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Development of Evolutionary Theory and… Darwin’s voyages and… Natural Selection.

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Presentation on theme: "Development of Evolutionary Theory and… Darwin’s voyages and… Natural Selection."— Presentation transcript:

1 Development of Evolutionary Theory and… Darwin’s voyages and… Natural Selection

2 Aristotle 384-322 B.C. – Aristotle – wrote the Scala Naturae, or ladder of life. It described a Great Chain of Being which had a graduating complexity. Humans were on top. There was not mention of transformation, extinctions. Organisms were immutable.

3 Archbishop James Usher 1650 – Archbishop James Usher of Armagh declared that the Earth was created on Sunday October 23 4004 B.C.

4 Carolus Linnaeus 1700’s - Linnaeus wrote the Systema Naturae, thus developing taxonomy. The classification system of Genus species was introduced.

5 Thomas Malthus 1766-1834 – Thomas Malthus – An essay on the Principles of Populations stated that reproductive increases are geometric. Excess fertility creates more offspring than the environment can sustain.

6 Jean Baptiste Lamarck 1809 – Lamarck developed the theory of transformism – the transmission of acquired characteristics. E.g. Giraffe. Environment plays a role

7 Baron Georges Cuvier 1769-1832 – Baron Georges Cuvier developed the theory of Catastrophism, which explained that catastrophes in the past caused the extinction of local species Cuvier is the founder of palaeontology (Ross in Friends)

8 Sir Charles Lyell 1798-1875 – Sir Charles Lyell, a geologist Uniformitarianism The geological processes we see today are the same that they have always been. Wrote a book on geology

9 Sir Charles Darwin At 16 was sent to medical school… he thought it was boring, and left Enrolled at Christ College at Cambridge to become a clergyman (at this time, most prominent naturalists and scientists were clergymen) Graduated in 1831 at age 21

10 Sir Charles Darwin Reverend John Henslow, a professor of botany, introduced Darwin to Captain Robert FitzRoy (HMS Beagle), and gave Darwin Lyell’s book Set out on the HMS Beagle for 6 years as the captains companion (unofficial naturalist) Mission was to chart the South American coast While the ship was on the coast, Darwin would go ashore and collect specimens of local animals and plants, as well as fossils of extinct animals I’m on a boat

11 Voyage of the Beagle

12 Darwin’s Finches While on the Galapagos islands, Darwin collected samples from 13 similar but separate species of finches Different beak shapes and sizes specialized for a particular food source Darwin hypothesized that the finches must have all had a common ancestor. He also found fossils of hippo sized rodents. The similarities of the fossils to modern day rodents led him to believe species changed over time.

13 Sir Charles Darwin The fossils led Darwin to believe that existing animals were descended from extinct animals, He wrote an essay on Natural Selection in 1844 Darwin was excessively meticulous, and didn’t publish his essay on Natural Selection He spent 8 years studying barnacles on the suggestion of a friend He did this because he wanted to thoroughly understand the natural selection of at least one species

14 On the Origin of Species 1856, Darwin had amassed so much more evidence for evolution, that he re-opened his 1844 essay. In 1858, Darwin received a letter from Alfred Russell Wallace. A naturalist working in Indonesia, that described the changing of species over time. 12 days after reading the letter, Darwin read Wallace’s letter and a portion of his 1844 essay to the Linnaean Society. On the Origin of Species by means of Natural Selection was published in November 1859. It was over 1000 pages long. It sold out Harry Potter, eat your heart out.

15 Some people didn’t like it

16 Natural Selection Observation 1 All organisms increase in a geometric ratio (excess fertility) Observation 2 The number of any given species tends to remain constant, in spite of its potential Deduction There is a universal struggle for survival and success is measured in leaving viable offspring Observation 3 All living things vary; even parts may vary to some degree Deduction Individuals possessing any advantage, no matter how small, have a better chance of surviving to leave viable offspring

17 Homologous, Analagous and Vestigial Structures

18 Homologous structures Features that have a common origin, but a different function

19 Analogous Features Features that have a similar function, but have a different origin

20 Vestigial Features Homologous characters of an organism which seem to have lost all of their original function The human appendix The wings of flightless birds (some penguins) Cartilage in the human ear Hip bones in whales


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