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John Wells Foster

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American geologist (1815–1873)
Foster in 1899

John Wells Foster (March 4, 1815 – June 29, 1873) was an Americangeologist andarchaeologist.

Biography

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Foster was born March 4, 1815, inPetersham, Massachusetts where his father, Festus Foster was a minister. When Festus quit the ministry in 1818, the family moved toBrimfield, Massachusetts. Wells was educated locally, spent a year atWilbraham Academy and then enteredWesleyan University in 1831.[1] After graduating with honors in 1834, he studied law inZanesville, Ohio and was admitted to thebar.[2]

In 1837, the Ohio legislature authorized a geological survey of the state to be led byWilliam W. Mather. Foster had studied under Mather at Wesleyan, and accepted an invitation to join the survey.[2] Foster was assigned to a district in the central part of the state and mapped the area's basicstratigraphy. In particular he noted the area held extensive coal reserves. He also discovered the fossilized bones of mastodons and a species of giant beaver which he namedCastoroides ohioensis.[3] The survey lasted only eighteen months but made significant contributions towards understanding the basic geological structure of the state.[4]

When the survey ended, Foster continued to investigate the Ohio coal fields on behalf of several mining companies. In 1847, Foster andJosiah Dwight Whitney were hired to assistCharles T. Jackson in making a federal survey of Michigan'sUpper Peninsula, which was about to become a major copper and iron mining region. The survey was poorly managed by Jackson and when he was dismissed, Foster and Whitney were asked to complete the effort. The final reports were published under their names in 1850 and 1851.[3] In 1851, they made a well-received presentation of their findings to theAmerican Association for the Advancement of Science.[2]

Afterwards Foster returned to Brimfield and became involved in politics. He was a prominent member of theKnow-Nothing movement, an organization opposed to immigrants and Catholics. When the party split over the question of slavery, Foster worked withHenry Wilson, a noted abolitionist, to organize the Republican party in Massachusetts. In 1855, Foster ran for Congress as a Republican and was narrowly defeated byCalvin C. Chaffee.[1]

In 1858, he settled in Chicago where he remained for the rest of his life. For a time he worked in the land department of theIllinois Central Railroad but then joined the faculty at theOld University of Chicago where he served as a professor of natural history. Foster had been interested in archaeology since his work on the Ohio geological survey and spent many years studying the remnants of theIndian mound builders culture. Just prior to his death in 1873, he publishedPrehistoric races of the United States of America which laid out the results of his studies of the mound builders.[1][2]

Foster was electedpresident of theAmerican Association for the Advancement of Science in 1869 and served for three years as president of theChicago Academy of Sciences. He died on June 29, 1873, of liver inflammation.

Publications

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Notes

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  1. ^abcHyde (1879)
  2. ^abcdChicago Daily Tribune
  3. ^abMerrill (1924)
  4. ^Hansen (1979)

References

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