Sydney Barber Josiah Skertchly

Skertchly in 1871

Sydney Barber Josiah Skertchly (14 December 1850 – 2 February 1926) was an English and later Australian botanist and geologist. He described and mapped the geology of East Anglia and the fenlands, travelled the world exploring geology and other aspects of science, and became influential in scientific societies in Queensland.

Biography

Early life

Born in Anstey, Leicestershire, Skertchly was the son of an English engineer, Joseph Skertchly, and Sarah Moseley, née Barber. He was educated at King Edward's School, Ashby-de-la-Zouch where he won the Queen's gold medal for science. He studied geology at the Royal School of Mines (later Imperial College, London) under Sir Ralph Tate and Thomas H. Huxley.[1]

Career

Illustration from Skertchly's On the manufacture of Gun-Flints, 1879

He then worked as assistant curator to the Geological Society, London, with Sir Charles Lyell. In 1869 he began to travel, becoming assistant geologist to Ismail Pasha, khedive of Egypt. He worked in East Anglia for the British Geological Survey, studying and making maps of the geologically young strata there, as well as writing on the gun-flint industry which exploited the local flints. He described and named the Brandon Beds which lie under the Boulder clay.[1][2]

Skertchly sent Charles Darwin a copy of his Geology of the Fenland in 1878. Darwin replied with a gift of his Origin of Species.[3] He also corresponded with Darwin's rival and co-discoverer of natural selection, Alfred Russel Wallace.[4]

He travelled to California, Borneo, and China, studying and writing on geology and wider scientific subjects. He pioneered the first ever series of science textbooks written by scientists rather than school teachers, and a system for showing relief on maps. He became professor of Botany in Hong Kong. When war broke out in 1891 between China and Japan, he moved to Brisbane, Australia. He gave many lectures on geology there, and wrote on science and natural history for the Brisbane Courier.[1]

Societies

Skertchly became a member of the Geological Society, London, in 1871, and of the Royal Anthropological Institute in 1880. He was president of the Royal Society of Queensland in 1898. He founded and was the first president of the Field Naturalists' Club in 1906. He was examining board president of the Queensland Institute of Ophthalmic Opticians from 1910 to 1925, and president of the Child Study Association of Queensland.[1]

Family and later life

Skertchly married Rachel Ellen Kemp on 26 June 1871 in London, and they travelled around France and Italy together. She illustrated Colouration in Animals and Plants (1886) for him. They had a daughter and a son. He retired to the Nerang district of Australia. He died on 2 February 1926 in Molendinar, Queensland, Australia, and is buried in Nerang cemetery.[1]

Works

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Australian Dictionary of Biography, Skertchly. 1988.
  2. Howorth, Henry Hoyle (1893). The Glacial Nightmare and the Flood: A Second Appeal to Common Sense from the Extravagance of Some Recent Geology. London: Sampson Low, Marston & Company. p. 318.
  3. Darwin Correspondence Project. Letters 11379 and 11429 to Charles Darwin from S.B.J. Skertchly. 27 February 1878 and 17 March 1878. Retrieved 22 November 2012.
  4. van Wyhe, John (2012). "Wallace Online". National University of Singapore. Retrieved November 24, 2012.. NHM-WP01.007, letters and notes from Wallace to Skertchly.

Bibliography

External links

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