Darwin was not the first

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Darwin was not the first"

Transcription

1 A look forward. Laying the groundwork I: The birth of evolutionary theory Darwin was not the first 1

2 Historical constraints to thoughts about nature of life on earth 1. The earth is young James Uscher: 4004 BCE 9:00AM Sunday 23 October to be exact 2. Species were immutable Species were created by God in exact forms 3. The value of science is to explain God s creation Conflict with the church could be very bad for one s career The rationalists began to set science in direct conflict with the church 4. Imprecise knowledge of species Naming and organizing natural diversity was chaotic Carolus Linnaeus: I will name them all Carl van Linné ( ), Swedish proponent of Natural theology set out to stop the chaos binomial nomenclature System Natura 1735 (142pp) Later editions (>2300pp) rock star of field biologists believed species were immutable 2

3 Hutton: the world is older than you think James Hutton ( ), Scottish did not like ad hoc explanations did not like Catastrophism champion of Uniformitarianism : the present is the key to the past the Earth must be very old Hutton was a huge influence on Charles Lyell ( ) who wrote highly influential books on geology Lamarck: Species are not immutable Jean Baptist Lamarck ( ), French first true museum systematist important work on patterns in fossil record first to put together two points: the world was very old species changed over this long time period Lamarck most famous for getting the mechanism of evolution wrong (very sad) Lamarck and Erasmus Darwin corresponded about evolution by acquired characteristics (Hmmm ) 3

4 Cuvier: Fossils are real Georges Cuvier ( ), French father of comparative anatomy believed species were fixed. very influential and unkind to Lamarck convinced world that fossils were real must have seen same patterns in fossil record as Lamark, seems he choose to ignore the implications Malthus: Life is a struggle Thomas Malthus ( ), English political economist published Essays on the principle of population (1790) Malthusian principle presented many examples of life as a struggle profit of doom Doctrine of Eugenics echoes back to Malthus 4

5 Young Darwin: I will voyage on the beagle Charles Robert Darwin ( ), English started life as orthodox member of church naturalist on the Beagle observed many differences between species among islands and between islands and mainland read Lyell while on voyage became a devout Uniformitarian; saw much evidence read Malthus two years after return to England; He sees Malthus differently from all who came before drew info from very different sources; saw beyond the orthodox Older Darwin: I say species evolve by natural selection Ernst Mayr, in his book entitled The Growth of Biological Thought distils Darwin s work to five key observations: 1. Species produce more offspring than survive to age of reproduction. This leads to a struggle. 2. Food and other such resources are limited; more evidence for struggle. 3. Population sizes surprisingly stable given the intensity of struggle among species. Must be a mechanism for stability. 4. Variation in the form of differences among individuals exists in every species. 5. Variation is heritable. 5

6 Older Darwin: I say species evolve by natural selection From these observations, Darwin made three inferences: 1. Competition for finite resources ensures that many individuals within a species are eliminated because of inferior ability to survive and reproduce (low fitness). 2. Natural selection is the result of competition, where the more fit individuals outnumber the less fit individuals. 3. The characteristics favored by natural selection are passed on to succeeding generations because such characteristics are heritable. The consequences: all organisms must have descended, with modification, from common ancestors Wallace: Hey, I say so too! Alfred Russel Wallace ( ), English full credit for co-discovery of evolution by natural selection had epiphany while delirious from an attack of malaria (1858) had read Malthus as well, and came to same conclusion as Darwin 6

7 Darwinian evolution fell into disrepute an languished until 1920 s Two problems that Darwin (and Wallace) could not solve: 1. Source of variation 2. Mechanism of inheritance Fleming Jenkin demolished Darwin in an article in the North British Review (1876) Jenkins introduced the problem of blending Darwin s five theories [not in the notes] Ernst Mayr (1982) 1. Evolution of species and over long periods of time 2. Common Descent 3. Population speciation 4. Natural selection 5. Gradualism 7

8 History Laying the groundwork I: The birth of evolutionary theory Laying the groundwork II: A concise history of the gene Laying the groundwork III: Neo-Darwinism and the evolutionary synthesis Gregor Mendel: Traits endure, they do not blend Augsutinian monk interested in plant breeding many breeders, none examined problem of heredity via mathematics published in 1865 (six years after publication of The Origin) traits do NOT blend (largely ignored) Mendel s postulates: 1. Inheritance is by factors or particles 2. Particles are present in pairs in the breeding adults 3. Paired particles segregate independently during the formation of gametes; each contains only one particle 4. Particles can have alternate (dominant/recessive) forms first to distinguish phenotype and genotype Mendelian genetics re-discovered 30 years later (enhanced the decline of Darwinian theory) 8

