, and Journals
★ ''Life, Letters, and Journals of Sir Charles Lyell'' 2 vols. 1st edition, K. M. Lyell, ed., 1881 (John Murray, London)
See also
★
Correspondence of Charles Darwin
★
Shen Kuo, 11th century Chinese geologist and mineralogist
Image source
★ Portraits of Honorary Members of the
Ipswich Museum (Portfolio of 60 lithographs by T.H. Maguire) (George Ransome, Ipswich 1846-1852)
External links
★
''Principles of Geology'' 1st edition at ESP: Electronic Scholarly Publishing. Retrieved on 8 August 2007
★
★
Charles Lyell in NNDB: Notable Names Database.
★
Charles Lyell in Strange Science