Read The Map That Changed the World Online

Authors: Simon Winchester

The Map That Changed the World

BOOK: The Map That Changed the World
5.14Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads
Simon Winchester
The Map That Changed the World

William Smith and the Birth of Modern Geology

FOR
HAROLD READING

In days of old, old William Smith,

While making a canal, Sir,

Found out how the strata dipped to the east

With a very gentle fall, Sir.

First New Red Sand and marl a-top

With Lias on its border,

Then the Oolite and the Chalk so white

All stratified in order.

Sing, cockle-shells and oyster-banks,

Sing, thunder-bolts and screw-stones,

To Father Smith we owe our thanks

For the history of a few stones.

Source: Anniversary dinner, A. C. Ramsay, 1854

Contents

One
Escape on the Northbound Stage

Two
A Land Awakening from Sleep

Three
The Mystery of the Chedworth Bun

Four
The Duke and the Baronet’s Widow

Five
A Light in the Underworld

Six
The Slicing of Somerset

Seven
The View from York Minster

Eight
Notes from the Swan

Nine
The Dictator in the Drawing Room

Ten
The Great Map Conceived

Eleven
A Jurassic Interlude

Twelve
The Map That Changed the World

Thirteen
An Ungentlemanly Act

Fourteen
The Sale of the Century

Fifteen
The Wrath of Leviathan

Sixteen
The Lost and Found Man

Seventeen
All Honor to the Doctor

C
HAPTER
-O
PENING
I
LLUSTRATIONS

Incorporated in eighteen of the nineteen chapter openings (including those of the prologue and the epilogue) will be found small line drawings of Jurassic ammonites—long-extinct marine animals that were so named because their coiled and chambered shells resembled nothing so much as the horns of the ancient Egyptian ram-god,
Ammon
. Soun Vannithone’s drawings of these eighteen specimens are placed in the book in what I believe to be the ammonites’ exact chronological sequence. This means that the book’s first fossil,
Psiloceras planorbis
, which illustrates the prologue, is the oldest ammonite, and is to be found deepest down in any sequence of Jurassic sediments; by the same token the final fossil,
Pavlovia pallasioides
, comes from a much higher horizon, and is very much younger. Much like the epilogue it illustrates, it was fashioned last. It must be said, though, that anyone who flips rapidly from chapter to chapter in the hope of seeing a speeded-up version of the evolutionary advancement of the ammonite will be disappointed: Ammonites—floating, pulsating, slow-swimming beasts that were hugely abundant in the warm blue Jurassic seas—do not display any conveniently obvious changes in their features—they neither become progressively smaller with time, nor do they become larger; their shells
do not become more complex, or less. True, some ammonites with very ridged shells do indeed evolve into smoother-shelled species over the ages, but these same creatures then become rougher and more ridged again as time wears on, managing thereby to confuse and fascinate all who study them. Only studies of ammonites from successive levels will reveal sure evidence of evolutionary change, and such study is too time consuming for the chance observer. Ammonites are, however, uniformly lovely; and they inspired William Smith: two reasons good enough, perhaps, for including them as symbols both of Smith’s remarkable prescience and geological time’s amazing bounty. However: eighteen ammonites and nineteen chapter openings? There is one additional illustration, of the microscopic cross-section of a typical oolitic limestone, which I have used to mark the heading for chapter 11. Since this chapter is very different in structure from all the others, and since much of its narrative takes place along the outcrop of those exquisitely lovely, honey-colored Jurassic rocks known in England as the Great Oolite and the Inferior Oolite, it seemed appropriate and reasonable to ask the legions of ammonites, on just this one occasion, to step—or swim very slowly—to one side.

