- Frank Rutley
Frank Rutley (1842-1904), an English
geologist and petrographer, was born atDover on the 14th of May 1842. He was educated partly atBonn , but his interest in geology was kindled at theRoyal School of Mines , where he studied from 1862-64. He then joined the army, and served as lieutenant until 1867, when he became an Assistant Geologist on the Geological Survey.Working in the
Lake district , Rutley began to make a special study of rocks and rock-formingmineral s, and soon qualified as acting petrographer on the Geological Survey. For several years be worked in this capacity at the Museum in Jermyn Street: he described the volcanic rocks of E. Somerset and the Bristol district in 1876, and wrote special memoirs on "The Eruptive Rocks ofBrent Tor " (1878), and on "The Felsitic Lavas of England and Wales" (1885).Rutley was the author of an exceedingly useful little book on "
Mineralogy " (1874; 12th ed., 1900); also of "The Study of Rocks" (1879; 2nd ed., 1881), "Rock-forming Minerals "(1888), and "Granites and Greenstones" (1894); and of a number of petrographical papers, dealing with perlitic and spherulitic structures, with the rocks of theMalvern Hills , etc. In 1882 he was appointed lecturer on mineralogy in the Royal College of Science, and held this post until ill-health compelled him to retire in 1898. He died inLondon on the 16th of May 1904.References
*1911
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.