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Biographical Memoir of John Wesley Powell, 1834-1902

This is Volume VIII of the National Academy of Sciences Biographical Memoirs series. It is read as 33 sections using the memoir headings. John Wesley Powell (1834-1902) was a leading figure in the geological explorations of the West and helped establish the federal U.S. Geological Survey in 1879. He also led the Bureau of Ethnology and advocated for better treatment and study of Native American tribes and culture. He wrote a definitive study of the arid western U.S., advocating for thoughtful irrigation and land management practices. Powell predicted that water rights purchased by corporations, rather than tied to the land, would be a major political and environmental issue. John Wesley Powell was a scientific frontiersman. His life reveals the energetic working of a vigorous and independent personality, full of inspiration, power, and enterprise. He was a founder of major scientific organizations, including the National Geographic Society, Geological Society of America, and the Cosmos Club. Powell lived most of his life in Washington, DC. The memoir was written by William Morris Davis (1850-1934) was a prominent professor of geology, geography, and meteorology at Harvard and knew Powell personally. Summary by Melanie Schleeter McCalmont (3 hr 40 min)

Chapters

Early Life

Service in the Civil War

Visit to the Rocky Mountains, 1867-1868

Exploration of the Colorado Canyon

Geological Survey of the Territories and Report on the Colorado Canyon

Antecedent Rivers

Geological Work

Physiographic Work

Baselevel of Erosion

Planation

Physiographic Essays

Lands of the Arid Region

The Geological Survey

Topographical Map

Reports and Folios

Irrigation Survey

Administration

Resignation from the Survey

Residence in Washington

Ethnological Work

Bureau of Ethnology

Indian Languages and Mythology

Savagery, Barbarism, and Civilization

Synthetic Essays

Mannerisms

Views on Evolution

Evolution of Music

Inductive Studies

Indian Linguistic Families

Philosophical Studies

Pentalogic Series

Truth and Error

Personal Estimates