|
ALPHONSE See also: born at See also: Renaix, in Eastern See also: Flanders, on the 27th of See also: September 1842
.
He was educated for the See also: church of
See also: Rome, and from 1866 to 1869 he was See also: superintendent at the See also: College de la Paix, See also: Namur
.
In 1870 he entered the Jesuit Training College at the old abbey of Maria Laach in the See also: Eifel, and there, while engaged in studying philosophy and science, he became interested in the geology of the See also: district, and especially in the volcanic rocks
.
Thenceforth he worked at chemistry and See also: mineralogy, and qualified himself for those petrographical researches for which he was distinguished
.
In 1874 he became professor of chemistry and geology in the college of the Belgian See also: Jesuits at See also: Louvain, a few years later he was appointed one of the curators of the Royal Natural See also: History Museum at Brussels, and in 1882 he relinquished his See also: post at Louvain
.
In 1888 he was chosen professor of geology at the university of See also: Ghent, and retained the post until the close of his See also: life
.
Meanwhile he had been ordained See also: priest in 1877, and had intended to enter the Society of Jesus
.
He was known as the See also: Abbe Renard; but, as remarked by See also: Sir A
.
Geikie, " As years passed, the longing for See also: mental freedom See also: grew ever stronger, until at last it overmastered all the traditions and associations of a lifetime, and he finally separated himself from the church of Rome." His first See also: work,
written in conjunction with See also: Charles de la Vallee-Poussin (1827-1904), was the Memoire sur
See also: les caracteres mineralogiques et stratigraphiques See also: des roches dices plutoniennes de la Belgique et de l'Ardenne francaise (1876)
.
In later essays and papers he dealt with the structure and See also: mineral composition of many igneous and sedimentary rocks, and with the phenomena of metamorphism in Belgium and other countries
.
In acknowledgment of his work the See also: Bigsby Medal was in 1885 awarded to him by the See also: Geological Society of See also: London
.
Still more important were his later researches connected with the Challenger Expedition
.
The various See also: rock specimens and oceanic deposits were submitted to him for examination in association with Sir See also: John
See also: Murray, and their detailed observations were embodied in the Report on the Scientific Results of the Voyage of H.M.S
.
" Challenger." Deep
See also: Sea Deposits (1891)
.
The more striking additions to our knowledge included " the detection and description of cosmic dust, which as See also: fine rain slowly accumulates on the ocean floor; the development of zeolitic crystals on the sea-bottom at temperatures of 32° and under; and the distribution and mode of occurrence of manganiferous concretions and of phosphatic and See also: glauconite deposits on the See also: bed of the ocean " (Geikie)
.
Renard died at Brussels on the 9th of See also: July 1903
.
Obituaries by Sir A
.
Geikie in Quart
.
Journ
.
Geol
.
See also: Soc., 1x
.
1904, and in Geol
.
Mag., Nov
.
1903
.
|
|
|
[back] ERNEST RENAN (1823-1892) |
[next] RENAUD DE MONTAUBAN (Rinaldo di Montalbano) |
There are no comments yet for this article.
Do not copy, download, transfer, or otherwise replicate the site content in whole or in part.
Links to articles and home page are encouraged.