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CUL-DAR75.69    Abstract:    [1809--1882.04.00]   [Abstracts of 8vo Pamphlets] `[G]184-[G]208'   Text   Image
The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online 69 (7 Pamphlets 8vo 184 Blyth (B) p 18 2 cases of asses in recent times of Æygpt [Egypt] — 2 in Persia Blyth, Edward. 1859. On the different animals known as wild asses. Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal 28: 229-253. [Darwin Pamphlet Collection 184] PDF p 21 on Selection prices of asses in Kentucky. good. 185 Blyth (C) p. 2 On the wild Hogs of several islds in Malay Arch Blyth, Edward. 1858. Report of Curator, Zoological Department, for May
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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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CUL-DAR75.127-135    Abstract:    [1809--1882.04.00]   [index to references concerning] `[Ch] 7 Variation under Nature'   Text   Image
Naturelles 6: 263-328. [Darwin Pamphlet Collection 192] PDF Journal. A… Soc. (pamph 193) paper by Blyth on size of Rein-deer, not very important Blyth, Edward. 1860. Note on the races of Rein Deer. Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal 29: 376-392. [Darwin Pamphlet Collection 193] PDF Masters (pamph 216) on Cowslip Primrose springing from same root on Buckman's experiments. Masters, Maxwell Tylden. 1860. On the relation between the abnormal and normal formations in plants. [Read 16 March.] Notices
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CUL-DAR75.127-135    Abstract:    [1809--1882.04.00]   [index to references concerning] `[Ch] 7 Variation under Nature'   Text   Image
/ [remarkable structural variations] 338 568 variation in Habits 338 p. 639 on relation of cynips to certain [illeg] 353 A. De Candolle on var. in nearness of leaves in allied species on same [leaves] Proc. Zoolog Soc. 1863 P. I p. 95 Lord on musk-rat which differs only in habits size from common form — is it species? [J. K. Lord. 1863. Notes on two new species of mammals.] 1863 P. 2 p. 182 Blyth on vars of Lion in male sex [E. Blyth. 1863. Synoptical list of the species of Felis inhabiting the
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CUL-DAR75.127-135    Abstract:    [1809--1882.04.00]   [index to references concerning] `[Ch] 7 Variation under Nature'   Text   Image
-feathers of snipe (probable) Pamph 4to 45/391 Asa Gray vittæ varying in [2 words illeg] character 49/185 Lubbock on variation in muscles of Larvæ Downing 248 on variation of wild Vines Hickory (when carefully attended to) 8vo Pamph 89/10 Blyth on corvus corone cornix — Indian crow varying with what 126/40 Fournet vars of astacus habituated to own water, cannot be transported. 36 Alpine vars. 139 Extra joint to toe common variation in genus of [Orangs] 155 F. Smith some good facts on variation in
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CUL-DAR75.137-144    Abstract:    [1809--1882.04.00]   [index to references concerning] `Laws of Variation: Nature'   Text   Image
organs subsequently formed must accommodate character [illeg] formed Hooker New Zealand XIV indiced proofs that var. are different in diff countries do XXXVI on polymorphous species variable in different quarters of world Pamph 8vo 79/254 Forbes on shells colourless at great depth 89/10 Blyth on Indian crow varying with white Andes variation? 113/ p. 4 p. 26 Hooker on acclimatized Rhods. p 49 changes of colour size of flowers at Kew. Direct effect of conditions 180 A. Murray on Cave Insects (N.B
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CUL-DAR75.137-144    Abstract:    [1809--1882.04.00]   [index to references concerning] `Laws of Variation: Nature'   Text   Image
that difference of leaves under similar conditions 16/204 (a s) R. hederaceus becoming [R. cenoris] by rise in temperature. Linn Journ 4/107 Hooker Balsams.: petals differ in species, variable in individuals. Louden's Mag 3/537 Henslow correlation in anagallis 5/88 do. Case of Balancement 5/294 Stoat becoming white in England — perhaps reversion 8/50 ( 718) 7/504 591 7/58 variations in crossing of Beaks of Cross-bill Blyth Hooker Antarctica p. 61 Vessinica always penstamen sometimes 3 stamens
