Showing posts with label Charles Darwin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Charles Darwin. Show all posts

Sunday, January 22, 2012

Lost Charles Darwin fossils rediscovered in cabinet

A "treasure trove" of fossils - including some collected by Charles Darwin - has been re-discovered in an old cabinet.
The fossils, lost for some 165 years, were found by chance in the vaults of the British Geological Survey HQ near Keyworth, UK.
They have now been photographed and are available to the public through a new online museum exhibit released today.
The find was made by the palaeontologist Dr Howard Falcon-Lang.
Dr Falcon-Lang, who is based in the department of earth sciences at Royal Holloway, University of London, spotted some drawers in a cabinet marked "unregistered fossil plants".
"Inside the drawer were hundreds of beautiful glass slides made by polishing fossil plants into thin translucent sheets," Dr Falcon-Lang explained.
"This process allows them to be studied under the microscope. Almost the first slide I picked up was labelled 'C. Darwin Esq'."
The item turned out to be a piece of fossil wood collected by Darwin during his famous Voyage of the Beagle in 1834. This was the expedition on which he first started to develop his theory of evolution.
In the course of his visit to Chiloe Island, Chile, Darwin encountered "many fragments of black lignite and silicified and pyritous wood, often embedded close together".
He had these shipped back to England where they were cut and ground into thin sections.
Joseph Hooker, a botanist and a close friend of Darwin, was responsible for assembling the "lost" collection while he briefly worked for the British Geological Survey in 1846.
The fossils became "lost" because Hooker failed to number them in the formal specimen register before setting out on an expedition to the Himalayas.
The collection was moved several times and gradually became forgotten.
Dr John Ludden, executive director of the Geological Survey said: "This is quite a remarkable discovery. It really makes one wonder what else might be hiding in our collections."

Monday, June 27, 2011

Overdue Charles Darwin book returned to library 122 years late

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/australiaandthepacific/australia/8591006/Overdue-Charles-Darwin-book-returned-to-library-122-years-late.html

Staff at an Australia library have been stunned after first edition copy of Charles Darwin's Insectivorous Plants book was returned 122 years late.

A stamp inside the first edition copy showed that the book had been borrowed more than a century ago, on January 30, 1889.

Investigations have found that the book had been in a private collection for 50 years before being handed to a local university, whose employees passed it back to the library.

Read on...

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Harry: a 175 year old survivor of the Beagle?

Beachcombing has been interested in longevity recently and thought that today he would highlight the remarkable case of Harry, a particularly long-lived crew member of the Beagle, the boat on which Darwin travelled to the Galapagos and on which the English scientist hatched his explosive ideas.


Now some dates to give a sense of just how well Harry did. The Beagle, it will be remembered, sailed with Darwin from 1831-1836.

Jeremy Button a Fijian hostage on the Beagle survived to 1864 (aged about 50)

John Wickham Lieutenant on the Beagle died in 1864 (aged 66) – it was Wickham who gave the name ‘Darwin’ to a harbour in northern Australia.

The Beagle’s captain, that fine old Tory Robert ‘Hot Coffee’ Fitzroy died in 1865 (aged 60) – tragically by suicide.

Conrad Martens the Beagle’s artist passed away in 1878 (aged 77), a heart attack ending his life.

Darwin himself died at 73 in 1882 of coronary thrombosis: ‘I am not the least afraid of death…’

And Robert McCormick ship surgeon (for part of the voyage) made it to 90 (1890).

But Harry trumped them all by well over a century, finally giving out in 2006, after a heart failure.

In case Beachcombing has stretched credibility to breaking point let him immediately present a picture of Harry towards the end.

For, yes, Harry was a Galapagos tortoise. Brought back on the Beagle by John Wickham (see above).

Harry lived in the grounds of Brisbane’s oldest residence, Newstead House until 1859 or 1860 when Wickham left Australia to go and live in France. At that point Harry was given to Brisbane Botanic Gardens. It was there that he was given the name Harry.

Harry seems to have been happy living into the twenty-first century and reportedly spend most of the day dozing and eating hibiscus flowers – good advice, Beachcombing would say, for us all.

