In 1889 Adams was appointed Lecturer in Geology at McGill University. He was appointed Logan Professor of Geology after the retirement of John William Dawson in 1892 and held this position until his own retirement in 1924. Though he was working full-time at McGill, he continued to spend summers in the field, financed by the GSC. In 1891 he began working on the Grenville of eastern Ontario, and by the following year had started to work on the
Haliburton, Ontario area. His work there, carried out after 1896 with Alfred Barlow of the GSC, was published as a GSC Memoir in 1908, and became a classic of Canadian geology. The rocks, which included unusual
alkaline rocks, were not merely mapped, but studied in detail using petrographic and chemical methods, and firm conclusions were drawn about their
petrogenesis, all of which was unusual for a GSC Memoir at that time. At the same time, Adams was also studying the peculiar petrological characteristics of a group of alkaline intrusions of much later geological age (now known to be
Early Cretaceous), called by him the "
Monteregian Hills." This work would be continued by his students, notably
Joseph Austin Bancroft (1882-1957), who succeeded Adams as Logan Professor at McGill. Inspired by his observations on the flow of metamorphosed
limestones in the Grenville, Adams began a series of pioneer experimental studies of the physical properties of rocks at high pressures and temperatures, carried out in collaboration with
John Thomas Nicholson, Professor of Engineering at McGill. This was well before comparable work was carried out in Germany or the United States. Though the experimental apparatus was primitive compared with that later developed at
Harvard University and the Geophysical Laboratory in Washington, D.C., Adams' work was highly regarded by the newly founded
Carnegie Institution for Science, which supported him financially, and attempted to persuade him to move to the Institution. Adams remained at McGill, where he served as the Dean of the Faculty of Applied Science and then as Vice-Principal to the University. He served as President of the International Geological Congress held in Toronto in 1913, and was President of the
Geological Society of America in 1917. He received many honors during his career, first becoming a Fellow of the
Royal Society of Canada in 1896, a Fellow of the
Royal Society (of Great Britain) in 1907, a Foreign Honorary Member of the
American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1917, an International Member of the United States
National Academy of Sciences in 1920, and awarded the
Flavelle Medal, which is given for outstanding contributions to biological science, in 1937. The Frank Dawson Adams Building at
McGill University is named in his honor. A plaque in his honor was erected on the
Redpath Museum on the McGill campus in 1950. He retired from McGill in 1924, and began to travel widely, collecting books on the history of geology, as well as rocks and minerals for McGill. He published several papers on the geology of
Ceylon and also on the history of geology, culminating in his book
Birth and Development of the Geological Sciences (1938). It became a classic and was reprinted by
Dover Publications in 1954. He left his rare book collection (1581 monographs) to McGill university. ==References==