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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition.  2001-07.
 
Chamberlin, Thomas Chrowder
 
 
1843–1928, American geologist, b. Mattoon, Ill., grad. Beloit College, 1866. He was professor of geology at Beloit (1873–82), president of the Univ. of Wisconsin (1887–92), and professor of geology and director of the Walker Museum at the Univ. of Chicago (1892–1919). Chamberlin was chief geologist of the geological survey of Wisconsin (1873–82) and the founder (1893) of the Journal of Geology. While studying glaciation and climates in past geologic times he noted defects in the nebular hypothesis of Laplace that led him to formulate, with the American astronomer F. R. Moulton, the planetesimal hypothesis of the origin of the solar system. Chamberlin wrote The Geology of Wisconsin (1873–82), A Contribution to the Theory of Glacial Motion (1904), A General Treatise on Geology (with Rollin D. Salisbury, 1906), The Origin of the Earth (1916), and Two Solar Families (1928).
 
 
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright © 2007 Columbia University Press.

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