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Santorini and its eruptions / Ferdinand A. Fouqué ; translated and annotated by Alexander R. McBirney.

Van Pelt Library QE523.S27 F6813 1998 1 v. + 2 maps
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Fouqué, F. (Ferdinand), 1828-1904.
Contributor:
McBirney, Alexander R.
Series:
Foundations of natural history
Standardized Title:
Santorin et ses eruptions. English
Language:
English
French
Subjects (All):
Geology.
Santorini Volcano (Greece)--Eruptions.
Santorini Volcano (Greece).
Geology--Greece--Thera Island Region.
Greece.
Physical Description:
xiii, 495 pages, 39 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (some color), maps ; 25 cm.
Place of Publication:
Baltimore, Md. : Johns Hopkins University Press, 1998.
Summary:
Ferdinand Fouque's study of the Santorini archipelago in the Aegean Sea was first published in French in 1879. It quickly became known as a valued resource, not only on Santorini but also on volcanoes, their characteristics, and the remarkable archaeological artifacts that Fouque discovered under the volcanic rock of Santorini's most famous eruption. In short, the work proved invaluable to geologists and archaeologists alike.
For geologists, Fouque's detailed analysis of the volcano provided the first well-documented evidence that large volcanic depressions, such as the one forming the bay of Santorini, are the result of wholesale collapse following voluminous eruptions of ash and pumice. In the field of archaeology, Fouque discovered the buried city of Akrotiri and began the excavations that showed the first evidence of an advanced bronze-age civilization in the Aegean. (Like Pompeii, Akrotiri was buried by a major volcanic eruption which, according to one popular theory, was also responsible for the sudden demise of the Minoan civilization on Crete.) He was the first to use the petrographic microscope to study the sources of clay used in ancient ceramics and discovered the nature of"Egyptian blue" pigment.
Now noted volcanologist Alexander R. McBirney provides the first annotated English translation of the original French text of 1879. Most of the original work's illustrations are retained, including a fourteen-page color insert, and a large, full-color geological map of the Santorini islands.
Notes:
Accompanied by map and cross sections on two sheets with title: Geological map of the Santorini Islands (Aegean Sea, Greece).
Includes bibliographical references (pages [481]-489) and index.
ISBN:
0801856140
OCLC:
38430383

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