Roy Porter's publications in the history of geology mentioned here are as follows; the list — Which is not exhaustive — Is chronological.
2.
“The Industrial Revolution and the rise of the science of geology”, in TeichMikulášYoungRobert (eds), Changing perspectives in the history of science (London, 1973), 320–43.
3.
“Charles Lyell and the principles of the history of geology”, The British journal for the history of science, ix (1976), 91–103.
4.
The making of geology: Earth science in Britain, 1660–1815 (Cambridge, 1977).
5.
“Research in British geology 1660–1800: A survey and thematic bibliography” [with Kate Poulton], Annals of science, xxxiv (1977), 33–42.
6.
“George Hoggart Toulmin and James Hutton: A fresh look”, Geological Society of America bulletin, lxxxix (1978), 1256–8.
7.
“George Hoggart Toulmin's theory of man and the earth in the light of the development of British geology”, Annals of science, xxxv (1978), 339–52.
8.
“Philosophy and politics of a geologist: G. H. Toulmin (1754–1817)”, Journal of the history of ideas, xxxix (1978), 435–50.
9.
“Gentlemen and geology: The emergence of a scientific career, 1660–1920”, The historical journal, xxi (1978), 809–36.
10.
Images of the Earth: Essays in the history of the environmental sciences [edited jointly with L. J. Jordanova] (Chalfont St Giles, 1979; 2nd edition, 1997).
11.
“The terraqueous globe”, in RousseauG. S.PorterRoy (eds), The ferment of knowledge: Studies in the historiography of eighteenth-century science (Cambridge, 1980), 285–324.
12.
“Charles Lyell: The public and private faces of science”, Janus, lxix (1982), 29–50.
13.
“The Natural Sciences Tripos and the ‘Cambridge School of Geology’, 1850–1914”, History of universities, ii (1982), 193–216.
14.
“Geology in Britain, 1660–1800: A selective biographical bibliography” [with Kate Poulton], Journal of the Society for the Bibliography of Natural History, ix (1987), 74–84.