The only really exciting event in his post-Beagle life was when, in the 1960s, a visiting professor pointed out that Harry was actually a female. Beachcombing is a stickler for convention here and will refuse to employ ‘Harriet’, the name that Harry was known by for the rest of her life: ‘the names we are given are the names we should keep…’

Oh and yes there has been some muttering that Harry was not really brought to Australia by the Beagle. But Galapagos tortoises did not just drop from the Australian sky in the nineteenth century – or only rarely… – and Harry’s birth date has been carefully calculated at 1830 plus or minus two years, a date that matches the Beagle’s visit almost perfectly. Indeed, there is an excellent possibility that Darwin himself picked up the immature (perhaps four or five year old) Harry as he crawled along the hot sands of one of those jewelled Pacific islands.

Beachcombing dedicates this post to Chapman and Tracy his two own tortoises who he had just brought into his study for the winter. If last year is anything to go by then nothing but misery awaits them…

http://beachcombing.wordpress.com/2010/10/15/harry-a-175-year-old-survivor-of-the-beagle/

Harry: a 175 year old survivor of the Beagle?

Beachcombing has been interested in longevity recently and thought that today he would highlight the remarkable case of Harry, a particularly long-lived crew member of the Beagle, the boat on which Darwin travelled to the Galapagos and on which the English scientist hatched his explosive ideas.


Now some dates to give a sense of just how well Harry did. The Beagle, it will be remembered, sailed with Darwin from 1831-1836.

Jeremy Button a Fijian hostage on the Beagle survived to 1864 (aged about 50)

John Wickham Lieutenant on the Beagle died in 1864 (aged 66) – it was Wickham who gave the name ‘Darwin’ to a harbour in northern Australia.

The Beagle’s captain, that fine old Tory Robert ‘Hot Coffee’ Fitzroy died in 1865 (aged 60) – tragically by suicide.

Conrad Martens the Beagle’s artist passed away in 1878 (aged 77), a heart attack ending his life.

Darwin himself died at 73 in 1882 of coronary thrombosis: ‘I am not the least afraid of death…’

And Robert McCormick ship surgeon (for part of the voyage) made it to 90 (1890).

But Harry trumped them all by well over a century, finally giving out in 2006, after a heart failure.

In case Beachcombing has stretched credibility to breaking point let him immediately present a picture of Harry towards the end.

For, yes, Harry was a Galapagos tortoise. Brought back on the Beagle by John Wickham (see above).

Harry lived in the grounds of Brisbane’s oldest residence, Newstead House until 1859 or 1860 when Wickham left Australia to go and live in France. At that point Harry was given to Brisbane Botanic Gardens. It was there that he was given the name Harry.

Harry seems to have been happy living into the twenty-first century and reportedly spend most of the day dozing and eating hibiscus flowers – good advice, Beachcombing would say, for us all.

The only really exciting event in his post-Beagle life was when, in the 1960s, a visiting professor pointed out that Harry was actually a female. Beachcombing is a stickler for convention here and will refuse to employ ‘Harriet’, the name that Harry was known by for the rest of her life: ‘the names we are given are the names we should keep…’

Oh and yes there has been some muttering that Harry was not really brought to Australia by the Beagle. But Galapagos tortoises did not just drop from the Australian sky in the nineteenth century – or only rarely… – and Harry’s birth date has been carefully calculated at 1830 plus or minus two years, a date that matches the Beagle’s visit almost perfectly. Indeed, there is an excellent possibility that Darwin himself picked up the immature (perhaps four or five year old) Harry as he crawled along the hot sands of one of those jewelled Pacific islands.

Beachcombing dedicates this post to Chapman and Tracy his two own tortoises who he had just brought into his study for the winter. If last year is anything to go by then nothing but misery awaits them…

http://beachcombing.wordpress.com/2010/10/15/harry-a-175-year-old-survivor-of-the-beagle/

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Fossil find reveals whales as suckers

BRIDIE SMITH
December 23, 2009

A WHALE fossil found near Torquay more than 70 years ago has provided scientists with clues about how the mammals evolved, backing up the theories of naturalist Charles Darwin.

Museum Victoria palaeobiologist Erich Fitzgerald spent five years studying the fossil of a primitive toothed whale known as a Mammalodon colliveri and found, as Darwin had suggested, that some whales evolved as suction feeders.

Dr Fitzgerald said the findings showed that south-east Australia was ''a cradle of evolution'' for a variety of unusual, tiny baleen whales.

A specialist in the evolution of marine mammals, Dr Fitzgerald's research on the 25 million-year-old fossil is published in the latest Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society.

The Mammalodon colliveri, a relatively small whale at just three metres long, was unique to south-east Australia, with fossils only found in Victoria.

The fossilised skull and lower jaw of the whale, found in 1932 by local collectors, is just 45 centimetres long and has unusual features, including a short, blunt snout.

