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CUL-DAR205.5.119
Abstract:
[Undated]
'Abhandlungen der Königlichen Akademie der Wissenschaften in Berlin' 1834: 301
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CUL-DAR205.5.167
Abstract:
[1838]
With respect to whether Galapagos beings are species [Macculloch `Attributes of deity' vol 1]
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CUL-DAR205.5.20
Note:
1839.10.31
No VIII I see several species of thrushes with black ear feathers
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CUL-DAR205.5.203
Note:
[Undated]
Jerboa hops & walks never touching ground with front legs just like bird!! striking case of adaptation
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CUL-DAR205.5.199
Note:
[Undated]
The Galeopithecus is a Bat without arms give woodcut of its hand & that of bat
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CUL-DAR205.5.182
Note:
[Undated]
Divergence Theory / case of species adapted to different stations in
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CUL-DAR205.5.204
Note:
[Undated]
W[aterhouse?] says M[ilne-]Edwards has admirably discussed Waterhouse
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CUL-DAR205.5.205
Note:
[Undated]
Classification / 11 / Think over my origin of sexual characters I think
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CUL-DAR205.5.206
Note:
[Undated]
Owen says the one almost abortive & apparently useless tusk in the lower
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CUL-DAR205.5.208
Note:
[Undated]
How extraordinary the resemblance in pollen-masses in Asclepiadae &
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CUL-DAR205.5.209
Note:
[Undated]
Get case of some peculiarity common to two races of Cabbages
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CUL-DAR205.5.210
Note:
[Undated]
Take a small Family with (say) 3 genera — develop one with numerous
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CUL-DAR205.5.161
Note:
[Undated]
In Black horse bey brown & grey horses being dark when foals
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CUL-DAR205.5.72
Note:
[Undated]
Bicheno shows that here and there there exists a distinct natural family
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CUL-DAR205.5.193
Note:
[Undated]
Classification — Cuvierian notion — Why however different 2 sexes are
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CUL-DAR205.5.195
Note:
[Undated]
Geospiza an admirable instance of a diverging group becoming adapted to
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CUL-DAR205.5.196
Abstract:
[Undated]
Lord J.K. `Naturalist in Vancouver Island' 1866 2: 126
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CUL-DAR205.5.200
Abstract:
[Undated]
Appendix `Zoology of Beagle voyage' [reference incomplete]
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CUL-DAR205.5.202
Note:
[Undated]
Hooker says that in Umbelliferae that though the commoner sub-families
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CUL-DAR205.5.12
Note:
[Undated]
Excellent case of a structure being derived by gradations adapted to
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CUL-DAR205.5.146
Note:
[Undated]
John Murray scorns Forbes Ideal Morphosis & Owens remark that "Morphology
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CUL-DAR205.5.57
Note:
[Undated]
The Curculio & Cerambyx[?] from Philippines wh[ich] were spotted & so
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CUL-DAR205.5.103
Note:
[Undated]
Forbes thinks law that where genus arises there it will die because where
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CUL-DAR205.5.159
Note:
[Undated]
Waterhouse urged that if all fossils were collected & mingled with recent
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CUL-DAR205.5.38
Note:
[Undated]
The relations of affinity must be judged from those parts of frame
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CUL-DAR205.5.207
Note:
[Undated]
Most curious analogy for movement in trees in general form of whole body
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CUL-DAR205.5.163
Note:
[Undated]
All Mammals have something in common as warm blood & high cerebral
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CUL-DAR205.5.166
Note:
[Undated]
Which is most probable that two birds should be separately evolved in
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CUL-DAR205.5.189
Abstract:
[Undated]
`Annals and Magazine of Natural History' 3s 7 1861: 357
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CUL-DAR205.5.201
Note:
[Undated]
Mr Swainson pretends that Mammals circles are nearly perfect
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CUL-DAR205.5.49
Note:
[Undated]
Facts from Gould (on another paper) of close species of Tasmania of
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CUL-DAR205.5.10
Note:
[Undated]
Language only will express the analogies with distant parts of Nature
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CUL-DAR205.5.33
Abstract:
[1840]
Montagu `Ornithological dictionary of British birds': 51
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CUL-DAR205.5.178
Note:
[Undated]
Huxley / ramified aquiferous channels of annelids requiring circumambient
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CUL-DAR205.5.164
Note:
[Undated]
If physical mutations of world go in cycle (probably endless
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CUL-DAR205.5.83
Note:
[Undated]
For Waterhouses views two groups must be taken & his view must refer to