9 Hugo de Vries: Mutation, Mutation, Mutation one of three who re-discovered Mendelian inheritance bred evening primrose for over 20 years observed a trait that jumped and then bred true: saltation thought that saltation was inconsistent with gradual Darwinian evolution coined the term mutation suggested that mutations acted on tiny particles within a cell Europe was awash in Lamarkism at the time (1900 s), and de Vries was unhappy with it Mendelians: 1. Gradualism could act within a population 2. Saltation was only mechanism for new species August Weismann: Your chromosomes determine who you are Theodor Boveri: I think chromosomes carry smaller things that determine heredity; and you need a full set of them! 9

10 T. H. Morgan: No genes, wait, yes there really are genes extremely skeptical (no such thing as genes) did not believe in genes (or Lamarkism, or Darwinism) founded Fly Room at Columbia University 1910, discovered the white-eyed mutant OK, maybe there really are genes Evolution by mutation (saltation) F1 = 100% red-eyed; F2 = 3:1 red:white All males = white eyes All males = y chromosome Linkage groups matched chromosomes father of modern genetics Sturtevant and Morgan: genes are ordered in a linear array on chromosomes linkage groups are not perfect breakages in linkage were not random freq of breakage fit a linear model of genes reasoned that homologous chromosomes would on rare occasions exchange bits: recombination the observed freq of broken-linkage was used to put a relative distance between genes; linage mapping was born! As always, Morgan was skeptical; until Sturtevant began to predict the frequency of broken-linkage in genes that he had mapped but not directly examined in crosses! 10

11 Conflict between perspectives: mutation verses variation 30 year conflict Mendelians Laboratory research Experimental evidence for large effect of mutation natural selection only relevant to removing deleterious mutations Speciation by mutation; i.e., saltation Gradualists taxonomists; field naturalists; biometricians worked with variation observed in natural populations (as compared with crosses) Observed much small scale variation variation was correlated with geography saltation did not fit their data Laying the groundwork III: Neo-Darwinism and the evolutionary synthesis

12 Godfrey Hardy Wilhelm Weinberg Independent proof (1908) of equilibrium in allele frequencies in a an ideal population - serve as kernel of population genetics (but wait until 1930 s) Three wise men (theoreticians) Sewall Wright John Haldane Ronald Fisher Developed the mathematical theory that reconciled mutationalism and gradualism; the modern synthesis Demonstrated that laws of Mendelian inheritance were consistent with variation in natural populations Showed that such variation could be subject to positive Darwinain selection. 12

13 Fisher: small & continuous differences were compatible with Mendelian principles validated biometricians models that viewed evolution as a shift in the distribution of the whole population Fisher and Haldane: developed theory of change in allele frequencies in populations in response to natural selection Wright: developed a comprehensive theory that included the effects of natural selection, migration, inbreeding, and chance (genetic drift). Other architects of the modern synthesis: Theodosius Dobzhansky (Biologist) Julian Huxley (Biologist and proponent of Eugenics; brother of Aldous Huxley) Ernst Mayr (Biologist) G Ledyard Stebbins (Botanist) George Gaylord Simpson (Paleontologist) Theoretical work was integrated into studies of natural populations, leading to a series of books on the subject of evolution. 13

14 Tenets of Neo-Darwinism / evolutionary synthesis 1. populations contain genetic variation that arises at random via mutation and recombination 2. populations evolve by changes in allele frequencies 3. allele frequencies can change by mutation, migration, drift and natural selection 4. most mutations are deleterious [note: nothing here about neutrality] 5. most adaptive phenotypic effects are small so changes in phenotype are slow and gradual some such changes (like certain color polymorphisms) can have large discrete effects 6. diversification occurs by speciation usually a gradual process * usually by geographic isolation *** 7. population processes, continued for sufficiently long periods of time, give rise to changes of greater magnitude such as the divergence of genera, families, etc. Evolutionary theory has grown tremendously since the synthesis MACROEVOLUTION: the sum of those processes that explain the character-state changes that are characteristic of divergences of species and higher taxonomic ranks (modified from Jeffrey S. Levinton) 14

15 Morgan visits England in 1932: Bitter tasting Tasty mimics (Papilio) This is extraordinary; I just didn t know things like this existed 15

Ch. 22 Warm-Up. 1. What do you remember about Charles Darwin and his scientific ideas? 1. According to Campbell, what is the definition of evolution?

