| Search Help New search |
| Results 1-38 of 38 for « +text:meldola +(language:English) +(+name:darwin +name:charles +name:robert) » |
| 43% |
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
a few words of encouragement on Trimen's great paper on Mimicry are contained in No. 13; the geographical distribution of beetles in No. 19. Of four brief letters, two contain invitations (Nos. 13, 14), and two are concerned with difficulties caused by ill-health (Nos. 17, 18, the latter written by Mrs. Darwin). The first letter (No. 9) of the following series introduces, and subsequent letters return to the question of ocelli (ocellated spots or eye-spots) on the wings of butterflies and
|
| 59% |
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
believe me My dear Sir Yours very faithfully Charles Darwin. 1 August Weismann: Studies in the Theory of Descent translated and edited with notes by Raphael Meldola: with a prefatory notice by Charles Darwin, 3 vols., London 1880-1882. Charles Thomas Whitley Charles Thomas Whitley (1808-1895) was another of Darwin's intimate friends, who also was at Shrewsbury School. At Cambridge, where he matriculated in 1826, at St John's College, he became Senior Wrangler in 1830, and Fellow of his College in
|
| 69% |
Gazette 7 Catherine St. Strand. W.C. John Chalmers Morton (1821-1888), farmer and editor of the Agricultural Gazette. Meldola R. 21 John St. Bedford Row Raphael Meldola (1849-1915), chemist and entomologist. Recollections of Darwin here and here. [page 28
|
| 59% |
F1756
Periodical contribution:
Darwin, C. R. 1872. Bree on Darwinism. Nature. A Weekly Illustrated Journal of Science 6 (8 August): 279.
Text
Image
PDF
unintelligible to me, I cannot even conjecture how he has so completely mistaken my meaning: but, perhaps, no one who has read Mr. Wallace's article, or who has read a work formerly published by Dr. Bree on the same subject as his recent one, will be surprised at any amount of misunderstanding on his part. CHARLES DARWIN August 3 1 Wallace 1872. Charles Robert Bree (1811-1886), physician, zoologist and anti-Darwinian. Bree 1872. See LL 3: 167. Raphael Meldola also replied to Bree in a letter
|
| 56% |
F944
Book:
Darwin, C. R. 1874. The descent of man, and selection in relation to sex. 2d ed. 10 thousand. London: John Murray.
Text
Image
PDF
share in wooing, and their beauty seems to have been increased by the females having accepted the more attractive individuals; but with these butterflies, the females take the more active part in the final marriage ceremony, so that we may suppose that they likewise do so in the wooing; and in this case we can understand how it is that they have been rendered the more beautiful. Mr. Meldola, from whom the foregoing statements have been taken, says in conclusion; Though I am not convinced of the
|
| 49% |
F944
Book:
Darwin, C. R. 1874. The descent of man, and selection in relation to sex. 2d ed. 10 thousand. London: John Murray.
Text
Image
PDF
butterflies, 250. Melanesians, decrease of, 185. Meldola, Mr., colours and marriage flight of Colias and Pieris, 319. Meliphagid , Australian, nidification of, 454. Melita, secondary sexual characters of, 268. Melo , difference of colour in the sexes of a species of, 294. Memory, manifestations of, in animals, 74. Memnon, young, 168. Mental characters, difference of, in different races of men, 167. faculties, diversity of, in the same race of men, 26; inheritance of, 27; variation of, in the same
|
| 56% |
F948
Book:
Darwin, C. R. 1877. The descent of man, and selection in relation to sex. Twelfth thousand, revised and augmented. (final text). London: John Murray.
Text
PDF
share in wooing, and their beauty seems to have been increased by the females having accepted the more attractive individuals; but with these butterflies, the females take the more active part in the final marriage ceremony, so that we may suppose that they likewise do so in the wooing; and in this case we can understand how it is that they have been rendered the more beautiful. Mr. Meldola, from whom the foregoing statements have been taken, says in conclusion: Though I am not convinced of the
|
| 49% |
F948
Book:
Darwin, C. R. 1877. The descent of man, and selection in relation to sex. Twelfth thousand, revised and augmented. (final text). London: John Murray.
