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CUL-DAR75.137-144    Abstract:    [1809--1882.04.00]   [index to references concerning] `Laws of Variation: Nature'   Text   Image
9) Laws of Variation = Nature 7. (I must look through indices to each vol. of Lecoq Vauclair later vols of G. Chronicle) Gould Trochilidæ p. 19 on close alliance of the species in the large genera. species; showing difference of constitution (?) Engel (4to pamph 61) difference of light on mountains p. 10 ,12, p. 14 dew Gibb (8vo Pamph 238) case of analogous variation, perhaps worth attending to MacAndrew (8vo Pamp 241) p. 119 — Shells grew smaller N. S. of [illeg] range Loren (8vo Pamp. 247
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CUL-DAR75.65    Abstract:    [1809--1882.04.00]   [Abstracts of 8vo Pamphlets] `[G]75-[G]98'   Text   Image
coincident, but generally differing; being coincident forces created! Looks at all adaptation to climate. Good. See Back of Page Adams, Charles Baker. 1851. Nature and origin of terrestrial Mollusca in Jamaica. Proceedings of the American Association for the Advancement of Science 4: 29-32. [Darwin Pamphlet Collection 85] PDF 86 MacAndrew p. 4 Arctic regions rich only in individuals McAndrew, Robert. 1854. On the geographical distribution of testaceous Mollusca in the north-east Atlantic and
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EH88202575    Note:    1839--1882   Charles Darwin's Address Book.   Text   Image
: Margarets board wages began and 14 May: Margaret Johnson. 109s or 12-10 Mallet R. Esq. 98 Chapel St. Dublin Robert Mallet (1810-1881), civil engineer and seismologist. Mr Mrs Murchison 2 Eccleston St Belgrave Sq called on us Mar. 9. Roderick Impey Murchison (1792-1871), geologist and Charlotte Hugonin Murchison. Rookmaaker 2010. M'cAndrew Parliament St. Liverpool.— Robert McAndrew (1802-1873), Liverpool merchant and naturalist. Darwin also spelled 'MacAndrew'. Morris John 29 High St. Kensington John
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F339.1    Book:     Darwin, C. R. 1851 [=1852]. A monograph of the sub-class Cirripedia, with figures of all the species. The Lepadidæ; or, pedunculated cirripedes. London: The Ray Society. vol. 1   Text   Image   PDF
, according to Forbes and MacAndrew. HERMAPHRODITE. Description.—Capitulum much flattened with the apex produced, of a pale brown colour, sometimes faintly tinted purple, composed of 14 valves, of which the rostrum is rudimentary and barely visible externally; valves thin, white, translucent, smooth, slightly marked by the lines of growth, separated from each other by rather wide interspaces of colourless membrane, which is thickly clothed by small, articulated spines of unequal length. The valves
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F339.2    Book:     Darwin, C. R. 1854. A monograph on the sub-class Cirripedia, with figures of all the species. The Balanidæ, (or sessile cirripedes); the Verrucidæ, etc. etc. etc. London: The Ray Society. vol. 2.   Text   Image   PDF
Molluscorum Siciliæ, Tab. 12, fig. 24, (1836). — ANGLICA. Brown. Illustrations of Conchology, (2d edit., 1844), Tab. 53, fig. 27-29. Shell steeply conical, purplish red: orifice oval, narrow: basis permeated by pores, generally exserted out of the coral: scutum and tergum sub-triangular. Hab.—South coast of England and of Ireland, (12 to 45 fathoms, Forbes and MacAndrew); Sicily; Madeira; St. Jago, Cape de Verde Islands; generally [page] 36
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F339.2    Book:     Darwin, C. R. 1854. A monograph on the sub-class Cirripedia, with figures of all the species. The Balanidæ, (or sessile cirripedes); the Verrucidæ, etc. etc. etc. London: The Ray Society. vol. 2.   Text   Image   PDF