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CUL-DAR205.5.44
Note:
[Undated]
Relations of affinity are directly due to consanguineity (& remotely to
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CUL-DAR205.5.179
Note:
[Undated]
Though with Cuvier (& Huxley) the enunciation of as general propositions
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CUL-DAR205.5.212
Note:
[Undated]
In accounting for origin of rattle snake no difficulty if it cd be shewn
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CUL-DAR205.5.14-16
Note:
[Undated]
One is astonished at animals adapted to very diff[erent] habits although
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CUL-DAR205.5.30
Note:
1840.06.00
Considering the endless generations of organisms during almost infinite
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CUL-DAR205.5.40
Note:
1841.02.00
There is such disputes about affinity, linear, circular arrangement &c &c
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CUL-DAR205.5.45-46
Note:
1841.08.00
It is well known that character which is generally same in large groups
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CUL-DAR205.5.47
Note:
1841.10.00
There are two or three species of Aust[ralian] Genus wh[ich] builds
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CUL-DAR205.5.215
Correspondence:
Falconer Hugh to Darwin Charles Robert
[1842--1843]
Falconer Hugh to Darwin Charles Robert
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CUL-DAR205.5.53-54
Note:
1842.06.06
Dried specimens / The Geranium phaeum (or varifolium v[ide] Hooker) was
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CUL-DAR205.5.55
Note:
1842.08.00
Waterhouse / showed me a most beautiful series from broad Cicindela to
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CUL-DAR205.5.58
Note:
1842.08.00
When an animal has two means of performing same function as some reptiles
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CUL-DAR205.5.60
Note:
1843.04.00
Aberrant groups Hensleigh remarks that groups are aberrant because they
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CUL-DAR205.5.88-89
Note:
1843.06.25
After having read some notes of Waterhouse on Mammals
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CUL-DAR205.5.90
Note:
1843.07.00
As all groups by my theory blend into each other there could be no genera
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CUL-DAR205.5.95
Note:
1844.03.00
Bell tells me in late lecture he put unity of type in striking way viz
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CUL-DAR205.5.96
Note:
1844.03.00
It is an hallucination to suppose that Quinarianism can be explained by
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CUL-DAR205.5.98
Note:
1844.04.00
Waterhouse seemed to admit that probably all analogical characters
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CUL-DAR205.5.100
Note:
1844.06.00
Facts like that of the striking similarity of the gull of La Plata &
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CUL-DAR205.5.101
Note:
1844.07.19
Waterhouse tells me that out of the Coccinellas from the Colombia Rivers
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CUL-DAR205.5.102
Note:
1844.07.31
The Earwig is case of a genus in an abnormal group being very abundant in individuals & species??
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CUL-DAR205.5.106
Note:
1844.08.00
Waterhouse says in Brit[ish] Museum series of Chinese Swallows nests
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CUL-DAR205.5.105
Note:
1844.08.00
Waterhouse / Ichneumon prick with ovipositor believes no poison
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CUL-DAR205.5.108
Note:
1844.11.00
After the "Vestiges of Nat Hist Creation" I see it will be necessary to
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CUL-DAR205.5.109
Note:
1844.12.00
Forbes says that lately in Berlin's Transactions Müller has written on
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CUL-DAR205.5.216
Correspondence:
Gray John Edward to Darwin Charles Robert
[1845--1875]
Gray John Edward to Darwin Charles Robert
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CUL-DAR205.5.110
Note:
1845.01.00
When we think of fossil Mammifer of S[outh] America India & Australia all
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CUL-DAR205.5.111
Note:
1845.02.00
When an organ is very different from others of series as eyes of Loligo
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CUL-DAR205.5.113
Note:
1845.05.00
Waterhouse has read paper to show / that typical genera (ie with organs
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CUL-DAR205.5.114
Note:
1845.06.00
Falconer showed me beautiful series of elephant & Mastodon with structure
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CUL-DAR205.5.115
Note:
1845.12.25
Family Genus & species cease to have meaning when we collect every
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CUL-DAR205.5.120
Note:
1847.07.00
The affinities of organisms are represented by distance
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CUL-DAR205.5.121
Note:
1847.09.00
What a vast range of character in the Branchipoda & Entomostraca
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CUL-DAR205.5.124
Note:
1848.02.00
Owen says that there is organ in Ray's Tail anatomically certainly like
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CUL-DAR205.5.125
Note:
1848.07.00
Fulgora (a Ho[mo]pterous insect) Elat[ior?] & Lampyris these somewhat
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CUL-DAR205.5.214
Correspondence:
Dixon Edmund Saul to Darwin Charles Robert
