Session No. 56 Monday, October 28, 2002

8:00 AM-12:00 PM, Colorado Convention Center: A207
History of Geology
Robert N. Ginsburg and Roger D. K. Thomas, Presiding
 Paper #Start Time
56-18:00 AM FORM AND FORMLESS: SEVENTEENTH CENTURY DRAWINGS OF ROCKS IN EUROPE AND CHINA AND THE PATHS TOWARDS MODERN GEOSCIENCE AND SPIRITUAL ENLIGHTENMENT: ROSENBERG, Gary D., Indiana Univ/Purdue Univ - Indianapolis, 723 W Michigan St, Indianapolis, IN 46202-5132, grosenbe@iupui.edu.
56-28:15 AM NICOLAUS STENO, SPONTANEOUS GENERATION, AND THE GREAT FOSSIL DEBATE: CUTLER, Alan H., Department of Paleobiology, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC 20560, ahcutler@aol.com.
56-38:30 AM EIGHTEENTH CENTURY SERPENTINE ANALYSES AND THEIR MEANING: NEWCOMB, Sally E., 13120 Two Farm Dr, Silver Spring, MD 20904, senewcomb@earthlink.net.
56-48:45 AM THE IMAGE OF THE PLANET EARTH AS AN ACTIVE AGENT IN JAMES HUTTON'S THEORY OF THE EARTH WITH PROOFS AND ILLUSTRATIONS: NORWICK, Stephen A., Environmental Studies and Planning, Sonoma State Univ, Rohnert Park, CA 94928, norwick@sonoma.edu.
56-59:00 AM J.D. FORBES AND NAPLES: DEAN, Deannis R., 834 Washington St, Evanston, IL 60202
56-69:15 AM HENRY DARCY AND THE PUBLIC FOUNTAINS OF THE CITY OF DIJON: BOBECK, Patricia, Geotechnical Translations, 1601 Barn Swallow Drive, Austin, TX 78746, pbobeck@texas.net.
56-79:30 AM CD-ROM DIGITAL ARCHIVE- REPORT UPON THE COLORADO RIVER OF THE WEST EXPLORED IN 1857 AND 1858 BY LIEUTENANT JOSEPH C. IVES, GEOLOGICAL REPORT WITH MAPS BY JOHN S. NEWBERRY: MCKINNEY, Kevin C., U.S. Geol Survey, Denver Federal Center, MS 913, Denver, CO 80225, kcmckinney@usgs.gov.
 9:45 AM Break
56-810:00 AM TO SEE AND BE SEEN: TRANSATLANTIC RELATIONS IN ANTEBELLUM AMERICAN GEOLOGY: NEWELL, Julie R., Social and International Studies Program, Southern Polytechnic State Univ, 1100 S. Marietta Parkway, Marietta, GA 30060, jnewell@spsu.edu.
56-910:15 AM A BANNER YEAR IN THE TRANSPORTATION OF OIL, 1865: PEES, Samuel T., Samuel T. Pees & Associates, 628 Arch Street, Suite A-104, Meadville, PA 16335-2339, spees@toolcity.net.
56-1010:30 AM HENRY S. WILLIAMS (1847-1918)-THOUGHTS ON EVOLUTION: BRICE, William R., Geology & Planetary Science, Univ of Pittsburgh at Johnstown, Johnstown, PA 15904, brice@pitt.edu.
56-1110:45 AM GEOLOGY AND PALEONTOLOGY IN THE WRITINGS OF MARK TWAIN: A REFLECTION OF THE WOOF AND WARP OF SCIENCE AND AMERICAN CULTURE IN THE LATE 19TH AND EARLY 20TH CENTURIES: ROWLAND, Stephen M., Department of Geoscience, Univ Nevada, Las Vegas, PO Box 454010, Las Vegas, NV 89154-4010, srowland@unlv.edu.
56-1211:00 AM THE PRE-MODERN HISTORY OF THE POST-MODERN DINOSAUR: ALLMON, Warren D., Paleontological Rsch Institution, 1259 Trumansburg Rd, Ithaca, NY 14850-1398, wda1@cornell.edu.
56-1311:15 AM WALTER BUCHER'S LAST FIELD TRIP AND CONVERSION TO THE IMPACT ORIGIN OF METEOR CRATER: A TRIBUTE TO AN OPEN MIND: ELSTON, Wolfgang E., Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Univ of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM 87131, weelston@earthlink.net.

Back to the 2002 Denver Annual Meeting (October 27-30, 2002)