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LL/77961
James Deane (author, American, 1801-1858) / Unidentified photographer
1861 (published)
Ichnographs from the Sandstone of Connecticut River

Salted paper prints
Metropolitan Museum of Art
Purchase, The Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation Gift, through Joyce and Robert Menschel, 1990, Accession Number: 1990.1067
 
Curatorial description (Accessed: 13 October 2017)
Early on, photography was recognized as a potential tool for scientific investigation. In England and France, where scientists applied empirical observation in their quest to explain the origins of the earth, its flora and fauna, photography presented a means for achieving greater--and more lasting--optical probity.
 
James Deane, a surgeon from Greenfield, Massachusetts, began his work in ichnography (ikhnos, from Greek, meaning "track" or "trace;" graphia, from Latin, meaning "to draw") when fossils were discovered in sandstone mined from a nearby quarry. "Ichnographs from the Sandstone of Connecticut River," the "crowning labor" of Deane's life, contains drawings by Deane, as well as salted-paper prints made by an unknown photographer working under Deane's direction. Illustrated books on natural science were consumed by a wide audience and were appreciated as much for their elaborate illustrations as for the scientific knowledge they conveyed. In the introduction, the author describes the photographs themselves as "exquisite specimens of art." "Ichnographs" was one of the first books published in America to be illustrated with photographs.
 
LL/77961


 

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