Ch. 22 Warm-Up. 1. What do you remember about Charles Darwin and his scientific ideas? 1. According to Campbell, what is the definition of evolution? Ch. 22 Warm-Up 1. What do you remember about Charles Darwin and his scientific ideas? 1. According to Campbell, what is the definition of evolution? Descent with Modification: A Darwinian View of Life

More information

Descent with Modification: A Darwinian View of Life. Part A: Darwin & Natural Selection

Descent with Modification: A Darwinian View of Life. Part A: Darwin & Natural Selection Descent with Modification: A Darwinian View of Life Part A: Darwin & Natural Selection What you must know: How Lamarck s view of the mechanism of evolution differed from Darwin s. The role of adaptations,

More information

III. Evolutionary thinking before Darwin. Influences on Darwin. I. Evolution and its core principles. II. The importance of evolution as a concept

III. Evolutionary thinking before Darwin. Influences on Darwin. I. Evolution and its core principles. II. The importance of evolution as a concept I. Evolution and its core principles Evolution: cumulative changes in traits of a species or population over time. Common descent with modification: The modification of species in successive generations,

More information

Chapter 2 Evolution: Constructing a Fundamental Scientific Theory

Chapter 2 Evolution: Constructing a Fundamental Scientific Theory Chapter 2 Evolution: Constructing a Fundamental Scientific Theory TRUE/FALSE 1. Organisms classified in two different biological orders can still belong to the same genus. 2. Before 1700, most Western

More information

Evolution. A Brief and Idiosyncratic History of the Concept of. Evolution. Archbishop James Ussher ( ) Pre-scientific World View

Evolution. A Brief and Idiosyncratic History of the Concept of. Evolution. Archbishop James Ussher ( ) Pre-scientific World View Evolution A Brief and Idiosyncratic History of the Concept of Evolution or why we think we know how we got here The concept of evolution is used widely across subdisciplines in anthropology Most broadly

More information

Objectives for Chapter: 22

Objectives for Chapter: 22 Descent With Modification: A Darwinian View of Life Chapter 22 Objectives for Chapter: 22 1. Understand the following contributions made by the following as they relate to Darwin s Theory of evolution.

More information

The world distribution of organisms was puzzling: Marsupial mammals generally very rare, but all Australian mammals were marsupials

The world distribution of organisms was puzzling: Marsupial mammals generally very rare, but all Australian mammals were marsupials Reference: Chapter 2 of Futuyma The Early Seeds of Evolutionary Thinking The Classical view Buffon 1770 Erasmus Darwin 1770 Lamarck 1810 The Classical view: Living organisms are constant and unchanging.

More information

Study of similarities and differences in body plans of major groups Puzzling patterns:

Study of similarities and differences in body plans of major groups Puzzling patterns: Processes of Evolution Evolutionary Theories Widely used to interpret the past and present, and even to predict the future Reveal connections between the geological record, fossil record, and organismal

More information

Chapter 16: Evolutionary Theory

Chapter 16: Evolutionary Theory Chapter 16: Evolutionary Theory Section 1: Developing a Theory Evolution: Artificial Selection: Evolution: I. A Theory to Explain Change Over Time B. Charles Darwin C. Theory: D. Modern evolutionary theory

More information

Vocab. ! Evolution - change in a kind of organism over time; process by which modern organisms have descended from ancient organisms

Vocab. ! Evolution - change in a kind of organism over time; process by which modern organisms have descended from ancient organisms Vocab! Evolution - change in a kind of organism over time; process by which modern organisms have descended from ancient organisms! Theory - well-tested explanation that unifies a broad range of observations

More information

CHAPTER 2--THE DEVELOPMENT OF EVOLUTIONARY THEORY

CHAPTER 2--THE DEVELOPMENT OF EVOLUTIONARY THEORY CHAPTER 2--THE DEVELOPMENT OF EVOLUTIONARY THEORY Student: 1. In Europe during the Middle Ages, it was believed that. A. all species had evolved from a common ancestor B. evolution was the result of natural

