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A622    Periodical contribution:     Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.   Text   PDF
. Barlow, Nora, 1935. Charles Darwin and the Galapagos. Nature, v. 136, p. 534-535. Barlow, Nora, 1945. Charles Darwin and the Voyage of the Beagle. London: Pilot Press, v + 279 p. Barlow, Nora, 1946. Charles Darwin and the Voyage of the Beagle. New York: Philosophical Library, 278 p. Barlow, Nora, 1959. The Autobiography of Charles Darwin 1809-1882. With Original Omissions Restored. New York: Harcourt, Brace, 253 p. Barlow, Nora, 1963. Darwin's ornithological notes. With an introduction, notes, and
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A622    Periodical contribution:     Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.   Text   PDF
Burkhardt, Frederick, 1996. Charles Darwin's Letters: a Selection 1825-1859. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, xxvi + 249 p. Burkhardt, Frederick, 2008. Charles Darwin: The Beagle Letters. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, xxx 470 p. Burkhardt, Frederick; Porter, Duncan M.; Browne, Janet, and Richmond, Marsha, 1993. The Correspondence of Charles Darwin. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, v. 8, xxx + 766 p.; 1860. Burkhardt, Frederick; Porter, Duncan M.; Dean, Sheila Ann; Evans
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A622    Periodical contribution:     Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.   Text   PDF
. Agricultural Ecosystems Environment, v. 99, p. 29-49. Fellmann, Ferdinand, 1977. Darwin's Metaphern. Archiv f r Begriffsgeschichte, v. 21, p. 285-297. Ferguson, B. J., 1971. Syms Covington of Pambula, Assistant to Charles Darwin on the Voyage of H.M.S. Beagle round the World 1831 to 1836. Bega, New South Wales: Imlay District Historical Society. Feuer, Lewis S., 1975. Is the Darwin-Marx correspondence authentic? Annals of Science, v. 32, p. 1-12. Feuer, Lewis S., 1976. On the Darwin-Marx
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A622    Periodical contribution:     Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.   Text   PDF
-101. Murray, John, 1909. Darwin and his publisher. Science Progress, v. 3, p. 537-542. Murray, P. D. F., 1959. The voyage of the Beagle. New Biology, v. 28, p. 7-24. Musgrave, Anthony, 1932. Bibliography of Australian Entomology 1775-1930 with Biographical Notes on Authors and Collectors. Sydney: Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales, viii + 380 p. Naccache, Bernard, 1980. Marx, Critique de Darwin. Paris: Librairie Philosophique J. Vrin, 160 p. Nelson, E. Charles, and Seaward, Mark R. D
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A622    Periodical contribution:     Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.   Text   PDF
, Robert Clinton, 1975. Charles Darwin's Natural Selection: Being the Second Part of his Big Species Book Written from 1856 to 1858. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, xii + 692 p. Steadman, David W., 2001. [Review of] Charles Darwin's Zoology Notes Specimen Lists from H.M.S. Beagle, by R. Keynes. Journal of the History of Biology, v. 34, p. 603-604. Steadman, David W., and Zousmer, Steven, 1988. Gal pagos: Discovery on Darwin's Islands. Washington: Smithsonian Institution Press, 207 p. Stearn
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A622    Periodical contribution:     Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.   Text   PDF
Gender. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, p. 209-245. Swisher, Charles N., 1967. Charles Darwin on the origins of behavior. Bulletin of the History of Medicine, v. 41, p. 24-43. Tallmadge, John, 1980. From chronicle to quest: the shaping of Darwin's Voyage of the Beagle. Victorian Studies, v. 23, p. 325-345. Tammone, William, 1995. Competition, the division of labor, and Darwin's principle of divergence. Journal of the History of Biology, v. 28, p. 109-131. Tasch, P., 1950. Darwin and the
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A622    Periodical contribution:     Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.   Text   PDF
W.A. Sarjeant NBG = Nouvelle Biographie G n rale edited by Dr. Hoeffer ODNB = Oxford Dictionary of National Biography RBF = Charles Darwin, a Companion, by R.B. Freeman RD = Dictionary of British and Irish Botanists and Horticulturalists by Ray Desmond A Abercrombie, John October 10, 1780 November 14, 1844 Aberdeen, Scotland Edinburgh, Scotland Scottish physician and philosopher. Darwin read his Inquiries Concerning the Intellectual Powers and the Investigation of Truth (1830) after the Beagle
