Ermenegildo Pini

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Born
Carlo Pini

(1739-06-17)17 June 1739
Died3 January 1825(1825-01-03) (aged 85)
Parent(s)Domenico Pini and Maddalena Pini (née Venini)
Fields
Ermenegildo Pini
Portrait of Ermenegildo Pini
Born
Carlo Pini

(1739-06-17)17 June 1739
Died3 January 1825(1825-01-03) (aged 85)
Parent(s)Domenico Pini and Maddalena Pini (née Venini)
Scientific career
Fields
Ecclesiastical career
ReligionChristianity
ChurchCatholic Church
Ordained18 December 1762

Ermenegildo Pini CRSP (17 June 1739  3 January 1825) was an Italian clergyman, naturalist, mathematician, geologist and philosopher. He belonged to the Barnabite Order and worked mainly in northern Italy. He attempted to examine scientific ideas on geological phenomena and fossils and show them as being consistent with the framework of Biblical Genesis.

Pini was born in Milan and went to study in the Barnabite schools at Monza and Milan. He studied philosophy and geometry and received a degree in theology in 1760 from Rome. He taught canon law and mathematics at the college of Sant'Alessandro in Zebedia. In 1773 he was appointed head of the newly created Museum of Sant’Alessandro. During the subsequent years, he collected specimens of geology and made studies on the rocks of Europe. He recognized the nature of igneous, sedimentary and metamorphic rocks and discussed ideas on the origin of the mountains in the region, measuring the heights of their peaks. Pini also translated Nathanael Gottfried Leske's German work Anfangsgründe der Naturgeschichte into Italian. He noticed mollusc shells in strata found high in the mountains and questioned attempts by Neptunists to explain it on the basis of a primeval sea that reached to the tops of the peaks. He suggested that the difference in sea heights may have been produced by brief changes in the rate of rotation of the earth so as to make the forty-day Biblical flood plausible.[1][2][3]

Pini described a variety of orthoclase called Adularia from the Adula Alps near Gotthard in 1780.[4]

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