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CUL-DAR75.110-112    Abstract:    [1809--1882.04.00]   [index to references concerning] `Dichogamy Plants & Animals'   Text   Image
The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online 110 (6 10 Dichogamy Plants Animals Journl. Linn. Soc. vol x. 41 Carena other genera self-fertilised. Dickie (X) Journal of Linnean Society Botany' volume x. page 55 Cited in Cross and self fertilisation, p. 230. — — IX 38 p. 327 Henslow on fert. of Medicago (X) [Henslow, George. 1867. Note on the structure of Medicago sativa, as apparently affording facilities for the intercrossing of distinct flowers. [Read 16 November 1865.] Journal of the Linnean
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CUL-DAR75.90    Abstract:    [1809--1882.04.00]   [Abstracts of 8vo Pamphlets] `[G]1324-[G]1397'   Text   Image
The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online [90] (28 8vo Pamphlets 1324 Asa Gray answer to G. Henslow on weeds Gray, Asa. 1879. [Review of] Henslow, On the self-fertilisation of plants. Botanical Gazette 4 (July): 182-187. (whole issue) [Darwin Pamphlet Collection 1324] PDF 1326 Hildebrand Farben den Bluthen — good on variation Hildebrand, Friedrich Hermann Gustav. 1879. Die Farben der Blüthen in ihrer jetzigen Variation und früheren Entwicklung. Leipzig: Wilhelm Engelmann. [Darwin Pamphlet
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CUL-DAR75.127-135    Abstract:    [1809--1882.04.00]   [index to references concerning] `[Ch] 7 Variation under Nature'   Text   Image
primrose from Polyanthus — 1842 p 171 Range of Primrose cowslips — 1842 p 5 The two Oaks 1845 p 856, 857 on difference in woods — 1849 549 case of plants with corolla apelations 1853 99 132 on Deodar Cedar of Lebanon — 1855 766 Quercus sessiliflora true to seed — 1856, 191 on the 2 species 405 good p 8 511 do — 1856 582 Henslow on var. of Centaurea — 806 a Japonica [illeg] is [illeg] — 1857 548 — 5 species of Oaks 63 variations Journal of Botany p. 5 Watson several azores vars. Hereditary in England
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CUL-DAR75.127-135    Abstract:    [1809--1882.04.00]   [index to references concerning] `[Ch] 7 Variation under Nature'   Text   Image
sub-dioicous in England not in America 11/342 (2d S) Lava Toads Frogs producing young without tadpoles 12/352 (2d S) Gray on variation of Skulls in Sloths. 15/65 (2d S) Gray on do in skeleton of Sus 15/162 (2d) Japan Birds very close species. 15/431 (2d S) Black-cop in Madeira Var. 16/239 (2d S) on change of sex in individual willow Linn Journ 1/130 Aestivation important character variable. Asa Gray. do 2/35 important character var. Bentham. Loudon's Mag 5/346 Henslow variable cotyledon of [illeg
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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-DAR75.113-117    Abstract:    [1809--1882.04.00]   [index to references concerning] `Variation under Nature'   Text   Image
Variation under Nature Transact Ent. Soc 1871. Part II p. 215 Wollaston on early local Atlantic form presenting some little peculiarity. [Wollaston, Thomas Vernon. 1871. On additions to the Atlantic Coleoptera. Transactions of the Entomological Society of London [4th ser. 4] no. 2: 203-314. [CUL-DAR.LIB.PER-U452] PDF ] Trans Linn. Soc vol. 26 P. III p. 647 on variability in divergence of leaves Henslow p 657 do. [Henslow, George. 1870. On the variations of the angular divergencies of the
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CUL-DAR75.89    Abstract:    [1809--1882.04.00]   [Abstracts of 8vo Pamphlets] `[G]1276-[G]1323'   Text   Image
, Hermann. 1878. Die Insekten als unbewußte Blumenzüchter. (from: Kosmos 3: 314-337; 403-426; 476-499.) [Darwin Pamphlet Collection 1265] PDF 1266 Mohr. naturalized Plants in Gulf U. States means of dispersal Mohr, Charles. 1878. Foreign plants introduced into the Gulf States. Botanical Gazette (May): 42-46. (whole issue) [Darwin Pamphlet Collection 1266] PDF 1267 Henslow on inconspicuous flowers widely distributed. [Darwin gave the wrong number or this number was reassigned.] 1268 French Translation
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CUL-DAR45.47    Note:    [Undated]   Henslow has kept self-sowed Leontodon palustre for 15 years   Text   Image
The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online [47] Henslow has Kept self-sowed Leontodon palustris for 15 years in his Garden they come up true. Has raised the blue red Anagallis from each other.— Ch.