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A622    Periodical contribution:     Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.   Text   PDF
Buffon and Lamarck. He directed an expedition to Morea in 1829. He edited the Dictionnaire Classique d'Histoire Naturelle, which was an important reference work for Darwin while on the Beagle. Darwin mentions him in the Historical Sketch in later editions of the Origin. References: George in DSB, NBG. Bowerbank, James Scott July 14, 1797 March 8, 1877 London, England London, England English businessman and paleontologist, founder of the Palaeontographical Society. He lent Darwin cirripedes from
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A622    Periodical contribution:     Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.   Text   PDF
materials from the Beagle expedition. References: Tort in DD, Jahn in DSB. lie de Beaumont, Jean-Baptiste-Armand-Louis-L once September 25, 1798 September 21, 1874 Canon, Calvados, France Canon, Calvados, France French geologist and mining engineer, important to Darwin for his work on glaciers, volcanoes, and mountain-building. Beaumont maintained that mountain-building occurs as the result of the earth contracting as it cools, whereas Darwin attributed it to the injection of molten rock. References
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A622    Periodical contribution:     Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.   Text   PDF
Henry Lewes made her socially unacceptable to many. References: EB13. Eyton, Thomas Campbell September 10, 1809 October 25, 1880 Wellington, Shropshire, England Wellington, Shropshire, England English ornithologist, an expert on ducks. A friend of Darwin at Cambridge, they remained friends and corresponded, although Eyton did not support Darwin's evolutionary theory. He wrote the anatomical section on birds in the Zoology of the Beagle voyage. Darwin cites him as an authority on hybridization
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A622    Periodical contribution:     Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.   Text   PDF
naval officer. He commanded the Beagle while Darwin was on board as his guest. Although a difficult person he was a superb sailor and had the respect and loyalty of his men. He published an account of the voyage, in addition to some papers on geography. He was very rigid and orthodox in his beliefs and publicly denounced Darwin's evolutionary theory. During the voyage he suffered from bouts of depression. Ultimately he committed suicide. References: GHG, Basala in DSB. Fleming, John January 10
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A622    Periodical contribution:     Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.   Text   PDF
cites his work. References: Hintsche in DSB, Lexikon der bedeutenden Naturwissenschaftler. Hancock, Albany December 26, 1806 October 24, 1873 Newcastle upon Tyne, England Newcastle upon Tyne, England English invertebrate zoologist, collaborator with Joshua Alder. His main contributions were to the anatomy of brachiopods, mollusks and tunicates. He described the burrowing barnacle Alcippe (=Trypetesa) and corresponded extensively with Darwin about this and related animals. Darwin gave his Beagle
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A622    Periodical contribution:     Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.   Text   PDF
theology in 1872. The book attempted to reconcile evolution with theology. References: RBD. Henslow, John Stevens (Professor) February 6, 1796 May 16, 1861 Rochester, Kent, England Hitcham, Suffolk, England English clergyman and botanist. Professor of Botany at Cambridge University from 1825, he was Darwin's most important teacher there. He arranged for Darwin to go on the Beagle voyage and took responsibility for the specimens that were sent home. He also described some of the plants from the voyage
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A622    Periodical contribution:     Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.   Text   PDF
, 1797 April 15, 1862 London, England London, England English entomologist, President of the Entomological Society of London in 1835 and 1846, and author of The Coleopterist's Manual (1837). Darwin knew him while still an undergraduate at Cambridge. He described some of the Coleoptera of the voyage of the Beagle. References: BAE. Hope, Thomas Charles July 21, 1766 June 13, 1844 Edinburgh, Scotland Edinburgh, Scotland Scottish chemist, professor of that subject at Edinburgh. He was a very popular
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A622    Periodical contribution:     Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.   Text   PDF
