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David Dale Owen

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Name
  
David Owen

Role
  
Robert Owen's son


Parents
  
Robert Owen

Siblings
  
Richard Owen


Died
  
November 13, 1860, New Harmony, Indiana, United States

Books
  
Report of a Geological Survey of Wisconsin, Iowa, and Minnesota; and Incidentally of a Portion of Nebraska Territory. Made Under Instructions from the United States Treasury Department. by David Dale Owen, United States Geologist

Grandparents
  
Anne Williams, Robert Owen

Similar People
  
Robert Owen, Richard Owen, Robert Dale Owen, Andrew Ure, Charles Lyell

David Dale Owen (24 June 1807 – 13 November 1860) was a prominent American geologist. He conducted the first geological surveys of Indiana, Kentucky, Arkansas, Wisconsin, Iowa and Minnesota.

David Dale was the third son of Robert Owen, a Welsh reformer who moved to the United States and established a social experiment at New Harmony, Indiana, where David Dale also lived. It is likely that David Dale became interested in geology because of his father's partnership with geologist William Maclure. His first geological work was as an assistant mapping the geology of Tennessee, in 1836. He was appointed the first geologist for the State of Indiana (1837–39). He led surveys of the Upper Midwest as a U.S. geologist in 1847-1850, and worked as the State Geologist of Kentucky in 1854–57; he was appointed State Geologist of Arkansas in 1857, continuing as the Kentucky geologist without pay. He returned to Indiana as state geologist in 1859–60.

His granddaughter was author Caroline Dale Snedeker.

Owen died November 13, 1860, at the age of 53.

While in Arkansas, Owen drew the first known picture of a natural rock formation in Natural Steps, Arkansas.

References

David Dale Owen Wikipedia