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CUL-DAR75.76    Abstract:    [1809--1882.04.00]   [Abstracts of 8vo Pamphlets] `[G]472-[G]513'   Text   Image
exactes et Naturelles 2: 289-348. [Darwin Pamphlet Collection 489] PDF 492 Huxley on animals intermediate between Birds Reptiles Huxley, Thomas Henry. 1868. On the animals which are most nearly intermediate between birds and reptiles. roceedings of the Royal Institution 5: 278-287. [Darwin Pamphlet Collection 492a] [PDF] 493 Müller Ad p. 366 Instincts of Cuckoos Müller, Adolf. 1868. Unser Kukuk (Cuculus canorus) brütet! Zoologische Garten 9: 366-373. (whole issue) [Darwin Pamphlet Collection
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CUL-DAR75.92    Abstract:    [1809--1882.04.00]   [Abstracts of 4to Pamphlets] `Q2-Q35'   Text   Image
Huxley, Thomas Henry. 1855. On Mollusca. In Charles Knight ed., English cyclopedia. A new dictionary of universal knowledge, vol. 3, pp. 855-874. [Darwin Pamphlet Collection Quarto 20] PDF 21      Bonaparte p 19 smaller Fam. of Geospizae of Galapagos p 39 Galapagos Cryneus a section Bonaparte, Charles Lucien. 1854. Notes ornithologiques sur les collections rapportées en 1853 par M.A. Delattre: et classification parallélique des passereaux chanteurs. Paris: Mallet-Bachelier. [Darwin Pamphlet
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CUL-DAR75.101-109    Abstract:    [1809--1882.04.00]   [index to references concerning] `Ch 5 Intercrossing & Sterility'   Text   Image
introduced in England X - 494 [illeg] close interbreeding - on cattle n.s at end Chillingham cattle bad breeders X Bradley's Husbandry (1722) 3/58 good of change of [illeg] - tried himself Bradley, Richard. 1724. A general treatise of husbandry and gardening. 3 vols. London: T. Woodward. [Each signed R. W. Darwin.] CUL-DAR.LIB.61 vol. 1 PDF L. Institut 1840 p. 274 Bees in N. Zenbla.- Look carefully over C. C. Sprengel.- Huxley Medical Times 319/133 sexes of Parasitic worms. - 307/486 on spermatozoa
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CUL-DAR75.101-109    Abstract:    [1809--1882.04.00]   [index to references concerning] `Ch 5 Intercrossing & Sterility'   Text   Image
Nat. Hybrid between 2 Phaseoli — 149. R. Hils Parrot never breeds —p 8. [illeg] breeding S X — 161 Naudin on Stramonium Petunia; not crossed by insect — 174 Huxley Pyrosoma in fact Dichogamous — for element matured at different — 176 Guide Z. Gardens. p 11 12 Cranes breeding S — 189 Newman on barren Lepidoptera when bred at certain periods. S Eding. New Phil. 84 p 288 Hydra some individual 1 sex — some both sexes combined Bronn Geschichte 77 Dimorphism or doubling of flowers S — 96 Hawk going back
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CUL-DAR75.137-144    Abstract:    [1809--1882.04.00]   [index to references concerning] `Laws of Variation: Nature'   Text   Image
(curious correlation of var. with abnormal structure) 97 Species varying more in one country than other — or not varies in one vars [combined to own] p. 116 important case of do. p. 288 do p. 306. Huxley on Ants 85 hairy cocoons are not variable in individuals in different species My Journal 381 Effect of climate on vars species at Galapagos 14
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CUL-DAR75.41    Abstract:    [1809--1882.04.00]   Abstract of `Linnean Journal' 2-5   Text   Image
-157. Vol IV p. 2 Zoolog Huxley. Crocodiles at first a genus by Cuvier then as Order Huxley, Thomas Henry. 1860. On the dermal armour of Jacare and Caiman, with notes on the specific and generic characters of recent crocodilian. [Read 17 February.] Journal of the Proceedings of the Linnean Society of London (Zoology) 4: 1-28. p. 172-183 Zoolog. Wallace on Distrib in Malay Arch. (very good) Wallace, Alfred Russel. 1860. On the zoological geography of the Malay Archipelago. Communicated by Charles
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CUL-DAR75.62    Abstract:    [1809--1882.04.00]   Abstract of `Proceedings of the Royal Society' 8-25   Text   Image
The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online 62 Proceedings Royal Soc. Vol. 8 p 33 Dr Davy on Ova of Salmon Davy, John. 1855. Some observations on the ova of the salmon, in relation to the distribution of species. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London 7: 362-363. [CUL-DAR.LIB.PER-U1073] Text Image Vol 9. p. 157 Owen Muschelchalk [Muschelkalk] Reptiles, hitherto described as Fishes Owen, Richard. 1858. Description of the skull and teeth of the Placodus laticeps, Ow., with indications of
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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-DAR75.68    Abstract:    [1809--1882.04.00]   [Abstracts of 8vo Pamphlets] `[G]159-[G]183'   Text   Image