Coleoptera. He described some of Darwin's Beagle specimens. References: BAE. Newport, GeorgeJuly 4, 1803 April 7, 1854 Canterbury, England London, England English surgeon, entomologist and embryologist. References: Clarke in DSB. [page] 10
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A622    Periodical contribution:     Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.   Text   PDF
: Laurent in DD, Tobien in DSB. Owen, Richard (Professor, Sir)July 20, 1804 December 18, 1892 Lancaster, England London, England English anatomist. Sometimes called the English Cuvier, he was Hunterian Professor at the Royal College of Surgeons, and later head of the British Museum (Natural History). Owen described the fossil mammals of the Beagle voyage and provided Darwin with a great deal of advice. Their relationship deteriorated beginning at the time of the publication of The Origin of
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A622    Periodical contribution:     Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.   Text   PDF
Bern. References: Tobien in DSB. Sulivan, Bartholomew James (Captain)November 18, 1810 January 1, 1890 Tregew, England Bournemouth, England English naval officer. A Second Lieutenant on the Beagle during Darwin's voyage, he was knighted in 1869 and promoted to Admiral in 1877. Darwin made considerable use of Sulivan's geological observations and collections. He and another shipmate, John Wickham, visited Darwin at Down on October 21, 1861. References: RBF; Laughyon in DNB. Swainson, WilliamOctober
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A622    Periodical contribution:     Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.   Text   PDF
output was to some extent offset by the amount of harm he did. Walker described many of the insects from the Beagle voyage and identified Diptera for Darwin's work on orchids. References: Lindroth 1973, obituary in Entomologists' Monthly Magazine 11:140 141 (1874). Wallace, Alexander1830 October 1, 1899 London, England Colchester, England English physician and lepidopterist. Darwin refers to his publications and personal communications about insect reproduction in the Descent. References: RBF
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A622    Periodical contribution:     Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.   Text   PDF
retirement was on the staff of the British Museum. Waterhouse described the living mammals from Darwin's Beagle voyage and many of the insects as well. They engaged in important correspondence on principles of classification. Darwin reviewed Waterhouse's book on Mammalia in 1847. References: CCD. Watson, Hewett CottrellMay 9, 1804 July 27, 1881 Firbeck, Yorkshire, England Thames Ditton, Surrey, England English botanist and phrenologist. Watson studied Medicine at Edinburgh from 1828 to 1832. He resigned
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A622    Periodical contribution:     Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.   Text   PDF
English Industrialist, founder of the Wedgwood pottery firm. He was the maternal grandfather of Charles Darwin. References: Dorn in ODNB. Wedgwood, Josiah (II) ( Uncle Jos. ) 1769 July 12, 1843 Etruria, England Maer, England Maternal uncle of Charles Darwin, brother of his mother and father of his wife. It was he who convinced Robert Waring Darwin that he should allow Charles to accept the invitation to serve as unofficial naturalist on the Beagle. Wedgwood, Josiah (III)1795 1880 Etruria
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A622    Periodical contribution:     Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.   Text   PDF
German lawer and amateur botanist. He did important work on floral biology. Darwin annotated his book on plant hybridization and cited it. References: DD. Wickham, John Clements1798 January 6, 1864 English naval officer. He and his former shipmate from the Beagle, James Sulivan, visited Darwin at Down on October 21, 1861. In 1862 he retired to the south of France. Wiesner, Julius von (Professor)January 20, 1838 October 9, 1916 Tschechen, Moravia Vienna, Austria Austro-Hungarian plant physiologist
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A622    Periodical contribution:     Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.   Text   PDF
value systems of the day, Darwin was liberal, open-minded, and tolerant, whereas FitzRoy was rigidly conservative. They both approved of the work of Christian missionaries in Tahiti and co-authored an article to that effect when they reached Cape Town. Darwin, although he was not the Beagle's official naturalist, was encouraged to collect and observe anything of interest to natural history that he might encounter during the voyage. The Beagle had an excellent collection of relevant scientific books
