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James
Croll (1821-1890)
Scottish
man of science, was born of a peasant family at Little Whitefield,
in the parish of Cargill, in Perthshire, on the 2nd of January
1821. He was regarded as an unpromising boy, but a trifling
circumstance aroused a passion for reading, and he made great
progress in self-education. He was apprenticed to a wheelwright
at Collace in Perthshire, but being debarred by ill-health from
manual labor, he became successively a shop-keeper and an insurance
agent.
In
1859 he was made keeper of the Andersonian Museum in Glasgow,
a humble appointment, which, however, gave him congenial occupation.
In 1857, being deeply impressed by the metaphysics of Jonathan
Edwards, he had published an anonymous volume entitled The Philosophy
of Theism; but his connection with the Museum induced him to
take up physical science, and from 1861 onwards he studied with
such perseverance that he was enabled to contribute papers to
the Philosophical Magazine and other journals. For that magazine
in 1864 he wrote his celebrated essay On the Physical Cause
of the Changes of Climate during Geological Epochs.
This
led to his receiving an appointment on the Scottish Geological
Survey in 1867, and for thirteen. years he took charge of the
Edinburgh Office. In 1875 he summed up his researches upon the
ancient condition of the earth in his Climate and Time, in their
Geological Relations, in which he contends that terrestrial
revolutions are due in a measure to cosmical causes. This theory
excited warm controversy. Crolls replies to his opponents are
collected in his Climate and Cosmology (1885). He had been compelled
by ill-health to withdraw from the public service in 1880; yet,
working under the greatest difficulties, and harassed by the
inadequacy of his retiring pension, he managed to produce Stellar
Evolution, discussing, among other things, the age of the sun,
in 1889; and The Philosophical Basis of Evolution, partly a
critique of Herbert Spencers philosophy, in 1890. He died on
the i5th of December 1890. The soundness of Crolls astronomical
theory regasrling the glacial .period has since been criticized
by E. P. Culverwell in the Geological Magazine for 1895, and
by others; and it is now generally abandoned. Never- theless
it must be admitted that his character as a scientific worker
under great discouragements was nothing less than heroic. The
hon. degree of LL.D. was conferred on him in 1876 by the university
of St Andrews; and he was elected F.R.S. in the same year.
Return
To Famous Folks From Perthshire
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