Background
James Geikie was born on August 23, 1839, in Edinburgh, Scotland. He was the son of James Stuart Geikie and Isabella Thom and younger brother of Sir Archibald Geikie.
University of Edinburgh, Old College, South Bridge, Edinburgh EH8 9YL, United Kingdom
James attended the University of Edinburgh.
United Kingdom
James Murdoch Geikie
United Kingdom
James Murdoch Geikie
James Geikie was born on August 23, 1839, in Edinburgh, Scotland. He was the son of James Stuart Geikie and Isabella Thom and younger brother of Sir Archibald Geikie.
After leaving Edinburgh High School, for a few years James divided his time between working in a printer’s office and attending the University of Edinburgh.
Under the supervision of his brother, James joined the Geological Survey in 1861 as one of the men recruited to map the glacial deposits of parts of central Scotland. He devoted himself with a sustained ardor to this work, with the result that the study of Pleistocene geology in general, and the glacial deposits in particular, became his lifework. In these fields, he became the leading British authority. His official work in the mapping and investigation of the Paleozoic rocks and the superficial deposits overlying them in the areas allotted to him was of the highest quality but is hardly given full expression in the Survey publications.
It is on his unofficial papers and his books, The Great Ice Age in particular, that Geikie’s reputation rests. This work was dedicated to Andrew Ramsay, the director-general of the Geological Survey, who had already shown the effects of land ice and to whom he owed much as teacher and friend. A second edition appeared in 1877, and in 1894 a third edition was published, extensively revised in accordance with new knowledge and with the advance in Geikie’s own opinions. His book Prehistoric Europe supplemented it.
Geikie succeeded his brother Archibald as Murchison professor of geology at the University of Edinburgh in 1882. He had left the Geological Survey with great reluctance but enthusiastically took up the work of geological and geographical education. From 1904 to 1910 he was the president of the Royal Scottish Geographical Society. For many years he was an editor of its magazine. Geikie conducted his university teaching, both in the classroom and in the field, with great success and showed administrative ability within the university. For his students, he wrote Outlines of Geology and Structural and Field Geology. The latter was particularly successful and has been brought up to date in a sixth edition, published in 1953. He retired from his professorship in June 1914.
In The Great Ice Age Geikie put forward the hypothesis that the glacial period as a whole had been interrupted by mild episodes or interglacial periods. This hypothesis was suggested to him by evidence in Scotland, where (as in the rest of Britain) the evidence is not very definite; thus he was at first hesitant. But the support of a more conclusive nature was forthcoming from the Continent, and Geikie became a progressively stronger advocate for the existence of interglacial periods. His fundamental contention - now generally accepted - was strikingly supported by Albrecht Penck and Eduard Bruckner in their description of the glacial phenomena of the Alpine valleys published in 1909 in a volume dedicated to Geikie. He further taught that man lived in Europe throughout the glacial period, a theory that also has gained acceptance.
Geikie was a fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburg and of the Royal Society of London. He also was a founding member of the Royal Scottish Geographical Society from 1884 and joined the Geological Society of London in 1873.
In 1875 Geikie married Mary Johnston, whose family lived in the region of the Cheviot Hills.