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A622    Periodical contribution:     Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.   Text   PDF
in the voyage Darwin showed his diary to Captain FitzRoy, who liked it very much and encouraged him to publish it. The diary was the basis for Darwin's first book, which is popularly known as The Voyage of the Beagle. It was extensively supplemented by additional material, and much revised. (The Diary itself, edited by Richard Darwin Keynes, has been published.) The first edition, published in 1839, appeared as part of a series that includes FitzRoy's account of the voyage. It was prepared at a
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A622    Periodical contribution:     Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.   Text   PDF
Australia. The chapter on fringing reefs begins with Mauritius, which Darwin had also visited when on the Beagle. He again compares quite a variety of reefs. A separate chapter is devoted to the conditions that are favorable to the growth and prosperity of corals and reefs, and to their rate of growth and related topics. He was able to establish that reef-forming corals grow only in warm, shallow waters. He knew that they are carnivores, but the fact that reef-forming corals are largely dependent
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A622    Periodical contribution:     Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.   Text   PDF
the means by which pollen is transferred from one of them to another of the same species. Darwin discusses his predecessors, including Christian Conrad Sprengel, whose book Das Entdeckte Geheimniss der Natur im Bau und in der Befruchtung der Blumen (The Mystery of Nature Revealed in the Structure and Fertilization of Flowers) he felt had received insufficient recognition. Evidently the book was called to his attention by the botanist Robert Brown soon after Darwin's return from the Beagle voyage
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A622    Periodical contribution:     Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.   Text   PDF
as reprints of the American edition. Darwin's work on human psychology, like that on other animals and on plants, began very early in his career. Indeed, some of the observations in the Expression evidently go back to the time when he was a student at Cambridge University. (He bet some other young men that they could not sneeze by taking snuff and they all had to pay up!) After he got back from the Beagle voyage he opened a series of notebooks on evolution, but soon split the series into two
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A622    Periodical contribution:     Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.   Text   PDF
earthworms soon after his return from the voyage of the Beagle. The topic evidently attracted his attention when he was visiting the home of his uncle Josiah Wedgwood II at Maer in Staffordshire. Darwin's initial interest in them was mainly geological, and his thinking about such matters must have been affected by his work on coral reefs. He read a paper on that topic to the Geological Society of London on November 1, 1837 and it was published in their Transactions in 1840. He published [page] 4
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A622    Periodical contribution:     Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.   Text   PDF
OCTOBER 4, A. Gray CD, recommending Max M ller's Science of Language OCTOBER 7, resumed work on Variation chapters 9 and 10 OCTOBER 20, German translation of orchid book published OCTOBER 21, Beagle companions Wickham, Sulivan and Mellersh to dinner at Down House; they left the next morning; CD became very ill OCTOBER 31, Friday, Lubbock came to dinner NOVEMBER 4, CD J.D. Hooker on Max M ller's Science of Language, just read NOVEMBER 6, CD A. Gray, commenting on Max M ller's Science of Language
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A622    Periodical contribution:     Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.   Text   PDF
ethologist aboard HMS Beagle: the young Darwin's observations on animal behavior. Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences, v. 29, p. 339-344. Arnhart, Larry, 1984. Darwin, Aristotle and the biology of [page] 12
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A622    Periodical contribution:     Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.   Text   PDF
