RECORD: Darwin, C. R. 1850. On British fossil Lepadidæ. [Read 5 June.] Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society of London 6: 439-440.

REVISION HISTORY: Scanned, text prepared and edited by John van Wyhe 2003-8. RN2

NOTE: See record in the Freeman Bibliographical Database, enter its Identifier here. Abstract only. Darwin withdrew the paper with permission of the Council.


[page] 439

1. On BRITISH FOSSIL LEPADIDÆ. By C. DARWIN, Esq., F.R.S. G.S. &c.1

[This paper was withdrawn by the author with the permission of the Council.]

[Abstract.]

MR. DARWIN noticed that great confusion exists in the nomenclature of the comparatively few species of Cirrhipeds, hitherto found in a fossil state; arising both from the easy separation of the several dissimilar valves soon after the death of the animal, and from the imperfect characters afforded by the valves themselves, which are, as it were, but parts of the crustacean carapace, neither accompanied with, nor distinctly impressed by, any of the soft parts of the animal. He then pointed out such particular valves as were sufficiently distinct, and had sufficiently constant characters to be considered as charac-

1 Darwin later published his conclusions in Fossil Cirripedia (1851). See Correspondence vol. 4.

[page] 400

teristic of genera,—as, for instance, the keel, or dorsal, valve in Scalpellum, and the scutal, or inferior lateral, valve in Pollicipes. The pedunculated cirrhipeds (Lepadidæ) were stated to have made their first appearance in the lower oolite, and to have reached their culminant point in the cretaceous epoch. The absence of sessile cirrhipeds in the earlier and secondary formations, and their occurrence for the first time in the eocene deposits, were then noticed, the author dwelling on the characters of the genus Verruca, and pointing out that, as a type of a group intermediate between, and of equal value with, the sessile and the pedunculate cirrhipeds, it offered no real exception to the rule that sessile cirrhipeds do not occur in the secondary formations; but that, on the contrary, it harmonizes with the law of relation between serial affinities of animals and their first appearance on this earth. Mr. Darwin concluded with a few observations on the comparative ranges of recent and fossil cirrhipeds, and on the close affinities between the extinct and the living forms.


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Citation: John van Wyhe, ed. 2002-. The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online. (http://darwin-online.org.uk/)

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