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CUL-DAR29.3.41-42    Note:    [Undated]   [list of contents of specimen boxes/packets 1-8, Mostly algae and invertebrates ]   Text   Image
Paper Packet 7. 1161 Coralls 1935 Coralls Wheat injured p. 208 Henslow 1872 Coralls 1874 Flustra p 219 --- 1 Sertularia x 1770 Halimeda p. 210 / Cellaria 200 5 Sertularia p 248 --- 6 do 246 --- 7 Eschara p 254 --- 9 Coralls 2068 Rats Head --- 9 Coralls 2112 Coralls x 2151 Corallina p 279 over [8
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CUL-DAR42.88-89    Note:    [Undated]   From conversation & examination of Mr Brown's specimens of agates   Text   Image
towards central points. Henslow strongly insists on aggregation of atoms of iron wh. in some cases certainly seem to have taken place. {Henslow says there is paper in Annale des Science (1831??) by Brongniart on Agates} D + + Especially in St Albans pebbles, which must be altogether subsequen
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CUL-DAR116.111-115    Abstract:    [Undated]   [`with Gaertner']   Text   Image
Geum both species British admitted by Henslow The Geum cases is nothing for G. urbano-rivale had already been crossed twice with pollen of rivale.— Lobelia fulgens Mexico. cardinalis Virginia in Loudon Steudel. At p. 385 says L. cardinali-fulgens gave 871 pure species 1100-1200 Lychnis diurna = L. sylvestris ― vespertina = dioica} Thus entered in Steudel Loudon Both Britain Henslow under L. dioica includes L. diurna sylvestris does not mention L. vespertina. London London Cat: uses same name
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CUL-DAR73.106-113    Abstract:    [Undated]   Godley; Newman; Henslow; Bromfield `Phytologist' 3: 180; 180; 651; 693   Text   Image
I think it must be admitted that number of species related to diversity of conditions — but that whatever conditions are, more forms supported according to degree of difference. 9 Godley, W. 1848. Note on raising cowslips (Primula veris) from seed. Phytologist 3: 180. Newman, Edward. 1848. Note on raising Jacquin's Primula (Primula jacquinii), commonly called the Bardfield oxlip, from seed. Phytologist 3: 180-181. Henslow, John Stevens. 1849. On the experiments of raising Primulae, etc., from
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CUL-DAR73.123-124    Abstract:    [Undated]   Roulin; Notice of Bot Society Edin; Jack; Notice of `Phytologist'; Notice of `Botanische Zeitung' `Botanical Gazette' 1: 141; [pp?]; 277; 302; 307   Text   Image
Bot. Gazette vol I. p. 302. Quotes Phytologist Oct. 1849. Henslow on raising Primulae from Seed. — In Novr Mr Sidebotham on do. Bot. Gazette vol. I. p. 307. from Bot. Zeitung Sept. 21. 49. case of Berlin nurseryman who cultivates the wall-flower extensively observed several specimens of this plant in which every pedicel arose from the axil of a lanceolate, acuminate bract as is well known the occurrence of bracts is exceedlingly rare in the Cruciferae, they exist however in Cardamine picta
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CUL-DAR195.1.37    Abstract:    [Undated]   Humboldt Vol 3 p. 229   Text   Image
Darwin, C. R. 'Humboldt Vol 3 p. 229' CUL-DAR195.1.37 Transcribed by Kees Rookmaaker. (The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online, http://darwin-online.org.uk/) [37] Humboldt. vol. 3 p. 229 good sentence on Negro Indian not blushing. — 25 Humboldt, Alexander von and Bonpland, Aimé. 1819-1829. Personal narrative of travels to the equinoctial regions of the New Continent during the years 1799-1804. Helen Maria Williams, trans. London: Longman, hurst, Rees, Orme Brown. [on Beagle][Darwin Library
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CUL-DAR73.106-113    Abstract:    [Undated]   Godley; Newman; Henslow; Bromfield `Phytologist' 3: 180; 180; 651; 693   Text   Image