More information

Descent with Modification Lecture 1 Winter 2014

Descent with Modification Lecture 1 Winter 2014 Descent with Modification Lecture 1 Winter 2014 Biodiversity 1 Globally - ~1.8 million species ~10,000 birds ~ 4629 mammals ~ 8240 reptiles ~ 900,000 insects (named) ~ 300,000 vascular plants ~ 20,000

More information

Darwin and Natural Selection

Darwin and Natural Selection Darwin and Natural Selection Background: Students know Evolution is change over time Essential Question: What was Darwin s conclusion about his observations? (CIRCLE ans. ) Vocabulary: Highlight or underline

More information

Natural Selection. Professor Andrea Garrison Biology 3A Illustrations 2011 Pearson Education, Inc., unless otherwise noted

Natural Selection. Professor Andrea Garrison Biology 3A Illustrations 2011 Pearson Education, Inc., unless otherwise noted Natural Selection Professor Andrea Garrison Biology 3A Illustrations 2011 Pearson Education, Inc., unless otherwise noted Natural Selection Mechanism for change in species over time Proposed by Charles

More information

EVOLUTION change in populations over time

EVOLUTION change in populations over time EVOLUTION change in populations over time HISTORY ideas that shaped the current theory James Hutton (1785) proposes that Earth is shaped by geological forces that took place over extremely long periods

More information

Biodiversity. Descent with Modification Lecture 1 Winter Species Diversity & Unity. Darwin s Journey. Themes in Biology

Biodiversity. Descent with Modification Lecture 1 Winter Species Diversity & Unity. Darwin s Journey. Themes in Biology Biodiversity 1 Descent with Modification Lecture 1 Winter 2014 Globally - ~1.8 million species ~10,000 birds ~ 4629 mammals ~ 8240 reptiles ~ 900,000 insects (named) ~ 300,000 vascular plants ~ 20,000

More information

9/19/2013. Lecture 2 19 th century progress. Biology 145 EVOLUTION. Evidence for Evolution prior to 1830

9/19/2013. Lecture 2 19 th century progress. Biology 145 EVOLUTION. Evidence for Evolution prior to 1830 Lecture 2 19 th century progress Biology 145 EVOLUTION 1 More than 700,000 species of beetle alone. WHY??? The Creator, if He exists, has an inordinate fondness for beetles JBS Haldane Not all individuals

More information

EVOLUTION. HISTORY: Ideas that shaped the current evolutionary theory. Evolution change in populations over time.

EVOLUTION. HISTORY: Ideas that shaped the current evolutionary theory. Evolution change in populations over time. EVOLUTION HISTORY: Ideas that shaped the current evolutionary theory. Evolution change in populations over time. James Hutton & Charles Lyell proposes that Earth is shaped by geological forces that took

More information

Charles Darwin. 0 Lived in England : Beagle s five-year voyage mapping the coastline of South America

Charles Darwin. 0 Lived in England : Beagle s five-year voyage mapping the coastline of South America Charles Darwin 0 Lived in England 0 1809-1882 0 1831-1836: Beagle s five-year voyage mapping the coastline of South America 0 1859: On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection 0 EVOLUTION à

More information

EVOLUTION change in populations over time

EVOLUTION change in populations over time EVOLUTION change in populations over time HISTORY ideas that shaped the current theory James Hutton & Charles Lyell proposes that Earth is shaped by geological forces that took place over extremely long

More information

THE HISTORY OF THE THEORY. Darwin presented that happens and offered an of how it happens. Theory a broad that has been and

THE HISTORY OF THE THEORY. Darwin presented that happens and offered an of how it happens. Theory a broad that has been and Evolution Notes THE HISTORY OF THE THEORY Why is the evolutionary theory associated with Charles Darwin? Darwin presented that happens and offered an of how it happens. o Evolution the process by which

More information

A Summary of the Theory of Evolution

A Summary of the Theory of Evolution A Summary of the Theory of Evolution Raúl Esperante Geoscience Research Institute Loma Linda, California What is Evolution? What does the term evolution mean? The word has three meanings that are relevant

More information

Outline. Evolution: Evidence, Selection and Adaptation. Key Concepts: One of the key words of our modern time is Evolution

Outline. Evolution: Evidence, Selection and Adaptation. Key Concepts: One of the key words of our modern time is Evolution Evolution: Evidence, Selection and Adaptation One of the key words of our modern time is Evolution u 1. Key concepts Outline u 2. Early Beliefs, and New Discoveries u 3. Darwin developed the theory of

More information

Biology 3201 Unit 4 Evolution Ch Introducing Evolution (part 1) What is Evolution?