Text
PDF
numerical proportion of the sexes in butterflies, 250. Melanesians, decrease of, 185. Meldola, Mr., colours and marriage flight of Colias and Pieris, 319. Meliphagidæ, Australian, nidification of, 454. Melita, secondary sexual characters of, 268. Meloë, difference of colour in the sexes of a species of, 294. Memory, manifestations of, in animals, 74. Memnon, young, 168. Mental characters, difference of, in different races of men, 167. — faculties, diversity of, in the same race of men, 26; inheritance
|
| 100% |
CUL-DAR252.5
Note:
[1878--1908]
Catalogue of Charles Robert Darwin's pamphlet collection: Quarto
Text
37 1071 MEGNIN SARCOPTIDES ACARI 1073 MEGNIN LES HYOPES ACARI 1072 MEGNIN GAMASIDAE ACARI 1191 Meldola R. Evolution (Lepidoptera) 1190 ditto Letter from F. Müller 1344 Meldola (Müller F) mimicry in butterflies 1668 w Meldola Evolution '83 Mer Absorption by roots 1520 1683 Meyer Starch bodies 1076 MIVART BATS 1295 Möbius K Thiegenden Fische 1266 Mohr C Foreign plants introduced into Stales 1236 Mohl V H Cleistomgamic Hetrostyled 568 Moll Cell division growth 1499 Moll J Droping of leaves Moll
|
| 49% |
F1414
Book contribution:
Darwin, C. R. 1880. Prefatory notice. In Weismann, August, Studies in the theory of descent. With notes and additions by the author: Translated and edited, with notes, by Raphael Meldola F.C.S.: With a prefatory notice by Charles Darwin, LL.D., F.R.S. 2 vols. London: Sampson Low, Marston, Searle, & Rivington. Volume 1, pp. [v]-vi.
Text
Image
PDF
Darwin, C. R. 1882 [1880]. Prefatory notice. In Weismann, August, Studies in the theory of descent. With notes and additions by the author: Translated and edited, with notes, by Raphael Meldola F.C.S.: With a prefatory notice by Charles Darwin, LL.D., F.R.S. 2 volumes. London: Sampson Low, Marston, Searle, Rivington. Volume 1, pp. [v]-vi. [page v] PREFATORY NOTICE. THE present work by Professor Weismann,1 well known for his profound embryological investigations on the Diptera, will appear, I
|
| 56% |
F955
Book:
Darwin, C. R. 1882. The descent of man, and selection in relation to sex. London: John Murray. 2d ed., fifteenth thousand.
Text
Image
PDF
share in wooing, and their beauty seems to have been increased by the females having accepted the more attractive individuals; but with these butterflies, the females take the more active part in the final marriage ceremony, so that we may suppose that they likewise do so in the wooing; and in this case we can understand how it is that they have been rendered the more beautiful. Mr. Meldola, from whom the foregoing statements have been taken, says in conclusion: Though I am not convinced of the
|
| 49% |
F955
Book:
Darwin, C. R. 1882. The descent of man, and selection in relation to sex. London: John Murray. 2d ed., fifteenth thousand.
Text
Image
PDF
numerical proportion of the sexes in butterflies, 250. Melanesians, decrease of, 185. Meldola, Mr., colours and marriage flight of Colias and Pieris, 319. Meliphagidæ, Australian, nidification of, 454. Melita, secondary sexual characters of, 268. Meloë, difference of colour in the sexes of a species of, 294. Memory, manifestations of, in animals, 74. Memnon, young, 168. Mental characters, difference of, in different races of men, 167. — faculties, diversity of, in the same race of men, 26; inheritance
|
| 48% |
F1452.3
Book:
Darwin, Francis ed. 1887. The life and letters of Charles Darwin, including an autobiographical chapter. vol. 3. London: John Murray.
Text
Image
PDF
and edited by Raphael Meldola. With a Prefatory Notice by Charles Darwin. 8 vo. London, 1880 . The Fertilisation of Flowers. By Hermann M ller. Translated and edited by D'Arcy W. Thompson. With a Preface by Charles Darwin. 8vo. London, 1883. Mental Evolution in Animals. By G. J. Romanes. With a posthumous essay on instinct by Charles Darwin, 1883. [Also published in the Journal of the Linnean Society.] Some Notes on a curious habit of male humble bees were sent to Prof. Hermann M ller, of
|
| 40% |
F2756
Periodical contribution:
Darwin, C. R. 1891. [Letter to George Bentham 1869]. In W. T. Thiselton Dyer, The multiplication of races. Nature43, no. 1119, (9 April): 535-6.
