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*(a) For this fact I am indebted to my friend Mr. Sabine
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The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online [70] Coral Lyell 6th Edit. vol. II. p. 447. Reference to Leckie's view of connection between strike of mountains chains curves of equal magnetic intensity. See Sabine for Map - of Pacific then put this Slip to Cleavage Slips [70v
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CUL-DAR74.55-64,66-103
Abstract:
[Undated]
19 / [reference incomplete] `Horticultural Transactions'
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(38 vol v: Hort. Transact tried the fruit was never altered: Mr Sabine [rejoins] the appearance was such that it shows that adjoining apple trees have some influence on each other - quotes case of melon (Hort. Transact. Vol. III p. 318) mentions one of Amaryllis in which seed capsule was altered in form. Mr Sabine concludes that the determining circumstance which causes Pollen thus to act is unknown - Case of Digitalis by Koelreuter p. 70 Mr Sabine describes three varieties of hybrid Passion
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CUL-DAR74.55-64,66-103
Abstract:
[Undated]
19 / [reference incomplete] `Horticultural Transactions'
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(26) Hort. Transact. Vol IV p. 218 case of seedling golden pippin from old Golden Pippin p. 261 Mr Sabine in his account of Passiflora cœruleo-racemosa, thinks when all the seedlings shall have flowered, shall be obliged to resort to further means of distinguishing them for of the six remaining plants which have not yet blossomed; though one seems to correspond with that now under notice yet each of the other five have such differences as indicate a probability of their being distinct Here is
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CUL-DAR74.55-64,66-103
Abstract:
[Undated]
19 / [reference incomplete] `Horticultural Transactions'
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(11 According to Herbert to cases of hybrid Cystus of Herbert. p. 252 Mr K. allows even life of annual might be prolonged for vast period though not for eternity - the roots appear younger than the branches or more vigorous. 257 Mr Sabine says great caution is necessary in the production of the fruit of Gourd if any other kind has been grown in the neighbourhood no reliance can be placed on the goodness of its seeds, for like all others of the tribe under such circumstances it will sport into
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CUL-DAR74.55-64,66-103
Abstract:
[Undated]
19 / [reference incomplete] `Horticultural Transactions'
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(58 Vol VII. Hort. Transact. p. 336 Sir G. S. Mackenzie's account of some varieties of apple proves that from any two apples, the probability is, that an almost endless variety may be obtained, there being, apparently circumstances connected with (cross) impregnation, but unknown to us, that tend to variation - no clear facts given supporting this opinion. p. 423 Mr Sabine in his paper on Crocuses states that some of the varieties described by Parkinson in 1629 are now lost. - analogy with
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CUL-DAR73.116-117
Abstract:
[Undated]
Woods M.J; [reference identified]; Review of Bell J.W.S `Botanical Gazette' 1: 328; 2: 92; 114
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Darwin Online [116] Bot. Gazette vol I. p 328 Mr J. Woods on Atriplex several of the species, or at least several forms have 2 sorts of seeds. Those of the smaller calyces are slightly depressed, smooth black shining; while those found in the larger calyces are much larger, so much so as to have occasionally 3 times the diameter of the upper seeds, they are considerably more of a dark chesnut colour, wrinkled or shagreened. In Aspects of Nature by Humboldt, tranlated by Mrs. Sabine, there is a
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CUL-DAR74.55-64,66-103
Abstract:
[Undated]
19 / [reference incomplete] `Horticultural Transactions'
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(16 p. 209 Mr K. in giving list of new Strawberries mentions two varieties as having come from the same mongrel parentage p. 212 Mr K. The parentage of the Early Black Cherry is the same as that of the Black Eagle Waterloo Cherries ( very near resembles the last) p. 225 Mr Sabine on the genus Dahlia (There are two species) it seems as if some period of actual cultivation was required, before the fixed qualities of the native plant gave way began to sport into those changes which now so much
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CUL-DAR74.55-64,66-103
Abstract:
[Undated]
19 / [reference incomplete] `Horticultural Transactions'
