Showing posts with label Croll. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Croll. Show all posts

Monday, 9 June 2014

Celebrating Croll: Who was James Croll?

James Croll is one of those remarkable Victorian characters who made a fundamental contribution to our current understanding of science, but who is now all but forgotten except in specialist circles.

James Croll

Coming from a modest rural background near Perth, Croll was largely self-taught through reading, his enthusiasm for learning sparked by The Penny Magazine of The Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge.

For much of his life he struggled with illness, and he held a succession of different jobs, from millwright to shopkeeper to insurance salesman. It was in 1859, when he became a janitor at the Anderson College in Glasgow and gained access to its extensive library, that he became actively involved in pushing the boundaries of glaciology.

His first paper on glacial epochs was published in 1864, and in 1875 he published the landmark Climate and Time, the distillation of his theory of ice ages and Earth’s orbit. In all, he wrote dozens of scientific papers, amongst other things explaining global oceanic circulation, calculating the age of the sun, developing a theory of evolution, and remarkably presciently predicting the thickness of the unexplored Antarctic Ice Sheet.

“I remember well that, before I could make headway in physical astronomy,… I had to go back and study the laws of motion and fundamental principles of mechanics. In like manner I studied pneumatics, hydrostatics, light, heat, electricity and magnetism. I obtained assistance from no-one. In fact there were none of my acquaintances who knew anything whatever about these subjects.” - James Croll


The Celebrating Croll appeal launched last week. The RSGS is aiming to rejuvenate the outdoor space and the interpretation panels in our visitor and education centre in the Fair Maid's House., to give visitors more to see, maximise the space available to visiting groups, and to celebrate the legacy of James Croll.

Tuesday, 3 June 2014

Celebrating Croll - our new appeal.

Celebrating Croll

A message from Professor Iain Stewart. 


Professor Iain Stewart
Professor Iain Stewart, President of RSGS
James Croll 
Since it opened in July 2011, the Fair Maid’s House has been enthusiastically welcomed by its visitors – adults and children alike – as an imaginative, informative and inspirational place for learning about geography and the world around us.

Now, in celebration of the RSGS’s 130th anniversary, we plan to refresh and extend the interpretative displays and facilities inside and outside the building, to give visitors even more to see, to maximise the space available for visiting schools and other groups, to give us more flexibility when running events, and to celebrate the tremendous contribution made by the 19th-century Scottish scientist James Croll to geographical thinking and our modern understanding of climate cycles – how variations in the Earth’s orbit affect its climate, leading to regular and predictable ice ages.

The Garden Today
We want to transform the plain ‘garden’ area into an exciting outdoor learning and visitor space. To do this, we need to employ a project designer and provide a budget for materials and labour, and we plan to include specially-commissioned artwork that reflects Croll’s work. We want to create an ‘outdoor room’ that will be another beautiful space for visitors and will honour an inspirational Scottish scientist.



To complement this new development outdoors, we also plan to update the interpretation panels and displays indoors with attractive and accessible information and learning materials, so that the Fair Maid’s House continues to be a repository of current thinking as well as historical knowledge.

Some design ideas from students at the Edinburgh College of Art

We have set a target for the project of £16,000. If we can raise more than this from members and other supporters, then we can do even more to improve the Fair Maid’s House for all our visitors, and to support its ongoing running costs.

Every donation will make a difference, so please help us if you can.

Donate Online

Alternatively you can print and complete this donation form and send to RSGS, Lord John Murray House, 15-19 North Port, Perth, PH1 5LU