Text
Image
PDF
writings. Quite recently I have found by accident, amongst the papers of the late Mr. Bentham at Kew, a letter of friendly criticism from Mr. Darwin upon the presidential address which Mr. Bentham delivered to the Linnean Society on May 24, 1869. This letter, I think, has been overlooked and not published previously. In it Mr. Darwin expresses himself with regard to the multiple-origin of races and some other points in very explicit language. Prof. Meldola, to whom I mentioned in conversation
|
| 29% |
F2169
Periodical contribution:
Darwin, C. R. 1899. [Recollections of Darwin by Hooker, Meldola & Tylor]. Unveiling the Darwin statue at the museum. Jackson's Oxford Journal (17 June): 8.
Text
Darwin, C. R. 1899. [Recollections of Darwin by Hooker, Meldola Tylor.] Unveiling the Darwin statue at the museum. Jackson's Oxford Journal (17 June): 8. [page] 8 UNVEILING THE DARWIN STATUE AT THE MUSEUM. […] [Joseph Dalton Hooker1:] The Vice-Chancellor of your University has done me the honour of asking me to address you on the occasion of the installation of the statue of the great naturalist which now adorns your museum, and has expressed his opinion that a few personal reminiscences would
|
| 74% |
F1592.2
Book:
Marchant, James ed. 1916. Alfred Russel Wallace letters and reminiscences. London: Cassell. Volume 2.
Text
Image
PDF
Thayer's demonstration of the value of such colouring for the purposes of concealment among environment. Wallace accepted Thayer's view at once when it was subsequently put forward; as do most naturalists at the present time. TO PROF. MELDOLA Frith Hill, Godalming. April 8, 1885. My dear Meldola, Your letter in Nature last week riz my dander, as the Yankees say, and, for once in a way, we find ourselves deadly enemies prepared for mortal combat, armed with steel (pens) and prepared to shed any
|
| 62% |
F1592.2
Book:
Marchant, James ed. 1916. Alfred Russel Wallace letters and reminiscences. London: Cassell. Volume 2.
Text
Image
PDF
incipient species. Many other causes of infertility co-operate, and I really think I have overcome the fundamental difficulties of the question and made it a good deal clearer than Darwin left it . I think also it completely smashes up Romanes. Yours faithfully, ALFRED R. WALLACE. The next letter relates to a question which Prof. Meldola raised as to whether, in view of the extreme importance of divergence (in the Darwinian sense) for the separation and maintenance of specific types, it might
|
| 62% |
F1592.2
Book:
Marchant, James ed. 1916. Alfred Russel Wallace letters and reminiscences. London: Cassell. Volume 2.
Text
Image
PDF
by Romanes had no real weight because the possibility of so called co adaptations being developed successively in the order of evolution had not been reckoned with. There was no real divergence between Wallace and Prof. Meldola on this matter when they subsequently discussed it. The correspondence is in Nature, xliii. 557, and subsequently. See also Darwin and After Darwin, by Romanes, 1895, ii. 68. TO PROF. MELDOLA Parkstone, Dorset. April 25, 1891. My dear Meldola, You have now put your foot
|
| 55% |
F1592.2
Book:
Marchant, James ed. 1916. Alfred Russel Wallace letters and reminiscences. London: Cassell. Volume 2.
Text
Image
PDF
difficult and inadequate as mine does to him. A. R. W. Wallace was in frequent correspondence with Professor Raphael Meldola, the eminent chemist, a friend both of Darwin and of Wallace, a student of Evolution, and a stout defender of Darwinism. I received from him much help and advice in connection with this work, and had he lived until its completion he died, suddenly, in 1914 my indebtedness to him would have been even greater. The following letter to Meldola refers to a suggestion that the white
|
| 55% |
F1592.2
Book:
Marchant, James ed. 1916. Alfred Russel Wallace letters and reminiscences. London: Cassell. Volume 2.
