Gérard Paul Deshayes (
May 13,
1795 –
June 9,
1875) was a
French geologist and
conchologist.
He was born in
Nancy, his father at that time being professor of experimental physics in the École Centrale of the
Meurthe département.
He studied
medicine in
Strasbourg, and afterwards took the degree of
bachelier ès lettres in
Paris in 1821; but he abandoned the medical profession in order to devote himself to
natural history. For some time he gave private lessons on
geology, and subsequently became professor of natural history in the
Museum d'Histoire Naturelle.
He was distinguished for his researches on the
fossil mollusca of the
Paris Basin and of other
Tertiary areas. His studies on the relations of the fossil to the recent species led him as early as 1829 to conclusions somewhat similar to those arrived at by
Lyell, to whom Deshayes rendered much assistance in connection with the classification of the Tertiary system into
Eocene,
Miocene and
Pliocene.
He was one of the founders of the
Société Géologique de France. In 1839 he began the publication of his
Traité élémentaire de conchyliologie, the last part of which was not issued until 1858. In the same year (1839) he went to
Algeria for the French Government, and spent three years in explorations in that country. His principal work, which resulted from the collections he made,
Mollusques de l'Algérie, was issued (incomplete) in 1848.
In 1870 the
Wollaston medal of the
Geological Society of London was awarded to him. He died in
Boran-sur-Oise.
Works
His publications included:
- Description des coquilles fossiles des environs de Paris (2 vols. and atlas, 1824-1837)
- Description des animaux sans vertèbres découverts dans le bassin de Paris (3 vols. and atlas, 1856-1866)
- Catalogue des mollusques de l'île de la Reunion (1863).