James Hutton is considered to be the father of modern geology. From this increased interest in the nature of the Earth and its origin, came a heightened attention to
minerals and other components of the Earth's
crust. Moreover, the increasing economic importance of
mining in Europe during the mid to late 18th century made the possession of accurate knowledge about
ores and their natural distribution vital. Scholars began to study the makeup of the Earth in a systematic manner, with detailed comparisons and descriptions not only of the land itself, but of the semi-precious
metals it contained, which had great commercial value. For example, in 1774
Abraham Gottlob Werner published the book
(On the External Features of Fossils), which brought him widespread recognition because he presented a detailed system for identifying specific minerals based on external characteristics. From experimentation with cooling globes, he found that the age of the Earth was not only 4,000 or 5,500 years as
inferred from the Bible, but rather 75,000 years. Another individual who described the history of the Earth with reference to neither God nor the Bible was the philosopher
Immanuel Kant, who published his
Universal Natural History and Theory of the Heavens () in 1755. From the works of these respected men, as well as others, it became acceptable by the mid eighteenth century to question the age of the Earth. This questioning represented a turning point in the study of the Earth. It was now possible to study the history of the Earth from a scientific perspective without religious preconceptions. With the application of scientific methods to the investigation of the Earth's history, the study of geology could become a distinct field of science. To begin with, the terminology and definition of what constituted geological study had to be worked out. The term "geology" was first used technically in publications by two Genevan naturalists,
Jean-André Deluc and
Horace-Bénédict de Saussure, though "geology" was not well received as a term until it was taken up in the very influential compendium, the
Encyclopédie, published beginning in 1751 by
Denis Diderot. This was an important step in further promoting knowledge of geology as a science and in recognizing the value of widely disseminating such knowledge. By the 1770s, chemistry was starting to play a pivotal role in the theoretical foundation of geology and two opposite theories with committed followers emerged. These contrasting theories offered differing explanations of how the rock layers of the Earth's surface had formed. One suggested that a liquid inundation, perhaps like the biblical deluge, had created all geological strata. The theory extended chemical theories that had been developing since the seventeenth century and was promoted by Scotland's
John Walker, Sweden's
Johan Gottschalk Wallerius and Germany's
Abraham Werner. Of these names, Werner's views become internationally influential around 1800. He argued that the Earth's layers, including
basalt and
granite, had formed as a precipitate from an ocean that covered the entire Earth. Werner's system was influential and those who accepted his theory were known as Diluvianists or
Neptunists. The Neptunist thesis was the most popular during the late eighteenth century, especially for those who were chemically trained. However, another thesis slowly gained currency from the 1780s forward. Instead of water, some mid-eighteenth-century naturalists such as Buffon had suggested that strata had been formed through heat (or fire). Abbé
Anton Moro, who had studied volcanic islands, first proposed the theory before 1750, and
James Hutton subsequently developed it as part of his
Theory of the Earth. Hutton argued against the theory of Neptunism, proposing instead the theory of based on heat. Those who followed this thesis during the early nineteenth century referred to this view as
Plutonism: the formation of the Earth through the gradual solidification of a molten mass at a slow rate by the same processes that had occurred throughout history and continued in the present day. This led him to the conclusion that the Earth was immeasurably old and could not possibly be explained within the limits of the chronology inferred from the Bible. Plutonists believed that
volcanic processes were the chief agent in rock formation, not water from a Great Flood. ==19th century==