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CUL-DAR75.68    Abstract:    [1809--1882.04.00]   [Abstracts of 8vo Pamphlets] `[G]159-[G]183'   Text   Image
The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online 68 (6 8vo Pamphlet 159 Dana on Azoic Rock in America Dana, James Dwight. 1856. On American geological history. (With Plan of development in the geological history of North America. with a Map. by J. D. Dana. ). (from: American Journal of Science and Arts 2d ser. 22: 335-349). [Darwin Pamphlet Collection 159] PDF 14 [twelve repressing] during Silurian Carb. periods 17, 19 Imperfection of N. American Geological record 28 Leidy has described Cretaceous
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CUL-DAR75.101-109    Abstract:    [1809--1882.04.00]   [index to references concerning] `Ch 5 Intercrossing & Sterility'   Text   Image
vol. 2 PDF vol. 3 PDF vol. 4 PDF supplement PDF Yarrell Birds p 1. Alande arrensis breeding excellently in aviaries S 43 Audubon p. 12 varying sterility of Anser canedensis in confinement S — p 22 case of a Fringilla which breeds perfectly in confinement S do 1 egg only by the nigratosic leucocephales at L. Desys S Blyth refers to Chambers Journal before Oct 1855. about Red Deer [illeg] when few remain In Tin Box copy of my Paper on Kidney Beans crossing X Gardeners Ch. 1860. p. 270 on much
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CUL-DAR75.67    Abstract:    [1809--1882.04.00]   [Abstracts of 8vo Pamphlets] `[G]131-[G]157'   Text   Image
Meetings of the Royal Institution 2: 86-97. [Darwin Pamphlet Collection 137] PDF 139 Blytt Report p. 12 Introduced mammals of Mauritius Blyth, Edward. 1855. May meeting. Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal 24: 359-363. [Darwin Pamphlet Collection 139] PDF 140 — Extra phalax to the common variability to genus Blyth, Edward. 1855. Further remarks on the different species of Orang-utan. Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal 24: 518-528. [Darwin Pamphlet Collection 140] PDF 142 Targioni p 6
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CUL-DAR75.70    Abstract:    [1809--1882.04.00]   [Abstracts of 8vo Pamphlets] `[G]210-[G]248'   Text   Image
The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online [70] (8 Abstract of Pamphlets 8vo 210 Blyth p. 10, 11 cases of Birds wandering far from their native homes. Blyth, Edward. 1859. Report of Curator, Zoological Department, for September, 1859. Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal 28: 411-419. [Darwin Pamphlet Collection 210] PDF 211 Newberry on 60 sp. of Dicots in Challk of N. America — on parallel changes of vegetation in successive ages in Old New world Newberry, John Strong. 1860. Notes on the
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CUL-DAR84.1.109    Note:    [Undated]   Ardea astrix young white adult dark ash-coloured slate / [Ardea]   Text   Image
Blyth. These were almost black white Ibis no true black, but very dark slate-coloured Herons Ardea Sunatranu
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CUL-DAR48.A15    Note:    [Undated]   Blyth suggests hind limbs of sea-otter Enhydra gradating to seals   Text   Image
The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online [A15] Blyth suggests hind limbs of sea-otter Enhydris gradating to seals Waterhouse affinity of seals Bears mem Owen on liver. (In Penny Encyclop. art Pleuroptera good drawing of Galeopithecus. Ch 8 Anon. 1840. Pleuroptera. The Penny Cyclopaedia of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge, vol. 18, pp. 263-264
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CUL-DAR83.103    Note:    [Undated]   Keeper says the Chimpanzee & Ourangs do not move conch[?] of ear — Blyth   Text   Image
The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online [103] Keeper says the Chimpanzee Ourangs do not move conch of ear. Blyth says male ourang has beard, but not female. Rengger Rengger, Johann Rudolph. 1830. Naturgeschichte der Säugethiere von Paraguay. Basel: Schweighauser. [on Beagle][Darwin Library-CUL] PDF ; PD
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CUL-DAR84.2.172    Note:    [Undated]   Birds Sexual Selection / Swinhoes cases (if I understand) of certain   Text   Image