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(17 vol III p. 267 On a selection of apples by J. Sabine Esqr. Describes the Pitmaston Russet Nonpareil is a seedling of the Nonpareil The wood colour of the bark have a strong resemblance to its parent; but the extremity of the leaf is not so sharply pointed. There are simple non hereditary varieties semi permanent other quite permanent varieties p. 340 Mr Shepherd says having sown some seeds from a small undulated variety of Scolopendrium vulgare he found the fronds of the young plants as
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CUL-DAR74.55-64,66-103
Abstract:
[Undated]
19 / [reference incomplete] `Horticultural Transactions'
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(27 with red, these produced seed from which some semi-double flowers were obtained by continuing a selection of seed, thus raising new Plant in 1802 1803 had eight good double varieties to dispose of (9 10 years) (This is case somewhat like that of the Dahlias - the parent plant seems to accumulate the power of change, which accounts for the sudden formation of varieties]. Vol IV p 288 Mr Sabine says there are four distinct kinds of double white Scotch roses - Of the double yellow two c c 3d
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CUL-DAR74.55-64,66-103
Abstract:
[Undated]
19 / [reference incomplete] `Horticultural Transactions'
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(28 Hort. Transact. Vol IV of the four species of the subgenus. Double white scotch rose. Hence we see that all the species of a genus may not descend from one father but from each other - so that genus means probably, in fact family brothers fathers, cousins c c Turritella has existed from Cambrian to present time yet may have given off many genera Mr Sabine goes on to say next section is Double Red Scotch Roses. of these there are many, as in the other sections with slight shades of
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CUL-DAR74.55-64,66-103
Abstract:
[Undated]
19 / [reference incomplete] `Horticultural Transactions'
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= no selection. p. 410 Mr Braddick says that buds of Peach Nectarine inserted into [branches] of productive trees will form fruit-bearing branches in the succeeding year. the same with apples grafted close above fruit-bearing spur. Surely this is opposed to Mr Knight's views. p. 456 Mr Sabine on the Ayrshire Rose Edinburgh. Phil. Mag. Vol. II p. 102 Mr Neill account of the Ayrshire Rose. Mr S. considers it deciduous free growing variety of Rosa sempervirens, to which it has more affinity than
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CUL-DAR205.7.73
Abstract:
[Undated]
Sabine Supplement to Parry `Voyage of 1819-1820': ch 25
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The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online [73] A Supplement to Parry's Voyage of 1819-20 by Capt. E. Sabine Q p. CLXXXV. case of she-wolf tempting dog away [Quoted in Natural selection, p. 427.] [73v
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CUL-DAR205.2.213
Abstract:
[Undated]
Sabine E `Supplement to Parry's Voyage of 1819-1820': cxc
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The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online [213] p. CXC. case of head of Bos grunniens born on ice to Greenland Bone of Lemming A Supplement to Parrys' Voyage of 1819 - 20 . by Capt. E. Sabine
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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.
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speaking the Williche language give them a different name from Aquina, the word of the West Patagonia. The potatoes has been found near Valparaiso. V. Sabine Horticultural society7? |315| 1 The deer was killed at Maldonado in June 1833 (see Beagle Diary p. 160), and as described in Zoology 2:29-31, the specimen that smelled so strongly was eventually mounted at the Zoological Museum in London. 2 Listed in Zoology 2:22-4 as Lutra Chilensis. 3 Listed in Zoology 2:78-9 as Myopotamus Coypus. 4 CD's
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CUL-DAR237.3
Note:
[1832--1836]
Plants notebook. [List of plants collected during the Beagle voyage].
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Patagonia The Potatoes has been found near Valparaiso. V. Sabine Horticultural Society? [9v
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F2114
Periodical contribution:
Porter, Duncan M. 1999. Charles Darwin's Chilean plant collections. Revista Chilena de Historia Natural 72: 181-200.
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. Humboldt refers to Humboldt (1822) and Sabine to Sabine (1824). Darwin made the following entry into one of the Specimens in Spirits of Wine Notebooks: 1142 Potatoes, (wild). Lowes Harbour Chonos A. (Porter 1987 p. 229; as S. tuberosum var. vulgare Hook. f.). Unknown. 984. Scurvy grass (very good) growing near the wigwams . Plant Notes. (Porter 1987 p. 167). I had earlier tentatively identified this collection as Oxalis enneaphylla Cav. (Oxalidaceae), which is known as scurvy-grass in the Falkland
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F2114
Periodical contribution:
Porter, Duncan M. 1999. Charles Darwin's Chilean plant collections. Revista Chilena de Historia Natural 72: 181-200.
