Geoscientist Online 21 May 2007
The keys to the future of our species and our planet have always lain in the deep past. Richard Fortey FRS, in his Presidential Address to the Society 2007, wonders what the future will hold for the Earth sciences...
In this, the 200th year of the Geological Society of London, it is permissible to indulge a little reflection on the future of the geosciences. In the first years of the Society, the President was wont to review the progress of the subject in his annual address – that was a comparatively easy matter then, when it was still possible to summarise what was known of “the mineral structure of the Earth” within the covers of a few volumes.
Since those early days, the compass of geology has been transformed by its growth and fragmentation into a host of sub-disciplines: geophysics, geodesy, geochronology, geochemistry, sedimentology mineralogy, volcanology, and so on almost endlessly. No doubt the most effective science can now be performed by a researcher who concentrates intensely on a small area of his or her expertise. But perhaps the Bicentenary is one occasion when larger prospects should be reviewed. What will dominate the geological agenda in the next century? How will our scientists and intellects be deployed?
Some outcomes are certain. We can be sure that the former division between academic and ‘practising’ geologists will cease to be an issue. New technical advances in subsurface imaging that have industrial origins are being deployed by academics; while new remote sensing techniques have uses that are eminently practical - to detect changes in ‘groundswell’ prior to volcanic eruptions, for example – but are also are used by others to test geodetic theory. Ancient continental reconstructions mused over by palaeontologists impact on the hard-nosed search for minerals. There is no room now for arguments between ‘professionals’ and leisured ‘gentlemen’ that occupied our 19th Century forebears.