The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online [172] Birds Sexual Selection Swinhoes cases (if I understand) of certain Herons ( Blyth has case) which have adult plumage like the young of other species in some argument that in all cases the plumage of the young shows as the plumage of a progenitor — that our Robins are descended from birds like young Robins. [172v
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CUL-DAR84.2.173    Note:    [Undated]   After facts about young & [females] having embryonic coloured plumage   Text   Image
The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online [173] After facts about young ♀s having embryonic coloured plumage give from Introduction the Jerdon facts from Blyth about ♂ alone differing in certain closely allied species — showing that these alone have been modified. [173v
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CUL-DAR84.2.218    Note:    [Undated]   Mr Bartlett says if you pull feathers out of neck or head of young [male]   Text   Image
The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online [218] Nov 7th /68/ Mr Bartlett says if you pull feathers out of neck or head of young ♂ Gold Pheasant, the proper [illeg] feathers of collar top knot are developed, as with Blyth Bullfinch breast
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CUL-DAR84.2.201    Note:    [Undated]   Sexual Selection / Male & female of 2 sp[ecimens] of Marabou[?] Stork do   Text   Image
The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online [201] Sexual Selection Male female of 2 sp. of Marabou Stork do not differ in plumage, but female has yellow iris male has black - Difficult case. Blyth says that in the 3 species of Rhynchæa (snipe) in which female far more beautiful it is not known that male sits: but this is case with Turnix - With Tadorna variegata the young resemble male in plumage there is like - [201v
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CUL-DAR83.68    Note:    [Undated]   Hyelaphus porcinus both sexes spotted   Text   Image
The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online [68] [in margin:] Knowsley Menagerie Hyelaphus porcinus p. 215 Gray catalogue both sexes spotted. Are Coassus (Deer) superioris ♂ seem much darker than ♀ Deer Gray, John Edward. 1846-1850. Gleanings from the menagerie and aviary at Knowsley Hall. 2 vols. Knowsley. Darwin cited this in Descent 2: 303, n40: Dr. Gray, 'Gleanings from the Menagerie of Knowsley,' p. 64. Mr. Blyth, in speaking ('Land and Water,' 1869, p. 42) of the hog-deer of Ceylon, says
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CUL-DAR84.2.174    Note:    [Undated]   Gallinaceae when sexes are not gaudily coloured but have peculiar   Text   Image
The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online [174] Gallinaceæ when sexes are not gaudily coloured or have peculiar ornaments strongly developed, they are often alike. When these ornamented generally unlike but the Crossoptilon are exception. Incipient masculine peculiarities may be worked in for ornament or for grasping female or for [discovering] her. In Herons Cranes Storks ornaments generally common to both sexes but developed only during breeding season? Blyth Gould say that plumes in
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CUL-DAR84.2.184-185    Note:    [Undated]   Pavo muticus or spiciferus (p 7) — topknot in both sexes equal? How in   Text   Image
of adult summer dress adults, white Jerdon was it winter or young or mature dress different (very close to Australian sp.) In Rhynchæa has the female the ocelli on wing or tail? (both have ocelli) (Blyth examined number of specimens) Young of Turnix tiagon like males? about Trecheæ Blyth is nearly confident that like males - [left margin:] Add p. 199 [right margin:] add to case of Buphus coromandus on other hand the young the adults in their winter dress as [few words illeg]....? to adults
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CUL-DAR83.34    Abstract:    [Undated]   Blyth: letter on Sexual S[election]   Text   Image