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related species in the Andes. Willdenowia 23: 193 209. WILLSON MF JJ ARMESTO (1996) The natural history of Chilo : on Darwin's trail. Revista Chilena de Historia Natural 69: 149 161. YUDILEVICH LEVY D E CASTRO LE-FORT (eds) (1995) Darwin en Chile (1832 1835) viaje de un naturalista alrededor del mundo por Charles Darwin. 2nd ed. Editorial Universitaria, Santiago. 341 pp. APPENDIX 1 Vascular plants collected in Chile by Charles Darwin Plantas vasculares colectadas en Chile por Charles Darwin Names
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a sandy soil, with much vegetable matter.— The Climate is very humid little sunshine.— The Indians of Chiloe speaking the Williche language give them a different name from Aquina, the word of the West Patagonia.— The potatoes has been found near Valparaiso. V. Sabine Horticultural society
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CUL-DAR37.716-795A
Note:
1835.10.00
Geological diary: Galapagos Islands [All images collated into a single sequence, together with transcription]
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which resemble cables, folds in thick drapery rugged bark. [illeg] [mention] Douglas [on] [ferns] Vol IV p 337 19 months after wards rose strong through the fissure and have sent forth luxuriant fronds as though nothing had happened to them, much less that they had been deluged with fire2 !!— 1 Palo santo trees (Bursera graveolens). 2 Quoted from: Anon. 1834. Extract from a Private Letter addressed to Captain Sabine, R.A. F.R.S., by Mr. David Douglas, F.L.S. Dated Woahoo (Sandwich Islands) 3d of
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.] Scottish Agricultural Journal. Edinburgh. 1849-50. Transactions of the Linnean Society of London. London. 1791-. [vol. 21 in Darwin Library-CUL. Abstract in CUL-DAR75.46-8; CUL-DAR205.5.64-85 and CUL-DAR205.10.44-55.] Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. Edinburgh. 1788-. Wrangel, Ferdinand Petrovich. 1840. Narrative of an expedition to the Polar Sea, in the years 1820-3. Trans. by Elizabeth Juliana Sabine. ed. by Edward Sabine. London. [? ed.] Zoological Journal. ed. by Thomas Bell. London
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other domestic birds in a captive state, with hints for their management. London. [Darwin Library-CUL] Ekmarck, Carl Daniel. 1781. On the migration of birds. In Linnaeus, ed., Select dissertations from the Amœnitates Academiae. London. Humboldt, Alexander von. 1849. Aspects of nature, in different lands and different climates; with scientific elucidations. Trans. by Elizabeth Juliana Sabine. 2 vols. London. [Abstract in CUL-DAR71.35-6.] Liebig, Justus von. 1851. Familiar letters on chemistry. 3d
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structure, functions, and classification of animals. 2 vols. Edinburgh. [Darwin Library-CUL] Forsskahl, Jonas Gustav. 1781. The flora of insects. In Linnaeus, ed., Select dissertations from the Amœnitates Academics. London. Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire, Isidore. 1841. Essais de zoologie générale. Paris. [Darwin Library-CUL] Guillemin, Jean Antoine. 1825. Hybridité. In vol. 8, pp. 403-7, of Bory de Saint-Vincent, Jean Baptiste Georges Marie, ed., Dictionnaire classique d'histoire naturelle. 17 vols. Paris
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CUL-DAR71.180-91.] Odart, Alexandre Pierre, Comte. 1849. Ampélographie universelle, ou traité des cépages les plus estimés dans tous les vignobles de quelque renom. 2d ed. Paris. Pickering, Charles. 1850. The races of man: and their geographical distribution. New ed. (Bohn's Illustrated Library.) London. [Darwin Library-CUL] Ramsay, George. 1848. Analysis and theory of the emotions, with dissertations on beauty, sublimity and the ludicrous. Edinburgh. Rivers, Thomas. 1837. The rose amateur's
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). 1808. Letters on the subject of the Catholics, to my brother Abraham, who lives in the country. London. [? ed.] Prescott, William Hickling. 1847. History of the conquest of Peru, with a preliminary view of the civilization of the Incas. 2 vols. London. Sleeman, William Henry. 1844. Rambles and recollections of an Indian official. 2 vols. London. Southey, Charles Cuthbert. 1849-50. The life and correspondence of Robert Southey. 6 vols. London. Tocqueville, Charles Alexis Henri Maurice, Clérel