course of botany. American Journal of Science and Arts 2d ser. 24: 426-432. [Darwin Pamphlet Collection 170] PDF 171 Buffon p 11 on changes which some plants undergo by comparison with old drawings [This number seems to have been reassigned by Darwin after writing this list.] 174 Huxley Pyrosoma (p 3) in fact dichogamous Huxley, Thomas Henry. 1860. On the development of Pyrosoma. Annals and Magazine of Natural History 3d ser. 5: 29-35. [Darwin Pamphlet Collection 174] PDF 175 Wilde on Irish Cattle p
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CUL-DAR75.101-109    Abstract:    [1809--1882.04.00]   [index to references concerning] `Ch 5 Intercrossing & Sterility'   Text   Image
The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online 101 (5 (1) Ch 5) Intercrossing Sterility X = Interbreeding — good of crossing = Effects /- S = Sterility from changed condition Cottage Gardener 1/44 55 Geraniums changing in fertility / do 8/61 / 1/24 / 10/109 secret of producing fertility S Poultry Book p. 65 Indian Fowls African fertile when first introduced into this country S X — 126 on increased size of crossed pheasant of breeds of fowls.— — 130 Hen-tailed cocks sterile Poultry Chronicle
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CUL-DAR75.101-109    Abstract:    [1809--1882.04.00]   [index to references concerning] `Ch 5 Intercrossing & Sterility'   Text   Image
Humming Birds fertilise flowers p. 36 natural crossing of Phaseolus Fermond, Charles. 1859. Faits pour servir à l'histoire générale de la fécondation chez les végétaux. Paris: Pillet (from: Bulletin de la Société Botanique de France 6: 749-751.) [Darwin Pamphlet Collection 234] PDF Linnean Transact vol. 23 — 1860 Part I p. 64. Dichogamy in [illeg] , good in comparison with plants. do do do p. 224 Huxley on Dichogamy in Pyrosoma do do Part II p. 350 Cobbold on rare case of [illeg] Flakes in
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CUL-DAR75.67    Abstract:    [1809--1882.04.00]   [Abstracts of 8vo Pamphlets] `[G]131-[G]157'   Text   Image
: Richard and John E. Taylor. [Darwin Pamphlet Collection 133] PDF 135 Owen p 38 on only crests bones varying from muscles p 40 do Owen, Richard. 1855. On the anthropoid apes, and their relations to man. [Read 9 February.] Notices of the Proceedings at the meetings of the members of the Royal Institution of Great Britain 2: 26-41. (whole issue) [Darwin Pamphlet Collection 135] PDF 136 Huxley p 11 on few orders lost Huxley, Thomas Henry. 1855. On certain zoological arguments commonly adduced in favour
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CUL-DAR75.98    Abstract:    [1809--1882.04.00]   [Abstracts of 4to Pamphlets] `Q164-Q227'   Text   Image
The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online 98 (7 Abstract 4to Pamphlets 164 Hoffman on struggle for existence in weeds Hoffmann, Hermann. 1870. Ueber Verunkrautung. Ein Beitrag zur Lehre vom Kampfe um's Dasein. Oesterreichisches Landwirthschaftliches Wochenblatt 2: 6-9, 17-19. (whole issues) [Darwin Pamphlet Collection Quarto 164] PDF 170 Lindstrom on connecting ancient corals Lindström, Gustaf. 1870. A description of the Anthozoa perforata of Gotland. Presented to the Royal Swedish Academy of
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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-DAR72.154-169    Abstract:    [Undated]   [reference incomplete] `Annales des Sciences Naturelles. Zoologie' 2s   Text   Image
p. 2 Pangenesis p 8 Rudiment Man — ask Huxley — Arteries runs in layer
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CUL-DAR51.C31    Abstract:    [Undated]   Wilder `[G]578, [G]755'   Text   Image
Darwin Online C31 8vo. Wilder. (578) wilder extra digits. Huxley Anat. of Vertebrata 1872 p. 248. carpus of fishes - Polydactylism 8vo (758) correlated mistrantes with 6-digitals. Roujon
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CUL-DAR80.B16    Note:    [Undated]   Huxley says old Ganoids are much related to Lepidosiren which connects amphibians & Fishes   Text   Image
The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online B16 Huxley says old Ganoids are much related to Lepidosiren which connects amphibians Fishes B16
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CUL-DAR48.A76    Note:    [Undated]   Huxley Origin of Species / Mr Parker & Huxley have shown that   Text   Image
The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online [A76] Huxley                               Origin of Species Mr Parker Huxley have shown that Palamedia is an aberrant form of the Anatidæ or Duck family - so here all mention removed ( whole frame like that of stork? see woodcut in Descent) Pleurodont Reptiles - chiefly Recent - There is aperture in eye of Loligo - says Mivart [3 words illeg