The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online [34] Blyth abstract of letter on Sexual S. Sheet I. on Bustards nuptial plumage confined to males. In plover sandpiper common to both sexes. except in Ruffs Reeve, but in latter female does undergo some change, with trace of frill. — Case of do in likewise polygamous Rallidae sheet II. seasonal changes in Gulls Terns common to both sexes Sheet II. p. 2.  Canines in Walrus - perhaps seals Do not differ in terrene carnivora — --- p. 3.  Canines in
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CUL-DAR84.2.3    Note:    [Undated]   Youn[g] of both sexes in first perfect plumage alike / N.B by true   Text   Image
begin with young this as most natural way of putting case. Have modified chiefly from Blyth, but more separate Reversed as far as young concerned - In adult exception occurs, but will include great majority of cases
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CUL-DAR91.74-76    Abstract:    [Undated]   Abstracts of journals [many references]   Text   Image
(⸮) Flora 1836. p. 86 Link on grafting. Not in can it be in Band 2. Flora 1848 p. 376 {Most curious case of sport of Laburnum L' Institut No 155. p 116. on sporting of Grape Berries. (Hooker say Flora at Kew) (not Isis) Froriep Neue Notizen 1837. Nr. 13. p. 200 merely for references to Blyth on Hybrids. Arthur Adams on sport in Œnothera in Froriep Neue Notizen 1840 Nr. 319. p. 166. Flora 1821. B. 1. p. 15 on vars. of Anagallis Flora des Osterreich. separate work Kaisereichs. p. 129 on do
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CUL-DAR73.53-58    Abstract:    [Undated]   Roulin `Mem presentes par divers savans a l'Acad Royale des Sci' 6 1835: 324   Text   Image
first years thought fortunate to have 2 or 3 chickens in a hatch. — In the hot countries where Therm. does not fall under 20°. centgr. curious difference in chickens of this English the country race, latter are born with little down this they loose become (hereditary in growth) quite naked, except feathers of wing; whereas English chicken are thickly covered as usual. — This nudity only happens with the poultry of the hot countries. Blyth has some remarks on the naked fowls of Panama; being a
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F1577    Periodical contribution:     Barlow, Nora ed. 1963. Darwin's ornithological notes. Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History). Historical Series 2 (7): 201-278. With introduction, notes and appendix by the editor.   Text   Image   PDF
another context, however, this work may have served to stimulate Darwin to start his eight years' study of the Cirripedes, 1846-1854 (see Sydney Smith, Linn. Soc. Nov. 8th, 1962). Again, in the early note-book quoted above, p. 277, the word inosculat , or inosculating , occurs three times in the discussion on species' changes. Loren C. Eiseley has suggested that Darwin took the word from E. Blyth; probably Blyth also was well acquainted with Macleay's work, and he, like Darwin, drew on Macleay's
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CUL-DAR208.9    Note:    [1837--1838]   Notebook B: 177, 178, 189, 190, 197, 198 (excised pages)   Text   Image
199 Bustards in Germany. Athenaeum. No. 537. Feb. 1838. p. 107. Mr Blyth1 states that all genera of birds in N. America Europe, which have not their representative species in each other, are migratory species from warmer countries. When will this paper be published it will be curious. Some general statements about mundine confined genera. 19 1 Edward Blyth. Athenaeum, No. 537, February 1838, p. 107: … that those North American birds which have no generic representative in Europe, and those
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CUL-DAR121.-    Note:    1837--1838   Notebook B: [Transmutation of species]   Text   Image
[excised, located in CUL-DAR208.10] Bustards in Germany. Athenaeum. No. 537. Feb. 1838. p. 107. Mr Blyth1 states that all genera of birds in N. America Europe, which have not their representative species in each other, are migratory species from warmer countries. When will this paper be published it will be curious. Some general statements about mundine confined genera. 19 1 Edward Blyth. Athenaeum, No. 537, February 1838, p. 107: … that those North American birds which have no generic