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Hertfordshire 14 Torriano Terrace Gloucester Place Kentish Town 9. Pembroke Sq Kensington George Brettingham Sowerby. 1st address used in 1844, 2nd in 1851, 3rd in 1862. Listed above and below. Mr J. Swinton 62 Berners St Probably a merchant. Mr Secker 5 Pump Court Temple Isaac Onslow Secker (1799-1861), barrister. Correspondence. Sabine Col. 13. Ashley Place Westminster Edward Sabine (1788-1883), physicist and army officer. [page 39
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? Sabine says North of Siberia, no sea-current, icebergs travel by wind. Aug. St. Hilaire Bot. p. 787. position of embryo in close species of Hilianthemum differs greatly — how very interesting to see if any variation in varieties. G. St. Hilaires law of Balancement (1
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F10.3
Book:
Darwin, C. R. 1839. Narrative of the surveying voyages of His Majesty's Ships Adventure and Beagle between the years 1826 and 1836, describing their examination of the southern shores of South America, and the Beagle's circumnavigation of the globe. Journal and remarks. 1832-1836. London: Henry Colburn.
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four or five hundred miles on a most unfrequented and scarcely known coast, almost proves their native existence. Professor Henslow, who has examined the dried specimens which I brought home, says that they are the same with those described by Mr. Sabine* from Valparaiso, but that they form a variety which by some botanists has been considered as specifically distinct. It is remarkable that the same plant should be found on the sterile mountains of central Chile, where a drop of rain does not
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CUL-DAR205.4.29
Abstract:
[Undated]
'Transactions of the Linnean Society of London' 14: 360ff
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The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online [29] Linn. Trans. XIV. p. 360. An account of a Collect. of Arctic plants by collected by E. Sabine by Sir W. Hooker. (Quoted) p. 361 Ranunculus nivalis in cold parts of Europe, Asia America on the Altaic alps of Siberia, I observe that several other arctic species are found on the Altai p. 372. Epilobium latifolium, is confined entirely to high northern latitudes, viz Siberia Norway Greenland Iceland c c c. I observe there are some few others there
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CUL-DAR139.10.1
Printed:
1841
Darwin, C. R. 1841. On the distribution of erratic boulders and on the contemporaneous unstratified deposits of South America. [Read 5 May.] Proceedings of the Geological Society of London Part 2, 3: 425-430 with plates. (annotated offprint)
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Major Sabine, p. 257.1 1 Ferdinand Petrovich Wrangel (1796-1870), Russian navigator who explored northern waters. Sabine 1840. [page] 42
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F1657
Periodical contribution:
Darwin, C. R. 1841. On the distribution of the erratic boulders and on the contemporaneous unstratified deposits of South America. [Read 5 May] Proceedings of the Geological Society of London Part 2, 3: 425-430.
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varieties of granite and sienite at the northern end of the island are stated, on the authority of an intelligent resident, to form whole mountains in Reloncavi Sound, on the opposite part of the main land. The larger masses were quite angular, and resembled fragments at the foot of a mountain. One block measured 1 Ferdinand Petrovich Wrangel (1796-1870), Russian navigator who explored northern waters. Darwin refers to Sabine 1840. [page] 42
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F1661
Periodical contribution:
Darwin, C. R. 1842. On the distribution of the erratic boulders and on the contemporaneous unstratified deposits of South America. [Read 14 April 1841] Transactions of the Geological Society Part 2, 3 (78): 415-431, pl. 11, figs. 1-3.