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CUL-DAR88.21    Note:    [Undated]   We have known lately more of the important distinction between material &   Text   Image
The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online [21] We have heard lately more of the important distinction between material formal morality, it has been disposed of by Prof. Huxley with his usual clearness. See also Mr Leslie Stephen ( ) who says p. 467, 468 Huxle
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CUL-DAR195.1.16    Note:    [Undated]   Huxley / Says feels hot all over when blushing & that this in fact is   Text   Image
The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online [16] Says feels hot all over when blushing that this in fact is blushing even though not red.— When certain nerve cut, rabbits ears become red hot. — (Huxley
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CUL-DAR80.A2    Note:    [Undated]   In Gorilla tail much more parallel than in Macacus   Text   Image
Dr. Murie on os coccyx Huxley says that in Gibraltar Inuus there are embedded vertebrae— In man the os coccyx is very little curved in itself, but the curvature depends on curvature of sacrum
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CUL-DAR80.B17    Note:    [Undated]   Huxley says Orang very abnormal — Length of arms & dentition connect   Text   Image
The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online B17 Huxley says Orang very abnormal — Length of arms dentition connect Gibbon, Orang Chimpanzee Gorilla together into Anthropomorphida group — he believes Gratiolet — Thinks he overstates brain characters.— B17
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CUL-DAR48.A82    Note:    [Undated]   Embryology shows there has been advance   Text   Image
The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online [A82] Embryology shows there has been advance Nat. Selec tends to speciation advance - so in intellect But I cannot in imagination follow out steps of advance for cell. Huxley homologies of Vertebrata Articulata All do plant for germinal cell or vesicle [in margin:] Difficulties I must enlarge on thes
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CUL-DAR80.A2    Note:    [Undated]   In Gorilla tail much more parallel than in Macacus   Text   Image
The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online A2 In Gorilla tail much more parallel than in Macacus. In man os coccyx if prolonged, wd come out in front, but that position depends on allied form of sacrum as animal became erect.— (Huxley) A2
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CUL-DAR80.B16    Note:    [Undated]   Huxley says old Ganoids are much related to Lepidosiren which connects amphibians & Fishes   Text   Image
Intercalary (1) ornithorhynchus any amphibian affinities? (not strictly more than all lower animals.— (2) Old Batrachians or amphibians  in any degree intercalary with Reptilia— Huxley thinks not. (Selachians are known to have reptilian affinities C.D) (3) What Fishes are most Reptilian See Academy — Ganoid — Dipterus see X Decale on Class of Ganoid very like Lepidosire
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CUL-DAR80.B17    Note:    [Undated]   Huxley says Orang very abnormal — Length of arms & dentition connect   Text   Image
Huxley Interval of development of wise teeth after last molar. Size of do, relatively to others, in man Anthropomorphids— Brace on dray teeth length or size of lower jaw, relatively to head — relative size of teeth is difference— American monkey About affinities of Anthropomorpherat Gratiolet's views.— Refer Bird paper Wallac
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CUL-DAR72.117-151    Abstract:    [Undated]   [reference incomplete] `Annales des Sciences Naturelles. Zoologie' 3s   Text   Image
(a) states that in Crust, antennæ parts of mouth appear before legs — the mouth-parts appearing before antennæ — The former have assumed their forms, when the legs begin to appear. V. Rathkes' paper M. Edwards Treatise on Crustaceæ — It wd be important to show that in diff. families, parts did appear in different order, even if no rule cd be established. (Ask Huxley) (
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CUL-DAR195.1.11-13    Note:    [Undated]   Huxley or Paget / Queries to Mr Foster   Text   Image