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CUL-DAR208.10    Note:    [1837--1838]   Notebook B: 199e, 200e, 201e, 202e, 209e, 210e (excised pages)   Text   Image
The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online 199 Bustards in Germany. Athenaeum. No. 537. Feb. 1838. p. 107. Mr Blyth1 states that all genera of birds in N. America Europe, which have not their representative species in each other, are migratory species from warmer countries. When will this paper be published it will be curious. Some general statements about mundine confined genera. 19 1 Edward Blyth. Athenaeum, No. 537, February 1838, p. 107: … that those North American birds which have no
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CUL-DAR121.-    Note:    1837--1838   Notebook B: [Transmutation of species]   Text   Image
1815-1822. [deB67] 4 Edward Blyth. An attempt to classify the 'Varieties' of animals, with observations , Loudon's Mag. Nat. Hist. vol. 8, 1835, p. 40. On p. 47: tailless cats … are other striking examples of true varieties . [deB67] 17
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CUL-DAR208.9    Note:    [1837--1838]   Notebook B: 177, 178, 189, 190, 197, 198 (excised pages)   Text   Image
Blyth. An attempt to classify the 'Varieties' of animals, with observations , Loudon's Mag. Nat. Hist. vol. 8, 1835, p. 40. On p. 47: tailless cats … are other striking examples of true varieties . [deB67] 9
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F1574a    Pamphlet:     de Beer, Gavin ed. 1960. Darwin's notebooks on transmutation of species. Part I. First notebook [B] (July 1837-February 1838). Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History). Historical Series 2 (2) (January): 23-73.   Text   Image   PDF
Notebook both contain mention of what Blyth called the fact, equally well-known, of bullfinches becoming wholly black when fed entirely on hempseed. Additional similar correspondences can probably be found, and although Darwin may have obtained some of them from other sources such as Lyell and Erasmus Darwin, and certainly found the expression osculant in the work of MacLeay, there is nothing improbable in his having copied some from Blyth. Indeed, Darwin's references to Blyth in the Origin of Species
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F1574a    Pamphlet:     de Beer, Gavin ed. 1960. Darwin's notebooks on transmutation of species. Part I. First notebook [B] (July 1837-February 1838). Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History). Historical Series 2 (2) (January): 23-73.   Text   Image   PDF
healthy condition, or which occur away from their normal or healthy condition, or which occur away from their proper and suitable locality , and thereby tend to limit the 1 Ernst Mayr. Isolation as an evolutionary factor , Proc. Amer. Phil. Soc., vol. 103, 1959, p. 221. 2 Eiseley. Charles Darwin, Edward Blyth and the Theory of Natural Selection , Proc. Amer. Phil. Soc., vol. 103, 1959, p. 94. [page] 3
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F1574b    Pamphlet:     de Beer, Gavin ed. 1960. Darwin's notebooks on transmutation of species. Part II. Second notebook [C] (February to July 1838). Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History). Historical Series 2 (3) (May): 75-118.   Text   Image   PDF
words: Changes effected in the nervous and other systems during the metamorphoses of insects. 2 Andrew Smith, whom Darwin met in South Africa. 3 George Robert Waterhouse. The Zoology of the Voyage of H.M.S. Beagle, Part II. Mammalia by George Robert Waterhouse. London 1839, p. 19: , Felis pajeros: it extends northwards as far as latitude 30 . p. 88: Lagostomus trichodactylus is not found north of 30 . Darwin's obscure note would appear to mean no forms peculiar to South America. 4 Edward Blyth. The
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F1574b    Pamphlet:     de Beer, Gavin ed. 1960. Darwin's notebooks on transmutation of species. Part II. Second notebook [C] (February to July 1838). Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History). Historical Series 2 (3) (May): 75-118.   Text   Image   PDF
