Scientific achievements Ager was the author of numerous works on brachiopod
systematics and introduced several
taxa within the
order Rhynchonellida, for example the
family Norellidae Ager, 1959 (originally as a subfamily) and the
genus Austrirhynchia Ager, 1959. He was the author of the first English-language He also worked on general issues of the
Earth sciences, such as the relationship between
uniformitarianism and catastrophism, pioneering the rediscovery of the latter after many decades of disregard.
Reception of his writings Some of Ager's books reached wide audiences. His 1973 book,
The nature of the stratigraphical record was described as 'brief, cheerful, iconoclastic and compelling' by a reviewer, writing in
Scientific American. This book was also eminently quotable, written in eight pithy chapters, each summed up in an
aphorism that captured the essence of the essay. Of these, perhaps the best known is the quote
Nothing is worldwide, but everything is episodic .... The history of any one part of the earth, like the life of a soldier, consists of long periods of boredom and short periods of terror. == Legacy ==