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Frederick John North (1889–1968) was a British geologist and museum curator.[1]
He was a lifelong advocate and populariser of geology, and was from 1914–59 Keeper of Geology at the National Museum of Wales. He trained as a palaeontologist, specialising in fossil brachiopods; but from the 1920s, he wrote and spoke broadly about slate, coal, ironstone and limestone. He was a keen historian, cartographer, archaeologist, caver and photographer. He was a founder member of the British Association for History of Science.[2]
Bibliography
edit- 1930: The River Scenery at the Head of the Vale of Neath, National Museum of Wales, Cardiff
- 1937: Humphrey Lhuyd's maps of England and of Wales. National Museum of Wales, Cardiff.
- 1949: Snowdonia (with B. Campbell and R. Scott). New Naturalist #13. Collins, London.
References
edit- ^ Bassett, Douglas Anthony (2001). "NORTH, FREDERICK JOHN (1889 - 1968), geologist, educator, historian of science and museum curator". Dictionary of Welsh Biography. National Library of Wales. Retrieved 9 November 2021.
- ^ Marren, Peter (1995). The New Naturalists. HarperCollins. ISBN 978-0002199971.