The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online (1 Huxley or Paget When a man stands before a fire his face redden, — does the heat act directly on the nerves or muscles of the capillaries — or do centripetal nerves transmit some effect from the heat on the surface, to the vaso-motor ganglia, these by reflex action cause the capillaries to dilate? (a) It is admitted by my physician When we closely direct our attention to any part, so that we sharpen a sense, feel a pain more acutely in am injured
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CUL-DAR195.3.34    Abstract:    [Undated]   Lubbock `Prehistoric man' 2nd edition; Paget `Lectures'; Müller J `Physiology'   Text   Image
Lawrence Lecture p. 204 Scan for various emotion animals weeping ─ camels c ─ Seals z. garden H. Spencer Principles of Psychology p. 596 gives whole theory of expression ─ under fear to hide or run away. ─ (old Edition), This must be quoted. ─ (old) Huxley Man's Place in nature p. 38, protruding lips in orang, when uttering high notes p 50 ─ p. 48 expression of gorilla in cage ─ contract downwards over brow in cage Tylor's Early Hist 2d edit p 38 on nodding shaking Head — intelligible by
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CUL-DAR48.A28    Note:    [Undated]   The open suture in the skull of the human (mammal?) infant   Text   Image
The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online [A28] The open suturein the skull of human infants in mammals? are often adduced as an example of  adaptation, which allow the bones to overlap close? overlap? during birth so as to facilitate birth, are often advanced, as a case of adaptation; but as the [few words illeg] open in skull of the Bird? or young Reptile? which has not to come only out of an egg, we see that this structure must be due to some quite independent cause, being present has only
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CUL-DAR53.2.138    Draft:    [Undated]   ramble on this head, in a letter to A Gray [general reactions to reviews   Text   Image
The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online [138] (2 ramble in this head, in a letter to A. Gray. Within late time var reviewers have given the whole credit of the idea to F. M. H. who have undoubtedly worked at it much more fully in some respects more [consistently] I had material for a whole chapter on the subject I ought to have made the discussion longer; for it is clear that I failed to impress my readers, he who succeed in doing so deserve, in my opinion, all that credit. This leads me to
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CUL-DAR53.2.162    Abstract:    [Undated]   [G]958, 959, 970; R261; Bain `Emotion and Will' 3rd edition; Plumtree `Elocution'   Text   Image
The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online [162] C.D 4 Expression 8vo. Pamph. (958) Donders on action on eyes of violent expiration. [DONDERS. ------ ACTION OF EYE-LIDS. ---------- 958] [Expression, p. 161, n16: Prof. Donders remarks (ibid. p. 28), that, After injury to the eye, after operations, and in some forms of internal inflammation, we attach great value to the uniform support of the closed eyelids, and we increase this in many instances by the application of a bandage. In both cases we
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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
Peruviana 1134 Ascidias, compound, with viscera brilliant scarlet (Huxley) [inserted above with different pen]: simple, transparent white: [the name 'Huxley' was probably added in April 1853 when CD learnt that T.H. Huxley was cataloguing the British Museum collection of the Ascidiacea, and wrote (see Correspondence 5:130-1) offering to send him 12-15 specimens collected on the Beagle.] 1135 Holuthuria V 3081136 R X Frog: above fine grass gr mottled all over with Copper color: which nearly forms
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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
his Geology and Zoology Notes that was quoted almost word for word by Thomas Huxley in his obituary of CD for the Royal Society24. There were, nevertheless, many splendid descriptive passages drawn from the Zoology Notes that provided the natural history in the Journal of Researches, and although the results of his anatomical studies on bryozoans, crustaceans and other invertebrates mostly remained unpublished, there were among them, as will be seen, many pioneering observations of considerable
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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
, colored reddish grey almost buried in Sand Chauques Isd Huxley [note opposite] vide (1165 infr`) [see also 1134 above. The only red ascidian found in Chiloe is Pyura chilensis, which appears to have been especially well known for its culinary qualities, a characteristic that always appealed to CD.] 1163 R Lizard Pale, with dark brown spots two lines along back of a blueish color. [Proctotretus n.s. (434) P. cyanogaster TB] 1164 C Amphipod: Crust: feeding on dead crab on sand-beach at Cucao Chiloe
