James Croll

James Croll
FRS
Born (1821-01-02)January 2, 1821
Died December 15, 1890(1890-12-15) (aged 69)
Nationality Scottish
Occupation Scientist
Spouse(s) Isabella Macdonald (m. 1848–90)

James Croll, FRS, (2 January 1821 15 December 1890) was a 19th-century Scottish scientist who developed a theory of climate change based on changes in the Earth's orbit.

Life

James Croll was born in 1821 on the farm of Little Whitefield, near Wolfhill in Perthshire, Scotland (NO1733). He was largely self-educated. At 16 he became an apprentice wheelwright at Collace near Wolfhill, and then because of health problems a tea merchant in Elgin, Moray. He married Isabella Macdonald in 1848.[1]

In the 1850s he managed a temperance hotel in Blairgowrie, and was then an insurance agent in Glasgow, Edinburgh and Leicester. In 1859, he became a janitor at the museum of the Andersonian University in Glasgow. He was able to use the university library to get access to books, and taught himself physics and astronomy to develop his ideas.[1]

From 1864, Croll corresponded with Sir Charles Lyell,[2] on links between ice ages and variations in the Earth's orbit. This led to a position in the Edinburgh office of the Geological Survey of Scotland, as keeper of maps and correspondence, where the director, Sir Archibald Geikie, encouraged his research. He published a number of books and papers which "were at the forefront of contemporary science",[3] including Climate and Time, in Their Geological Relations in 1875. He corresponded with Charles Darwin on erosion by rivers.

In 1876, he was elected Fellow of the Royal Society, and awarded an honorary degree by the University of St Andrews. He retired in 1880 because of ill health, and died in 1890.

Theory of ice ages

Croll was the leading proponent of an astronomical theory of climate change in the nineteenth century.[4] Using formulae for orbital variations developed by Urbain Le Verrier (which had led to the discovery of Neptune), Croll developed a theory of the effects of variations of the Earth's orbit on climate cycles. His idea was that decreases in winter sunlight would favour snow accumulation, and for the first time coupled this to the idea of a positive ice-albedo feedback to amplify the solar variations. Croll further argued that the accumulation of snow would change the pattern of trade winds, leading to the deflection of warming currents like the Gulf Stream, and finally a self-sustaining ice age. He suggested that when orbital eccentricity is high, then winters will tend to be colder when the Earth is farther from the sun in that season and hence, that during periods of high orbital eccentricity, ice ages occur on 22,000 year cycles in each hemisphere, and alternate between southern and northern hemispheres, lasting approximately 10,000 years each.

Croll's theory predicted multiple ice ages, asynchronous in northern and southern hemispheres, and that the last ice ages should have ended about 80,000 years ago. Evidence was just then emerging of multiple ice ages, and geologists were interested in a theory to explain this. Geologists were not then able to date sediments accurately enough to determine if glaciation was synchronous between the hemispheres, though the limited evidence more pointed towards synchronicity than not. More crucially, estimates of the recession rate of the Niagara Falls indicated that the last ice age ended 6,000 to 35,000 years ago - a large range, but enough to rule out Croll's theory, to those who accepted the measurements.

Croll's work was widely discussed, but by the end of the 19th century, his theory was generally disbelieved. However, the basic idea of orbitally-forced insolation variations influencing terrestrial temperatures - now known generally as Milankovitch cycles - was further developed by Milutin Milankovitch and eventually, in modified form, triumphed in 1976.

Works

See also

Notes

  1. 1 2 Bonney 1901.
  2. "Index of some of Croll's correspondence". NAHSTE. Retrieved 2006-07-30.
  3. Prof David Crichton. "Croll: a forgotten hero of Perth". (Copy at web.archive.org). Archived from the original on 2004-10-11. Retrieved 2004-10-11.
  4. James Rodger Fleming (2006). "James Croll in Context: The Encounter between Climate Dynamics and Geology in the Second Half of the Nineteenth Century" (PDF).
Attribution

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Bonney, Thomas George (1901). "Croll, James". In Sidney Lee. Dictionary of National Biography, 1901 supplement. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 

References

External links

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