Darwin Online [106] Phytol. vol. 3. p. 180. Mr Godfrey gathered seed from common cowslip isolated in field 36 seedlings raised all came true. (Of course because parent left growing in its own pasture: this though so foolish as argument against variation, is rather good evidence of effect of garden on the production of vars.) p. 180. Mr Edward Newman having planted the Bardfield Oxlip = Primula Jacquinii without any particular precautions near other vars, raised 8 seedlings which came all
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CUL-DAR73.98-99    Abstract:    [Undated]   Babington; Bromfield; Henslow `Phytologist' 3: 544; 573, 597; 651   Text   Image
p. 651. Prof. Henslow saw a white var. of Borago officinalis in a hedge, collected seeds everyone has since borne white flowers, being allowed to sow themselves. — With regard to the Anagallis, he well remarks that the view that there may be one Anagallis which bears either red or blue flowers the other is true to blue only is not only rather hypothetical not to say somewhat trifling with positive results. — Asa Gray says in U. S. there are scarlet, sometimes purple, blue white vars. with
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CUL-DAR71.89-94    Abstract:    [Undated]   22 / Loudon J `Arboretum et fructicetum'   Text   Image
(4) confusion disputes what are species are infinite. Loudon after trusting chiefly to young trees takes the extreme case of few species is supported by Henslow. Far from intimate knowledge stopping the confusion - it is British trees which create most - My theory would bring within the proper limits these discussion - it would show that no abstract points, as whether such such a form was a species or not - but it would leave the attention free to ascertain amount of difference it would not
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CUL-DAR74.55-64,66-103    Abstract:    [Undated]   19 / [reference incomplete] `Horticultural Transactions'   Text   Image
much undulated as those of the parent so that Cryptogamic plants vary are hereditary like others. p. 358 Mr Gibbs has produced a great number of beautiful variations from the Cowslip; yet none of the specimens appeared to have lost the general character appearance of the Cowslip not running into the oxlip or Primrose, but some had become Hose in Hose . Henslow sowed Primrose?? not cowslip - No. V. p. 18 p. 378 Mr C. Strachan in his Account of the different varieties of the Onion says the [63v
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CUL-DAR262.8.6-8    Abstract:    [Undated]   Abstract of Reviews on me   Text   Image
(2 Abstracts of reviews of C. Darwin 145.- The Month, p. 9 Why many forms not like Giraffe. p. 11 Prehensile tail whalebone — analogy teeth of Thylacinus p. 14 dog. p. 13 Difficulty (p. 12) from manner of development of certain Diptera — Rattle-snake mammary glands p. 26 On ancient generalized forms. p. 29 Difficulties from Geograp. Distribution. p. 39 Difficulty from abhorrence of incest Henslow M= Hooker Kew Brehm 146. Quatrefages, p. 52 in herds of antelopes the rear perish from hunger p
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CUL-DAR45.151    Abstract:    [Undated]   Henslow Bot: 130; GĂ©rard [8vo Pamplet 121]: 6; Scientific Memoirs 3: 267, 4: 276; Braun Rejuvenescence: 116   Text   Image
The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online [151] Henslow's Bot. p. 130 — a few cones on same trees often possess a different divergence from rest even on same cone; many of these anomalies originate in causes, which it is not difficult to appreciate.— It is often common to find in cones on same tree the generating spiral turning to right left — [Henslow, John Stevens. 1837. Descriptive and physiological botany. (Lardner's Cabinet Cyclopedia: Natural History). new ed. London: Longman, Orme
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F1840    Book:     Keynes, Richard Darwin ed. 2000. Charles Darwin's zoology notes & specimen lists from H.M.S. Beagle. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.   Text   Image   PDF
