Schuchert, Charles

Schuchert, Charles (b. Karl)

(1858–1942) paleontologist; born in Cincinnati, Ohio. Schuchert, whose formal education ended at age 12, began his scientific career illustrating state geological surveys, and ended it as professor of historical geology at Yale (1904–23), then nationally preeminent in training invertebrate paleontologists and stratigraphers. A pioneer paleogeographer, Schuchert published the classic "Paleogeography of North America" (1910) and the long-lived Text-Book of Geology (1915). His last great work was Historical Geology of North America (1935–43).

Schuchert, Charles

 

Born July 3, 1858, in Cincinnati, Ohio; died Nov. 20, 1942, in New Haven, Conn. American paleontologist and geologist.

Schuchert worked at Yale University in New Haven in 1892–93 and for the US Geolgoical Survey in 1893–94. Beginning in 1904, he was a professor at Yale University and the Sheffield Scientific School. At the same time, he was curator of the geological collection of the Peabody Museum of Natural History at Yale University. Schuchert’s principal works dealt with the taxonomy of brachiopods, paleogeography, historical geology, the stratigraphy of North America, and the classification of geosynclines.

WORKS

“Paleogeography of North America.” Bulletin of the Geological Society of America, 1910, vol. 20.

REFERENCE

Lull, R. S. “Charles Schuchert.” American Journal of Science, 1943, vol. 241, no. 2.