bodies on the Beagle: touch, sight, and writing in a Darwin letter, in Still, J., and Wooten, M., eds., Textuality and Sexuality: Reading Theories and Practices. Manchester: Manchester University Press, p. 116-132. Beer, Gillian, 1996. Travelling the other way, ch. 19 in Jardine, N.; Secord, J. A., and Spary, E. C., eds., Cultures of Natural History. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, p. 323-337. Beer, Gillian, 1998. The evolution of the novel, ch. 6 in Fabian, A. C., ed., Evolution: Society
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A622    Periodical contribution:     Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.   Text   PDF
British Museum (Natural History) Historical Series, v. 18, p. 203-228. Chancellor, Gordon; DiMauro, Angelo; Ingle, Ray, and King, Gillian, 1988. Charles Darwin's Beagle collections in the Oxford University Museum. Archives of Natural History, v. 15, p. 197-231. Chancellor, John, 1973. Charles Darwin. London: Weidenfeld and Nicholson, 231 p. Chapman, Roger G., and Duval, Cleveland T., 1982. Charles Darwin, 1809-1882: a Centennial Commemorative. Wellington: Nova Pacifica, xii + 376 p
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A622    Periodical contribution:     Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.   Text   PDF
bibliography of the evolutionay texts read by Samuel Butler (1835-1902). Journal of the Society for the Bibliography of Natural History, v. 7, p. 107-110. Coleman, William, 1962. Lyell and the reality of species. Isis, v. 53, p. 325-338. Colley, Ann C., 1991. Nostalgia in The Voyage of the Beagle. Centennial Review, v. 35, p. 167-183. Colp, Ralph, Jr., 1972. Charles Darwin and Mrs. Whitby. Bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine, v. 48, p. 870-876. Colp, Ralph, Jr., 1974. The contacts
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A622    Periodical contribution:     Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.   Text   PDF
the History and Philosophy of Science, v. 7, p. 127-169. D'Argenio, Bruno, 1984. Problematiche geologiche nel-l'opera di Darwin e importanza dei modelli geodinamici moderni nelle concezioni evoluzionistiche, in Ghiara, G., ed., Il Darwinismo nel Pensiero Scientifico Contemporaneo. Napoli: Guida, p. 74-136. Darling, Lois, 1960. The Beagle a search for a lost ship. Natural History, v. 69, p. 48-59. Darlington, C. D., 1953. Purpose and particles in the study of heredity, in Underwood, E. A., ed
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A622    Periodical contribution:     Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.   Text   PDF
Science: Essays in Commemoration of the Centenary of the Birth of Charles Darwin and of the Fiftieth Anniversary of The Origin of Species. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, p. 66-84. Dewey, John, 1910. The Influence of Darwin on Philosophy, and Other Essays in Contemporary Thought. New York: Henry Holt Company, vi + 309 p. Dexter, Ralph W., 1977. Historical aspects of Louis Agassiz's lectures on the nature of the species. Bios, v. 48, p. 12-19. Dibner, Bern, 1964. Darwin of the Beagle. New
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A622    Periodical contribution:     Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.   Text   PDF
Lord Avebury (Sir John Lubbock) 1834-1913. London: Watts Co., vii + 261 p. Dubowsky, Nathan, and Dubowsky, Scott Michael, 1994. The final mission of HMS Beagle: clarifying the historical record. British Journal for the History of Science, v. 27, p. 105-111. Duncan, Ian, 1991. Darwin and the savages. Yale Journal of Criticism, v. 4, p. 13-45. Dupree, A. Hunter, 1951. Some letters from Charles Darwin to Jeffries Wyman. Isis, v. 42, p. 104-110. Dupree, A. Hunter, 1953. Jeffries Wyman's views of
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A622    Periodical contribution:     Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.   Text   PDF
. 401-423. Gohau, Gabriel, 1983. La descendance de Darwin. Raison Pr sente, v. 66, p. 5-16. Goldsmith, John, 1978. A Voyage in the Beagle. London: Chatto Windus, xviii + 196 p. Goldstein, J. H., 1989. Darwin, Chagas, mind, and body. Perspectives in Biology and Medicine, v. 32, p. 586-601. Goodale, George L., 1918. The development of botany since 1818, ch. 13 in Dana, E. S.; Schuchert, C.; Gregory, H. E.; Barrell, J.; Smith, G. O.; Lull, R. S.; Pierson, L. W.; Ford, W. E.; Sosman, R. B.; Wells, H
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A622    Periodical contribution:     Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.   Text   PDF
. Gruber, together with Darwin's Early and Unpublished Notebooks Transcribed and Annotated by Paul H. Barrett. New York: Dutton, xxv + 495 p. Gruber, Howard E., and Gruber, Valmai, 1962. The eye of reason: Darwin's development during the Beagle voy [page] 15
