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  1. David Dale Owen (24 June 1807 – 13 November 1860) was a prominent American geologist who conducted the first geological surveys of Indiana, Kentucky, Arkansas, Wisconsin, Iowa and Minnesota. Owen served as the first state geologist for three states: Kentucky (1854–57), Arkansas (1857–59), and Indiana (1837–39 and 1859–60).

    • Col. Alfred Dale Owen (1841), William Herschel Owen (1847), Nina Dale Owen (1849), Anna Owen
    • Caroline Charlotte Neef
    • Geologist
  2. David Dale Owen (* 24. Juni 1807 in Lanarkshire, Schottland; † 13. November 1860 in New Harmony, Indiana) war ein US-amerikanischer Geologe, bekannt für die geologische Landesaufnahme in Indiana, Kentucky, Arkansas und anderen Staaten des Mittleren Westens.

  3. David Dale Owen (1807–1860): Frontier Geologist. David Dale Owen at about 40 years of age from a self-portrait included with the Report of a Geological Survey of Wisconsin, Iowa, and Minnesota, and Incidentally of a Portion of Nebraska Territory, published in 1852.

  4. DAVID DALE OWEN, MAN OF SCIENCE. By Dr. WALTER B. HENDRICKSON. DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY, MACMURRAY COLLEGE. DAVID DALE OWEN, one of the leading geologists of the United States a hundred years ago, was one of the second genera- tion of scientists who made New Har- mony, Indiana, their home.

  5. David Dale Owen was a leading nineteenth-century American geologist. He resided in New Harmony, Indiana, a town purchased by his father, social reformer Robert Owen, in 1825. In New Harmony, Dr. Owen headquartered two federal geological surveys and the first official state geological surveys of Indiana, Kentucky, and Arkansas.

  6. contribution to geochronology. …identified by the American geologist David Dale Owen in 1839, was subsequently termed Mississippian in 1870 as a result of work conducted by another American geologist, Alexander Winchell, in the upper Mississippi valley area.

  7. David Dale Owen (24 June 1807 – 13 November 1860) was a prominent American geologist who conducted the first geological surveys of Indiana, Kentucky, Arkansas, Wisconsin, Iowa and Minnesota. Owen served as the first state geologist for three states: Kentucky (1854–57), Arkansas (1857–59), and Indiana (1837–39 and 1859–60).