9 See Henslow to CD Correspondence 1:292-5. 10 See Beagle Diary p. 107. 11 See Henslow to CD Correspondence 1:327-8. 12 See CD to Henslow Correspondence 1:321-3. 13 See CD to Henslow Correspondence 1:351-3. 14 See Henslow to CD Correspondence 1:394-6. 15 See Beagle Diary p. 263, CD to Henslow Correspondence 1:410. 16 See CD to Henslow Correspondence 1:420. 17 See CD to Henslow Correspondence 1:461-3. [page 321
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F1840    Book:     Keynes, Richard Darwin ed. 2000. Charles Darwin's zoology notes & specimen lists from H.M.S. Beagle. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.   Text   Image   PDF
and numbered list of shells in alphabetical order, with the localities at which they were collected. The identifications can probably be attributed to William John Broderip, for CD wrote to Henslow on 1 November 18367 'I also heard that Mr Broderip would be glad to look over the S. American shells'. But the later fate of the collection of shells is not known. CD's first consignment of specimens was dispatched to Henslow from Monte Video by the Emulous Packet in August 18328, and Henslow reported
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EH88202366    Note:    1831--1836   Beagle Diary   Text   Image
In the evening I wrote to Mr Peacock Capt Beaufort went to bed very much exhausted. On the 2nd [September 1831] I got up at 3 oclock went by the Wonder coach1 as far as Brickhill, I then proceeded by postchaises to Cambridge. I there staid two days consulting with Prof: Henslow. At this point I had nearly given up all hopes, owing to a letter from Cap. Fitz Roy to Mr Wood, which threw on every thing a very discouraging appearance. On Monday 5th I went to London that same day saw Cap. Beaufort
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F3450    Pamphlet:     Darwin, C. R. 1971. A letter of Charles Darwin about preparations for the voyage of the Beagle, 1831. [Philadelphia]: Friends of the Library, American Philosophical Society. Stinehour Press and the Meriden Gravure Company.   Text   Image   PDF
, and together they drove to Shrewsbury to discuss Peacock's offer in person. Though strong-minded, Robert Darwin was not an unreasonable man, and he wanted nothing that was not best for his children. After listening to his brother-in-law's sentiments, he withdrew his objections. Charles hurried off to Cambridge, where he arrived on the night of September 2 and at once despatched a note to Henslow: I trust the place is not given away. On  September 5 he met Captain FitzRoy in London. Gloria in
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HarkerCatalogue    Note:    1831--1836   [1907]. Catalogue of the "Beagle" Collection of Rocks   Text   Image
, very compact, conchdl. fract. jaspery rock; iron pyrites in threads. + 2864. White imperfect foliated felsp. much green hornblende. + 2865. Micaceous iron-ore. + 2866. Cream-coloured, friable, earthy, slightly indurated argill-calcs. stone. + 2867. Laminated (thinly) greenish-white partially indurated argillc. slightly calcs. stone, laminæ even; clay-slate. (Clay-shale: Henslow.) (Adheres to tongue; alums. smell: some of the layers have an almost crystn. structr. ; easily fusible to green glass
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F3450    Pamphlet:     Darwin, C. R. 1971. A letter of Charles Darwin about preparations for the voyage of the Beagle, 1831. [Philadelphia]: Friends of the Library, American Philosophical Society. Stinehour Press and the Meriden Gravure Company.   Text   Image   PDF
INTRODUCTION CHARLES DARWIN in the summer of 1831 was twenty-two and seemingly without career or purpose. He had spent two years studying medicine at Edinburgh but had found the lectures 'intolerably dull and the clinical wards distressing,'' and he fled in horror from the operating room in the Royal Infirmary the only two times he witnessed a surgical operation, and refused ever to return. As the son of a well-to-do physician of Shrewsbury Darwin was under no pressure to support himself. He
