When Continental Drift Was Considered Pseudoscience
One hundred years ago, a German scientist was ridiculed for advancing the shocking idea that the continents were adrift
- By Richard Conniff
- Smithsonian magazine, June 2012, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
But it was the Americans who came down hardest against continental drift. A paleontologist called it “Germanic pseudo-science” and accused Wegener of toying with the evidence to spin himself into “a state of auto-intoxication.” Wegener’s lack of geological credentials troubled another critic, who declared that it was “wrong for a stranger to the facts he handles to generalize from them.” He then produced his own cutout continents to demonstrate how awkwardly they fit together. It was geology’s equivalent of O.J. Simpson’s glove.
The most poignant attack came from a father-son duo. Like Wegener, University of Chicago geologist Thomas C. Chamberlin had launched his career with an iconoclastic attack on establishment thinking. He went on to define a distinctly democratic and American way of doing science, according to historian Naomi Oreskes. Making the evidence fit grandiose theories was the fatal flaw in Old World science, Chamberlin said; the true scientist’s role was to lay out the facts and let all theories compete on equal terms. Like a parent with his children, he was “morally forbidden to fasten his affection unduly upon any one of them.”
By the 1920s, Chamberlin was the dean of American science and his colleagues fawned that his originality put him on a par with Newton and Galileo. But he had also become besotted with his own theory of earth’s origins, which treated the oceans and continents as fixed features. This “great love affair” with his own work was characterized, historian Robert Dott writes, “by elaborate, rhetorical pirouetting with old and new evidence.” Chamberlin’s democratic ideals—or perhaps some more personal motivation—required grinding Wegener’s grandiose theorizing underfoot.
Rollin T. Chamberlin, who was also a University of Chicago geologist, did his father’s dirty work: The drift theory “takes considerable liberties with our globe,” he wrote. It ignores “awkward, ugly facts” and “plays a game in which there are few restrictive rules.” Young Chamberlin also quoted an unnamed geologist’s remark that inadvertently revealed the heart of the problem: “If we are to believe Wegener’s hypothesis we must forget everything which has been learned in the last 70 years and start all over again.”
Instead, geologists largely chose to forget Alfred Wegener, except to launch another flurry of attacks on his “fairy tale” theory in the middle of World War II. For decades afterward, older geologists warned newcomers that any hint of an interest in continental drift would doom their careers.
Wegener took the assault as an opportunity to refine his ideas and address valid criticisms. When critics said he had not presented a plausible mechanism for the drift, he provided six of them (including one that foreshadowed the idea of plate tectonics). When they pointed out mistakes—his timeline for continental drift was far too short—he corrected himself in subsequent editions of his work. But he “never retracted anything,” says historian Mott Greene, author of an upcoming biography, Alfred Wegener’s Life and Scientific Work. “That was always his response: Just assert it again, even more strongly.” By the time Wegener published the final version of his theory, in 1929, he was certain it would sweep other theories aside and pull together all the accumulating evidence into a unifying vision of the earth’s history. (But even he would have been astonished by the charges against the Italians for failing to turn continental drift into a predictive device; that trial is expected to continue for months.)
The turnabout on his theory came relatively quickly, in the mid-1960s, as older geologists died off and younger ones began to accumulate proof of seafloor spreading and vast tectonic plates grinding across one another deep within the earth.
Wegener didn’t live to see it. Because of a subordinate’s failure, he and a colleague had to make a lifesaving delivery of food to two of his weather researchers spending the winter of 1930 deep in Greenland’s ice pack. The 250-mile return trip to the coast that November turned desperate. Wegener, at 50, yearned to be home with his wife and three daughters. He dreamed of “vacation trips with no mountain climbing or other semi-polar adventures” and of the day when “the obligation to be a hero ends, too.” But a quotation in his notes reminded him that no one accomplished anything worthwhile “except under one condition: I will accomplish it or die.”
Somewhere along the way the two men vanished in the endless snow. Searchers later found Wegener’s body and reported that “his eyes were open, and the expression on his face was calm and peaceful, almost smiling.” It was as if he had foreseen his ultimate vindication.
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Comments (23)
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Reading about Wegener reminds me immensely of the Expanding Earth theory. The criticisms against it are identical: scientists complain that there is no adequate explanation for the expansion. The proof is there and cannot be refuted, only denied. Thankfully, most thankfully, it will triumph as we now have the NOAA confirmation of the relative ages of the oceanic crust. Even more thankfully, the generation now living who continue to resist the truth are dying off and a generation will come that will be raised with the paradigm that the earth expanded, and Pangea will be relegated back to its rightful place as pseudo-science.
