Northeastern Section - 48th Annual Meeting (18–20 March 2013)

Paper No. 7
Presentation Time: 9:40 AM

JOHN K. DELASKI M.D. (1814–1874 ): PIONEER GLACIAL GEOLOGIST AND EARLY ADVOCATE FOR A CONTINENTAL ICE SHEET OVER NEW ENGLAND AND NEW BRUNSWICK


BORNS Jr, Harold W., Orono, ME 04473, Borns@me.edu

John K. DeLaski, M.D. practiced medicine in the Penobscot Bay region of Maine and, in addition, was a naturalist with keen powers of observation. His study of the landscape led to the conclusion that a thick glacier had overtopped the highest hills, flooded all of Penobscot Bay, extended far to the east and west and probably was part of a greater continental glacier. He published these very critical field observations and inferences in numerous articles in local newspapers and magazines, and in the American Journal of Science in 1864. His work put him on the “team” of Benjamin Silliman, James D. Dana and Louis Agassiz as an advocate for glaciation as the regional land shaping force opposed to that of the Biblical Deluge, a major scientific conflict of the day both in North America and Europe. He remained a shadowy player, in the background, but clearly contributed critical observations to the argument through personal interactions with Agassiz and other prominent naturalists. They incorporated DeLasky’s observations into their own presentations, often without giving him credit. John DeLaski’s summary work, a 400 page handwritten manuscript for the book, “The Ancient Great Glacier of North America”, was dated 1869. He died in 1874 and the book was not published. The manuscript currently resides with Professor H.W. Borns, Jr of the University of Maine.