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Major Sabine, p. 257.1 1 Ferdinand Petrovich Wrangel (1796-1870), Russian navigator who explored northern waters. Sabine 1840. [page] 42
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CUL-DAR205.7.238
Note:
1842.11.00
Does not I St Hilaire say only races produce heterogeneous offspring some
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The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online [238] Nov. 42. — Does not. I. St Hilaire say only races produce heterogeneous offspring some like father some like mother — but how few hybrid litters for comparison — I think some of Hunters hybrid wolves differed one from other. — In Hybrid plants there is much variation there is little fear of foreign pollen in some cases as in Sabine Passion-flowers — Here case of two hybrids — if thought to be as only races refer to some of Koelreuter's cases
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F272
Book:
Darwin, C. R. 1844. Geological observations on the volcanic islands visited during the voyage of H.M.S. Beagle, together with some brief notices of the geology of Australia and the Cape of Good Hope. Being the second part of the geology of the voyage of the Beagle, under the command of Capt. FitzRoy, R.N. during the years 1832 to 1836. London: Smith Elder and Co.
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A plan of the island of Ascension. by Lieut. Robert Campbell R.N. 1819. Hydrographic Office. Capt. Sabine. London, Published according to Act of Parliament at the Hydrographic Office of the Admiralty, 14th. Sepr. 1825. [page ii
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F14
Book:
Darwin, C. R. 1845. Journal of researches into the natural history and geology of the countries visited during the voyage of H.M.S. Beagle round the world, under the Command of Capt. Fitz Roy, R.N. 2d ed. London: John Murray.
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insipid, without any bitter taste. They are undoubtedly here indigenous: they grow as far south, according to Mr. Low, as lat. 50 , and are called Aquinas by the wild Indians of that part: the Chilotan Indians have a different name for them. Professor Henslow, who has examined the dried specimens which I brought home, says that they are the same with those described by Mr. Sabine* from Valparaiso, but that they form a variety which by some botanists has been considered as specifically distinct. It
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F1831
Periodical contribution:
Darwin, C. R. et al. 1847. Copy of Memorial to the First Lord of the Treasury [Lord John Russell], respecting the Management of the British Museum. Parliamentary Papers, Accounts and Papers 1847, paper number (268), volume XXXIV.253 (13 April): 1-3.
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.S. W. J. Hooker, F.R.S. Director of Royal Gardens, Kew. Edward Sabine, For. Sec. Royal Society, and Gen. Sec. British Association. Thomas Horsfield, M.D. F.R.S. c. John Richardson, M.D. F.R.S. c. Richard Taylor, Fellow and U. Sec. of Linnæan Society. Jos. D. Hooker, F.L.S. M.D. W. J. Broderip, F.R.S. c. Thomas Bell, F.R.S. Prof. Zoology in King's College. Wm. Yarrell, V.P.Z.S. F.L.S. Wm. Spence, F.R.S. Pres. of Entomological Soc. Charles C. Babington, M.A. F.L.S. Sec. of Camb. Philo. Soc
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CUL-DAR74.137-140
Abstract:
[Undated]
22 / Herbert; Gardner; Herbert; Sabine; Gasparini; Mackenzie; Gardner ` Journal of the Horticultural Society' 1 1846: 44, 114; 281; 2: 153; 283; 3: 185; 301; 4: 37
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(3 p. 283 Sabine separated two white varieties, as belonging to a distinct species. C. lacteus, distinguished also by the absence of a bract from C. Lagenaeflorus aureus. but has obtained these another var from same capsule of seed of aureus. There are natural vars of aureus with without bracts, which the bracteate vars. seem disposed to lose in our climates. Q Herbert, William. 1847. A history of the species of crocus. Journal of the Horticultural Society of London 2: 249-293. Vol. 3. p. 185
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Darwin, C. R. 'Catalogue of Books (not Journals)'. (nd) CUL-DAR71.1-5 Transcribed and edited by Kees Rookmaaker. (The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online, http://darwin-online.org.uk/) (1 Catalogue of Books (not Journals.) 1. Temminck. Hist. nat. des Pigeons et des Gallinaces. On Hybridisation Pheasants migratory instinct. 2. Royle. Illustrations of the Bot. of Himalaya. On [illeg] on wandering genera. Rev. Hope on insects. 3. Royle Productive Resources: on difference of cactus with respect