Posted by Doug Gibson on April 28,2013 | 05:03 PM
It's amazing how close minded people can down grade a scientist like Wegener. It takes some one who's brave and confident in there own beliefs to develop a thought like that and i value a persons time and listen to them even if i disagree... wish more people were the same way... or at least more respectful.
Posted by david johnston on January 15,2013 | 09:16 PM
this page help me with my science homework.
Posted by nathaniel montalvo on January 15,2013 | 07:49 PM
This is so long & most of it isn't relevant . Most of this stuff isn't even important . WHY PUT THIS ON THE INTERNET?¿?¿?¿?¿?¿
Posted by Emilee on January 15,2013 | 07:37 PM
I have a extra credit assignment in school the info i am looking for is what is the name that was given to the next continental drift in 200 million years
Posted by josh shelley on January 10,2013 | 05:24 PM
This is very helpful and good.
Posted by cima on December 13,2012 | 07:00 PM
These pictures are very old time... In science I was looking for him and yet , He was very popular .....
Posted by ariyana on December 6,2012 | 01:26 PM
This article help me understand better then my teacher did :)
Posted by Lydia on November 9,2012 | 02:56 PM
Early Greenland Expeditions The article caught me with great surprise, reading it as a subscriber. My uncle, Professor Dr. Eugen Wegmann, was on that same expedition, and I remember him telling us about Alfred Wegener, and their findings about the movements of the continents. These were the first expeditions to Greenland for geological research, and the first Europeans to spend the winter there. My uncle later led other expeditions for Denmark and for Norway, where he has a memorial stone at the University of Oslo. He had lectured at several American Universities, and received numerous honors during his lifetime, incl. Chevalier de la Legion d’Honeur, and after his death, was honored by the American Geological Society. Professor Eugen Wegmann was born and studied in Switzerland, spent many years for research in Scandinavia, and later became Director of the Geological Institute at the University of Neuchatel, Switzerland. He was born in 1895 and passed away in 1983. Verena Aeschbacher, Bellville, Texas
Posted by Verena S. Aeschbacher on September 29,2012 | 11:06 PM
How we interpret the science of centuries past cannot be separated from our view of modern science. The danger is that this view may be based on a stereotype. A common stereotype of a scientist is that of a rational professional that evaluates new ideas based only on an objective evaluation of data. This would leave the impression that, unlike early scientists, modern scientists proposing radical new ideas do not need to fear the reactions of those entrenched in the existing system. Alfred Wegener is one modern scientist amongst many that demonstrate that new ideas threaten the establishment, regardless of the century.
Posted by DOUGLAS TEINE on September 12,2012 | 01:32 AM
Regarding the article, “When the Earth Moved.” I think it is noteworthy that in Alan Moorehead’s book, Darwin and the Beagle (esp. pp.169-174 and pp. 155 & 167), he referenced entries from Darwin's Voyage of the Beagle. Darwin made mid-February observations about the 1835 Concepción Earthquake in which he imagined the concept of plate tectonics 75 years before Wegener articulated it. Darwin wrote, “…A bad earthquake at once destroys our oldest associations: the earth, the very emblem of solidity, has moved beneath our feet like a thin crust over a fluid; one second of time has created in the mind a strange idea of insecurity, which hours of reflection would not have produced. …We can scarcely avoid the conclusion, however fearful it may be, that a vast lake of melted matter of an area [here in Chile] nearly double the extent of the Black Sea is spread out beneath a mere crust of solid land. …Nothing, not even the wind that blows, is so unstable as the level of the crust of the earth.” David Hoyler Lee, NH
Posted by David Hoyler on July 27,2012 | 11:57 AM
No one denies climate change, it's been happening for billions of years; many do deny Al Gore's version of climate change... big differance.
Posted by ABCarowhina on July 22,2012 | 10:51 PM
Richard Conniff has succinctly described Alfred Wegener's battles with the geological consensus and the established wisdom of the day over continental drift. This should be required reading for today's consensus experts on global warming and climate change. Their often orthodoxical assertions have, unfortunately, made scientific skepticism a pejorative.
Posted by Ken Towe on June 21,2012 | 09:25 PM
Had Alfred Wegener been alive today to see the most recent data that the earth ocean floors are very young, he would have undoubtedly revised his theory once again and stated that he was incorrect about the continents drifting apart, because it is the Earth that is in fact expanding in size.
Posted by Terra Incognita on June 13,2012 | 01:41 AM
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