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Chapter 15: Darwin’s Theory of Evolution Charles Robert Darwin (1809-1882) “nothing in biology makes sense except in the light of evolution”-Theodosius Dobzhansky
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Evolution On the grandest scale, is all the changes that have transformed life over time. Essentially, it is the biological history of life on Earth. Evolutionary Theory: A collection of facts, observations, and hypotheses about the process by which modern organisms have descended from ancient ones.
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15-1: The Puzzle of Life’s Diversity ► In 1831, a 22-yr-old Darwin set sail on the HMS Beagle on a 5 year cruise around the world ► As a naturalist, he studied the geology, plants, and animals encountered on the voyage
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Darwin’s Observations ► He observed an immense amount of diversity in the South American plants, animals, and fossils Many different ways of reproducing and surviving Life seemed well suited for the environment Some fossils resembled modern life forms, some had no resemblance ► The Galapagos Islands- islands had similar life forms but varied in climate and vegetation Darwin inferred that the species on the different islands had once been part of the same mainland species
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The Galapagos Tortoises
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15-2: Ideas that Shaped Darwin’s Thinking ► Darwin’s voyage occurred during one of the most exciting periods in the history of Western science ► Explorers were traveling the globe, and great thinkers were beginning to challenge established views about the natural world ► At this time, most Europeans believed: Life was created in its complexity and has remained fixed (or unchanging) since this time The Earth was about 10,000 years old and also relatively unchanging
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Early Influences ► George Buffon (mid-1700s): French naturalist; collected fossils and noticed similarities and differences; suggests Earth is older than 10,000yrs ► James Hutton (1785): English Geologist; suggest geological forces that shape Earth’s surface are slow and require long periods of time (Earth must be millions of years old) ► Jean Baptiste Lamarck (1809): French naturalist; Explains Buffon’s observations by making a hypothesis that life evolves through the inheritance of acquired characteristics
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Lamarck’s Hypothesis
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Geological Influence ► On the voyage of the Beagle, Darwin read the writings of geologist Charles Lyell (1833) ► Lyell proposed that the geological processes that shape the Earth’s surface today (erosion, deposition, earthquakes, etc.) are the same processes that shaped the Earth in the past ► Encouraged explaining the past in terms of observable present day processes
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A Mechanism for Change ► When Darwin returned to England, he could no longer accept the idea of unchanging life ► He began contemplating a mechanism for evolutionary change ► In 1838, he read the work of Thomas Malthus (an economist who wrote an essay on human populations) ► Malthus suggested that human warfare, famine, and disease would limit the growth of the population
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Darwin Publishes His Ideas ► In 1844, Darwin wrote a 200- page essay that outlined his idea, but did not publish it in fear of controversy and doubt ► Instead he spent the next decade collecting evidence to support his idea ► Darwin received an essay from a young naturalist, Alfred Wallace, in 1858 proposing the same idea for evolutionary change with similar evidence ► In 1859, Darwin published his book On The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection
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