Born into a modest family in the small town of
San Vito al Tagliamento, he attended the seminary in
Portogruaro and was ordained a priest in 1710. In the following years, he deepened his studies in
anatomy,
physiology, and
natural history. In 1721, he became director of the seminary in
Feltre, where he also taught philosophy. In his later life he was appointed as parish priest of the small village of Corbolone, a position he held almost until his death. Moro died in his hometown on 3 March 1764, aged 76. The
lunar mountain
Mons Moro is named after him. Moro devoted in depth research to the study of natural history. From his personal observations of the mountains in the Friuli region and from accounts of the eruption near
Santorini that led to the formation of the island of
Nea Kameni in 1707, he theorized that inside the earth was a ball of liquid fire and that mountains were upheaved from the sea. He hypothesized that fossils of marine animals were found petrified inside rocks because they had grown in sea water before the mountains had risen above the sea level. He published the results of his researches in the book ''De' Crostacei'' (1740). The work sparked heated controversy throughout Europe and was soon translated into
German and published in Leipzig in 1751. Moro corresponded with several prominent scientists and scholars of his age, including
Scipione Maffei,
Giovanni Lami,
Giovanni Bianchi, and Johann Balthasar Ehrhart. == Contributions ==