1 / 22

Charles Darwin and His Origin of Species

Charles Darwin and His Origin of Species. Darwin’s Background. Born in England, 1809  Studied Medicine at Edinburgh University Transferred to Cambridge University Studied to be a Minister. Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division [reproduction number, e.g., LC-USZ61-104].

benjamin
Download Presentation

Charles Darwin and His Origin of Species

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. Charles Darwin and His Origin of Species

  2. Darwin’s Background • Born in England, 1809  • Studied Medicine at Edinburgh University • Transferred to Cambridge University • Studied to be a Minister Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division [reproduction number, e.g., LC-USZ61-104].

  3. Darwin’s Expedition - 1831 • Hired as Naturalist on H.M.S. Beagle • Sailed on Five Year Scientific Expedition • Down East Coast of South America • Up Pacific Coast to Galapagos Islands • Made Stops on Mainland and Islands • Observed Variety of Life and Habitats

  4. Darwin’s Work • Outlined Theory in his Book in 1859: • On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection • Published Other Works on Biology • Died in 1882

  5. Summary of Origin of Species • Proposed Evolution Resulting from Natural Selection: • Organisms Produce Many Offspring • Competition for Food, Territory, Mates, etc. • Those With Best Traits Survive • Organisms Change Over Many Generations • Time Frame: Millions of Years

  6. Darwin’s Support for His Theory • Characteristics of Organisms Coincide With Habitats • Changes Produced by Breeding of Organisms • Geologic Ages Suggested by Charles Lyell • Similarities of Various Organisms

  7. Limitations of Darwin’s Theory • Apparent Limits to Variation • No Mechanism For Sufficiently New Characteristics • Transitional Forms Would Require Special Environments • Oversimplified View of Living Cells • The Origin of Life Unexplained • Limitations of Fossil Record

  8. Chicago Daily News negatives collection, DN-0006585. Courtesy of the Chicago Historical Society. American Memory Collection Limitations of the Fossil Record • Sudden Appearance of Complex Life • Lack of Clear Transitional Forms • Gives More Evidence For Species Disappearance

  9. Limitations of the Fossil Record • Sudden Appearance of Complex Life • Lack of Clear Transitional Forms • Gives More Evidence For Species Disappearance • Explanation of Strata Insufficient

  10. Bryce Canyon, Utah Fossils on Display Western History/Genealogy Department, Denver Public Library, American Memory Collection Limitations of the Fossil Record

  11. Strata Better Explained by Hydrologic Catastrophe • Magnitude of Fossil Graveyards

  12. Strata Better Explained by Hydrologic Catastrophe Petrified forest American Environmental Photographs Collection, [AEP Image Number, e.g., AEP-AZS8], Department of Special Collections, University of Chicago Library, American Memory Collection.

  13. Strata Better Explained by Hydrologic Catastrophe • Magnitude of Fossil Graveyards • Polystrate Fossils

  14. Strata Better Explained by Hydrologic Catastrophe Vertical Fossil Trees American Environmental Photographs Collection, [AEP Image Number, e.g., AEP-WYS32], Department of Special Collections, University of Chicago Library, American Memory Collection.

  15. Strata Better Explained by Hydrologic Catastrophe • Magnitude of Fossil Graveyards • Polystrate Fossils • Inconsistent Fossil Distribution

  16. Strata Better Explained by Hydrologic Catastrophe • Magnitude of Fossil Graveyards • Polystrate Fossils • Inconsistent Fossil Distribution • Fossils Found Together From Separate Ages

  17. Strata Better Explained by Hydrologic Catastrophe • Magnitude of Fossil Graveyards • Polystrate Fossils • Inconsistent Fossil Distribution • Fossils Found Together From Separate Ages • Simple (“Older”) Organisms Above Complex (“Younger”)

  18. Scientists’ Initial Reactions to Darwin’s Work • A Compilation of Assertions and Hypotheses • Unsupported by Scientific Testing • Contains Assumptions that Cannot Be Supported • Violates the Principles of Cause and Effect • Illogical Conclusions

  19. So Why Was It Eventually Accepted? • It Passed Rigorous Scientific Testing? • No, His Hypotheses Are Not Testable  • Were Transitional Fossils Found? • No Clearly Substantiated Links Found Yet • A Mechanism to Produce New Traits Discovered? • Mutations Result in Lost Genetic Information

  20. The Acceptance of Darwin’s Theory of Evolution • Natural Selection of Genetic Variations is Observable • Limited to Genes Already Present • New Traits Produced Only By Mutations • Overwhelming Odds Against Good Mutations

  21. Ultimately, Acceptance Depended On One Factor: Willingness to Accept a Naturalistic Explanation

  22. Credits • All clip art is from ClickArt by Broderbund • All photographs were accessed through the Library of Congress American Memory Collection. • The Darwin photograph is from Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division. • The dinosaur fossil photo is from the Chicago Daily News negatives collection, Courtesy of the Chicago Historical Society. • The Bryce Canyon and fossil display photos are from the Western History/Genealogy Department, Denver Public Library. • The fossil trees and Petrified Forest photos are from the American Environmental Photographs Collection, Department of Special Collections, University of Chicago Library.

More Related