Prologue:
Psiloceras planorbis

Chapter One:
Echioceras raricostatum

Chapter Two:
Amaltheus margaritatus

Chapter Three:
Dactylioceras tenuicostatum

Chapter Four:
Harpoceras falciferum

Chapter Five:
Hildoceras bifrons

Chapter Six:
Sonninia sowerbyi

Chapter Seven:
Stephanoceras humphriesianum

Chapter Eight:
Parkinsonia parkinsoni

Chapter Nine:
Zigzagiceras zigzag

Chapter Ten:
Tulites subcontractus

Chapter Eleven: Oolitic Limestone

Chapter Twelve:
Clydoniceras discus

Chapter Thirteen:
Macrocephalites macrocephalus

Chapter Fourteen:
Sigaloceras calloviense

Chapter Fifteen:
Peltoceras athleta

Chapter Sixteen:
Cardioceras cordatum

Chapter Seventeen:
Aulacostephanoides mutabilis

Epilogue:
Pavlovia pallasioides

T
EXT
I
LLUSTRATIONS

   William Smith’s 1801 Map

1. A Map Showing the Locations of the Main Prisons in London in 1819

2.
Clypeus ploti
(side view)

3.
Clypeus ploti
(top view)

4.
Lobothyris

5. A Typical Coal Sequence

6. Rugborne Farm

7. The Mearns Colliery

8. The Somerset Coalfield

9. The Camerton & Limpley Stoke Railway

10. The Somerset Coal Canal

11. Tucking Mill

12. Tucking Mill House

13. An Ichthyosaur

14. A Plesiosaur

15. The Tethyan Ocean

16.
Leioceras opalinum

17. The Jurassic of England (Indication of Outcrop)

18.
Titanites giganteus

19.
Asteroceras

20. No. 15 Buckingham Street

21. The King’s Bench Prison

22.
Ammonites sublaevis

23. Scarborough City Museum

24. Hackness Hall

25. The Sheldonian Theatre

26. Detail of ornate stonework at the House of Commons

27. Geological Time Scale

A N
OTE ON THE
M
AP
I
NSERT

The brilliance of William Smith’s achievement can be amply demonstrated by comparing his great map of 1815 with the one produced today by the British Geological Survey. The similarity of so much of the detail—visible even at a scale where much cannot be seen—is proof absolute of the accuracy and prescience of Smith’s work, yet does not admit of the one signal difference between the two productions: that while the survey map is the fruit of the labors of thousands, William Smith’s map, drawn a century and a half before, is the result of the dedication and determination of one man who worked for almost twenty years, always entirely alone.

Psiloceras planorbis

A
bove one of the many grand marble staircases within the east wing of Burlington House, the great Palladian mansion on the north side of London’s Piccadilly, hangs a pair of huge sky blue velvet curtains, twisted and tasseled silk ropes beside them. Although many may wonder in passing, rarely does any one of the scores of people who climb and descend the stairs inquire as to what lies behind the drapes. A blocked-off window, perhaps? A painting too grotesque to show? A rare Continental tapestry, faded by the sunlight?

Once in a while someone curious and bold will demand a look, whereupon a functionary will emerge from behind a door marked Private, and with practiced hand will tug gently on the silk ropes. The curtains will slowly part, revealing an enormous and magnificent map of England and Wales, engraved and colored—in sea blue, green, bright yellow, orange, umber—in a beguiling and unfamiliar mixture of lines, patches, and stippled shapes.

“The German Ocean,” it says to the east of the English coast, instead of today’s “North Sea.” There is, in an inset, a small
cross-section of what is said to be the underside of the country from Wales to the river Thames. Otherwise all is readily familiar, comfortingly recognizable. The document is exquisitely beautiful—a beauty set off by its great size, more than eight feet by six—and by the fact that it towers—looms, indeed—above those who stand on the staircase to see it. The care and attention to its detail is clear: This is the work of a craftsman, lovingly done, the culmination of years of study, months of careful labor.

At the top right is its description, engraved in copperplate flourishes: “A Delineation of The Strata of England and Wales with part of Scotland; exhibiting the Collieries and Mines; the Marshes and Fen Lands originally Overflowed by the Sea; and the Varieties of Soil according to the Variations in the Sub Strata; illustrated by the Most Descriptive Names.” There is a signature: “By W. Smith.” There is a date: “Aug
st
1, 1815.”

This, the official will explain, is the first true geological map of anywhere in the world. It is a map that heralded the beginnings of a whole new science. It is a document that laid the groundwork for the making of great fortunes—in oil, in iron, in coal, and in other countries in diamonds, tin, platinum, and silver—that were won by explorers who used such maps. It is a map that laid the foundations of a field of study that culminated in the work of Charles Darwin. It is a map whose making signified the beginnings of an era not yet over, that has been marked ever since by the excitement and astonishment of scientific discoveries that allowed human beings to start at last to stagger out from the fogs of religious dogma, and to come to understand something certain about their own origins—and those of the planet they inhabit. It is a map that had an importance, symbolic and real, for the development of one of the great fundamental fields of study—geology—which, arguably like physics and mathematics, is a field of learning and endeavor that underpins all knowledge, all understanding.

