Li Siguang (1889-1971), a geologist
and founder of geological mechanics, was born in Huanggang, Hubei Province. In
his early years, Li Siguang joined the Tongmeng League, a revolutionary team,
and participated in the 1911 Revolution of China. He visited countries such as
France, Germany, and Switzerland. Before 1949, he had been a professor in Peking
University and president of the Central Institute of Geologics. After 1949, he
was elected as vice president of China Academy of Sciences, president of China
Institute of Ancient Biology, academician of CAS, president of China Association
for Science and Technology, Minster of Ministry of Geology. He was elected as
member the 1st, 2nd, 3rd National Congress, vice president of
2nd and 3rd Chinese People's Political Consultative
Conference, member of the 9th CCP Central Committee.
In the 1920s, Li Siguang set up the subject
of geological mechanics and made great contribution to the geological theory. He
studied lithosphere with the mechanic theory, and established the tectonic
system, one of the basic concepts of tectonic mechanics. He provided new ways to
explore the natural phenomena and ushered in new ways of studying the
lithosphere movement. His theory made great contribution to China's oil
reconnaissance and survey. With the geological mechanics, he analyzed the
geology and pointed out that China had abundant oil and gas resources. The
continuous development of Daqing oilfield, Shengli oilfield and Dagang oilfield
proved that Li Siguang was really farsighted in science. In the earthquake
studies, Li Siguang emphasized the importance of observing changes in
terrestrial stress on the base of studying geological structural movement, and
showed clearly the orientation for earthquake forecasting work.
What's more, as early as the 1920s, Li
Siguang visited many places such as the piedmont of Taihang Mountain, Datong
Basin, Lushan Mountain and Huangshan Mountain, and found the vestige variations
of the Quaternary Period glacier. He proved wrong many academic authorities'
conclusion that China had no Quaternary Period
glacier.