James Furman Kemp
James Furman Kemp | |
---|---|
Born |
August 14, 1859 New York City |
Died | November 17, 1926 (aged 67) |
Citizenship | American |
Fields | Geology |
Institutions | Columbia University, US Geological Survey, New York Botanical Gardens |
Alma mater | Amherst College, Columbia School of Mines |
James Furman Kemp, Sc.D., LL.D (August 14, 1859 – November 17, 1926) was an American geologist.
Biography
He was born in New York City and graduated from Amherst in 1881 and from the Columbia School of Mines in 1884. Amherst gave him an honorary Sc.D. in 1906 and McGill an LL.D. in 1913. Professor Kemp taught at Cornell University from 1886 to 1891 and then at Columbia and served as geologist of the United States and New York State geological surveys of the Adirondack Mountains. He served as manager and scientific director of the New York Botanical Gardens (after 1898), and lectured on geology at Johns Hopkins, MIT, and McGill. Besides numerous articles, reports, and monographs, he published Ore Deposits of the United States and Canada (1893; third edition, rewritten, 1900) and Handbook of Rocks (1896; fifth edition, 1911). Kemp was president of the Geological Society of America in 1921.[1] He was elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 1911.
References
External links
- Works written by or about James Furman Kemp at Wikisource
- Academy of Sciences Biographical Memoir