The map is in many ways a classic representation of the ambi
tions of its day. It was, like so many other grand projects that survive as testament to their times—the
Oxford English Dictionary
, the Grand Triangulation of India, the Manhattan Project, the Concorde, the Human Genome—a project of almost unimaginably vast scope that required great vision, energy, patience, and commitment to complete.

But a signal difference sets the map apart. Each of the other projects, grand in scale, formidable in execution, and unassailable in historical importance, required the labor of thousands. The
OED
needed entire armies of volunteers. To build the Concorde demanded the participation of two entire governments. More men died during the Indian triangulation than in scores of modest wars. The offices at Los Alamos may have housed behind their chain-link fences shadowy figures who would turn out to be Nobel laureates or spies, but they were all hemmed in by immense battalions of physicists. And to attend to all their various needs—be they bomb makers, plane builders, lexicographers, codifiers of chemistry, or measurers of the land—were legions upon legions of minions, runners, amanuenses, and drones.

The incomparably beautiful geological map of 1815, however, required none of these. As vital as it turned out to be for the future of humankind, it stands apart—because it was conceived, imagined, begun, undertaken, and continued and completed against all odds by just one man. All the Herculean labors involved in the mapping of the imagined underside of an entire country were accomplished not by an army or a legion or a committee or a team, but by the single individual who finally put his signature to the completed document—William Smith, then forty-six years old, the orphaned son of the village blacksmith from the unsung hamlet of Churchill, in Oxfordshire.

And yet William Smith, who created this great map in solitary endeavor, and from whose work all manner of benefits—commercial, intellectual, and nationalistic—then flowed, was truly at
first a prophet without honor. Smith had little enough going for him: He was of simple yeoman stock, more or less self-taught, stubborn and visionary, highly motivated, and single-minded. Although he had to suffer the most horrendous frustrations during the long making of the map, he never once gave up or even thought of doing so. And yet very soon after the map was made, he became ruined, completely.

He was forced to leave London, where he had drawn and finished the map and which he considered home. All that he owned was confiscated. He was compelled to live as a homeless man for years, utterly without recognition. His life was wretched: His wife went mad—nymphomania being but one of her recorded symptoms—he fell ill, he had few friends, and his work seemed to him to have been without point, without merit.

Ironically and cruelly, part of the reason for his humiliation lies behind another set of faded velvet curtains that hang nearby, on another of Burlington House’s many elaborate staircases. There, it turns out, is quite another map, made and published shortly after William Smith’s. It was in all essentials a copy, made by rivals, and it was made—if not expressly then at least in part—with the intention of ruining the reputation of this great and unsung pioneer from Oxfordshire: a man who was not gently born, and who was therefore compelled, like so many others in those times, to bear the ungenerous consequences of his class.

 

B
ut in the very long run William Smith was fortunate. A long while after the map had been published, a kindly and liberal-minded nobleman for whom Smith had been performing tasks on his estate in a small village in Yorkshire, recognized him—knew, somehow, that this was the man who had created the extraordinary and beautiful map about which, it was said, all learned England and all the world of science outside was talking.

This aristocratic figure let people—influential and connected
people—know about the man he had discovered. He reported that he was hidden, incognito, in the depths of the English countryside. He supposedly had no expectation that anyone would now ever remember, or would ever recognize, the solitary masterpiece that he once had made. He imagined he was doomed to suffer an undeserved oblivion.

But on this occasion his pessimism was misplaced: The messages that had been sent
did
get through—with the consequence that, eventually, William Smith was persuaded to return to London, to receive at last the honors and rewards that were due him, and to be acknowledged as the founding father of the whole new science of English geology, a science that remains at the core of intellectual endeavor to this day.

It is now exactly two hundred years since William Smith began work on the map that changed the world. What follows, drawn from his diaries and letters, is a portrait of both a long-forgotten man and the world in which he lived and worked, as well as the story of his great map, which has remained hidden behind the blue velvet curtains of a great house in London far too long.

BOOK: The Map That Changed the World
5.14Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

De Valera's Irelands by Dermot Keogh, Keogh Doherty, Dermot Keogh
Summer Nights by Christin Lovell
Finding Fate by Ariel Ellens
Time Eternal by Lily Worthington
Blue Stew (Second Edition) by Woodland, Nathaniel
Margaret Moore - [Warrior 14] by In The Kings Service
The Road by Vasily Grossman
Feral: Book One by DeHaven, Velvet