. Wonderful, partly explained on my theory, otherwise mere fact creator chooses so to create. It is very remarkable, with so much death, as has gone on, no greater gaps. External conditions to be sure have remained somewhat similar. !!! 201 My theory drives me to say that there can be no animal at present time having an 1 Edward Blyth. On the Psychological distinctions between Man and all other animals; and the consequent Diversity of Human Influence over the inferior ranks of Creation, from any
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F1574f    Pamphlet:     de Beer, Gavin, Rowlands, M. J. and Skramovsky, [Mrs] B. M. eds. 1967. Darwin's notebooks on transmutation of species. Part VI. Pages excised by Darwin. Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History). Historical Series 3 (5) (21 March): 129-176.   Text   Image   PDF
( 2 Rheas still closer). Mr. Blyth asked whether structure of pelvis c was not adaptive structure, like little wings of Auk which does not make that bird a Penguin. (i.e. whether relation in one point or many) Owen4 answered that all characters might be considered as adaptative and that he did not see where the line could be drawn. thus the most remarkable character in Apteryx, small respiratory system; even much smaller than in other Struthios was adaption to little movement. nocturnal
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F1574e    Pamphlet:     de Beer, Gavin, Rowlands, M. J. eds. 1961. Darwin's notebooks on transmutation of species. Addenda and corrigenda. Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History). Historical Series 2 (6) (October) 185-200.   Text   Image   PDF
subsequently. 8 The words sexual plumage subsequently underlined. 9 The words silver and common pheasant subsequently underlined. 10 Across the page, in pencil, were subsequently added the following; Yet odd they shd have so much sexual character as they have . The figure 17 is added in pencil. 11 A square bracket is opened here. 12 Edward Blyth. Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., vol. 2, 1838 [September 11] p. 115; Mr. Blyth made some remarks on the plumage and progressive changes of the crossbill 13 The figure
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F1574a    Pamphlet:     de Beer, Gavin ed. 1960. Darwin's notebooks on transmutation of species. Part I. First notebook [B] (July 1837-February 1838). Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History). Historical Series 2 (2) (January): 23-73.   Text   Image   PDF
born brown or any goats spotted and speckled, he might have them for himself. Jacob thereupon 1 Charles Lyell and Edward Blyth. 2 William Charles Wells and Patrick Matthew. 3 Conway Zirkle. The early history of the idea of the inheritance of acquired characters and of pangenesis , Trans. Amer. Phil. Soc., vol. 35, 1946, p. 91. 4 Genesis, 30, 30 42. [page] 2
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F1574b    Pamphlet:     de Beer, Gavin ed. 1960. Darwin's notebooks on transmutation of species. Part II. Second notebook [C] (February to July 1838). Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History). Historical Series 2 (3) (May): 75-118.   Text   Image   PDF
: La force r productrice des animaux infusoires est plus d velopp e que dans aucune autre classe d' tres . 2 John Gould. The widow bird, which is a weaver, inhabits South Africa while the Birds of Paradise inhabit Australia. Gould's opinion was probably a personal communication to Darwin. 3 This word crossed out in MS. 4 Christian Gottfried Ehrenberg. Pal ontologie: infusoires fossiles du tripoli d'Oran . L'Institut, tome 5, 1937, P. 3303 Remarks on the real occurrence of fossil Infusoria, and
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F1574d    Pamphlet:     de Beer, Gavin ed. 1960. de Beer, G. ed. 1960. Darwin's notebooks on transmutation of species. Part IV, Fourth notebook [E] (October 1838-10 July 1839). Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History). Historical Series 2 (5) (September): 151-183.   Text   Image   PDF
Darwin and Wallace, independently, introduced into the argument the variability of plants and animals of which 1Charles Lyell: Principles of Geology, vol. 2, London 1832, See Introduction to Darwin's First Notebook on Transmutation of Species (Bull. Brit. Mus. (Nat. Hist.), Historical Series, vol. 2, 1960, p. 33.) 2Edward Blyth. See Introduction, ibid., p. 36. 3T. H. Huxley: Evolution in Biology , Encyclopaedia Britannica, 9th Edition, vol. 8, p. 751. 4C. Zirkle: Natural Selection before the
