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reading rocks

reading rocks

Von: Ian Jackson
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Geologist and writer Ian Jackson reads a selection of stories from pages of his five books about northern rocks and their connections with our landscape ….and us. The stories of this first series – Time travelling - begin almost 500 million years ago and end with the Roman conquest of the north.

© 2026 Ian Jackson
Wissenschaft
  • Rocks to riches
    Feb 16 2026

    It is difficult to overstate how dependent we humans are on the resources geology – rocks – provide. It was rock that first provided prehistoric people with shelter and with the raw materials for their tools and weapons, jewellery and pots. Stones built their monuments and the tombs for their dead. Making fire is one of the things that distinguished us humans from animals – we struck two rocks to take that evolutionary step. Our ancestors’ connection with the landscape and its rocks was deep and all-pervasive.

    They recognised the hardness and sharp edges of flint, chert and quartz for cutting tools. The durability of hard rocks for hammers and axes. Stones with the right roughness were used for milling grain or sharpening tools. Rocks with layers were skilfully split into slabs and panels. Clay was used everywhere to make pottery.

    Local ores were prospected, mined and smelted and then turned into weapons, utensils and ornaments. Coal and peat were exploited as fuels for homes and industry. Rocks permeated early societies’ rituals and aesthetics: white gypsum on henges, ochre and hematite as pigments. The fact that these stones were traded so widely and valued so highly underlines their esteem.

    It’s tempting to think humans are less dependent on rocks today but we are not, we just use far more of them differently. From the environmental pariahs: coal, oil and gas; to the steel, copper and glass in our buildings; crushed rock, sand and gravel and gypsum in our infrastructure; limestone in toothpaste; salt in food; and barium in medicines. Without these and many others, especially the critical and rare minerals we are using more of in our digital devices, our lives would be a lot less civilised. We just have to find ways of using the Earth’s limited resources much more responsibly.

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    19 Min.
  • Lives in stone
    Feb 14 2026

    This second episode explores those northern rocks that are the domain of palaeontologists – rocks that contain fossils. These remains of lives long ago from sea shells to dinosaurs are one of the three aspects of geology that - along with earthquakes and volcanoes - excite the general public more than any others. How many geologists were seduced into the science by their fascination with these traces of ancient life.

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    13 Min.
  • A restless north
    Feb 11 2026

    This first episode of Series two - called a restless north - takes a look at how dynamic our land has been (and still is!). At least once or twice a year we are reminded of the awesome but terrifying power of the planet by catastrophic earthquakes occurring around the globe. Earthquakes happen here too – but on a more subdued level. But we have evidence in the north that they were once rather more assertive. How our rocks have been bent, broken and moved is the challenge of structural geologists, they are the ones who try to untangle this super complex earth size natural rubik's cube

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    14 Min.
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