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EVOLUTION

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Zoologist. Comparative Anatomy of bones & muscles. Similarities in structure, despite function. ... Later (1859) published his famous essay: ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: EVOLUTION


1
EVOLUTION
  • Transformation of the Biological Paradigm

2
Evolution
  • Charles Darwin
  • BUT, the history of Evolutionary Thought
    pre-dates Darwin considerably

3
The Aristotlean-Christian World View
  • Aristotle (350 BC)
  • Greek
  • Special Creation Fixety of Species
  • Every creature has its place, and all have been
    created in a specific and perfect form by an
    omnipotent omnipresent creator.
  • No change each organism is created in its most
    ideal form.

4
The Aristotlean-Christian World View
  • Aristotle observes lifes complexity
  • Suggests a Hierarchy of Life

Complexity
The scala naturae
5
The Aristotlean-Christian World View
  • Following Aristotle (and all the way up into the
    1700s), this is the unchallenged world view.
  • Taxonomy (Identification Naming of organisms)
    centers around placing newly discovered species
    properly into the pyramid (Linnaeus).

6
Naturalists begin to find problems
  • Some organisms were not fitting properly into the
    hierarchy.
  • Due to Variations
  • Viewed as imperfections of an idealized form.
  • Which characteristics of an organism are most
    important for placing it in the hierarchy?
  • How much variation should be viewed as normal
    within a species?

7
Georges Louis LeClerc DeBuffon
  • (1707-1788)
  • Wrote a huge Natural History
  • Observed much Variation.
  • Suggested the possibility of Descent with
    Modification
  • As organisms descend through time, modifications
    of the basic form occur due to differences in
    environment, geographic isolation, overcrowding,
    etc.
  • Offered no mechanism for such modification.
  • Suggested the Earth was only 168,000 years old.

8
Erasmus Darwin
  • (1731-1802)
  • Charles Darwins Grandfather
  • Physician
  • Examined the Anatomy of many organisms.
  • Found Vestigial Organs (non-functional).
  • Why would these be present in a perfectly-adapted
    organism?
  • Examined changes during development (Ontogeny).
  • Suggested some sort of Common Descent
  • Currently living organisms have descended from
    ancestors of similar (but slightly different)
    form.
  • Offered no mechanism for such modification.

9
James Hutton
  • (1726-1797)
  • Geologist
  • Suggested Gradualism
  • Changes to the Earth occur gradually through
    continuous processesthe same processes that are
    occurring right now
  • Erosion
  • Volcanic activity
  • Earthquakes

10
Charles Lyell
  • (1797-1875)
  • Geologist
  • (father of modern Geology)
  • Suggested Uniformitarianism
  • Following Huttons ideas, Lyell suggested that
    the rate at which geologic events occur is both
    slow and uniform (gradual).
  • The same processes are responsible for both past
    and present geologic eventsthe geologic
    processes occurring now have been occurring over
    many millions of years.
  • Leads to the conclusion that the Earth is very
    old many millions of years old.

11
Georges Cuvier
  • (1769-1832)
  • Zoologist.
  • Comparative Anatomy of bones muscles.
  • Similarities in structure, despite function.
  • Fossils (impressions of dead organisms in rock).
  • Slight differences in fossil forms found in
    different rock strata (layers of different age).
  • Was firmly entrenched in the Aristotlean-Christian
    View, so introduced Catastrophism as an
    explanation.
  • Sporatic catastrophies in the Earths history
    killed off certain species those not found
    currently.

12
Jean-Baptiste de Monet de Lamarck
  • (1744-1829)
  • Naturalist
  • Examined Rock Stratigraphy.
  • Fossils from the oldest strata appeared simpler,
    while those from more recent strata appeared more
    complex.
  • 1st to fully support Common Descent and suggest
    a link between biological diversity and
    adaptation to the environment.
  • Proposed a mechanism

13
Jean-Baptiste de Monet de Lamarck
  • Suggested that CHANGE in organisms took place by
    Inheritance of Acquired Characteristics.
  • Characteristics acquired during an organisms
    life were passed on to offspring.
  • Giraffe Necks became longer and longer as each
    generation stretched higher into the trees for
    food.
  • Problem

14
Jean-Baptiste de Monet de Lamarck
  • Lamarcks hypothesis was never supported by
    experiments.
  • Why?
  • An environmentally-induced phenotype cannot be
    passed on to the next generationonly genotype
    can!
  • Lamarks mechanism has long since been DISPROVED,
    but he is still remembered for this mistaken
    hypothesis!

15
Charles Darwin
  • (1809-1882)
  • British Naturalist
  • Supporter of the Aristotlean-Christian Worldview.
  • Began science in Medical School at Edinburgh
  • Became more interested in nature (birds
    particularly), and quit Medical School.
  • Enrolled at Christs College at Cambridge to
    become a prieststill more interested in nature
    (especially collecting beetles).

16
Charles Darwin
  • Finished School and planned to start a church in
    the countryside.
  • Before graduation, though, he gained an avid
    interest in Geology.
  • Was invited by former professors to become a
    Naturalist aboard the HMS Beagle a ship
    destined for a sailing trip around the world.

17
Charles Darwin
  • 5 year voyage (1831-1836)
  • Lots of DATA!
  • 1. Geologic
  • He saw first hand what Hutton had suggested
    (Gradualism), and agreed with Lyells premise
    that the Earth must be very old.
  • He examined many fossils some resembling modern
    (current) organisms, but not exactly.
  • Saw the possibility for Descent with Modification
    (modern forms having descended from now-extinct
    forms), and for organisms changing over time.

18
Charles Darwin
  • DATA
  • 2. Biogeography
  • He found similar organisms in far-reaching
    places, but in similar habitats.
  • Suggested that organisms may be adapting to the
    same types of environment, despite the distance
    between them.
  • He found slight variations in organisms found in
    slightly different habitats (but separated from
    each other Finch Bills, Tortoise Necks, etc.)
  • Suggested that a common ancestor gave rise to the
    different varieties, which each adapted to
    slightly different environments.

19
Darwins Biogeography
(Australia)
(S. America)
(Africa)
20
Darwins Biogeography
21
Charles Darwin
  • Returned from the voyage andPUBLISHED!
  • Saw that adaptation to environment was indeed
    real, and eventually formulated a mechanism for
    it, but
  • He did not want to jeopardize his scientific
    status, so didnt publish it.
  • Along came Alfred Russel Wallace

22
Alfred Russel Wallace
  • (1823-1913)
  • Naturalist
  • Studied and admired Darwins work.
  • Wrote Darwin to see what he thought about a
    hypothesis regarding a mechanism for adaptation
    to the environment.
  • This hypothesis was virtually the same as
    Darwins (unpublished) ideas about how change
    could take place!

23
Darwin Wallace
  • 1858 -- Presented their hypotheses at a meeting
    of the Linnaean Society (London)
  • "The Variation of Organic Beings under
    Domestication and in their Natural State"
  • "On the Variation of Organic Beings in the State
    of Nature on the Natural Means of Selection
    on the Comparison of Domestic Races and true
    Species"

24
Darwin
  • Later (1859) published his famous essay

I have called this principle, by which each
slight variation, if useful, is preserved, by the
term Natural Selection. - Charles Darwin, The
Origin of Species
25
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