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The founders of geology at the beginning of the last century were
suspicious oflaboratories. Hutton's well-known dictum illustrates
the point: "There are also superficial reasoning men . . . they
judge of the great oper ations of the mineral kingdom from having
kindled a fire, and looked into the bottom of a little crucible. "
The idea was not unreasonable; the earth is so large and its
changes are so slow and so complicated that labo ratory tests and
experiments were of little help. The earth had to be studied in its
own terms and geology grew up as a separate science and not as a
branch of physics or chemistry. Its practitioners were, for the
most part, experts in structure, stratigraphy, or paleontology, not
in silicate chemistry or mechanics. The chemists broke into this
closed circle before the physicists did. The problems of the
classification of rocks, particularly igneous rocks, and of the
nature and genesis of ores are obviously chemical and, by the mid-
19th century, chemistry was in a state where rocks could be
effectively analyzed, and a classification built up depending
partly on chemistry and partly on the optical study of thin
specimens. Gradually the chemical study of rocks became one of the
central themes of earth science."
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