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A622    Periodical contribution:     Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.   Text   PDF
., 1907. Notes on the rocks of the Beagle collection. Geological Magazine, 5, v. 4, p. 100-106. Harman, Oren Solomon, 2007. Powerful intuitions: re-reading nature versus nurture with Charles Darwin and Clifford Gertz. Science in Context, v. 20, p. 49-70. Harper, John L., 1983. A Darwinian plant ecology, ch. 16 in Bendall, D. S., ed., Evolution from Molecules to Men. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, p. 323-345. Harris, Marvin, 1968. The Rise of Anthropological Theory: a History of Theories
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A622    Periodical contribution:     Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.   Text   PDF
Markl, Hubert, 1983. Anpassung und Fortschritt: Evolution aus dem Widerspruch. Verhandlungen der Gesellschaft Deutscher Naturforscher und rzte, v. 112, p. 41-58. Markl, Hubert, 1984. Goethe und Darwin: konomie oder Harmonie der Natur? Jahrbuch des Freien Deutschen Hochstifts (for 1984) p. 88-112. Marks, Richard Lee, 1991. Three Men of the Beagle. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, xi + 256 p. Marler, Peter, 1959. Developments in the study of animal communication, ch. 4 in Bell, P. R., ed., Darwin's
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A622    Periodical contribution:     Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.   Text   PDF
of 1831. Archives of Natural History, v. 25, p. 59-73. Roberts, Michael B., 2001. Just before the Beagle: Charles Darwin's geological fieldwork in Wales, summer 1831. Endeavour, v. 25, p. 33-37. Robertson, F., 1999. Darwin in debt. New Scientist, v. 162, p. 57-58. Robinson, Gloria, 1979. A Prelude to Genetics. Theories of a Material Substance of Heredity: Darwin to Weismann. Lawrence, Kansas: Coronado Press. Rochowiak, Daniel, 1988. Darwin's psychological theorizing: triangulating on habit
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A622    Periodical contribution:     Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.   Text   PDF
(Mollusca: Gastropoda) collected by Charles Darwin during the Beagle expedition. Bollettino Malacologico, v. 37, p. 181-186. Schuchert, Charles, and LeVene, Clara Me, 1940. O.C. Marsh: Pioneer in Paleontology. New Haven: Yale University Press, xxi + 541 p.; 30 Plates. Schultze, Fritz, 1875. Kant und Darwin. Ein Beitrag zur Geschichte der Entwicklungslehre. Jena: Verlag von Hermann Dufft, iv + 279 p. Schurig, Volker, 1995. Die Grenzen Darwins als Tierforscher. Biologisches Zentralblatt, v. 114, p
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A623    Periodical contribution:     Hodge, Jonathan. 2009. Darwin, the Galapagos and his changing thoughts about species origins: 1835-1837. Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences 4th ser., 61, Supplement II, No. 7: 89-106.   Text   PDF
Beagle Voyage, Fossil Vertebrate Succession, and the 'Gradual Birth and Death of Species.' Journal of the History of Biology 43:363-399. Darwin, C. 1839. Journal of Researches into the Geology and Natural History of the Various Countries Visited by H.M.S.Beagle. Henry Colburn, London, England. [Facsimile reprint: Hafner, New York, New York, USA. 1952.] Darwin, C. 1903. More Letters of Charles Darwin. F. Darwin and A. Seward, eds. 2 vols. Appleton, New York, New York, USA. Darwin, C. 1963. Darwin's
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A3308    Periodical contribution:     Wyhe, John van. 2010. Commemorating Charles Darwin. The Evolutionary Review 1, no. 1 (February): 42-47.   Text   PDF
room of the Old Library at Christ's College. It included portraits, busts, notebooks, manuscripts, letters and objects used on the Beagle voyage. The exhibition catalogue listed 257 items (Shipley and Simpson). Many distinguished visitors from around the world came to see the exhibition and signed their names in a book now kept in the Old Library at Christ's College. The Darwin centenary in 1909 was by all counts unprecedented (Richmond). And in 2009 one can truly say the same thing again. Yet
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A3308    Periodical contribution:     Wyhe, John van. 2010. Commemorating Charles Darwin. The Evolutionary Review 1, no. 1 (February): 42-47.   Text   PDF
