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Before Darwin

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Title: Before Darwin


1
Before Darwin
  • Historical Examples show the
  • Evolution of Evolutionary Theory

2
Figured Stones
  • For centuries, people had noticed images of
    plants and animal remains in stones and wondered
    at them.
  • In China, people sometimes found dragon bones
    (fossils bones of ancient animals) which were
    used to make medicine.
  • Tongue stones (fossil sharks teeth) were known
    in Italy as curiosities.

3
Fossil
  • The term fossil in 16th and 17th century Europe
    referred to just about anything dug from the
    earth crystals, interesting mineral concretions,
    metal ores, and the figured stones that today
    are called fossils.

4
Early European theories
  • The rise of the Enlightenment brought new ideas
    about figured stones
  • Did they grow from seeds or eggs trapped in
    rocks?
  • Were they remains of victims of the Biblical
    flood?
  • Were they organic at all?

5
Steno (Niels Stensen, 1638-1686)
  • Danish anatomist, studied medicine in the
    Netherlands and France.
  • Came to Florence at the request of the Duke of
    Tuscany to run a hospital and continue his
    research.

6
Steno and the Shark
  • 1666 Fishermen in Livorno, Italy, caught a giant
    shark. The local duke had it shipped to Steno for
    study.
  • Steno noticed similarities between the sharks
    teeth and tongue stones that were well known at
    the time.

7
Corpuscle Theory of Matter
  • Steno used the Corpuscle Theory of Matter to
    explain the transformation of sharks teeth into
    tongue stones.
  • Naturalists of the day hypothesized that matter
    was made of corpuscles (essentially molecules).
    Steno suggested that the corpuscles of the teeth
    had been gradually replaced by corpuscles of
    stone as the teeth sat in the rocks.

8
Thinking Challenge
  • What was so radically different about Stenos
    corpuscular hypothesis about tongue stones?

9
Johann Beringer (d. 1740)
  • Dr. Johann Bartholomew Adam Beringer, professor
    of Medicine in Würtzburg, lectured widely on
    fossils.
  • In 1726, Beringer published Lithographia
    Wirceburgensis, a catalog of fossils he and his
    assistants had unearthed near his home.

10
The Figured Stones of Würtzburg
11
More stones
  • Some figured stones even bore Hebrew letters,
    spelling out the name of God.
  • Beringer took these as possible signs that the
    stones were the work of the Creator, but also
    suggested they could be sports of nature formed
    by the plastic power of the earth, or that some
    that resembled living things might grow from
    trapped seeds or eggs.

12
Thinking Challenge
  • Beringer may have been wrong in the end, but he
    was doing something right. What was it?

13
Georges-Louis LeClerk, Compte de Buffon
1707-1788
  • Life work Buffon believed that naturalists
    should search for a natural taxonomy, find the
    order in nature.
  • Asked by the King to catalog the Royal Garden
    collection, Buffon decided to catalog everything
    in nature.
  • Wrote 36 volume Histoire naturelle, générale et
    particulière.

14
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15
Thinking Challenge
  • In Buffons time, nothing was known about genes
    and heredity. Does modern genetic knowledge
    support or refute his theory? Explain as best you
    can.

16
Georges Cuvier 1769-1832
  • Supported the static model of species species
    do not change because they cannot survive
    changes.
  • Comparative anatomist looking for patterns in
    structure, especially among vertebrate animals.
  • Set up a natural, non-hierarchical taxonomy of
    animals based on the nervous system.

17
Cuviers Principles
  • Correlation of parts An organism is a functional
    unit with all part integrated. Each organism is
    adapted to its niche. Single parts can give clues
    about the entire organism.
  • Morphological type concept Every taxon (group
    of organisms) can be defined sharply and is
    stable.
  • Explained changes in the fossil record as
    evidence of Catastrophism.

18
Thinking Challenge
  • Think about Cuviers point if an organism is
    well-adapted to its environment, there is no
    reason for it to change. Does this fit or not fit
    with modern evolutionary theory? Explain.

19
Jean-Baptiste Pierre Antoine de Monet de Lamarck
1744-1829
  • Protegé of Buffon. Interested in natural
    classification of living organisms.
  • Background was in Botany, but later studied
    invertebrates.
  • Primary questions Where do you draw the line
    between species? How do you rank species?
  • Favored a theory of inheritance of acquired
    characteristics.

20
Lamarcks Organic Law of Development
  • Spontaneous Generation creates new, simple
    organisms, such as bacteria.

21
Lamarcks Organic Law of Development
  • Organisms are shaped by their environment.

22
Lamarcks Organic Law of Development
  • Change is teleological (goal-directed). Organisms
    have an internal drive to become more complex.

23
Lamarcks Organic Law of Development
  • Use and disuse of parts causes change that is
    passed on to the next generation.

24
Thinking Challenge
  • Consider this statement Fruit flies exposed to
    pesticides slowly get used to the pesticides and
    are no longer killed by it. Each generation
    becomes more and more resistant.
  • Does this statement fit Lamarcks ideas or modern
    ideas about evolution? Explain.

25
The Difficulties
  • While the theories of Lamarck and Buffon made
    sense in terms of logic, the evidence to support
    them was slight and they were not widely
    accepted.
  • Heredity was not understood. No one knew about
    genes or chromosomes, and even the nucleus of the
    cell had not been discovered.
  • Until a hereditary mechanism was discovered,
    there was little that could be done to evaluate
    these theories.
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