Circulations : colonial geology, the Prussian State Geological Institute and the South West African copper (1850–1919) / Helmut Maier
Material type: TextLanguage: English Series: Journal of Namibian Studies, 28 ; 2020Publication details: Bochum : Otjivanda Presse, 2020Description: 25 pages, tables, 24 cmISSN:- 1863-5954
- PER 541 Journal of Namibian Studies
Cover image | Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Periodicals | Namibia Scientific Society Library Periodicals | Reference | PER 541 Journal of Namibian Studies (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Not For Loan |
Includes bibliography and footnotes
Although colonial history saw Africa as a mining continent, geology was never looked upon as a decisive scientific discipline in the colonial knowledge system. Copper ore was already being mined in South West Africa (SWA) in precolonial times while the first commercial mining only started in the middle of the 19th century. From the 1880s onwards, copper became a strategic resource in the second industrial revolution. The expectation of copper imports from SWA to supply German industry became a key argument for colonialists legitimizing German colonial expansion. Fromthe mid-1880s onwards, a growing number of German geologists visited SWA. Their field research founded the tradition of what was known at the time as colonial geology (“Kolonialgeologie”). The Prussian State Geological Institute, founded in 1873, became the pivotal centre for research on colonial geo-resources. The exploration of the deposits up to 1919 culminated in the development of a new geological theory of the genesis of ore deposits.
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