History of ichnology: The correspondence between the reverend Henry Duncan and the reverend William Buckland and the discovery of the first vertebrate footprints


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Authors: Pemberton, SG; McCrea, R; Gingras, MK; Sarjeant, WAS; MacEachern, JA
Year: 2008
Journal: Ichnos 15: 5-18   Article Link (DOI)
Title: History of ichnology: The correspondence between the reverend Henry Duncan and the reverend William Buckland and the discovery of the first vertebrate footprints
Abstract: The Reverend Henry Duncan (1774-1846), clergyman, philosopher, writer, politician, archeologist, poet, educator, social reformer, and the founder of savings banks, was indeed a Man for All Seasons. In 1824, while Minister of the Church of Scotland at Ruthwell, Dumfriesshire, he was presented with a slab of red sandstone from the Corneockle Muir quarry in Annandale, exhibiting a set of footprints on it. Although Duncan felt from the start that he was dealing with the tracks of an animal, he wrote to the Reverend William Buckland, Reader in Mineralogy and Geology at the University of Oxford, to solicit his opinion on the origin of these curious markings. Buckland was at first skeptical, but after receiving casts of the markings from Duncan, he became convinced that they did in fact represent footprints. Duncan and Buckland maintained a correspondence about the footprints, and on January 7, 1828, Duncan described the Corncockle Muir footprints to the Royal Society of Edinburgh and quoted Buckland's findings. Duncan's paper was not published by the Society until 1831, but it aroused considerable interest-"Footsteps before the Flood"!-and was reported in several newspapers. This was the first scientific report of a fossil track; although a schoolboy, Pliny Moody, had found fossil footprints in Connecticut in 1802, they were not scientifically described until 1836. The Scottish tracks are now considered to be not reptilian but of synapsid origin and the rocks containing them are now known to be of Permian age.
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