Text
Image
PDF
it is a fine case! Yours very faithfully, ALFRED R. WALLACE. Wallace was formally admitted to the Royal Society in June, 1893. The postscript of the following letter refers to his cordial reception by the Fellows. TO PROF. MELDOLA Parkstone, Dorset. June 10, 1893. My dear Meldola, As we had no time to discourse on Thursday, I will say a few words on the individual adaptability question. We have to deal with facts, and facts certainly show that, in many groups, there is a great amount of adaptable
|
| 55% |
F1592.2
Book:
Marchant, James ed. 1916. Alfred Russel Wallace letters and reminiscences. London: Cassell. Volume 2.
Text
Image
PDF
the hosts of huge and very specialised animals everywhere recently extinct are clearly failures. They were successes as long as the struggle was with animal competitors only, physical conditions being highly favourable. But, when physical conditions became adverse, as by drought, cold, etc., they failed and became extinct. The entrance of new enemies from another area might equally render them failures. As to your question about myself and Darwin, I had met him once only for a few minutes at
|
| 55% |
F1592.2
Book:
Marchant, James ed. 1916. Alfred Russel Wallace letters and reminiscences. London: Cassell. Volume 2.
Text
Image
PDF
thinking that the actions of the latter will some day be similarly explained. When Lloyd Morgan's book is published we shall have much information on this question. (See Natural Selection and Tropical Nature, pp. 91 7.) Yours truly, ALFRED R. WALLACE. TO PROF. MELDOLA Parkstone, Dorset. October 12, 1896. My dear Meldola, I got Weismann's Germinal Selection two or three months back and read it very carefully, and on the whole I admire it very much, and think it does complete the work of ordinary
|
| 55% |
F1592.2
Book:
Marchant, James ed. 1916. Alfred Russel Wallace letters and reminiscences. London: Cassell. Volume 2.
Text
Image
PDF
evolution. Wallace ultimately accepted the Weismannian teaching. Darwin had no opportunity during his lifetime of considering this question, which was raised later in an acute form by Weismann. TO PROF. MELDOLA Parkstone, Dorset. January 6, 1897. My dear Meldola, The passage to which you refer in the Origin (top of p. 6) shows Darwin's firm belief in the heredity of acquired variations, and also in the importance of definite variations, that is, sports though elsewhere he almost gives these up in
|
| 55% |
F1592.2
Book:
Marchant, James ed. 1916. Alfred Russel Wallace letters and reminiscences. London: Cassell. Volume 2.
Text
Image
PDF
truly, ALFRED R. WALLACE. TO PROF. MELDOLA Parkstone, Dorset. April 27, 1897. My dear Meldola, I thought Romanes' article in reply to Spencer was very well written and wonderfully clear for him, and I agree with most of it, except his high estimate of Spencer's co-adaptation argument. It is quite true that Spencer's biology rests entirely on Lamarckism, so far as heredity of acquired characters goes. I have been reading Weismann's last book, The Germ Plasm. It is a wonderful attempt to solve the
|
| 55% |
F1592.2
Book:
Marchant, James ed. 1916. Alfred Russel Wallace letters and reminiscences. London: Cassell. Volume 2.
Text
Image
PDF
TO PROF. MELDOLA Parkstone, Dorset. July 8, 1897. My dear Meldola, I am now reading a wonderfully interesting book O. Fisher's Physics of the Earth's Crust. It is really a grand book, and, though full of unintelligible mathematics, is so clearly explained and so full of good reasoning on all the aspects of this most difficult question that it is a pleasure to read it. It was especially a pleasure to me because I had just been writing an article on the Permanence of the Oceanic Basins, at the
|
| 55% |
F1592.2
Book:
Marchant, James ed. 1916. Alfred Russel Wallace letters and reminiscences. London: Cassell. Volume 2.
Text
Image
PDF
! Yours very truly, ALFRED R. WALLACE. The next letter relates to Wallace's Friday evening Discourse at the Royal Institution. His friends were afraid whether his voice could be sustained throughout the hour fears which were abundantly dispelled by the actual performance. This was his last public lecture. TO PROF. MELDOLA Old Orchard, Broadstone, Wimborne. December 20, 1908. My dear Meldola, Thanks for your kind offer to read for me if necessary. But when Sir Wm. Crookes first wrote to me about it
|
| 55% |
F1592.2
Book:
Marchant, James ed. 1916. Alfred Russel Wallace letters and reminiscences. London: Cassell. Volume 2.