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CUL-DAR29.3.78    Note:    [1831]   Before packing up skins rub the box inside with turpentine putting   Text   Image
Darwin, C. R. [Notes on preserving Beagle specimens]. CUL-DAR29.3.78 Transcribed by Kees Rookmaaker and edited by John van Wyhe (The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online, http://darwin-online.org.uk/) [1] Before packing up skins rub the box inside with turpentine. putting tobacco camphor c with it. — Leadbeater1 at Zool: put turpentine in tow2 lap it in paper Lap seeds in the capsule in brown paper. dry but not hot. Henslow3 Jars. first half putrid bladder. then 2 coverings of Lead or Tin
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HarkerCatalogue    Note:    1831--1836   [1907]. Catalogue of the "Beagle" Collection of Rocks   Text   Image
points arranged in lines.) + 1134 + 1135. The passage between quartz-rock slate, Johnston Creek. (Rather coarse greenish-brown slate, micaceous obscurely crystalline structure; points fusible; H. says resembles a greywacke.) [H. = Henslow.] + 1136. Obscurely granular crystalline quartz-rock, without aluminous matter; some miles to the N. of Berkley's Sound. + 1127 + 1264 + 1312 [page 33
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HarkerCatalogue    Note:    1831--1836   [1907]. Catalogue of the "Beagle" Collection of Rocks   Text   Image
large numerous crysts of fractured glassy felsp. (Base as before; some of the crysts are 16 long; base composed of minute spherical cells; glass jet-black). (Henslow compares this to [illeg] lava of Vesuvius; says crysts. quite as large. I can by no means get a cleavage.) (Made 8°25', 18°0', 85°15'; 93°40': 0, therefore albite.) + 3289. Do., much heavier compact; felsp not so much fractd., little cement; angular cavities, vesicles. (Well ascertained albite.) [page 110
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EH88202366    Note:    1831--1836   Beagle Diary   Text   Image
Charles Darwin's complete Beagle diary [page] 1 [Darwin's Beagle diary is available in an excellent edited and illustrated edition by his great-grandson Richard Darwin Keynes. Available online only in Darwin Online.] [December 1831] I had been wandering about North Wales on a geological tour with Professor Sedgwick when I arrived home on Monday 29th of August [1831]. My sisters first informed me of the letters from Prof: Henslow Mr Peacock offering to me the place in the Beagle which I now
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F3450    Pamphlet:     Darwin, C. R. 1971. A letter of Charles Darwin about preparations for the voyage of the Beagle, 1831. [Philadelphia]: Friends of the Library, American Philosophical Society. Stinehour Press and the Meriden Gravure Company.   Text   Image   PDF
17 Spring Gardens London Friday Evening My dear Whitley I dare say you will be surprised when you see the date of this letter perhaps you will be more so when you read its contents. — When I arrived home after having left Barmouth, I found letters from Peacock Henslow offering me (from the Admiralty) the priviledge of going in a Kings ship on a surveying voyage round the world. — This I at first refused owing to my Father not approving of the plan, but since then we have convinced him of the
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HarkerCatalogue    Note:    1831--1836   [1907]. Catalogue of the "Beagle" Collection of Rocks   Text   Image
+ 2488. [Later note.] (May be simply described as very glossy black, only slightly staining paper, appearing as if rubbed by ampelite: consult Humboldt for latter name.) [66] 2487-2512. Low's Harbour [in N. part of Chonos Arch.o] + 2487. Green talcaceous-chloritic slate (Pale green glossy slate; appears talcaceous, but is of a felspathic nature, allied distinctly to 2437) (Henslow says chloritic, probably, felspathic base; striated appearance; easily fusible into dark green black enamel