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F1574e    Pamphlet:     de Beer, Gavin, Rowlands, M. J. eds. 1961. Darwin's notebooks on transmutation of species. Addenda and corrigenda. Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History). Historical Series 2 (6) (October) 185-200.   Text   Image   PDF
1845, vol. 3, p. 130. The Grey Phalarope . On p. 133; The females of this species appear to assume more perfect colours, in the breeding season, and to retain them longer than the males 2 Charles Darwin. Journal of Researches, etc. London 1839, p. 66; Polyborus Novae Zelandiae. 3 Edward Blyth. Presumably unrecorded remark at a meeting of the Zoological Society. 4 The lower half of this page lightly scored through. 5 Rev. John Bachman. Personal communication. 6 Edward Stanley. A Familiar History
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F1574e    Pamphlet:     de Beer, Gavin, Rowlands, M. J. eds. 1961. Darwin's notebooks on transmutation of species. Addenda and corrigenda. Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History). Historical Series 2 (6) (October) 185-200.   Text   Image   PDF
to analogy for causes in plants where innumerable individuals can be produced yet sexual apparatus. 1 At the top of the page, in pencil, are the words Sexual Selection followed by the figure 12 and the words Good Ch. 6 keep , referring to the chapter on Natural Selection in Darwin's unpublished MS. Across the page, written in pencil, are the words If masculine characters added to species, we can see why Young and Female alike . 2 Edward Blyth. Mag. Nat. Hist., vol. 2, London 1838, p. 351. I
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F1574a    Pamphlet:     de Beer, Gavin ed. 1960. Darwin's notebooks on transmutation of species. Part I. First notebook [B] (July 1837-February 1838). Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History). Historical Series 2 (2) (January): 23-73.   Text   Image   PDF
simplification. cf. also Jean Rostand. L' tat pr sent du transformisme, Paris 1931, p. 13. 2 Charles Lyell. Principles of Geology, London 1832. vol. 2, p. II which contains the first use in English of the term evolution in its present accepted sense. 3 Eiseley. Charles Darwin, Edward Blyth, and the theory of natural selection. Proc. Amer. Phil. Soc. vol. 103, 1959, p. 108. 4 Sir Ronald Fisher. Retrospect of the criticisms of the theory of natural selection , Evolution as a Process edited by Julian
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F1574f    Pamphlet:     de Beer, Gavin, Rowlands, M. J. and Skramovsky, [Mrs] B. M. eds. 1967. Darwin's notebooks on transmutation of species. Part VI. Pages excised by Darwin. Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History). Historical Series 3 (5) (21 March): 129-176.   Text   Image   PDF
Madagascar oxen with hump.40 p. 173 Voyage par un Officier du Roi Mem. Capt. Owen's41 story of cats on West coast of Africa. changing hair. The Edinburgh Journal of Natural History.42 Preface appeared good with facts about changes when animals transported. 199 Bustards in Germany. Athenaeum43 No. 537 Feb. 1838 p. 107. Mr. Blyth states that all genera of birds in N. America Europe, which have not their representative species in each other, are migratory species from warmer countries. When will
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F1574f    Pamphlet:     de Beer, Gavin, Rowlands, M. J. and Skramovsky, [Mrs] B. M. eds. 1967. Darwin's notebooks on transmutation of species. Part VI. Pages excised by Darwin. Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History). Historical Series 3 (5) (21 March): 129-176.   Text   Image   PDF
, Voyage to Suratt 1689, London, 1696. 93 Alexander Kennedy, Account of a non-descript Worm (the Ascaris pellucidus) found in the eyes of Horses in India , Trans. Roy. Soc. Edinburgh, vol. 9, 1823, p. 107. 94 Andrew Smith, possibly personal communication. 95 ditto ; cf. also Edward Blyth, An attempt to classify the varities of animals , Magazine of Natural History, vol. 8, 1835, pp. 40-53 ; on p. 52 : The mixed offspring of different varieties of Man thus generally blends the character of each
