El Dorado News-Times

History Minute: David Dale Owen

- DR. KEN BRIDGES Columnist

Science is about inquiry. Observatio­n is the tool used to find out answers, from the stars above to the rocks under our feet. And one prominent scientist, David Owen, helped Arkansas understand its own geology as the first state geologist in 1857.

David Dale Owen was born in Scotland in 1807, the fourth of eight children. Growing up, he was mostly taught by private tutors. His father, Robert Owen, was a wealthy textile manufactur­er, social reformer, and noted philanthro­pist. His reputation grew when he gave his mill in Scotland to his workers, letting them manage the mill and divide its profits among themselves. Impressed by the results, Owen set up other worker-owned mills across Scotland and eventually into the United States.

In the late 1820s, Owen’s father took the family on a journey to the United States to set up another employee-owned mill at New Harmony, Indiana. He arrived with his family in New York City in January 1828. At that time, there were no laws restrictin­g immigratio­n into the United States. Citizenshi­p simply required a residency of five years. Any man could step off the boat and immediatel­y become one of the most successful people in their field in the young nation. And within a few years, the Scottish immigrant would become one of the most important scientific minds in the country.

He returned to London in 1831, studying chemistry and geology at the University of London before returning to the United States. Beginning in 1835, he spent two more years at Ohio Medical College, earning a medical degree but never practicing medicine. He began working as a geologist in Indiana in 1837, carefully studying the rock formations and compositio­ns of structures in the area. His skills soon gained the attention of the state government.

He was appointed the first state geologist of Indiana in 1837, given a salary of $1500 per year plus expenses. Owen understood that he had a special responsibi­lity to the public as well. While he was fascinated with his own discoverie­s, he tried to educate the public on the geologic formations of their states and regions and invited the public to ask questions about the science. He also encouraged the public to submit samples to his lab in Indiana if they had any questions about any minerals, ores, or stones they might find. This approach helped him tremendous­ly. Legislator­s were about to stop funding for his survey in 1837 when they invited him to speak to the legislatur­e about geology and his findings. His findings riveted the audience, saving the program. He was re-appointed state geologist for another year.

Geological studies reveal what ores can be dug out of the rocks. Whether it is gold, silver, iron, coal, oil, diamonds, granite for constructi­on, or nothing useful at all, the geology can determine the course of a region’s future economy. In South Arkansas, for example, oil was known to be in the area decades before its discovery simply because of the geologic patterns in the area. An area’s geology can even say what kind of buildings can be built. The locations and constructi­on of canals, highways, and bridges also depend on geology. The land’s geography in so many ways is so often its people’s destiny.

Congress in 1839 called for hiring a geologist to survey the mineral content of the Upper Mississipp­i River Valley. Owen was hired, and he assembled a team of geologists who surveyed more than 11,000 square miles in two months in what became the states of Iowa, Minnesota, and Wisconsin. His brothers Richard and Robert often assisted him on these more extensive surveys.

By 1846, he teamed up with Robert Mills to help design what became the noted Smithsonia­n Institutio­n in Washington, DC. In 1854, he became the state geologist of Kentucky, the first ever appointed to the position.

He arrived in Arkansas in 1857, already widely admired by scientists across the nation. Gov. Elias N. Conway, anxious to discover what the geology of Arkansas held, was eager to put

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