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HarkerCatalogue    Note:    1831--1836   [1907]. Catalogue of the "Beagle" Collection of Rocks   Text   Image
[67] 2513-2534. Chiloe Island, Chile. + 2513. Concretion from Tertiary formation of Chiloe; headland on which P. Teny is. (Diameter 3 1/4 inches). (Henslow says very like Magnesian Limestone. Make section examine nature. Blue matter supposed as phosph. iron. Whole fusible, highly magnetic black glass, with ease. Non-calc.: central parts friable, minutely broken crystals scarcely aggregated, nor compact, so as almost to show a tendency to form minute interstitial cavities: centre of yellowish
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HarkerCatalogue    Note:    1831--1836   [1907]. Catalogue of the "Beagle" Collection of Rocks   Text   Image
lime. + 2621. Very soft impure aluminous gypsum. + 2622. Hard compact crystn. beautifully translucent do. + 2623. Black-grey coarse hard crystn. gypsum?? (Grey brilliantly crystn. anhydrite (no vapour), scratches calc-spar, does not effervesce, melts with fluor-spar.) (Henslow, yes.) + 2624. Greenish grey mass of small imperf. crysts. of felsp., with little green substance in interstices, iron pyrites. (Hornbl. or chlorite, pale green; felsp. partly foliated.) + 2625. Do., with yellow ochry
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HarkerCatalogue    Note:    1831--1836   [1907]. Catalogue of the "Beagle" Collection of Rocks   Text   Image
2870 [47192] [82] 2870-2889. Valparaiso to Coquimbo, continued. + 2870. Black, very hard, uneven splintery, fract, siliceous calcs. clay-slate. + 2871. Do., softer, more calcs.; threads of brown calc-spar. + 2872. Do., with even fracture. (Infusible.). + 2873. Do., with obscure small particles of substance like silics. pitchstone. + 2874. Yellowish-green, compact, fine-grained, square fracture, heavy, slightly sandy feel. (Would not mudstone be good name? Fusible). (Clay-stone; Henslow. Not
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HarkerCatalogue    Note:    1831--1836   [1907]. Catalogue of the "Beagle" Collection of Rocks   Text   Image
29209 [47193] [84] 2903-2912. Valparaiso to Coquimbo, continued. + 2903. Quite white, almost pure, granular, crysts. carbt. of lime. (Henslow thinks the quartz-grains should be examined, but such are present in this specimen: consider it rather a singular rock; each grain is a more or less perfect crystal.) + 2904. Grey hard compact felspathic stone with minute [quantity]. of carbt. of lime in interstices. (Easily fusible.) + 2905. Partially granular or compact mixture as before (=2903) with
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HarkerCatalogue    Note:    1831--1836   [1907]. Catalogue of the "Beagle" Collection of Rocks   Text   Image
. grains of oxide of iron? embedded in bright green moderately hard basis; almost a granular rock in appearance. (Henslow thinks all these metamorphic decidedly more crystn. than sedimy.; thinks red pipes ( sedimentary) cut into the mica.) [page 89
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HarkerCatalogue    Note:    1831--1836   [1907]. Catalogue of the "Beagle" Collection of Rocks   Text   Image
[90] 2987-2997. Copiapo. + 2987. Black, calcs. compact coarse clay-slate. + 2988. Hard, compact, pale green, fine-grained, non-calc. sediment. (Looks more like sandstone; Henslow.) + 2989. Do., coarser, purple, different sorts of particles visible grains of carbt. of lime. + 2990. Compact, dirty green, conchd. fract., tolerably fine-grained, calcs. sediment, altered blended together. + 2991. Siliceous ferrugs. rock; apparently particles blended together. (Easily fusible; mottled; not siliceous
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HarkerCatalogue    Note:    1831--1836   [1907]. Catalogue of the "Beagle" Collection of Rocks   Text   Image
