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A Darwinian View of Life I. Overview - Darwin (1859) Origin of Species

A Darwinian View of Life I. Overview - Darwin (1859) Origin of Species - Mendel (1865) Experiments in Plant Hybridization. II. Darwin’s Contributions A. Overview 1. Life - Born Feb 12, 1809 - Graduated Cambridge, intending to join the clergy - 1831-36, Naturalist on H.M.S. Beagle

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A Darwinian View of Life I. Overview - Darwin (1859) Origin of Species

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  1. A Darwinian View of Life I. Overview - Darwin (1859) Origin of Species - Mendel (1865) Experiments in Plant Hybridization

  2. II. Darwin’s Contributions A. Overview 1. Life - Born Feb 12, 1809 - Graduated Cambridge, intending to join the clergy - 1831-36, Naturalist on H.M.S. Beagle - 1859: TheOrigin of Species - DiedApril 19, 1882, interred in Westminster Abbey

  3. II. Darwin’s Contributions A. Overview 1. Life 2. The Origin of Species (1859)

  4. II. Darwin’s Contributions A. Overview 1. Life 2. The Origin of Species (1859) a. “One Long Argument” - observations leading to the conclusions that: - life changes through time - species descend from shared ancestors

  5. Figure from The Origin of Species (1859)

  6. II. Darwin’s Contributions A. Overview 1. Life 2. The Origin of Species (1859) a. “One Long Argument” b. Mechanism explaining HOW evolution occurs - Natural Selection c. Dilemmas – challenges and apparent inconsistencies

  7. II. Darwin’s Contributions A. Overview B. Argument: Evidence for Evolution by Common Descent

  8. II. Darwin’s Contributions A. Overview B. Argument: Evidence for Evolution by Common Descent 1. Geology a. James Hutton(1726-1797)

  9. B. Argument: Evidence for Evolution by Common Descent 1. Geology a. James Hutton(1726-1797) - observed Hadrian’s Wall, but by the Roman Emperor Hadrian in 122 A.D. 1600 years old, but no sign of erosion. How much older must highly worn and eroded granite outcrops be?

  10. B. Argument: Evidence for Evolution by Common Descent 1. Geology a. James Hutton(1726-1797) - observed the White Cliffs of Dover – huge coccolith deposits. If sedimentation was slow and steady as it is today (‘uniformitarianism’), how long would it take to create such a deposit?

  11. B. Argument: Evidence for Evolution by Common Descent 1. Geology a. James Hutton(1726-1797) - Observed and interpreted the unconformity at Siccar Point

  12. Process: 1. Initial depositional cycle

  13. Process: 2. uplift (time)

  14. Process: 3. erosion (time)

  15. Process: 4. second depositional cycle (time)

  16. B. Argument: Evidence for Evolution by Common Descent 1. Geology a. James Hutton(1726-1797) - the rock cycles, so the earth has “no vestige of a beginning, no prospect of an end.” THE EARTH IS REALLY REALLY OLD

  17. B. Argument: Evidence for Evolution by Common Descent 1. Geology a. James Hutton(1726-1797) b. Charles Lyell (1797-1875) - Principles of Geology (1831-33) - uniformitarianism - Darwin’s friend

  18. B. Argument: Evidence for Evolution by Common Descent 1. Geology 2. Paleontology a. New types of organisms are added through the fossil record recent Mammals Birds Reptiles Amphibians Jawed fishes past Jawless fishes

  19. 2. Paleontology a. New types of organisms are added through the fossil record b. Within a lineage, there are progressive changes through time. The fossils in recent strata are more similar to existing species than fossils in older (deeper) strata.

  20. B. Argument: Evidence for Evolution by Common Descent 1. Geology 2. Paleontology 3. Comparative Anatomy

  21. B. Argument: Evidence for Evolution by Common Descent 1. Geology 2. Paleontology 3. Comparative Anatomy a. Homologous Structures Same structure, but different uses in different environments (correlated pattern)

  22. 3. Comparative Anatomy a. Homologous Structures b. Analogous Structures Different structures, but same uses in the same environment . (again, a correlation between anatomy and environment)

  23. 3. Comparative Anatomy a. Homologous Structures b. Analogous Structures c. Vestigial Structures

  24. 3. Comparative Anatomy a. Homologous Structures b. Analogous Structures c. Vestigial Structures

  25. 3. Comparative Anatomy a. Homologous Structures b. Analogous Structures c. Vestigial Structures d. Embryology Whale embryo w/leg buds photo Haeckel (after Darwin)

  26. Study Questions: 1.  What where the three things Darwin did in Origin of Species? 2.  What is "uniformitarianism" and how was it important to the development of Darwin's ideas? 3. What observations did Hutton make, and what did he conclude from these observations? 4. What two patterns occur in the fossil record that impress Darwin regarding the hypothesis of evolution and common descent? 5. What are homologous structures?  What correlations occurs with the environment? 6. What are analogous structure?  What correlation occurs with the environment? 7. What are vestigial structures, and why were they so important to Darwin's refutation of Paley?

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