cut across so many fields that no one today is an expert in all of them. The best place to get even a passing impression of this is to scroll down the publications page on Darwin Online [darwin-online.org.uk](which lists his complete publications. Darwin's main contributions can be divided between geology and palaeontology, evolution, and botany. His early work during the voyage of the Beagle was largely geological and saw him advance from a collector and describer to an ambitious theorist. He
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A623    Periodical contribution:     Hodge, Jonathan. 2009. Darwin, the Galapagos and his changing thoughts about species origins: 1835-1837. Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences 4th ser., 61, Supplement II, No. 7: 89-106.   Text   PDF
species they would have had, for Darwin, no bearing at all, much less any positive bearing, on the transmutation question. Why? Because in mid-1836 he is assuming that if they are species then they would have arrived on the Galapagos as three distinct migrant species that had originated on the continent of South America, perhaps on the nearest part and so on land he had not visited, the Beagle having sailed to the Galapagos by a north-westerly not a due westerly route. The contrast with March 1837
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A623    Periodical contribution:     Hodge, Jonathan. 2009. Darwin, the Galapagos and his changing thoughts about species origins: 1835-1837. Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences 4th ser., 61, Supplement II, No. 7: 89-106.   Text   PDF
, judgements and inferences not made until after Darwin got back to England. So, these passages can make no contribution to any historians' quests for biographical alternatives to anachronistic retrospections. Darwin wrote late in life to a German correspondent, who had asked about the early development of his thinking, that when on the Beagle he believed in the permanence of species, but, as far as I can remember, vague doubts flitted across my mind. In its own vagueness this memory is consistent with
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A1283    Periodical contribution:     Wyhe, John van. 2011. Was Charles Darwin an Atheist? The public domain review (28 July).   Text   PDF
edition of 1839, based on his Beagle diary) now known universally as The Voyage of the Beagle referring to an excursion in Australia: A little time before this I had been lying on a sunny bank, and was reflecting on the strange character of the animals of this country as compared with the rest of the world. An unbeliever in every thing beyond his own reason might exclaim, Two distinct Creators must have been at work; their object, however, has been the same, and certainly the end in each case is
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A932    Periodical contribution:     van Wyhe, John. 2012. Where do Darwin's finches come from? The evolutionary review 3, 1: 185-195.   Text   PDF
as the sole influence or as the locale of discovery. The following year, 1888, Thomas Henry Huxley published an obituary notice of Darwin in the Proceedings of the Royal Society. Huxley argued that Darwin could not have begun to speculate about evolution until his specimens had been identified against institutional collections in Britain after the voyage. To further bolster his case Huxley cited Darwin's 1877 letter to the German zoologist Otto Zacharias: When I was on board the 'Beagle,' I
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A932    Periodical contribution:     van Wyhe, John. 2012. Where do Darwin's finches come from? The evolutionary review 3, 1: 185-195.   Text   PDF
were just not part of the Darwin story in the early years. For example, Alfred Russel Wallace recounted Darwin's life and work in the Century Magazine in 1883.6 Although Wallace wrote of the Beagle voyage as the essential prerequisite for Darwin's evolutionary theorizing, the Galapagos were only mentioned as one of a number of important influences on Darwin. There was a great deal of diversity in accounts of Darwin's life and theory in the early years, including occasional references to the
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A932    Periodical contribution:     van Wyhe, John. 2012. Where do Darwin's finches come from? The evolutionary review 3, 1: 185-195.   Text   PDF
Figure 2 M. E. Selsam ed. The voyage of the Beagle. (Tadworth, 1959) p. 246. 1960s-1982 From the 1950s the association between the site of Darwin's discovery or insight and the Galapagos Islands and Darwin's finches was very widespread. Virtually all of the most influential popular accounts of Darwin after this mention the role of the Galapagos and the finches. In the 1978 BBC dramatization 'The Voyage of Charles Darwin' millions of viewers saw the young Darwin lining up the finches on the
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