[93] 3021-3035. Iquique, Chile [Peru, crossed] + 3021. Green, calcs., hard, very compact, semi-conchdl. fract., sonorous porcelain-rock; layers of different hardness. (Of extremely easy fusibility.) (Like an altered rock. Henslow.) + 3025. Compact, black, calcs. clay-slate. + 3029. Pale purple, calcs., fine-grained, alums. sandstone or a limestone. (Red, fine-grained, very crystalline, calcareous sedimentary rock: the lime, though in small quantity, has been sufficient to give whole rock
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HarkerCatalogue    Note:    1831--1836   [1907]. Catalogue of the "Beagle" Collection of Rocks   Text   Image
3222. [6205] Palagonite-tiff. Descrd. Min C. Richardson, Bull. 110 Bishop Museum (Honolulu, 1933) p.59 [see Darwin Online, A189] 3223. [6206] Palagonite-tiff, with olivine crystals. See ibid. p. 58 3224 [32617] [ditto 3223] [102] 3220-3224. Galapagos Isles Chatham Is. + 3220. A brown-yellow soft resinous substance; I presume sedimenty; calcareous particles. + 3221. (Resinous colour lustre, brittle, angular with irregular granular fracture, scratched by knife yet some of edges will touch glass
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HarkerCatalogue    Note:    1831--1836   [1907]. Catalogue of the "Beagle" Collection of Rocks   Text   Image
. (Henslow thinks calcs. matter, aragonite, has been melted has subsided.) + 3379. Amygdoloid with mesotype? + 3380. [ditto] From near the coast:- + 3381. Black-brown compact laminated lava. + 3382. Lavas: latter full of crysts. of augite olivine: + 3383. vesicular cavities lined with minute crysts. (3882. Angulo-concretionary compact lava; black greenish kinds mottled together; not crystalline.) + 3384. Do., decomposing, passing into nature of wacke. (3385. Much most decompd. + 3385. earthy, olivine
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HarkerCatalogue    Note:    1831--1836   [1907]. Catalogue of the "Beagle" Collection of Rocks   Text   Image
Henslow or Miller on some question referred to him. I am yours faithfully, ALFRED HARKER. Sedgwick Museum, Cambridge. (see also Geol Mag. 1907, p. ) [page 4] References. Narrative of the Surveying Voyages of Her Majesty's Ships 'Adventure' and 'Beagle' ......vol. iii. Journal and Remarks, 1832-1836. By Charles Darwin. 8vo. London, 1839. The Structure and Distribution of Coral Reefs. Being the First Part of the Geology of the Voyage of the 'Beagle'. 8vo. London, 1842. Geological Observations on
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HarkerCatalogue    Note:    1831--1836   [1907]. Catalogue of the "Beagle" Collection of Rocks   Text   Image
appearing crystalline; not laminated; approaches to character of greywacke; easily fusible into nearly white enamel.) + 1792. Trap rock, little crystalline, fusible; cutting both latter rocks in dykes. + 1810. Coarse yellowish slaty rock; abundant, summit of Mt Tarn. (With decided tendency to slaty structure.) + 1811. Blackish-grey rather coarse slate (Henslow says a true fine greyscale) with fragments of a bivalve; Rocky Point. (Not laminated, slightly calcareous. All these are, I should think
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HarkerCatalogue    Note:    1831--1836   [1907]. Catalogue of the "Beagle" Collection of Rocks   Text   Image
calc-sper; slightly blackens at first by heat. = Vide [illeg] carb. of lime in Phillips. - Henslow says this latter where basalt has passed over chalk, blue, compact. This [page 134
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F1840    Book:     Keynes, Richard Darwin ed. 2000. Charles Darwin's zoology notes & specimen lists from H.M.S. Beagle. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.   Text   Image   PDF
Malacostegoidea. 3 When CD was a student at Edinburgh in 1826, his friend Robert Edmond Grant had published a translation of a paper by August Friedrich Schweigger which supported the view that corallines should be regarded as plants rather than animals. See CD's letter to Henslow dated 24 July 1834 in Correspondence 1:397-403. [CD P. 264 commences] Actinia1 987 The superior exterior margin of animal is formed into eight blunt foliaceous expansions. These are thickly covered with Hair brown papill , which are
