Leonard Horner in Bonn 1831–1833, finding loess and being incorporated into Lyell’s Loess Legion

Leonard Horner (1785–1864) was a pioneer in the study of loess. His 1836 paper on the geology of Bonn contained detailed descriptions of loess in the Rhine valley. He identified and presented loess as an interesting material for geological study. He investigated loess in the crater of the Rodderberg...

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Main Author: Smalley Ian
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2020-08-01
Series:Geologos
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/logos-2020-0014
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spelling doaj-de3d358c4a9142fca2c10c594de3a8492021-09-06T19:22:26ZengSciendoGeologos2080-65742020-08-0126216317010.2478/logos-2020-0014logos-2020-0014Leonard Horner in Bonn 1831–1833, finding loess and being incorporated into Lyell’s Loess LegionSmalley Ian0Centre for Loess Research & Documentation, School of Geography, Geology & the Environment, University of Leicester, LeicesterLE1 7RH, UKLeonard Horner (1785–1864) was a pioneer in the study of loess. His 1836 paper on the geology of Bonn contained detailed descriptions of loess in the Rhine valley. He identified and presented loess as an interesting material for geological study. He investigated loess in the crater of the Rodderberg with Charles Lyell in 1833. He presented the first significant paper on loess in Britain in 1833, but it was not published until 1836. With the assistance of G.A. Goldfuss and J.J. Noegerath he conducted early studies of the Siebengebirge and published the first geological map of the region, and the first picture of loess, at Rhondorf by the Drachenfels. He became the eleventh person to be included in the list of loess scholars which Charles Lyell published in volume 3 of the Principles of Geology. These were Leonhard, Bronn, Boue, Voltz, Steininger, Merian, Rozet, Hibbert in 1833, Noeggerath, von Meyer in 1835, Horner in 1837. Horner arrived after the publication of his studies on the loess at Bonn in 1836.https://doi.org/10.2478/logos-2020-0014bonnsiebengebirgerodderbergloess first documentation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Smalley Ian
spellingShingle Smalley Ian
Leonard Horner in Bonn 1831–1833, finding loess and being incorporated into Lyell’s Loess Legion
Geologos
bonn
siebengebirge
rodderberg
loess first documentation
author_facet Smalley Ian
author_sort Smalley Ian
title Leonard Horner in Bonn 1831–1833, finding loess and being incorporated into Lyell’s Loess Legion
title_short Leonard Horner in Bonn 1831–1833, finding loess and being incorporated into Lyell’s Loess Legion
title_full Leonard Horner in Bonn 1831–1833, finding loess and being incorporated into Lyell’s Loess Legion
title_fullStr Leonard Horner in Bonn 1831–1833, finding loess and being incorporated into Lyell’s Loess Legion
title_full_unstemmed Leonard Horner in Bonn 1831–1833, finding loess and being incorporated into Lyell’s Loess Legion
title_sort leonard horner in bonn 1831–1833, finding loess and being incorporated into lyell’s loess legion
publisher Sciendo
series Geologos
issn 2080-6574
publishDate 2020-08-01
description Leonard Horner (1785–1864) was a pioneer in the study of loess. His 1836 paper on the geology of Bonn contained detailed descriptions of loess in the Rhine valley. He identified and presented loess as an interesting material for geological study. He investigated loess in the crater of the Rodderberg with Charles Lyell in 1833. He presented the first significant paper on loess in Britain in 1833, but it was not published until 1836. With the assistance of G.A. Goldfuss and J.J. Noegerath he conducted early studies of the Siebengebirge and published the first geological map of the region, and the first picture of loess, at Rhondorf by the Drachenfels. He became the eleventh person to be included in the list of loess scholars which Charles Lyell published in volume 3 of the Principles of Geology. These were Leonhard, Bronn, Boue, Voltz, Steininger, Merian, Rozet, Hibbert in 1833, Noeggerath, von Meyer in 1835, Horner in 1837. Horner arrived after the publication of his studies on the loess at Bonn in 1836.
topic bonn
siebengebirge
rodderberg
loess first documentation
url https://doi.org/10.2478/logos-2020-0014
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