floating Lepas anatifera. Mus. Lowe, Macandrew, Stutchbury. General Appearance.—Shell tubulo-conical or conical: orifice large, toothed, approaching to pentagonal. Surface moderately smooth, naked. Colour rosy, or tile-red, with a slight tinge of purple; or beautiful rich purple. Radii nearly as dark as, or darker than, the parietes. The portion of the alæ seen externally is generally white. Internally the whole shell is nearly white. Generally the tints outside vary in transverse fasciæ; sometimes
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F342.2    Book:     Darwin, C. R. 1854 [=1855]. A monograph on the fossil Balanidæ and Verrucidæ of Great Britain. London: Palaeontographical Society.   Text   Image   PDF
, plerumque è coralio exserta: scuto et tergo subtriangularibus. Shell steeply conical, purplish red: orifice oval, narrow: basis permeated by pores, generally exserted out of the coral: scutum and tergum sub-triangular. Fossil in the Coralline Crag (Ramsholt) Mus. S. Wood. Recent on the south coast of England and of Ireland, (12 to 45 fathoms, Forbes and MacAndrew); Sicily; Madeira; St. Jago, Cape de Verde Islands; generally attached to the edge of the cup of a Caryophyllia, in deep water, but at St
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A282    Book:     Lyell, Charles. 1863. The geological evidences of the antiquity of man with remarks on the origin of species by variation. 3d ed., revised. London: John Murray.   Text   Image
Mr. MacAndrew, the late Edward Forbes, and other experienced dredgers, who, while they failed utterly in drawing up from the deep a single human bone, declared that they scarcely ever met with a work of art even after counting tens of thousands of shells and zoophytes, collected on a coast line of several hundred miles in extent, where they often approached within less than half a mile of a land peopled by millions of human beings. Lake of Haarlem. It is not many years since the Government of
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A282    Book:     Lyell, Charles. 1863. The geological evidences of the antiquity of man with remarks on the origin of species by variation. 3d ed., revised. London: John Murray.   Text   Image
LOW Lower level gravels of Somme valley, 108 Lubbock, Mr., on Danish shell mounds 11 Bubalus moschatus, 156 Moulin-Quignon flint tools, 516 Swiss lake dwellings, 19 Lund, fossil monkeys found by, in Brazil, 498 MACANDREW, Mr., 146 Maccagnone, Grotto di, 175 M'Energy, Mr., 97 Maclaren, Mr. C., on Pentland hill erratics, 247 Swiss erratics, 298 Madeiran Archipelago, 444 Maestricht loess, 338 Malaise, Professor, 69 Malthusian doctrine, 409 Mammalia, absence of, in islands, 443 at Menchecourt, 125
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F1548.1    Book:     Darwin, Francis & Seward, A. C. eds. 1903. More letters of Charles Darwin. A record of his work in a series of hitherto unpublished letters. London: John Murray. Volume 1   Text   Image   PDF
conception of time which will aid you much in your conversion of species, if immensity of time will do all you require; for the Glacial period is thus shown, as we might have anticipated, to be contemptible in duration or in distance from us, as compared to the older Pliocene, let alone the Miocene, when our contemporary species were, though in a minority, already beginning to flourish. The littoral shells, according to MacAndrew, imply that Madeira and the Canaries were once joined to the mainland of
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A281    Pamphlet:     1908. The Darwin-Wallace celebration held on Thursday, 1st July, 1908 by the Linnean society of London. London: Printed for the Linnean Society.   Text   PDF
J. J. Lister. Prof. A. C. Seward. J. J. MacAndrew. A. E. Shipley. C. F. U. Meek. W. A. Shoolbred. Dr. J. W. S. Meiklejohn. Miss S. M. Silver. J. Cosmo Melvill. M. B. Slater. H. T. Mennell. Miss A. L. Smith. L. C. Miall. E. A. Smith. A. D. Michael. Rev. F. C. Smith. R. M. Middleton. Dr. W. Somerville. Rev. C. H. Middleton-Wake. G. B. Sowerby. H. W. Monckton. T. A. Sprague. H. W. Monington. Dr. Otto Stapf. F. Morey. A. E. B. Steains. C. A. Newman. Mrs. Stebbing. C. S. Nicholson. Rev. T. R. R
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