Natural Selection and Tropical Nature: Essays on Descriptive and Theoretical BiologyMacmillan and Company, 1891 - 492 pages |
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Page 14
... adapted to the rapid growth and increase of individuals also contain the greatest profusion of species and the greatest variety of forms , —the tropics in comparison with the temperate and arctic regions . On the other hand , it seems ...
... adapted to the rapid growth and increase of individuals also contain the greatest profusion of species and the greatest variety of forms , —the tropics in comparison with the temperate and arctic regions . On the other hand , it seems ...
Page 18
... adapted for flight in the scaly flapper of the penguin , and limbs first concealed beneath the skin , and then weakly protruding from it , were the necessary gradations before others should be formed fully adapted for locomotion.1 Many ...
... adapted for flight in the scaly flapper of the penguin , and limbs first concealed beneath the skin , and then weakly protruding from it , were the necessary gradations before others should be formed fully adapted for locomotion.1 Many ...
Page 26
... adapted to obtain a regular supply of food , and to defend themselves against the attacks of their enemies and the vicissitudes of the seasons , must necessarily obtain and preserve a superiority in population ; while those species ...
... adapted to obtain a regular supply of food , and to defend themselves against the attacks of their enemies and the vicissitudes of the seasons , must necessarily obtain and preserve a superiority in population ; while those species ...
Page 28
... have replaced the species , of which it would be a more perfectly developed and more highly organised form . It would be in all respects better adapted to secure its safety , and to prolong its individual 28 11 NATURAL SELECTION.
... have replaced the species , of which it would be a more perfectly developed and more highly organised form . It would be in all respects better adapted to secure its safety , and to prolong its individual 28 11 NATURAL SELECTION.
Page 31
... adapted to procure food and secure safety , that in which , by the full exercise of every part of its organisation , the animal can alone continue to live . Domestic varieties , when turned wild , must return to something near the type ...
... adapted to procure food and secure safety , that in which , by the full exercise of every part of its organisation , the animal can alone continue to live . Domestic varieties , when turned wild , must return to something near the type ...
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Common terms and phrases
abundant action adapted allied species America animals ants appear bamboo Batavia beautiful become bees beetles birds branches brilliant butterflies caterpillars causes chaffinches character civilised climate colour Colours of Animals concealment conspicuous curious Darwin distinct earth equatorial zone evidence exactly existence extinct facts families favourable feet female fertilised flowers foliage forests genera genus geological gravel green groups habits humming-birds imitated important increase inhabit insects instinct islands kind larvæ laws less Malay Archipelago male mammalia mimicry mode modified moths natural selection naturalists nectary nest observed occur organic organisation origin Origin of Species ornaments Papilio peculiar phenomena pigeons plants Pliocene plumage probably produced protection race remarkable render resemble savage sexes sexual sexual selection sometimes South South America spots structure sun-birds surface tail temperate theory tints tion trees tropical variation varied variety vegetation whole wings yellow
Popular passages
Page 206 - ... to the other. They appear together, but we do not know why. Were our minds and senses so expanded, strengthened and illuminated as to enable us to see and feel the very molecules of the brain ; were we capable of following all their motions, all their groupings, all their electric discharges, if such there be ; and were we intimately acquainted with the corresponding states of thought and feeling, we should be as far as ever from the • solution of the problem, ' How are these physical processes...
Page 212 - WILL, while we have no knowledge of any other primary cause of force, it does not seem an improbable conclusion that all force may be will-force ; and thus, that the whole universe, is not \ merely dependent on, but actually is, the WILL of higher intelligences or of one Supreme Intelligence.
Page 174 - Tribes in which such mental and moral qualities were predominant would therefore have an advantage in the struggle for existence over other tribes in which they were less developed, would live and maintain their numbers, while the others would decrease and finally succumb.
Page 24 - ... die either by violence or want of food. Yet at this rate how tremendous would be the increase in a few years from a single pair! A simple calculation will show that in fifteen years each pair of birds would have increased to nearly ten millions! whereas we have no reason to believe that the number of the birds of any country increases at all in fifteen or in one hundred and fifty years.
Page 323 - ... are found in the temperate (northern and southern) parts of the continent are migrants, which retire in the winter to the warmer lands near or within the tropics.
Page 206 - ... the passage from the current to the needle, if not demonstrable, is thinkable, and that we entertain no doubt as to the final mechanical solution of the problem. But the passage from the physics of the brain to the corresponding facts of consciousness is unthinkable.
Page 20 - ... -there suddenly flashed upon me the idea of the survival of the fittest—that the individuals removed by these checks must be on the whole inferior to those that survived. In the two hours that elapsed before my ague fit was over I had thought out almost the whole of the theory, and the same evening I sketched the draft of my paper, and in the two succeeding evenings wrote it out in full, and sent it by the next post to Mr. Darwin.
Page 182 - ... a grand revolution was effected in nature, a revolution which in all the previous ages of the earth's history had had no parallel, for a being had arisen who was no longer necessarily subject to change with the changing universe — a being who was in some degree superior to nature, inasmuch as he knew how to control and regulate her action, and could keep himself in harmony with her, not by a change in body, but by an advance of mind.
Page 8 - Such phenomena as are exhibited by the Galapagos Islands, which contain little groups of plants and animals peculiar to themselves, but most nearly allied to those of South America, have not hitherto received any, even a conjectural explanation.
Page 442 - Mtnneiota, 1877, p. 60. are recorded in the first, second, and third volumes of the Reports of the Peabody Museum. The interesting series of researches now briefly recorded has led us on step by step through the several stages of the quaternary at least as far back as the first great Glacial period, thus corresponding to the various epochs of Neolithic and Palaeolithic man in Europe, terminating in the Suffolk flints, claimed to be pre-Glacial by Mr. Skertchley, or the earliest traces of human occupancy...