The diplomat and M. P. William Hamilton (1805 67) was also a keen geologist and a protege of Sir Roderick Murchison. In 1835 he set off with a companion for the eastern Mediterranean, visiting the Ionian Islands, the Bosphorus and the volcanic area called the Katakekaumene. Hamilton then continued alone on horseback through Armenia and Asia Minor before returning to Smyrna (Izmir). Having already published some of his notes as papers for the Geological Society, he published this two-volume account in 1842. The work was praised by Alexander von Humboldt, and in 1843 it won Hamilton the...
The diplomat and M. P. William Hamilton (1805 67) was also a keen geologist and a protege of Sir Roderick Murchison. In 1835 he set off with a compani...
The diplomat and M. P. William Hamilton (1805 67) was also a keen geologist and a protege of Sir Roderick Murchison. In 1835 he set off with a companion for the eastern Mediterranean, visiting the Ionian Islands, the Bosphorus and the volcanic area called the Katakekaumene. Hamilton then continued alone on horseback through Armenia and Asia Minor before returning to Smyrna (Izmir). Having already published some of his notes as papers for the Geological Society, he published this two-volume account in 1842. The work was praised by Alexander von Humboldt, and in 1843 it won Hamilton the...
The diplomat and M. P. William Hamilton (1805 67) was also a keen geologist and a protege of Sir Roderick Murchison. In 1835 he set off with a compani...