[1848.09.00--1848.10.00]
Dixon Edmund Saul to Darwin Charles Robert
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CUL-DAR205.5.127
Note:
1848.12.00
I have been much struck in Anotifera[?] how the genus ... breaks up into
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CUL-DAR205.5.128
Note:
1850.01.07
Cause of non-passage of forms in any of Geological Formations
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CUL-DAR205.5.129
Note:
1850.04.00
How all-pervading & deeply seated is the affinity of organisms
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CUL-DAR205.5.134
Abstract:
[Undated]
'Edinburgh Review' October 1851 [references incomplete]
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CUL-DAR205.5.130-131
Note:
1851.05.07
Against my theory, it may be urged & has often occurred to me that there
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CUL-DAR205.5.136
Note:
1853.02.00
It is an old argument but seeing the wonderful metamorphoses
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CUL-DAR205.5.135
Note:
1853.02.28
In a monster ever so monstrous (give examples) we have no doubt of
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CUL-DAR205.5.145
Note:
1854.09.00
It seems at first surprising that one organ shd vary in one group & be so
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CUL-DAR205.5.148
Note:
1854.11.00
We include all in class as in Crustacea which are connected but yet no
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CUL-DAR205.5.149
Note:
1854.11.00
It is indispensable to show that in small & uniform areas there are many
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CUL-DAR205.5.147
Note:
1854.11.00
Assuming species approximately constant if extinction has fallen near &
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CUL-DAR205.5.150-152
Note:
1854.11.00
I think an order with a few genera wd appear more aberrant if these few
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CUL-DAR205.5.155
Note:
1855.04.00
If we did not know the Platypus how impossible we shd have held it to
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CUL-DAR205.5.153
Note:
1855.05.05
Huxley showed me the drawings of auditory organs in Crustacea in Tail -
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CUL-DAR205.5.156
Note:
1855.08.00
Those who believe in distinct creations would argue with respect to
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CUL-DAR205.5.157
Note:
1855.08.19
Owing to power of propagation not only as many individuals crowded
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CUL-DAR205.5.158
Note:
1855.11.28
The reason why what are called important organs often best characters is
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CUL-DAR205.5.175
Note:
1856.04.28
Huxley very strong on every form coming into class & only I think 5 new
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CUL-DAR205.5.173-174
Note:
1856.05.11
Classification / as only few individuals of species survive & propagate
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CUL-DAR205.5.162
Note:
1856.06.01
On relations of organization — Turkish Dog — Hairless — I think
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CUL-DAR205.5.171
Note:
1856.09.25
The advantage in each group becoming as different as possible may be
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183. |
CUL-DAR205.5.170
Note:
1856.11.21
The remark which some good Bot[anist] has made that a genus ought not to
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CUL-DAR205.5.213
Correspondence:
Darwin Charles Robert to Hooker Joseph Dalton
[1856.12.early]
Darwin Charles Robert to Hooker Joseph Dalton
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CUL-DAR205.5.218
Correspondence:
Huxley Thomas Henry to Darwin Charles Robert
[1857][.10.03.before]
Huxley Thomas Henry to Darwin Charles Robert
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CUL-DAR205.5.177
Note:
1857.03.00
Hooker says he & Bentham have no doubt that Wight's remark on
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CUL-DAR205.5.181
Note:
1857.11.21
Huxley agrees if Barneoud true then does explain M[ilne-]Edwards
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CUL-DAR205.5.185
Note:
1858.10.12
I believe physiological importance lies in relative [illegible] to value of
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CUL-DAR205.5.1
Printed:
1860.07.28
Review of Marsh G.P `Lectures on the English language' `Athenaeum': (122-)123 only
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CUL-DAR205.5.191
Abstract:
[Undated]
`Annals and Magazine of Natural History' 3s 8 1861: 125
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CUL-DAR205.5.2
Printed:
1862
The fossil crab of Gay Head `(Boston) Society of Natural History, Journal' 9: 191-192 (breaks off)
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CUL-DAR205.5.217
Correspondence:
Hooker Joseph Dalton (Sir [1869]) to Darwin Charles Robert
[1862.03.26.after]
Hooker Joseph Dalton (Sir [1869]) to Darwin Charles Robert
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CUL-DAR205.5.192
Note:
1863.04.23
Transition / My ash case — for Sexes — Sir J Smith under Adoxa
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199. |
CUL-DAR205.5.4
Printed:
1871.01.01
Anatomical characters of limpets `Popular Science Review' 10: 115
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200. |
CUL-DAR205.5.5
Printed:
[1871orafter].08.23
Review of Owen R (Eight papers on the fossil mammals of Australia) `Sydney Mail': [1]a-d
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