| By which Lister concluded that the soil types mapping can also maps the distribution of rocks in the subsurface. Yet, the next important stage from Lister is not continued. | | By which Lister concluded that the soil types mapping can also maps the distribution of rocks in the subsurface. Yet, the next important stage from Lister is not continued. |
− | [[w:Luigi Ferdinando Marsili | Luigi Ferdinando Marsigli (1658-1730)]] created topographic maps for military use of the visited countries (Italy, France, Germany, the Balkans, and Turkey). Marsigli published a mining district map in Hungary and sketched the distribution of sulfur near his hometown, Bologna (1717). Probably, the first geological map drawn by an anonymous naval cartographer in 1757 where in the Heligoland islands he added boundaries of four different types of rocks.<ref>Franceschelli, C. &Marabini, S. 2006: Luigi Ferdinando Marsili (1658-1730): A Pioneer In Geomorphological And Archaeological Surveying. In Vai, G.B. Ed, The Origins Of Geology In Italy: Geological Society Of America Special Paper 411: 129-139</ref> <ref>Oldroyd, D. (2013): Maps As Pictures Or Diagrams: The Early Development Of Geological Maps. In Baker, V.R. Ed, Rethinking The Fabric Of Geology: Geological Society Of America Special Paper 502: 41-101</ref> | + | [[w:Luigi Ferdinando Marsili | Luigi Ferdinando Marsigli (1658-1730)]] created topographic maps for military use of the visited countries (Italy, France, Germany, the Balkans, and Turkey). Marsigli published a mining district map in Hungary and sketched the distribution of sulfur near his hometown, Bologna (1717). Probably, the first geological map drawn by an anonymous naval cartographer in 1757 where in the Heligoland islands he added boundaries of four different types of rocks.<ref>Franceschelli, C., and S. Marabini, 2006, Luigi Ferdinando Marsili (1658-1730): A Pioneer In Geomorphological And Archaeological Surveying, ''in'' G. B. Vai, ed., The origins of geology In Italy: Geological Society Of America Special Paper 411, p. 129-139</ref><ref>Oldroyd, D., 2013, Maps as pictures or diagrams: The early development of geological maps, ''in'' V. R. Baker, ed., Rethinking the fabric of geology: Geological Society Of America Special Paper 502: p. 41-101</ref> |