Adam Sedgwick was a priest and scholar. Roderick Murchison was a retired
soldier. Charles Lapworth was a schoolteacher. It was their personal and
intellectual rivalry, pursued on treks through Wales, Scotland,
Cornwall, Devon and parts of western Russia, that revealed the narrative
structure of the Paleozoic Era, the 300-million-year period during which
life on Earth became recognisably itself. Nick Davidson follows in their
footsteps and draws on maps, diaries, letters, field notes and
contemporary accounts to bring the ideas and characters alive. But this
is more than a history of geology. As we travel through some of the most
spectacular scenery in Britain, it's a celebration of the sheer visceral
pleasure generations of geologists have found, and continue to find, in
noticing the earth beneath our feet.