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]. The solar system: a descriptive treatise upon the sun, moon and planets, including an account of all the recent discoveries. London. Hue, Evariste Régis. 1852. Recollections of a journey through Tartary, Thibet, and China, during the years 1844, 1845, and 1846. A condensed translation by Mrs Percy Sinnett. 2 parts London. [Darwin Library-CUL] Humboldt, Alexander von. 1849. Aspects of nature, in different lands and different climates; with scientific elucidations. Translated by E. J. Sabine. 2
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Henry. 1851. A naturalist's sojourn in Jamaica. London. [Darwin Library-CUL] Gould, John. 1848. The birds of Australia. 7 vols. London. [Darwin Library-CUL Abstract in CUL-DAR71.215-16; 205.3: 78.] Holland, Henry. 1852. Chapters on mental physiology. London. [Darwin Library; 2d ed. (1858) also in Darwin Library-CUL] Humboldt, Alexander von. 1849. Aspects of nature, in different lands and different climates; with scientific elucidations. Translated by E. J. Sabine. 2 vols. London. [Abstract in CUL
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CUL-DAR8.(1-102)
Draft:
1856
'Natural selection' chapter 3 (On the possibility of all organic beings occasionally crossing and on the remarkable susceptibility of the reproductive system to external agencies)
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(Ch. 3 Sterility of Plants) most strongly on the very general tendency of hybrids, even utterly sterile kinds, to produce fruit the caps perfect receptacles of the seed or fruit: thus, Sabine on Passion Flower. With respect to the development of roots, Kölreuter expresses his unbounded astonishment at the size of those of hybrid Mirabilis. All hybridisers, also, (Gärtner Bastard. s. 527) are unanimous in the strong tendency in hybrids to be propagated make larger increase by their roots, throw
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F1583
Book:
Stauffer, R. C. ed. 1975. Charles Darwin's Natural Selection; being the second part of his big species book written from 1856 to 1858. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
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. XI, 24, 30. Sabine, Edward. 'Mammalia.' pp. clxxxiii-cxcii in [Parry, William Edward], A Supplement to the Appendix of Captain Parry's Voyage for the Discovery of a North-West Passage in the Years 1819-20, Containing an Account of the Subjects of Natural History. London, 1824. IX, 78. XI, 47. Sabine, Joseph. 'Account of a newly produced Hybrid Passiflora.' Hort. Soc. Lond. Trans., 4 (1822), 258-68. IX, 113. Sageret, Augustin. Pomologie physiologique, ou trait du perfectionnement de la
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F1583
Book:
Stauffer, R. C. ed. 1975. Charles Darwin's Natural Selection; being the second part of his big species book written from 1856 to 1858. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
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, 55 e, 56, 57. vI, 35, 63. vII, 6, 9, 22, 25 bis, 26, 103. Woods, J. 'On the Genus Atriplex.' Bot. Gaz., 1 (1849), 327-8. vIII, 43. Woodward, Samuel Pickworth. A Manual of the Mollusca; or a Rudimentary Treatise of Recent and Fossil Shells, 3 parts. London, 1851-56. xI, 48. Wrangel, Ferdinand Ludwig von. Narrative of an Expedition to the Polar Sea in the years 1820, 1821, 1822, and 1823. Ed. E. Sabine, trans. Mrs. Sabine, London, 1840. v, 21. x, 53. Yarrell, William. A History of British Birds. 3
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F1583
Book:
Stauffer, R. C. ed. 1975. Charles Darwin's Natural Selection; being the second part of his big species book written from 1856 to 1858. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
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Ruppia maritima, flowers at surface of water, 63 n 4 Rutaceae, variability, 109 Sabine, Joseph Passiflora hybrids differ markedly, 446 n 5 Transport by icebergs, 562 n 2 Sageret, Augustin Grafting: Apricot and peach on plum, 420 n 4; Pear varieties, 420 n 3; Variable responses, 420 Vigour but lessened fertility of hybrids, 38-9 Saint-Ange, Martin Developmental compensation holds for malformation, 305 n 1 Shape of bird kidney attributed to pelvic bones, 297 Saint-Hilaire, Auguste de Analogous
