Recent work on the rise of science in the nineteenth century has encouraged historians to look again at the role of correspondence. Naturalists relied extensively on this form of contact and correspondence was a major element in generating a community of experts who agreed on what comprised valid knowledge. As a leading figure in the development of North American botany, Asa Gray found that letters with botanists and collectors all over the world greatly expanded his areas of influence. Lasting friendships were made and the collections at Harvard were materially advanced. Letters also brought Gray into contact with Charles Darwin, who became a close friend. After publication of Darwin's Origin of Species in 1859, Gray defended Darwinis...
AbstractA new biography of Alfred Russel Wallace, co-founder of the theory of natural selection, aim...
‘I like all scientific periodicals’, Charles Darwin told Joseph Hooker in November 1869. His fondne...
‘I like all scientific periodicals’, Charles Darwin told Joseph Hooker in November 1869. His fondne...
This paper explores Darwin\u27s 14,000 plus letters and suggests that in spite of the enormous amoun...
This paper explores Darwin\u27s 14,000 plus letters and suggests that in spite of the enormous amoun...
Graduation date: 2007The publication of Charles Darwin’s On the Origin of Species, truly a synthesiz...
Note: Sidney S. Negus Memorial Lecture, Radford University, May 25, 2000 From the introduction: In t...
Like many scholars of his time, for Charles Darwin (1809-1882), written correspondence constituted b...
An examination of Charles Darwin\u27s On the Origin of Species -- and how, 150 years after publicati...
Evolution was not a new idea. The Greeks speculated on it. In the century before Darwin many differe...
SummaryThe scientific friendship between Alfred Russel Wallace and Charles Darwin has become one of ...
This thesis explores Darwin's life in London in the context of the social relationships he formed th...
researchThis article puts a unique spin on Charles Darwin’s work by looking at the plants that he st...
Two hundred years after his birth, Darwin, originated by the American Museum of Natural History in N...
With Orchid book Charles Darwin was able to accurately explain and demonstrate the evolutionary mec...
AbstractA new biography of Alfred Russel Wallace, co-founder of the theory of natural selection, aim...
‘I like all scientific periodicals’, Charles Darwin told Joseph Hooker in November 1869. His fondne...
‘I like all scientific periodicals’, Charles Darwin told Joseph Hooker in November 1869. His fondne...
This paper explores Darwin\u27s 14,000 plus letters and suggests that in spite of the enormous amoun...
This paper explores Darwin\u27s 14,000 plus letters and suggests that in spite of the enormous amoun...
Graduation date: 2007The publication of Charles Darwin’s On the Origin of Species, truly a synthesiz...
Note: Sidney S. Negus Memorial Lecture, Radford University, May 25, 2000 From the introduction: In t...
Like many scholars of his time, for Charles Darwin (1809-1882), written correspondence constituted b...
An examination of Charles Darwin\u27s On the Origin of Species -- and how, 150 years after publicati...
Evolution was not a new idea. The Greeks speculated on it. In the century before Darwin many differe...
SummaryThe scientific friendship between Alfred Russel Wallace and Charles Darwin has become one of ...
This thesis explores Darwin's life in London in the context of the social relationships he formed th...
researchThis article puts a unique spin on Charles Darwin’s work by looking at the plants that he st...
Two hundred years after his birth, Darwin, originated by the American Museum of Natural History in N...
With Orchid book Charles Darwin was able to accurately explain and demonstrate the evolutionary mec...
AbstractA new biography of Alfred Russel Wallace, co-founder of the theory of natural selection, aim...
‘I like all scientific periodicals’, Charles Darwin told Joseph Hooker in November 1869. His fondne...
‘I like all scientific periodicals’, Charles Darwin told Joseph Hooker in November 1869. His fondne...