Large holes in the upper and lower jaws indicate the mammal - a close cousin of the 30-metre-long blue whale, the largest animal to inhabit the planet - had huge blood and nerve supply to the lips and facial muscles.

''This is unusual and no other baleen whale has this … and it tells us that the Mammalodon was feeding in a really unusual way. It suggests that it was a bottom-feeding mud-sucker,'' Dr Fitzgerald said. He said the whale probably used its tongue and snout to suck small prey up from sand and mud on the sea floor.

The fossil goes on public display for the first time at Museum Victoria until March. Since it was found in the 1930s, it was stored at Melbourne University's geology department before being transferred to Museum Victoria in the 1980s.

See video at: http://www.theage.com.au/national/fossil-find-reveals-whales-as-suckers-20091222-lbql.html

(Submitted by Peter Darben)

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Richard Dawkins on Darwin's universal impact



Richard Dawkins, Darwin's universal impact, Mon 6 July
at Darwin 2009 Festival, Cambridge University, July 5-10, 2009


Was Darwin the most revolutionary scientist ever? If, by revolutionary, we mean the scientist whose discovery initiated the most seismic overturning of pre-existing science, the honour would at least be contested by Newton, Einstein and the architects of quantum theory.

Those same physicists might have outclassed Darwin in sheer intellectual fire power. But Darwin probably did revolutionize the world view of people outside science more comprehensively than any other scientist. I want to recognize four bridges to evolutionary understanding.

The first bridge is to natural selection as a force for weeding out the unfit.

The second bridge is the recognition that natural selection can drive evolutionary change.

Bridge number three leads to the imaginative grasp of the importance of natural selection in explaining all of life, in all its speciose richness.

Bridge number four is the bridge to public understanding and appreciation. Darwin crossed it alone, in 1859, by writing On the Origin of Species.

The fifth bridge, which Darwin himself never crossed was neo-Darwinism or what I shall rename digital Darwinism because the essence of Mendelian genetics is that it is digital. As crests get longer, or eyes rounder, or tails gaudier, what is really being carved by natural selection is the gene pool. As mutation and sexual recombination enrich the gene pool, the chisels of natural selection carve it into shape, working away through geological time. It is an image that might have seemed strange to Darwin. But I think he would have come to love it.

(Submitted by T. Peter Park)

Richard Dawkins on Darwin's universal impact



Richard Dawkins, Darwin's universal impact, Mon 6 July
at Darwin 2009 Festival, Cambridge University, July 5-10, 2009


Was Darwin the most revolutionary scientist ever? If, by revolutionary, we mean the scientist whose discovery initiated the most seismic overturning of pre-existing science, the honour would at least be contested by Newton, Einstein and the architects of quantum theory.

Those same physicists might have outclassed Darwin in sheer intellectual fire power. But Darwin probably did revolutionize the world view of people outside science more comprehensively than any other scientist. I want to recognize four bridges to evolutionary understanding.

The first bridge is to natural selection as a force for weeding out the unfit.

The second bridge is the recognition that natural selection can drive evolutionary change.

Bridge number three leads to the imaginative grasp of the importance of natural selection in explaining all of life, in all its speciose richness.

Bridge number four is the bridge to public understanding and appreciation. Darwin crossed it alone, in 1859, by writing On the Origin of Species.

The fifth bridge, which Darwin himself never crossed was neo-Darwinism or what I shall rename digital Darwinism because the essence of Mendelian genetics is that it is digital. As crests get longer, or eyes rounder, or tails gaudier, what is really being carved by natural selection is the gene pool. As mutation and sexual recombination enrich the gene pool, the chisels of natural selection carve it into shape, working away through geological time. It is an image that might have seemed strange to Darwin. But I think he would have come to love it.

(Submitted by T. Peter Park)

Friday, April 10, 2009

Egg collected by Charles Darwin found at Cambridge University after 200 years

An egg collected by Charles Darwin on his HMS Beagle voyage and lost for nearly 200 years has been discovered by a volunteer at the University of Cambridge.

By Richard Alleyne, Science Correspondent
Last Updated: 9:14AM BST 10 Apr 2009

Researchers have known that the naturalist collected 16 bird eggs during his trip between 1831 and 1836 but all were thought to be lost.

But one sample – that of the Tinamou bird of Uruguay - has been discovered by a volunteer as she catalogued a collection at the Zoology Museum.