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F1574c    Pamphlet:     de Beer, Gavin ed. 1960. Darwin's notebooks on transmutation of species. Part III. Third notebook [D] (July 15 to October 2nd 1838). Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History). Historical Series 2 (4) (July):119-150.   Text   Image   PDF
this out:6 There cannot be a doubt that the 1 Autobiography of Charles Darwin edited by Nora Barlow, London 1958, p. 119. 2 L. L., vol. 3, p. 193. 3 L. L., vol. 2, p. 315. 4 M. L., vol. 1, p. 195. 5 Alvar Elleg rd. The Darwinian Theory and Nineteenth-Century Philosophies of Science , Journ, History of Ideas, 1957, vol. 18, pp. 362-393. 6 T. H. Huxley. Westminster Review, 1860, vol. 17, p. 566. [page] 12
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F1574c    Pamphlet:     de Beer, Gavin ed. 1960. Darwin's notebooks on transmutation of species. Part III. Third notebook [D] (July 15 to October 2nd 1838). Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History). Historical Series 2 (4) (July):119-150.   Text   Image   PDF
filling the same place in Nature, I must suspect they are only varieties. The only fact of a similar kind of which I am aware is the constant asserted difference between the 1 T. H. Huxley. Lectures and Essays, London 1908, p. 172. 2 W. Stanley Jevons. Logic, London 1889, p. 79. 3 L. L., vol. 2, p. 241. 4 J. K. Feibleman. Darwin and Scientific Method , Tulane Studies in Philosophy, 1959, vol. 8, p. 8. 5 Autob., p. 118. 6 Charles Darwin and the Voyage of the Beagle edited by Nora Barlow, London 1945
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F1574c    Pamphlet:     de Beer, Gavin ed. 1960. Darwin's notebooks on transmutation of species. Part III. Third notebook [D] (July 15 to October 2nd 1838). Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History). Historical Series 2 (4) (July):119-150.   Text   Image   PDF
dominance of characters of different domestic breeds when crossed (III 3, 13, 42) and the hypothesis that dominance was determined by the relative ages of the breeds (III 16, 17, 43, 49, 108); with the relative importance of paternal and maternal influence on offspring (III 8, 44); with the explanation of the sterility of hybrids (III 15, 19) and with the possibility of telegony (III 8, 172). 1 Autob., p. 119. 2 Sir Julian Huxley. The Living Thoughts of Darwin, London 1958, p. 12. 3 Sir Gavin
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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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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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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
proves the law of 1 When Darwin wrote, the accepted view was that of Goethe and Oken that the vertebrate skull was composed of a number of fused vertebrae. This relic of transcendental anatomy, to which Richard Owen also subscribed, was destroyed by T.H.Huxley in 1858 (G. R. de Beer, The Development of the Vertebrate Skull, Oxford 1937). 2 Athenaeum, 1839, 12th January, p. 36. Miscellanea. New Crustacea. A surgeon of the French navy, M. Mittre, just arrived at Brest, among several new and
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F3484    Book contribution:     Darwin, C. R. 1909. [Letter to F. W. Hope, 1837, 19 letters to R. Trimen, 1863-71]. In E. B. Poulton ed. Charles Darwin and the Origin of species: addresses, etc., in America and England in the year of the two anniversaries. London: Longmans, Green, and Co.   Text
I sincerely wish yon health, happiness and success in Nat. History in S. Africa. I should have much liked to have asked you, if you could have spared time, to come down here for a day or two; but Mrs. Huxley is coming here in a few days with all her six children and nurses, for healths sake, and stop some weeks. And our House will be, with others, so absolutely full, that today we have had to tell our Brother-in-law, that we cannot possibly receive him.—Most truly do I thank you for your great
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CUL-DAR124.-    Note:    1838--1839   Notebook E: [Transmutation of species]   Text   Image
Jan. 6th [1839] The rudiment of a tail shows man was originally quadrumane quadruped. Hairy — could move his ears The head being six metamorphosed vertebra,1 the parents of all vertebrate animals must have been like some molluscous bisexual animal with a vertebra only no head — !! Handwriting is determined by most complicated circumstances, as shown by difficulty in forging, yet handwriting said to be hereditary, shows well what minute details of structure of hereditary 1 When Darwin wrote
