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      • In 1908 American geologist Frank B. Taylor postulated that the arcuate (bow-shaped) mountain belts of Asia and Europe resulted from the creep of the continents toward the Equator. His analysis of tectonic features foreshadowed in many ways modern thought regarding plate collisions.
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  1. He became a specialist in the glacial geology of the Great Lakes, and proposed to the Geological Society of America on December 29, 1908 that the continents moved on the Earth's surface, that a shallow region in the Atlantic marks where Africa and South America were once joined, and that the collisions of continents could uplift mountains.

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  3. May 18, 2018 · Taylor, Frank Bursley (1860–1939) Taylor was a respected American glaciologist, but is better known for his more speculative cosmology, which included the idea that the Moon was a former comet, captured in the Cretaceous.

  4. In 1908 American geologist Frank B. Taylor postulated that the arcuate (bow-shaped) mountain belts of Asia and Europe resulted from the creep of the continents toward the Equator. His analysis of tectonic features foreshadowed in many ways modern thought regarding plate collisions.

  5. Feb 14, 2018 · Frank B. Taylor (1860–1938), an American geologist whose prime interest was the glacial geology of the Great Lakes, also was an early contributor to continental drift theory. Edward Suess' writings on global tectonics was the stimulus which generated his interest in this field of geological theory. Taylor's initial proposal suggesting ...

    • George W. Black
    • 1979
  6. Frank B. Taylor was an American geologist who specialized in the glacial geology of the Great Lakes. This article discusses his work on the Continental Drift theory, which preceeded the work of Alfred Wegener by a year and a half.

    • George W. Black
    • 1979
  7. Feb 14, 2018 · In this paper, which was published by the Society in 1910, Taylor outlined the formation of Tertiary mountain belts by the collision of crustal sheets (we would now say “plates”) which had experienced horizontal creeping of hundreds, even thousands of kilometers over a plastic substrate.

  8. start is that Taylor (or Pickering or Wegener advantage that it explained why all the planets for that matter) was unusually persistent, and in our system circulate in the same direction, that, compared to his contemporaries, he had a Despite vagaries in its fortunes no other cos.

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