Frank Bursley Taylor

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Frank Bursley Taylor, [b. 1860, d. 1938] was a wealthy amateur American geologist, a specialist in the glacial geology of the Great Lakes, and famously proposed to the (Geological Society of America) in 1908 [1] that the continents moved on the Earth's surface, that a shallow region in the Atlantic marks where Africa and South America were once joined, and that the collisions of continents could uplift mountains.

Frank Bursley Taylor's ideas about continental drift were taken up by Alfred Wegener in Germany four years later, but even with Wegener's extensive extra research the idea did not achieve acceptance until the 1960s when a vast weight of evidence had accrued via Harry Hess, Fred Vine and Drummond Matthews. The initial key to his proposal, the complimentary shapes of the continental masses, had been observed as early as Abraham Ortelius in the 16th century, but had always lacked a credible driving force. His own proposition was that the moon was captured by the earth's gravity during the Cretaceous Period 100 million years ago, and came so close to the earth that its tidal pull dragged the continents toward the Equator. This also lacked evidence, thus undermining the credibility of the 'continental drift' observation. He had proposed that the continents ploughed through the ocean floors towards the equator, wrinkling their Equator-facing fronts to produce the Himalayas and Alps.

[edit] References

  1. ^ (Geological Society of America) (v. 21, p. 179–226)