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F1583
Book:
Stauffer, R. C. ed. 1975. Charles Darwin's Natural Selection; being the second part of his big species book written from 1856 to 1858. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
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produce the perfect receptacles of the seed or fruit: thus, Sabine on Passion Flower. With respect to the development of roots, Kolreuter expresses his unbounded astonishment at the size of those of hybrid Mirabilis. All hybridisers, also,3 are unanimous in the strong tendency in hybrids to increase by their roots, throw up suckers c. Considering this strictly parallel series of facts, that it can hardly be disputed that unnatural conditions have a special action in lessening the fertility of organic
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F1583
Book:
Stauffer, R. C. ed. 1975. Charles Darwin's Natural Selection; being the second part of his big species book written from 1856 to 1858. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
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. Supplement to Parry's voyage by Capt. Sabine p. cxc. Also Richardson's British Assoc. Report for 1836. p. 163. Scoresby estimated the weight of the beds of earth rock on many of the icebergs near Spitzbergen at from 50,000 to 100,000 tons; (Lyell's Principles of Geology. 9th Edit. p. 227.) [page] 563 GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTIO
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F1583
Book:
Stauffer, R. C. ed. 1975. Charles Darwin's Natural Selection; being the second part of his big species book written from 1856 to 1858. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
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illustrative of the umbelliferous plants, the composite plants, the grasses, the ferns London, 1855. IV, 24, 44, 69. Hooker, Sir William Jackson. 'Some Account of a Collection of Arctic Plants formed by Edward Sabine. . . during a voyage in the Polar Seas in the Year 1823.' Linn. Soc. Lond. Trans., 14 (1825), 360-94. XI, 10. Hope, Frederic William. 'On the Entomology of the Himalayas and of India', in Royle, John Forbes, Illustrations of the Botany and other Branches of the Natural History of the
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the four species of Peruvian sheep called Carneros de la Tierra: to which are added, particulars respecting the domestication of the two wild species. London. [Abstract in CUL-DAR205.7.89.] Waterhouse, George Robert. 1841. Marsupialia, or pouched animals. In Jardine, William, ed., The naturalist's library. 40 vols. Edinburgh. 1843, vol. 8. [Darwin Library-CUL] [Abstracts in CUL-DAR45.56; CUL-DAR46.1.2; CUL-DAR47.32.] Waterton, Charles. 1838. Essays on natural history, chiefly ornithology. 2d ed
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. Kosmos; a general survey of the physical phenomena of the universe. Trans. by Augustin Prichard. 2 vols. London. Humboldt, Alexander von. 1849. Aspects of nature, in different lands and different climates; with scientific elucidations. Trans. by Elizabeth Juliana Sabine. 2 vols. London. [Abstract in CUL-DAR71.35-6.] Hutchinson, William Nelson. 1850. Dog breaking. The most expeditious, certain and easy method. 2d ed. London. [Darwin Library-CUL] [20] [20v
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Periodical contribution:
Darwin, C. R. et al. 1858. Memorial of the promoters and cultivators of science on the subject of the proposed severance from the British Museum of its natural history collections, addressed to Her Majesty's Government. House of Commons Papers; Accounts and Papers (XXXIII.499) 456 (23 July): 1-5.
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. Gaskoin, F.L.S. D. W. Mitchell, Secretary to the Zoological Society of London, F.L.S., c. c. c. Philip Lutley Sclater, M.A., Fellow of Christ Church College, Oxford. George Bush, F.R.S., F.R.C.S.E, c. W. Macdonald, M.D. E. W. H. Holdsworth, F.L.S., F.Z.S. John J. Bennett, F.R.S.L.S. John Percy, M.D., F.R.S. M. Henderson, M.D., F.R.S. John Carrick Moore, M.A., F.R.S. John Gould, F.R.S. Robert Stephenson, M.P., F.R.S. George Peacock, Dean of Ely, F.R.S. Charles Darwin, F.R.S., c. J. F. W. Herschel, M
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