The records seem to indicate that Darwin himself was responsible for damage caused to the heavily cracked egg after packing it in too small a box during or following his famous voyage.

The chocolate brown egg – slightly smaller than a hen's egg – was among the museum's 10,000 strong collection from Darwin being partly catalogued by volunteer Liz Wetton.

She has spent half a day at the Museum each week for the past ten years where she faithfully sorts and reboxes the Museum's bird egg collection.

She merely commented that the specimen had C. Darwin written on it before moving to the next drawer.

It was only when Mathew Lowe, Collections Manager, was reviewing her work that he discovered no one knew about the existence of this specimen.

He said: "There are so many historical treasures in the collection, Liz did not realise this was a new discovery. To have rediscovered a Beagle specimen in the 200th year of Darwin's birth is special enough, but to have evidence that Darwin himself broke it is a wonderful twist."

After reading Liz's notes, Lowe and Curator of Ornithology Dr Mike Brooke, traced the specimen's origin in the notebook of Professor Alfred Newton, a friend of Darwin's and Professor of Zoology in the latter 19th Century.

Prof Newton had written: "One egg, received through Frank Darwin, having been sent to me by his father who said he got it at Maldonado (Uruguay) and that it belonged to the Common Tinamou of those parts.

"The great man put it into too small a box and hence its unhappy state."

Museum Director Professor Michael Akam said: "This find shows just how valuable the work of our loyal volunteers is to the Museum. Only Liz has examined each of the many thousands of eggs in our collection. Without her we would not have found this unique specimen."

Ms Wetton said: "It was an exhilarating experience. After working on the egg collections for ten years this was a tremendous thing to happen."

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/scienceandtechnology/science/evolution/5131017/Egg-collected-by-Charles-Darwin-found-at-Cambridge-University-after-200-years.html

Saturday, March 7, 2009

Ahead of his time, Darwin, still an influence

By Agency Reporter
Published: Monday, 23 Feb 2009

Darwin‘s theory of evolution has become the bedrock of modern biology. But for most of the theory‘s existence since 1859, even biologists have ignored or vigorously opposed it, in whole or in part.

It is a testament to Darwin‘s extraordinary insight that it took almost a century for biologists to understand the essential correctness of his views.

Biologists quickly accepted the idea of evolution, but for decades they rejected natural selection, the mechanism Darwin proposed for the evolutionary process. Until the mid-20th century they largely ignored sexual selection, a special aspect of natural selection that Darwin proposed to account for male ornaments like the peacock‘s tail.

And biologists are still arguing about group-level selection, the idea that natural selection can operate at the level of groups as well as on individuals. Darwin proposed group selection -- or something like it; scholars differ as to what he meant -- to account for castes in ant societies and morality in people.

How did Darwin come to be so in advance of his time? Why were biologists so slow to understand that Darwin had provided the correct answer on so many central issues? Historians of science have noted several distinctive features of Darwin‘s approach to science that, besides genius, help account for his insights. They also point to several nonscientific criteria that stood as mental blocks in the way of biologists‘ accepting Darwin‘s ideas.

One of Darwin‘s advantages was that he did not have to write grant proposals or publish 15 articles a year. He thought deeply about every detail of his theory for more than 20 years before publishing ”The Origin of Species” in 1859, and for 12 years more before its sequel, ”The Descent of Man,” which explored how his theory applied to people.

Darwin brought several intellectual virtues to the task at hand. Instead of brushing off objections to his theory, he thought about them obsessively until he had found a solution. Showy male ornaments, like the peacock‘s tail, appeared hard to explain by natural selection because they seemed more of a handicap than an aid to survival. ”The sight of a feather in a peacock‘s tail, whenever I gaze at it, makes me sick,” Darwin wrote. But from worrying about this problem, he developed the idea of sexual selection, that females chose males with the best ornaments, and hence elegant peacocks have the most offspring.

Darwin also had the intellectual toughness to stick with the deeply discomfiting consequences of his theory, that natural selection has no goal or purpose. Alfred Wallace, who independently thought of natural selection, later lost faith in the power of the idea and turned to spiritualism to explain the human mind. ”Darwin had the courage to face the implications of what he had done, but poor Wallace couldn‘t bear it,” says William Provine, a historian at Cornell University.

Darwin‘s thinking about evolution was not only deep, but also very broad. He was interested in fossils, animal breeding, geographical distribution, anatomy and plants. ”That very comprehensive view allowed him to see things that others perhaps didn‘t,” says Robert J. Richards, a historian at the University of Chicago. ”He was so sure of his central ideas -- the transmutation of species and natural selection -- that he had to find a way to make it all work together.”

