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[[File:Medal of Lazzaro Moro. Panteon Veneto; Istituto Veneto di Scienze, Lettere ed Arti.jpg|thumb|Medal of Lazzaro Moro. Panteon Veneto; Istituto Veneto di Scienze, Lettere ed Arti]]

'''Anton Lazzaro Moro''' (1687 in [[San Vito al Tagliamento]] &ndash; 1764) was an Italian abbot, geologist and naturalist. He was one of the leading advocates of [[plutonism]] in the early debate that confronted plutonism to [[neptunism]], making him described by some authors as an ultraplutonist.<ref name="SulRoss" /> He was the first to discriminate [[sedimentary rock]]s from [[volcanic rock|volcanic]] ones by studying the rocks of volcanic islands.<ref name="Saunders" /> In his study of the [[crustacean]]s, he discovered fossils petrified in mountains that led him to deduce those rocks were once buried in the sea.<ref name="Vallisneri" />
'''Anton Lazzaro Moro''' (1687 in [[San Vito al Tagliamento]] &ndash; 1764) was an Italian abbot, geologist and naturalist. He was one of the leading advocates of [[plutonism]] in the early debate that confronted plutonism to [[neptunism]], making him described by some authors as an ultraplutonist.<ref name="SulRoss" /> He was the first to discriminate [[sedimentary rock]]s from [[volcanic rock|volcanic]] ones by studying the rocks of volcanic islands.<ref name="Saunders" /> In his study of the [[crustacean]]s, he discovered fossils petrified in mountains that led him to deduce those rocks were once buried in the sea.<ref name="Vallisneri" />



Revision as of 11:18, 21 July 2021

Medal of Lazzaro Moro. Panteon Veneto; Istituto Veneto di Scienze, Lettere ed Arti

Anton Lazzaro Moro (1687 in San Vito al Tagliamento – 1764) was an Italian abbot, geologist and naturalist. He was one of the leading advocates of plutonism in the early debate that confronted plutonism to neptunism, making him described by some authors as an ultraplutonist.[1] He was the first to discriminate sedimentary rocks from volcanic ones by studying the rocks of volcanic islands.[2] In his study of the crustaceans, he discovered fossils petrified in mountains that led him to deduce those rocks were once buried in the sea.[3]

Book

  • 1740, De' crostacei e degli altri Marini corpi che si truovano su' monti

References

  1. ^ Auvergne and Neptunism verses Plutonism on the Sul Ross State University website
  2. ^ Craig Saunders, What Is the Theory of Plate Tectonics?, Shaping Modern Science, Jan. 30 2011 - 64 pages ISBN 9780778772095 Read online
  3. ^ Curiosity and ingenuity on the University of Padua website