Lecture by Hugh Torrens and display of
two versions of Strata Smith’s large map
On Saturday 14
February, Mr. Gamolfeax and myself attended a Lecture by Prof. Torrens,
organized by the East Midlands Geological Society at the University of
Nottingham. The Lecture was entitled 'William
Smith and his geological advances as expressed through his work in Yorkshire.' Prof. Torrens is attached to the University
of Keele, where a Geology Department resides in a building named in my honour (and
there is a building named after me here at the Geological Survey). Prof.
Torrens gave a satisfactory, if incomplete account of my connections with
Yorkshire, as well as expounding a little upon the history of my Map of the
Strata of England and Wales. I was particularly obliged that he was able to
explain to the audience some of the difficulties I experienced in correlating
certain Strata around Bath with those in Yorkshire.
Those
attending the Lecture were provided with an opportunity to view two versions of
my Map, one from the Geological Survey and the other from the University of
Nottingham. Mr. Gamolfeax was inclined to prefer the colouring applied to the
University’s version, which is delicately executed and incorporates revisions
made subsequent to the issue of the Geological Survey’s version. Yet this excellent
copy was very nearly lost, I am told, about 24 years ago. There was a
Department of Geology at Nottingham which was dismantled in about 1991. The
Geology Library was dispersed and my Map, out of simple ignorance as to its
value, was thrown into a container of rubbish. It was then retrieved by a
gentleman who understood its worth. This gentleman returned the map to its
proper place, only to find on the following day that it had been once again cast
into the rubbish. He took the map home for safe keeping, where it remained
for some years while he was out of England. On his return, he brought the map
back to the University and, upon explaining matters, the University immediately
understood the need to preserve this wonderful copy.
Mr.
Gamolfeax has more than once told me of the great peril in which our
institutional libraries now stand, for it seems that in these times books are esteemed
as things of little account. As I understand it, knowledge is now stored by
some electrical process which makes printed paper redundant. Mr. Gamolfeax believes
that some map collections will suffer the same fate once they have been copied
and stored in what he calls electronic
form.
Mr. Gamolfeax has appended some representations of the event which he was able to capture on what he describes as a digital camera―a most striking invention, which he tells me originated as a photographical process that was first demonstrated in Paris by a Frenchman, Louis Daguerre, in the year of my death. He regrets that the images are imperfect owing to a transparent overlay.
Detail of SE England from early version of 1815 map held by BGS |
Detail of SE England from later version of 1815 map held by NU |
Strata Smith's 1815 map: Nottingham University version |