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F1840    Book:     Keynes, Richard Darwin ed. 2000. Charles Darwin's zoology notes & specimen lists from H.M.S. Beagle. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.   Text   Image   PDF
l'Isle de France, and Planche 68 of Atlanta de Péron in the section on Conchyliologie et malacologie by Henri Marie Ducrotay de Blainville in Dic. Sciences Naturelles Planches 2e partie, Zoologie. 7 CD's specimen of the mold Mucor (Mucoraceae) was not well preserved, and Henslow wrote to CD in January 1833 'For goodness sake what is No. 223 it looks like the remains of an electric explosion, a mere mass of soot something very curious I dare say ' (see Correspondence 1:294 and Plant Notes p. 153
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F1840    Book:     Keynes, Richard Darwin ed. 2000. Charles Darwin's zoology notes & specimen lists from H.M.S. Beagle. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.   Text   Image   PDF
vaginuloides by CD in his article on 'Brief Descriptions of Several Terrestrial Planariae, and of Some Remarkable Marine Species, with an Account of Their Habits' in Annals and Magazine of Natural History, including Zoology, Botany, and Geology 14:241-51 (1844). Turbellarian flatworm in order Tricladida, now known as Geoplana vaginuloides Darwin. 2 CD's 'remarkable phenomenon' was probably the action, made visible by the bubble of air, of the microscopic cilia beating. The same explanation would apply
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F1840    Book:     Keynes, Richard Darwin ed. 2000. Charles Darwin's zoology notes & specimen lists from H.M.S. Beagle. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.   Text   Image   PDF
Surveying Voyages of his Majesty's Ships Adventure and Beagle, 1825-1836. J. Royal Geog. Soc. Lond. 6:311-43. 5 Cambridge University Library MSS: DAR 32-3 Diary of observations on the geology of the places visited during the voyage. Parts I and II; DAR 34-8 Notes on the geology of the places visited during the voyage: maps, etc. Parts I-V. 6 Nora Barlow, ed. Darwin and Henslow. The growth of an idea. Letters 1831-1860. John Murray, 1967; and Correspondence 1. 7 Charles Darwin (read 7 March 1838) On the
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F1840    Book:     Keynes, Richard Darwin ed. 2000. Charles Darwin's zoology notes & specimen lists from H.M.S. Beagle. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.   Text   Image   PDF
42 Letter from CD to Henslow of 24 July to 7 November 1834 in Correspondence 1:397-403. 43 Plant Notes pp. 194-5. 44 Letter from CD to Catherine of 20-29 July 1834 in Correspondence 1:391-4. 45 Phillip R. Sloan (1985) Darwin's invertebrate program, 1826-1836: Preconditions for transformism. Chapter 3, pp. 71-120 in The Darwinian Heritage, edited by David Kohn. Princeton University Press. 46 This has turned out not to be entirely true, since calcification of the zooids is characteristic of the
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F1840    Book:     Keynes, Richard Darwin ed. 2000. Charles Darwin's zoology notes & specimen lists from H.M.S. Beagle. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.   Text   Image   PDF
like this: [note ends] 1 Gastropoda, possibly superfamily Trochacea, a top snail. 2 The Tubiporées listed by Lamouroux on pp. 65-7 among order XVII of the polypiers entièrement pierreux et non flexibles, are distinguished from the flexible Gorgonias in order IX on pp. 31-7. The organ-pipe coral Tubipora is a polyp of order Stolonifera. A specimen of Idmonea milneana Busk was identified by S.F. Harmer in No. 175 (in spirits). 3 Although this claim was repeated in CD's letter to Henslow of 15
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