Biology 3201 Unit 4 Evolution Ch Introducing Evolution (part 1) What is Evolution? Biology 3201 Unit 4 Evolution Ch. 19 - Introducing Evolution (part 1) What is Evolution? Evolution: the relative change in the characteristics of a population over successive generations A population is

More information

Unit Activity. 1. You will complete a table that follows the theories of evolution through time.

Unit Activity. 1. You will complete a table that follows the theories of evolution through time. Biology Unit Activity Unit 6: Evolution Introduction Evolution is one of the most important concepts in biology. Over the past 300 years, scientists have been theorizing about how the earth and the species

More information

The Evolution of Evolutionary Thought

The Evolution of Evolutionary Thought The Evolution of Evolutionary Thought Evolution simply means change over time So, what has evolved? With new information and discoveries, our thoughts on how living things have evolved have evolved as

More information

EVOLUTIONARY THEORY Evolution affects EVERY living thing All life is descended from the Original Life Form: Ur-slime DARWIN figured out how it could

EVOLUTIONARY THEORY Evolution affects EVERY living thing All life is descended from the Original Life Form: Ur-slime DARWIN figured out how it could EVOLUTIONARY THEORY Evolution affects EVERY living thing All life is descended from the Original Life Form: Ur-slime DARWIN figured out how it could happen Had 100 years of precedents Natural History Hobby

More information

Epistemology and Evolution. History of Evolutionary Thought. Rise and Fall: in a nutshell. Age of the Earth. Charles Lyell ( ) 9/27/2012

Epistemology and Evolution. History of Evolutionary Thought. Rise and Fall: in a nutshell. Age of the Earth. Charles Lyell ( ) 9/27/2012 History of Evolutionary Thought Epistemology and Evolution Argument from Authority Reality can be explained by scripture or by persons Methodological Naturalism Nature to explain nature Supernatural explanations

More information

THE THEORY OF EVOLUTION

THE THEORY OF EVOLUTION THE THEORY OF EVOLUTION Why evolution matters Theory: A well-substantiated explanation of some aspect of the natural world, based on a body of facts that have been repeatedly confirmed through observation

More information

1.A- Natural Selection

1.A- Natural Selection 1.A- Natural Selection Big Idea 1: The process of evolution drives the diversity and unity of life. EU 1.A- Evolution is change in the genetic makeup of a population over time. EU 1.B- Organisms are linked

More information

Major Contributors to Modern Evolutionary Theory. even this theory evolved from something!

Major Contributors to Modern Evolutionary Theory. even this theory evolved from something! Major Contributors to Modern Evolutionary Theory even this theory evolved from something! Throughout history there have been many contributions to theories involving the origin and evolution of species

More information

Darwin s Theory of Evolution. The Puzzle of Life s Diversity

Darwin s Theory of Evolution. The Puzzle of Life s Diversity Darwin s Theory of Evolution The Puzzle of Life s Diversity Evolutionary Theory A scientific explanation that can illustrate the diversity of life on Earth Theory A well-supported, testable explanation

More information

Evolution: Natural Selection Lecture 16 Summer 2014

Evolution: Natural Selection Lecture 16 Summer 2014 Evolution: Natural Selection Lecture 16 Summer 2014 Biodiversity 1 Globally - ~1.8 million species ~10,000 birds ~ 4629 mammals ~ 8240 reptiles ~ 900,000 insects (named) ~ 300,000 vascular plants ~ 20,000

More information

Evolution and Natural Selection

Evolution and Natural Selection Evolution and Natural Selection What Evolution is NOT Change in a gene pool over time What Evolution IS Evolution unites all fields of biology! Cell biology Genetics/DNA Ecology Biodiversity/Taxonomy Carolus

More information

Computer Simulations on Evolution BiologyLabs On-line. Laboratory 1 for Section B. Laboratory 2 for Section A

