Abstract
Alexander Logie du Toit (1878–1948) was South Africa’s most famous geologist during his lifetime, having authored five books which brought him world renown. In December 1937 to January 1938, accompanied by his wife Evelyn, he visited India in order to attend the Jubilee Indian Science Congress in Calcutta and to do field work in coal and diamond mines. On the return journey to Africa by ship, they stopped for a few hours in Port Victoria on Mahé Island in the Seychelles archipelago. They also passed by Silhouette Island. Du Toit recorded his activities in a diary, and his geological observations in a notebook, where he also drew a sketch of Mahé, and recorded steep structures on the east coast of Silhouette. Although he had not visited the Seychelles before, his deep understanding of the problems of Seychelles geology resulted from his comprehensive research on Indian Ocean geology for his 1937 book Our Wandering Continents. He made remarkably accurate observations on the geomorphology and structure, some of which were only confirmed decades later when the Seychelles were mapped in the 1960s to 1990s. His bold and prescient ideas on the breakup of the Gondwana continent, and on the formation of the Indian Ocean, have been amply confirmed by modern studies, especially by those of Lewis D. Ashwal and his collaborators.
 Significance:
 
 South African geologist Alexander Logie du Toit’s impressions of the Seychelles in 1938 are recorded for the first time, based on entries in his diaries. His observations of structures on Mahé and Silhouette Islands were prescient. His deep understanding of Seychelles geology was the result of his research for his 1937 book Our Wandering Continents. His bold conjecture that the Mascerene Ridge, made of continental crust, was the nucleus of Mauritius, was finally proved in 2017.
Highlights
In 1938, the South African geologist Alexander Logie du Toit (1878–1948) attended the Jubilee Indian Science Congress, from 3 to 9 January, in Calcutta ( Kolkata), India
Du Toit was at that time the most famous geologist in South Africa, having published books on the Geology of Cape Colony[1], on Physical Geography for South African Schools (1912)[2], Geology of South Africa (1924)[3], Geological Comparison of South America and South Africa (1927)[4], and most recently his passionately argued and hugely controversial book Our Wandering Continents (1937)[5]
He was interested in the fossil evidence supporting the concept of continental drift
Summary
In 1938, the South African geologist Alexander Logie du Toit (1878–1948) attended the Jubilee Indian Science Congress, from 3 to 9 January, in Calcutta ( Kolkata), India. Du Toit had spent only a few hours in the Seychelles, and made a few observations from on board ship concerning the geomorphology and structure of the islands he saw, he already knew more than just about anybody else on earth about the significance of this picturesque group of tropical islands.
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