27 ICE TIME
couldn’t grasp t ice in bulk exerts. “Could scratc be due to ice ?” asked Roderick Murcone at one meeting,evidently imagining t and glassy rime. to incredulity at ts for so mucy, endorsed t tion t ice could transportboulders presented “sucies” as to make it uny’s attention.
Undaunted, Agassiz traveled tirelessly to promote o ameeting of tision for t of Science in Glasgo Cy ofEdinburgion conceding t t be some general merit in t t certainly none of it applied to Scotland.
Lyell did eventually come round. of epip amoraine, or line of rocks, near ate in Scotland, ood if one accepted t a glacier ed, Lyell t of t rating time for Agassiz. ly accusing of ier speak to est living geologist offered support of only t tepid and vacillating kind.
In 1846, Agassiz traveled to America to give a series of lectures and t last found teem -rate museum, tive Zoology. Doubtless it tled in Neain sympaterminable periods ofcold. It also six years after scientific expedition to Greenlandreported t nearly t semicontinent like t one imagined in Agassiz’s t long last, o find a realfolloral defect of Agassiz’s t assistance to come from an unlikely quarter.
In tions in Britain began to receive papers onatics, electricity, and otific subjects from a James Croll of Anderson’sUniversity in Glasgoions in Eart migated ice ages, standard. So t a touc, urned out t Croll an academic at ty, but a janitor.
Born in 1821, Croll greed only to teen. a variety of jobs—as