Computer Simulations on Evolution BiologyLabs On-line. Laboratory 1 for Section B. Laboratory 2 for Section A Computer Simulations on Evolution BiologyLabs On-line Laboratory 1 for Section B Laboratory 2 for Section A The following was taken from http://www.biologylabsonline.com/protected/evolutionlab/ Introduction

More information

Process of Evolution CHAPTER 15

Process of Evolution CHAPTER 15 Process of Evolution CHAPTER 15 Key Concepts 15.1 Evolution Is Both Factual and the Basis of Broader Theory 15.2 Mutation, Selection, Gene Flow, Genetic Drift, and Nonrandom Mating Result in Evolution

More information

Evolution. Chapters 16 & 17

Evolution. Chapters 16 & 17 Evolution Chapters 16 & 17 Darwin s Voyage Chapter 16 Change over time Evolution Charles Darwin Developed a scientific theory that explains how modern organisms evolved over long periods of time through

More information

Anthro. 101: Human Biological Evolution. Lecture 2 : Origins of Evolutionary Theory. Prof. Kenneth Feldmeier

Anthro. 101: Human Biological Evolution. Lecture 2 : Origins of Evolutionary Theory. Prof. Kenneth Feldmeier Anthro. 101: Human Biological Evolution Lecture 2 : Origins of Evolutionary Theory Prof. Kenneth Feldmeier feldmekj@lavc.edu feldmekj@weebly.com Darwin and the history of evolutionary thinking Historical

More information

8/6/2014. Biodiversity. Evolution: Natural Selection Lecture 16 Summer Species Diversity & Unity. Darwin s Journey.

8/6/2014. Biodiversity. Evolution: Natural Selection Lecture 16 Summer Species Diversity & Unity. Darwin s Journey. Biodiversity 1 Evolution: Natural Selection Lecture 16 Summer 2014 Globally - ~1.8 million species ~10,000 birds ~ 4629 mammals ~ 8240 reptiles ~ 900,000 insects (named) ~ 300,000 vascular plants ~ 20,000

More information

Descent with Modification

Descent with Modification Descent with Modification Chapter 22 Descent with modification Evolution The earth is a dynamic place (ever-changing). In order for life to survive, it too must change. This represents an interesting parody.

More information

Evolution Notes Darwin and His Ideas

Evolution Notes Darwin and His Ideas Evolution Notes Darwin and His Ideas Charles Darwin Charles Darwin was born in 1809 (on the same day as Abraham Lincoln) In Darwin s day, scientists were just starting to come around to the idea the Earth

More information

Evolution as Fact and Theory. What is a Scientific Theory? Examples of Scientific Theories:

Evolution as Fact and Theory. What is a Scientific Theory? Examples of Scientific Theories: Evolution as Fact and Theory What is a Scientific Theory? A well-substantiated explanation of some aspect of the natural world; an organized system of accepted knowledge that applies in a variety of circumstances

More information

Evolution as Fact and Theory

Evolution as Fact and Theory Evolution as Fact and Theory What is a Scientific Theory? A well-substantiated explanation of some aspect of the natural world; an organized system of accepted knowledge that applies in a variety of circumstances

More information

Multiple Choice Write the letter on the line provided that best answers the question or completes the statement.

Multiple Choice Write the letter on the line provided that best answers the question or completes the statement. Chapter 15 Darwin s Theory of Evolution Chapter Test A Multiple Choice Write the letter on the line provided that best answers the question or completes the statement. 1. On the Galápagos Islands, Charles

More information

EVOLUTION. Charles Darwin

EVOLUTION. Charles Darwin EVOLUTION Charles Darwin Question for Thought Earth has millions of other kinds of organisms of every imaginable shape, size, and habitat. This variety of living things is called biological diversity.

More information

UNIT 4: EVOLUTION Chapter 10: Principles of Evolution. I. Early Ideas about Evolution (10.1) A. Early scientists proposed ideas about evolution

UNIT 4: EVOLUTION Chapter 10: Principles of Evolution. I. Early Ideas about Evolution (10.1) A. Early scientists proposed ideas about evolution UNIT IV Chapter 10 Principles of Evolution UNIT 4: EVOLUTION Chapter 10: Principles of Evolution I. Early Ideas about Evolution (10.1) A. Early scientists proposed ideas about evolution 1. Evolution- process

More information

Biological Anthropology

Biological Anthropology Biological Anthropology Sample Exam 1 Multiple-Choice Questions For each of the following questions, circle the answer that is most correct. Each question is worth two (2) points. 1. Which of the following

