La Geologia catalana, entre els estudis universitaris i l'Institut d'Estudis Catalans

Autors/ores

  • Jordi Bohigas i Maynegre

Resum

The commemoration of the centennial of the founding of the Institut dEstudis Catalans (Institute of Catalan Studies, IEC) might be a good moment to recall the figure and the work of the multi-faceted Barcelona priest and geologist Norbert Font i Sagué (1873-1910). He was a figure that bridges the apologetic geology of the Conciliar Seminary, the official geology represented by his mentor, the mining engineer Lluís M. Vidal, and the geology at university represented by professor Odón de Buen. This article reviews some of the milestones of Catalan geology from the first decade of the 20th century, during the years between the first Catalan University Congress (1903) and the creation of the Sciences Section of the IEC (1911). It also rejects the cliché of the absence of naturalists in the IECs first years. Thus, some of the most prestigious Catalan geologists of the moment, such as Font i Sagué, Vidal and Manuel Cazurro, would be placed in charge of directing the first archaeological excavations carried out by the IEC and the Barcelona «Junta de Museus», at a moment in which the Palaeolithic was still considered part of the field of the natural sciences. As of 1910, the year Font i Sagué died, some crucial changes would begin to transform the panorama of Catalan geology, as well as its relation with the Institute.

Descàrregues

Publicat

2008-12-03

Número

Secció

Centenari de l'Institut d'Estudis Catalans : l'activitat científica al segle XX