Darwin's Living Legacy--Evolutionary Theory 150 Years Later
By SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN
Added: Mon, 15 Dec 2008 00:00:00 UTC
Thanks to Catalin for the link.
Reposted from:
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A Victorian amateur undertook a lifetime pursuit of slow, meticulous observation and thought about the natural world, producing a theory 150 years ago that still drives the contemporary scientific agenda
When the 26-year-old Charles Darwin sailed into the Galápagos Islands in 1835 onboard the HMS Beagle, he took little notice of a collection of birds that are now intimately associated with his name. The naturalist, in fact, misclassified as grosbeaks some of the birds that are now known as Darwinâs finches. After Darwin returned to England, ornithologist and artist John Gould began to make illustrations of a group of preserved bird specimens brought back in the Beagleâs hold, and the artist recognized them all to be different species of finches.
From Gouldâs work, Darwin, the self-taught naturalist, came to understand how the finchesâ beak size must have changed over the generations to accommodate differences in the size of seeds or insects consumed on the various islands. âSeeing this gradation and diversity of structure in one small, intimately related group of birds, one might really fancy that from an original paucity of birds in this archipelago, one species had been taken and modified for different ends,â he noted in The Voyage of The Beagle, published after his return in 1839.
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