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F2540    Periodical contribution:     Darwin, C. R. 1968. [15 letters, 1838-80]. In G. de Beer ed., The Darwin letters at Shrewsbury School. Notes and Records of the Royal Society 23 (1) (June): 68-85.   Text   Image   PDF
original copy of the first edition of the Origin of Species, by Mr A. E. Gunther, O.S. 1 Notes and Records, Roy. Soc. 14, 1959, p. 50. 2 Gavin de Beer: Charles Darwin, London, 1963. P. 165. (Letter 4) [Charles Darwin to Richard Owen] Down, Bromley, Kent Nov. 11th 1859 Dear Owen I have asked Mr Murray to send you a copy (as yet only an abstract) on the origin of species. I fear that it will be abominable in your eyes; but I assure you that it is the result of far more labour than is apparent on its
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EH88202575    Note:    1839--1882   Charles Darwin's Address Book.   Text   Image
), conchologist and malacologist. Harris W. Charing Kent William Harris (1797-1877), stratigrapher and collector of chalk fossils. {Henslow parcels for; directed to H. Webb Esq. 13 Clements Lane Inn John Stephens Henslow (1796-1861), Darwin's botany professor and Cambridge mentor. Henry Webb was a carrier of parcels for the Ipswich Museum. See Darwin to J. S. Henslow 13 March 1855. Correspondence vol. 5 and John van Wyhe, Charles Darwin in Cambridge. (2014) T. H. Huxley 41 North Bank. Regents Park 14
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CUL-DAR69.A9    Abstract:    [Undated]   Nordmann `Institut' 1839: 95   Text   Image
The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online [A9] L' Institut 1839. p. 95. Nordmann on Tendra zostericola allied to Flustra — sexes in separate cells — l' on voit dans leur voisinage une multitude d'animalcules ressembant a des zoospermes , speaking of females; but he says below afterwards that the zoosperms pass from males to females by an ouverture située a la base de chaque loge .— I cannot reconcile this — [Natural selection, p. 46: Distrusting my own knowledge I applied to Professor Huxley
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EH88202575    Note:    1839--1882   Charles Darwin's Address Book.   Text   Image
(1826-1891), German microscope maker. Darwin bought one from him for £16 8s in June 1873. See Darwin to Francis Darwin 10 Oct. 1873. Correspondence vol. 21. [page 22
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EH88202575    Note:    1839--1882   Charles Darwin's Address Book.   Text   Image
Islington James Scott Bowerbank (1797-1877), palaeontologist. Busk George 2 Gloucester Place Greenwich 15 Harley St. W. George Busk (1807-1886), palaeontologist and close friend of T. H. Huxley. {Barytes carbonate for Rats from Dymond? of Holborn Gardeners Chron 1851 p. 597 Powdered v. Gardeners' Chronicle 1850. Jan 12 Feb 9 March 16 Notes on rat poison from the Gardeners' Chronicle. Kidd 1851, Kidd 1850, Kidd 1850 and Kidd 1850. See The Complete Library of Charles Darwin. Dymond Co. Manufacturing
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CUL-DAR205.3.245    Abstract:    [Undated]   Huxley T.H `Explanatory catalogue Museum of Practical Geology' pp. 37-38   Text   Image
The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online [245] Huxley Explanatory Catalogue Museum of Practical Geology. p. 37 Crust. Nephrops norvegicus inhabits Norway Adriatic Nice not intermediate sea-regions. p 38 The genus has been f. fossil in central France, betwen close two points 19 Huxley, Thomas Henry and Etheridge, Robert. 1865. A catalogue of the collection of fossils in the Museum of Practical Geology, with an explanatory introduction. London: Her Majesty's Stationery Office. [CCD13] PD
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CUL-DAR205.5.179    Note:    [Undated]   Though with Cuvier (& Huxley) the enunciation of as general propositions   Text   Image
The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online [179] Though with Cuvier ( Huxley) this enunciation of general proposition may be main end of Classification, the distinction between a natural artificial system be that all characters are included in former, yet I think by very many systematists it has been silently felt that something more is meant. — Show this — Anyhow if more can be included in a classification which will group [illeg] resemblance it will be felt as advantage; this is case if we
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