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The Nature of the Stratigraphical Record

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The Nature of the Stratigraphical Record
AuthorDerek Victor Ager
LanguageEnglish
SubjectGeology, stratigraphy, catastrophism
Published1993 (3rd ed.; 1st ed. 1973)
PublisherJohn Wiley & Sons
Pages166
ISBN0471938084

The Nature of the Stratigraphical Record is a book by the British geologist Derek Victor Ager, first published in 1973 (Macmillan) with later editions through John Wiley (3rd edition, 1993).

Overview

The book is a lively, non-technical account of Earth history as recorded in the rocks, intended to stimulate thought and debate about geology as a unified science. Its central theme is what Ager called the "catastrophic" nature of much of the stratigraphical record: that sedimentation has often been rapid and episodic, with the rock record dominated by gaps rather than by continuous deposition. He famously summarized the history of any one place as "long periods of boredom separated by short periods of terror." Although Ager firmly regarded himself as an evolutionist and a (broadly) uniformitarian geologist, his emphasis on rare, high-energy events has often been cited by catastrophists.

About the author

Derek Victor Ager (1923–1992) was an English geologist and palaeontologist, professor at University College Swansea and a President of the Geologists' Association. He was known both for technical work in stratigraphy and palaeontology and for accessible, provocative writing; his later book The New Catastrophism (1993) developed the same themes.

Publication details

Links to Purchase Book