From the perspective of 2009, Darwin‘s principal ideas are substantially correct. He did not get everything right. Because he didn‘t know about plate tectonics, Darwin‘s comments on the distribution of species are not very useful. His theory of inheritance, since he had no knowledge of genes or DNA, is beside the point. But his central concepts of natural selection and sexual selection were correct. He also presented a form of group-level selection that was long dismissed but now has leading advocates like the biologists E.O. Wilson and David Sloan Wilson.

Not only was Darwin correct on the central premises of his theory, but in several other still open issues his views also seem quite likely to prevail. His idea of how new species form was long eclipsed by Ernst Mayr‘s view that a reproductive barrier like a mountain forces a species to split. But a number of biologists are now returning to Darwin‘s idea that speciation occurs most often through competition in open spaces, Richards says.

Darwin believed there was a continuity between humans and other species, which led him to think of human morality as related to the sympathy seen among social animals. This long-disdained idea was resurrected only recently by researchers like the primatologist Frans de Waal. Darwin ”never felt that morality was our own invention, but was a product of evolution, a position we are now seeing grow in popularity under the influence of what we know about animal behavior,” de Waal says. ”In fact, we‘ve now returned to the original Darwinian position.”

It is somewhat remarkable that a man who died in 1882 should still be influencing discussion among biologists. It is perhaps equally strange that so many biologists failed for so many decades to accept ideas that Darwin expressed in clear and beautiful English.

The rejection was in part because a substantial amount of science, including the two new fields of Mendelian genetics and population genetics, needed to be developed before other, more enticing mechanisms of selection could be excluded. But there were also a series of nonscientific considerations that affected biologists‘ judgment.

In the 19th century, biologists accepted evolution, in part because it implied progress.

”The general idea of evolution, particularly if you took it to be progressive and purposeful, fitted the ideology of the age,” says Peter J. Bowler, a historian of science at Queen‘s University, Belfast. But that made it all the harder to accept that something as purposeless as natural selection could be the shaping force of evolution. ”Origin of Species” and its central idea were largely ignored and did not come back into vogue until the 1930s. By that time the population geneticist R.A. Fisher and others had shown that Mendelian genetics was compatible with the idea of natural selection working on small variations.

”If you think of the 150 years since the publication of ‘Origin of Species,‘ it had half that time in the wilderness and half at the center, and even at the center it‘s often been not more than marginal,” says Helena Cronin, a philosopher of science at the London School of Economics. ”That‘s a pretty comprehensive rejection of Darwin.”

Darwin is still far from being fully accepted in sciences outside biology. ”People say natural selection is OK for human bodies but not for brain or behavior,” Cronin says. ”But making an exception for one species is to deny Darwin‘s tenet of understanding all living things. This includes almost the whole of social studies -- that‘s quite an influential body that‘s still rejecting Darwinism.”

The yearning to see purpose in evolution and the doubt that it really applied to people were two nonscientific criteria that led scientists to reject the essence of Darwin‘s theory. A third, in terms of group selection, may be people‘s tendency to think of themselves as individuals rather than as units of a group.

”More and more I‘m beginning to think about individualism as our own cultural bias that more or less explains why group selection was rejected so forcefully and why it is still so controversial,” says David Sloan Wilson, a biologist at Binghamton University.

Historians who are aware of the long eclipse endured by Darwin‘s ideas perhaps have a clearer idea of his extraordinary contribution than do biologists, many of whom assume Darwin‘s theory has always been seen to offer, as now, a grand explanatory framework for all biology. Richards, the University of Chicago historian, recalls that a biologist colleague ”had occasion to read the ‘Origin‘ for the first time -- most biologists have never read the ‘Origin‘ -- because of a class he was teaching. We met on the street and he remarked, ‘You know, Bob, Darwin really knew a lot of biology.”‘

Darwin knew a lot of biology: more than any of his contemporaries, more than a surprising number of his successors. From prolonged thought and study, he was able to intuit how evolution worked without having access to all the subsequent scientific knowledge that others required to be convinced of natural selection. He had the objectivity to put aside criteria with powerful emotional resonance, like the conviction that evolution should be purposeful. As a result, he saw deep into the strange workings of the evolutionary mechanism, an insight not really exceeded until a century after his great work of synthesis.

http://www.punchng.com/Articl.aspx?theartic=Art20090223439045