1 / 10

DARWIN

DARWIN. Darwin: The Early Years. Charles Darwin was born to an upper class family in 1806 and was the 5 th of 6 children At his father’s request, he enrolled in medical school and then to study for the clergy; neither of which interested him more than exploring the natural sciences.

yoland
Download Presentation

DARWIN

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. DARWIN

  2. Darwin: The Early Years • Charles Darwin was born to an upper class family in 1806 and was the 5th of 6 children • At his father’s request, he enrolled in medical school and then to study for the clergy; neither of which interested him more than exploring the natural sciences. • His professors recognized this aptitude, and one recommended him to join a 3 year voyage on the HMS Beagle.

  3. The Beagle • The HMS Beagle set sail for a voyage around the world on December 27th 1831. • The primary goal was to chart poorly known stretches of the South American Coastline • Darwin’s job on board, as the ship’s naturalist, was to study the geology, plants, and animals encountered in the voyage. • During this time, he collected thousands of specimens and recorded over 4000 pages of notes.

  4. Voyage of the Beagle

  5. Darwin’s Observations • Some of Darwin’s most important observations were recorded in the Galapagos archipelago: • He observed that isolated areas often contained species that are found nowhere else. • These isolated species most closely resemble species on the nearest continental land mass. • Many species have adaptations that confer an advantage in their specific location. • Most notable were the observations he recorded about the various types of finches.

  6. Darwin’s Finches • While in the Galapagos, Darwin identified 13 previously unknown species of Finches.

  7. Darwin’s Finches • The finches in each region of the Galapagos resembled the birds on the mainland of S. America • The Finches appeared to have beaks well-suited to the food available in their specific location. • Those with long, narrow beaks fed on nectar and seeds of cactus flowers • Those with larger, shorter beaks fed on nuts and seeds found on the ground

  8. Lyell’s Contribution • Darwin read Lyell’s book Principles of Geology while on board the Beagle. • He applied Lyell’s idea of gradual geological change resulting in dramatic differences, to biology.

  9. The Birth of a Theory… • Darwin recognized that the Galapagos was a harsh environment and species were in a constant “struggle for existence” • Any favorable traits possessed by an organism makes it more likely to survive and less favorable traits die off; this is natural selection. • He suggested that over long periods of time, natural selection could cause gradual changes in characteristics, what he called descent with modification.

  10. Criticism Of Darwin’s Idea: Scopes Monkey Trial • 24-year old John Scopes was arrested in 1925 for teaching evolution to his high school biology class in Dayton, Tennessee. • The state had recently passed a law that prohibited the teaching of evolution • The jury found scopes guilty and fined him $100. • The anti-evolution law stood for another 42 years.

More Related