Text
Image
PDF
as Westminster Abbey, the burial-place of his illustrious fellow-worker Charles Darwin, petition the Right Reverend the Dean and Chapter for permission to place a medallion in Westminster Abbey. We further guarantee, if the medallion be accepted, to pay the Abbey fees of 200. ARCH. GEIKIE JOHN W. JUDD WILLIAM CROOKES OLIVER J. LODGE A. B. KEMPE E. B. POULTON E. RAY LANKESTER A. STRAHAN D. H. SCOTT H. H. TURNER D. PRAIN J. LARMOR A. E. SHIPLEY W. RAMSAY RAPHAEL MELDOLA SILVANUS P. THOMPSON P. A
|
| 55% |
F1592.2
Book:
Marchant, James ed. 1916. Alfred Russel Wallace letters and reminiscences. London: Cassell. Volume 2.
Text
Image
PDF
about by Natural Selection, just as extreme fecundity had been brought about (by Natural Selection) in cases where such fecundity was of advantage. TO PROF. MELDOLA Frith Hill, Godalming April12, 1888. My dear Meldola, Many thanks for your criticism. It is a perfectly sound one as against my view being a complete explanation of the phenomena, but that I do not claim. And I do not see any chance of the required facts being forthcoming for many years to come. Experiments in the hybridisation of
|
| 46% |
F1592.1
Book:
Marchant, James ed. 1916. Alfred Russel Wallace letters and reminiscences. London: Cassell. Volume 1.
Text
Image
PDF
Synthetic Philosophy, the final and amended syllabus [being] issued in 1860. The work of Darwin and Spencer from that period, although moving along independent lines, was directed towards the same end, notwithstanding the diversity of materials which they made use of and the differences in their methods of attack; that end was 1 Life and Letters of Charles Darwin, ii. 188. [page] 12
|
| 46% |
F1592.2
Book:
Marchant, James ed. 1916. Alfred Russel Wallace letters and reminiscences. London: Cassell. Volume 2.
Text
Image
PDF
Spencer's argument about Co adaptation which Romanes had urged in support of Neo-Lamarckism as opposed to Natural Selection. Prof. Meldola endeavoured to show that the difficulties raised by Spencer and supported E [page] 5
|
| 46% |
F1592.2
Book:
Marchant, James ed. 1916. Alfred Russel Wallace letters and reminiscences. London: Cassell. Volume 2.
Text
Image
PDF
regaining consciousness. He was in his ninety first year. It was suggested that he should be buried in Westminster Abbey, beside Charles Darwin, but Mrs. Wallace and the family, expressing his own wishes as well as theirs, did not desire it. On Monday, November 10th, he was laid to rest with touching simplicity in the little cemetery of Broadstone, on a pine clad hill swept by ocean breezes. He was followed on his last earthly journey by his son and daughter, by Miss Mitten, his sister in law, and
|
| 43% |
F1592.2
Book:
Marchant, James ed. 1916. Alfred Russel Wallace letters and reminiscences. London: Cassell. Volume 2.
Text
Image
PDF
boyish joyous exuberance which touched me. He never grew old. When I had sat with him an hour he was a young man, he became transfigured to me. The last time I saw Dr. Wallace, writes Prof. T. D. A. Cockerell of Colorado, was immediately after the Darwin Celebration at Cambridge in 1909. I was the first to give him the details concerning it, and vividly remember how interested he was, and how heartily he laughed over some of the funny incidents, which may not as yet be told in print. One of his
|
| 39% |
F1592.2
Book:
Marchant, James ed. 1916. Alfred Russel Wallace letters and reminiscences. London: Cassell. Volume 2.
Text
Image
PDF
Wallace's views of, i. 91 2, 152 3, 155 et seq., 221, 240, 243, 250, 256, ii. 31 Man's Place in the Universe, ii. 102, 120, 167, 170 et seq., 178 Mantegazza, colour theory of, i. 299 Marchant, James, ii. 100; and the Wallace memorial, ii. 253; letter from Bishop Ryle to, 254 Mars, Wallace's, ii. 122, 172 3, 175 7 and its Canals, Lowell's, ii. 172, 175 7 Marshall, Mr. J. W., ii. 53, 209, 226 Dr. W., i. 279 Martineau, James, Darwin on Spencer's reply to, i. 272 Material for Study of Variation
|
| 39% |
F1592.2
Book:
Marchant, James ed. 1916. Alfred Russel Wallace letters and reminiscences. London: Cassell. Volume 2.
