Barthélemy Faujas de Saint-Fond
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Barthélemy Faujas de Saint-Fond (May 17, 1741-July 18, 1819), French geologist and traveller, was born at Montélimar. He was educated at the Jesuit's College at Lyon; afterwards hewent to Grenoble, applied himself to the study of law, and was admitted advocate to the parliament.
He rose to be president of the seneschals court (1765), a post which he honorably filled, but the duties of which became irksome, as he had early developed a love of nature and his favorite relaxation was found in visits to the Alps. There be began to study the forms, structure, composition and superposition of rocks.
In 1775 he discovered in the Velay a rich deposit of pozzuolana, which in due course was worked by the government. In 1776 he put himself in communication with Buffon, who was not slow to perceive the value of his labors. Invited by Buffon to Paris, he quitted the law, and was appointed by Louis XVI assistant naturalist to the museum, to which office was added some years later (1785, 1788) that of royal commissioner for mines.
One of the most important of his works was the Recherches sur les volcans teints du Vivarais et du Velay, which appeared in 1778. In this work, rich in facts and observations, be developed his theory of the origin of volcanoes. In his capacity of commissioner for mines Faujas travelled in almost all the countries of Europe, everywhere devoting attention to the nature and constituents of the rocks. It was he who first recognized the volcanic nature of the basaltic columns of the Fingal's Cave (Staffa), although the island was visited in 1772 by Sir Joseph Banks, who remarked that the stone is a coarse kind of basalt, very much resembling the Giant's Causeway in Ireland (Pennant's Tour in Scotland and Voyage to the Hebrides). Faujas' Voyage en Angleterre, en Ecosse et aux lies hebrides (1787) is full of interestcontaining anecdotes of Sir Joseph Banks and Dr. John Whitehurst, and an amusing account of The Dinner of an Academic Club (the Royal Society), and has been translated into English (2 vols., 1799).
Having been nominated in 1793 professor at the Jardin des Plantes, he held this post until he was nearly eighty years of age, retiring in 1818 to his estate of Saint-Fond in Dauphin. Faujas took a warm interest in the balloon experiments of the Montgolfier brothers, and published a very complete Description des experiences de la machine airostatique de MM. Montgolfier, &c. (1783, 1784). He contributed many scientific memoirs to the Annales and the Memoires of the museum of natural history. Among his separate works, in addition to those already named are Histoire naturelle de la province de Dauphine (1787, 1782), and Mineralogie des volcan.
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- This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.