
Abram ortelius manual#
In his Manual of Geology (1863), Dana wrote, "The continents and oceans had their general outline or form defined in earliest time. In 1889, Alfred Russel Wallace remarked, "It was formerly a very general belief, even amongst geologists, that the great features of the earth's surface, no less than the smaller ones, were subject to continual mutations, and that during the course of known geological time the continents and great oceans had, again and again, changed places with each other." He quotes Charles Lyell as saying, "Continents, therefore, although permanent for whole geological epochs, shift their positions entirely in the course of ages." and claims that the first to throw doubt on this was James Dwight Dana in 1849.Īntonio Snider-Pellegrini's Illustration of the closed and opened Atlantic Ocean (1858) by earthquakes and floods" and went on to say: "The vestiges of the rupture reveal themselves if someone brings forward a map of the world and considers carefully the coasts of the three. suggested that the Americas were "torn away from Europe and Africa. Kious described Ortelius' thoughts in this way: Ībraham Ortelius in his work Thesaurus Geographicus.

See also: Early modern Netherlandish cartography and geography Abraham Ortelius by Peter Paul Rubens, 1633Ībraham Ortelius ( Ortelius 1596), Theodor Christoph Lilienthal (1756), Alexander von Humboldt (18), Antonio Snider-Pellegrini ( Snider-Pellegrini 1858), and others had noted earlier that the shapes of continents on opposite sides of the Atlantic Ocean (most notably, Africa and South America) seem to fit together.