Text
Image
PDF
, Mr., i. 150, 161, 166, 232 Stanley, Dean, at Linlathen, ii. 228 Stephens' Illustrations of British Insects, i. 23 (note) Sterility, Natural Selection and, Meldola on, ii. 41 2 Stevens, Samuel, i. 26, 48, 49, 54, 71, 72, 102, 105, 143 Stewart, Prof. Balfour, and telepathy, ii. 200 Strahan, Dr. A., and Wallace memorial, ii. 253 Strang, Mr., chalk portrait of Wallace by, ii. 224 Strasburger, Prof. Eduard, receives Darwin-Wallace Medal, i. 120; tribute to Wallace, 120; on Wallace's Malay Archipelago
|
| 39% |
F1592.2
Book:
Marchant, James ed. 1916. Alfred Russel Wallace letters and reminiscences. London: Cassell. Volume 2.
Text
Image
PDF
proves of term survival of the fittest, 171; birth of a son, 188; later views on Natural Selection, 217, 218; dedicates Malayan Travels to Darwin, 232; birth of a daughter, 234; visits Wales, 247; reviews Descent of Man, 260; on Chauncey Wright and Mivart, 265 7; Bethnal Green Museum directorship, 277; and second edition of Descent of Man, 281 (note), 282, 283; social and political views, 283, 317, 319, ii. 139 65, 245 7; at Dorking, i. 294, 297, ii. 106; and the superintendency of Epping
|
| 39% |
F1592.2
Book:
Marchant, James ed. 1916. Alfred Russel Wallace letters and reminiscences. London: Cassell. Volume 2.
Text
Image
PDF
265; on Darwin's answer to Mivart, 271; on Dr. Bree, and Bastian's Beginnings of Life, 273; on a Bethnal Green Museum appointment, 277; on Darwin's Expression of the Emotions, 279; on invitation to undertake revision work for Darwin, 281, 282; on Climbing Plants, 285; on Darwin's criticism of Geographical Distribution, 288, 294; on Darwin's Crossing Plants, 296; on Darwin's Orchids, 297; on Darwin's Forms of Flowers, and glacial theory, 298; on sufficiency of Natural Selection, 300; on Epping
|
| 59% |
A538
Periodical contribution:
de Beer, G. 1968. The Darwin letters at Shrewsbury School. Notes and Records of the Royal Society 23 (1) (June): 68-85.
Text
Image
believe me My dear Sir Yours very faithfully Charles Darwin. 1 August Weismann: Studies in the Theory of Descent translated and edited with notes by Raphael Meldola: with a prefatory notice by Charles Darwin, 3 vols., London 1880-1882. Charles Thomas Whitley Charles Thomas Whitley (1808-1895) was another of Darwin's intimate friends, who also was at Shrewsbury School. At Cambridge, where he matriculated in 1826, at St John's College, he became Senior Wrangler in 1830, and Fellow of his College in
|
| 36% |
F3275
Book:
Gregorio, Mario A. -Di, ed. 1990. Charles Darwin's marginalia, vol. 1. Edited by Mario A. Di Gregorio, with the assistance of N.W. Gill. New York; London: Garland.
Text
Image
PDF
200 22-30m 201 26-28m 203 4-25m, 20m, 22-30m 209 6m 210 22-25m, 22-26m, 15-26m, 28-38m 212 22-28m 214 6-23m 216 8-24m 219 ll-20m, 36m 220 2-5m, 18-20u soIaufgeben 221 26-30m 223 32-38m 224 7-24m 225 3-9m 227 wt I have read this essay before except the appendix p. 273 273 22-26m, 34-36m, 37u verwerthbar I muss 274 17-20m, 21-24m 277 26-30m 280 25m WEISMANN, August Studies in the theory of descent trans. R. Meldola; London; Sampson Low, Marston, Searle Rivington; 1880-82 [Down] partlNB 101-107 106
|







