G.W. Lamplugh. Photograph courtesy
of the British Geological Survey
G.W.
Lamplugh produced some of the most important geological research
on the Isle of Man. Working between 1892 and 1897, he made the first
official geological map of the Island and the accuracy of his observations
means that todays geological
maps still bear many resemblances to his seminal work. Over the
five years he worked on the Isle of Man, Lamplugh meticulously covered
every square mile of the Island. The maps that he produced in the
field are kept at the British Geological Survey in Edinburgh but hand-painted
clean copies of his map sheets are also housed at the
Manx Museum on the Isle of Man.
Lamplughs work has provided the focus of much of the investigation
over the last 100 years. The research continues on the Isle of Man
with several academic papers having been recently published (e.g.
Burnett and Quirk),
as well as a new British Geological Survey map and memoir. With each
new study, new questions are being asked and although the rocks themselves
are unlikely to change much over the next millennium our understanding
of them certainly will.