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  1. David Dale Owen, né le 24 juin 1807 à New Lanark, en Écosse 1 et mort le 13 novembre 1860 2, est un éminent géologue des États-Unis à l'origine des premiers relèvements géologiques de l' Indiana, du Kentucky, de l' Arkansas, du Wisconsin, de l' Iowa et du Minnesota 3, 4 .

  2. David Dale Owen. 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. However, Iain Whyte recently noted that David Dale, who founded New Lanark in 1785, was also a founding member and chairman of the Glasgow Society for the Abolition of the African Slave Trade in 1791, which begins to move attention onto the complicated relationship between Atlantic slavery and improvement.20 Dale’s son-in-law, the Welshman Robert Owen, took over New Lanark from 1799–c ...

  4. The following letters were written by David Dale Owen to his wife and brother during the course of his survey of the Chippewa land district in 1847.12 While his formal report, referred to above, gives a complete account of his discoveries, these letters are more interesting since they were written in the field.

  5. Dale married Ann Carolina Campbell on 7 September 1777. She was the 24-year-old second daughter of John Campbell, who had been cashier of The Royal Bank of Scotland from 1745 until his death earlier that year. They had at least six children together: Ann Carolina, born 4 August 1778. In 1799 she married the industrialist Robert Owen.

  6. Es sabido que el mismo Robert Owen (1771-1858), cuando se casó con la Srta. Dale y cuando compró New Lanark en 1799, sentó su proyecto sobre una tradición que ya había tenido en consideración aspectos religiosos, filantrópicos, económicos o educativos en la línea escocesa de la aportación de David Dale.

  7. David Dale (1739-1806) est un négociant écossais qui devint à 45 ans l'un des premiers entrepreneurs du coton britannique et l'un des plus importants industriels du XVIII e siècle, en fondant en 1784 le village-champignon de New Lanark, où 4 usines comptaient 2 500 ouvriers et fonctionnaient avec l'énergie des chutes d'eau de la rivière Clyde, près de Glasgow.