British pioneers of the geology of Gibraltar; Part 2, Cave archaeology and geological survey of The Rock, 1863 to 1878

The 1860s marked a period of intense early interest in the antiquity of man, and so cave archaeology, in England and elsewhere. Systematic cave archaeology was initiated on Gibraltar in 1863 by a former infantry officer, Frederick Brome, the governor of the military prison, and his discoveries promp...

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description The 1860s marked a period of intense early interest in the antiquity of man, and so cave archaeology, in England and elsewhere. Systematic cave archaeology was initiated on Gibraltar in 1863 by a former infantry officer, Frederick Brome, the governor of the military prison, and his discoveries prompted cave exploration and local geological interest by two young British Army officers stationed on the Rock: Alexander Burton-Brown of the Royal Artillery and the subsequently more famous Charles (later Sir Charles) Warren of the Royal Engineers. On the recommendation of Sir Charles Lyell, President of the Geological Society of London, Brome's excavated material was sent to England for study by George Busk and Hugh Falconer: both palaeontologists of considerable distinction. The new discoveries drew attention to the 'Gibraltar Skull', presented to the Gibraltar Scientific Society by Lieutenant Edmund Flint of the Royal Artillery in 1848 but recognized only after description of Homo neanderthalensis from Germany in 1864 as a relic of that extinct species-one of the most complete Neanderthal skulls known. Detailed topographical mapping of the Gibraltar peninsula by Charles Warren and interest in Gibraltar geology generated by cave studies led to the first geological survey of the Rock-by Andrew (later Sir Andrew) Crombie Ramsay and James Geikie of the 'British' Geological Survey, in 1876. The first 'overseas' project to be undertaken by the Survey, this was historically significant because its purpose was primarily hydrogeological and it generated an atypically large-scale (1:2,500) geological map. The map and its 1877-1878 descriptive accounts, which featured Quaternary superficial sediments in more detail than the Jurassic limestone bedrock, were to guide development of Gibraltar's fortress infrastructure for the next sixty-five years.
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On the recommendation of Sir Charles Lyell, President of the Geological Society of London, Brome's excavated material was sent to England for study by George Busk and Hugh Falconer: both palaeontologists of considerable distinction. The new discoveries drew attention to the 'Gibraltar Skull', presented to the Gibraltar Scientific Society by Lieutenant Edmund Flint of the Royal Artillery in 1848 but recognized only after description of Homo neanderthalensis from Germany in 1864 as a relic of that extinct species-one of the most complete Neanderthal skulls known. Detailed topographical mapping of the Gibraltar peninsula by Charles Warren and interest in Gibraltar geology generated by cave studies led to the first geological survey of the Rock-by Andrew (later Sir Andrew) Crombie Ramsay and James Geikie of the 'British' Geological Survey, in 1876. The first 'overseas' project to be undertaken by the Survey, this was historically significant because its purpose was primarily hydrogeological and it generated an atypically large-scale (1:2,500) geological map. 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F</author></sort><facets><frbrtype>5</frbrtype><frbrgroupid>cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-a491t-e461df868b8dc78037118325f0b11e44845249886a141f7496b87ffa7c6b8a483</frbrgroupid><rsrctype>articles</rsrctype><prefilter>articles</prefilter><language>eng</language><creationdate>2014</creationdate><topic>Archaeological expeditions</topic><topic>archaeological sites</topic><topic>archaeology</topic><topic>Breccia</topic><topic>Brome, Joseph Frederick</topic><topic>Burton-Brown, Alexander</topic><topic>Busk, George</topic><topic>Caves</topic><topic>Discovery and exploration</topic><topic>Europe</topic><topic>Excavations</topic><topic>Explorers</topic><topic>Falconer, Hugh</topic><topic>Geike, James</topic><topic>Geological surveys</topic><topic>Geology</topic><topic>Gibraltar</topic><topic>Gibralter Skull</topic><topic>Governors</topic><topic>Iberian Peninsula</topic><topic>Limestones</topic><topic>Military prisons</topic><topic>Neanderthals</topic><topic>Practice</topic><topic>Quaternary geology</topic><topic>Ramsay, Andrew Crombie</topic><topic>Rocks</topic><topic>Southern Europe</topic><topic>Warren, Charles</topic><toplevel>peer_reviewed</toplevel><toplevel>online_resources</toplevel><creatorcontrib>Rose, Edward P. 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Detailed topographical mapping of the Gibraltar peninsula by Charles Warren and interest in Gibraltar geology generated by cave studies led to the first geological survey of the Rock-by Andrew (later Sir Andrew) Crombie Ramsay and James Geikie of the 'British' Geological Survey, in 1876. The first 'overseas' project to be undertaken by the Survey, this was historically significant because its purpose was primarily hydrogeological and it generated an atypically large-scale (1:2,500) geological map. The map and its 1877-1878 descriptive accounts, which featured Quaternary superficial sediments in more detail than the Jurassic limestone bedrock, were to guide development of Gibraltar's fortress infrastructure for the next sixty-five years.</abstract><pub>History of the Earth Sciences Society</pub><doi>10.17704/eshi.33.1.a35446v5k2817942</doi><tpages>33</tpages></addata></record>
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subjects Archaeological expeditions
archaeological sites
archaeology
Breccia
Brome, Joseph Frederick
Burton-Brown, Alexander
Busk, George
Caves
Discovery and exploration
Europe
Excavations
Explorers
Falconer, Hugh
Geike, James
Geological surveys
Geology
Gibraltar
Gibralter Skull
Governors
Iberian Peninsula
Limestones
Military prisons
Neanderthals
Practice
Quaternary geology
Ramsay, Andrew Crombie
Rocks
Southern Europe
Warren, Charles
title British pioneers of the geology of Gibraltar; Part 2, Cave archaeology and geological survey of The Rock, 1863 to 1878
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