2002
DOI: 10.1144/gsl.sp.2002.192.01.04
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From graphical display to dynamic model: mathematical geology in the Earth sciences in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries

Abstract: Graphical displays were used early in geophysics and crystallography, mineralogy, petrology and structural geology by the early 1800s, but nineteenth-century geology obstinately remained mainly descriptive. Charles Lyell’s quantitative classification of the Tertiary Sub-Era in 1828 was a notable exception. Nevertheless, by 1920 the quantitative approach had become established. W. C. Krumbein, who introduced the computer into geology in 1958, encouraged use of probabilistic sampling and process-response models.… Show more

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“… For the use of visual language in geology, see, for example, Rudwick (1976) and Howarth (2002). …”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“… For the use of visual language in geology, see, for example, Rudwick (1976) and Howarth (2002). …”
mentioning
confidence: 99%