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F1574f    Pamphlet:     de Beer, Gavin, Rowlands, M. J. and Skramovsky, [Mrs] B. M. eds. 1967. Darwin's notebooks on transmutation of species. Part VI. Pages excised by Darwin. Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History). Historical Series 3 (5) (21 March): 129-176.   Text   Image   PDF
entirely, changed his residence a great many miles yet one day a cow walked in, then disappeared, three days afterwards came again, bringing with her the other younger cow. 29 Mr. Blyth3 remarked that greater difference in the 4 Struthionidae, than in many large orders of birds. The Emu Cassowary closest. Ostrich Rhea closest. 1 William Darwin Fox, personal communication. 2 William Yarrell ; this and the following pages read like notes taken at a discussion meeting of the Zoological Society. 3 Edward
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F1574f    Pamphlet:     de Beer, Gavin, Rowlands, M. J. and Skramovsky, [Mrs] B. M. eds. 1967. Darwin's notebooks on transmutation of species. Part VI. Pages excised by Darwin. Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History). Historical Series 3 (5) (21 March): 129-176.   Text   Image   PDF
that even some species only in genera have this structure. Some willow trees have been observed to change their sex. this effect from age, what Mr. Knight49 139 then dropped it was found alive. Stanleys Familiar History of Birds50 several cases on record of stoats being carried (p. 121) dropped having wounded the bird. p. 124 Mr. Willoughby51 found a dead lamb hare by the side of Eagles nest, which shows power of carrying great weight p. 125. is said that Eagles bring rabbits 45 Edward Blyth
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F1574f    Pamphlet:     de Beer, Gavin, Rowlands, M. J. and Skramovsky, [Mrs] B. M. eds. 1967. Darwin's notebooks on transmutation of species. Part VI. Pages excised by Darwin. Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History). Historical Series 3 (5) (21 March): 129-176.   Text   Image   PDF
Australia different.81 Temminck Fauna Japonica (??) 82 Mammalia88 p. 293 Phalangista89 of Australia Van Diemen's land diff. 81 Timothy Dwight, Travels in New England and New York, London, 1823. 82 John Dunmore Lang, Origin and migrations of the Polynesian nation, London, 1834. 83 John Lewis Burckhardt, Travels in Arabia, London, 1829. 84 Edward Blyth, Observations on the various seasonal and other external changes which regularly take place in Birds, more particularly in those which occur in Britain
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F1574f    Pamphlet:     de Beer, Gavin, Rowlands, M. J. and Skramovsky, [Mrs] B. M. eds. 1967. Darwin's notebooks on transmutation of species. Part VI. Pages excised by Darwin. Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History). Historical Series 3 (5) (21 March): 129-176.   Text   Image   PDF
Island of St Helena, in Alexander Beatson, vide infra., following footnote. 28 Alexander Beatson. Tracts relative to the Island of St Helena, [London], 1816. 29 John Philips. Treatise on Geology, in Lardner's Cabinet Cyclopedia, London 1837. 30 ibid. 31 Henry Darwin Rogers. Report on the Geology of North America , Rep. Brit. Assoc. Adv. Sci. Edinburgh 1834 [1835], vol. 3, pp. 1-66. 32 William Darwin Fox. Probably personal communication. 33 Fran ois P ron, Sur quelques faits zoologiques
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CUL-DAR208.36    Note:    [1838]   Notebook D: 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34 (excised pages)   Text   Image
The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online 29 11 Mr. Blyth1 remarked that greater difference in the 4 Struthionidae, than in many large orders of birds. The Emu Cassowary closest. — Ostrich Rhea closest. — ( 2 Rheas still closer). — Mr Blyth asked whether structure of pelvis c was not adaptive structure, like little wings of Auk which does not make that bird a Penguin. — (i.e. whether relation in one point or many) Owen2 answered that all characters might be considered as adaptative and that
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