More information

Biology Slide 1 of 41

Biology Slide 1 of 41 Biology 1 of 41 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case 2 of 41 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case Publication of On the Origin of Species Publication of On the Origin of Species Darwin filled notebooks with his ideas

More information

Biology. Slide 1 of 41. End Show. Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall

Biology. Slide 1 of 41. End Show. Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall Biology 1 of 41 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case 2 of 41 Publication of On the Origin of Species Publication of On the Origin of Species Darwin filled notebooks with his ideas about species diversity and

More information

Publication of On the Origin of Species Darwin Presents His Case

Publication of On the Origin of Species Darwin Presents His Case Publication of On the Origin of Species Publication of On the Origin of Species Darwin filled notebooks with his ideas about species diversity and the evolution process. Darwin was stunned and disturbed

More information

Learning objectives. Evolution in Action. Chapter 8: Evolution and Natural Selection. By the end of today s topic students should be able to:

Learning objectives. Evolution in Action. Chapter 8: Evolution and Natural Selection. By the end of today s topic students should be able to: ANNOUNCEMENTS Thursday February 13, 2014 Chapter 8: Evolution and Natural Selection Dr. Traver returns next week. Movie on Tuesday afternoon What Darwin Never Knew. Midterm 2 is next week 2/20/2014 Use

More information

Thomas Malthus ( ) was an English economist. He wrote an essay titled On Population.

Thomas Malthus ( ) was an English economist. He wrote an essay titled On Population. THEORY OF EVOLUTION History of Evolutionary Thought The Idea of Evolution Evolution is the process of change in the inherited characteristics within populations over generations such that new types of

More information

Descent with Modification: A Darwinian View of life

Descent with Modification: A Darwinian View of life Descent with Modification: A Darwinian View of life - Charles Darwin published On the origin of Species by means of Natural Selection on November 24, 1859. The Origin of Species focused biologists attention

More information

BIOL 1010 Introduction to Biology: The Evolution and Diversity of Life. Spring 2011 Sections A & B

BIOL 1010 Introduction to Biology: The Evolution and Diversity of Life. Spring 2011 Sections A & B BIOL 1010 Introduction to Biology: The Evolution and Diversity of Life. Spring 2011 Sections A & B Steve Thompson: stthompson@valdosta.edu http://www.bioinfo4u.net 1 Natural Selection and Variation through

More information

1) Overview: Darwin Introduces a Revolutionary Theory

1) Overview: Darwin Introduces a Revolutionary Theory 1) Overview: Darwin Introduces a Revolutionary Theory A new era of biology began on November 24, 1859, the day Charles Darwin published On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection The Origin

More information

Name: Period Study Guide 17-1 and 17-2

Name: Period Study Guide 17-1 and 17-2 Name: Period Study Guide 17-1 and 17-2 17-1 The Fossil Record (pgs. 417-422) 1. What is the fossil record? 2. What evidence does the fossil record provide? 1. 2. 3. List the 2 techniques paleontologists

More information

NOTES: CH 22 Descent With Modification A Darwinian View of Life

NOTES: CH 22 Descent With Modification A Darwinian View of Life NOTES: CH 22 Descent With Modification A Darwinian View of Life Our planet is home to a huge variety of organisms (Scientists estimate 5-20 million species of organisms alive today!) Even more amazing

More information

History of Evolutionary Thought

History of Evolutionary Thought History of Evolutionary Thought What was the view of the world and nature before Darwin? 1. Static Universe The universe didn t change through time Problem - Fossil Evidence What was the view of the world

More information

Evolution. Just a few points

Evolution. Just a few points Evolution Just a few points Just What is a Species??? Species: a group of organisms that share similar characteristics can interbreed with one another produce fertile offspring Population: One species

More information

What does the phrase Only the Strong Survive mean to you??

What does the phrase Only the Strong Survive mean to you?? What does the phrase Only the Strong Survive mean to you?? Essential Questions: How are we Here? What caused so many different living things to populate Earth? Why do Living things become extinct? 1 A.

More information

Summary - Mon and Wed

Summary - Mon and Wed Unit 1: Evolution 1 Summary - Mon and Wed 1. Wrap up red tape 2. Short answers - the tautology 3. Recap scientific method/inference to the best explanation 4. The natural sciences before Darwin 5. Influences

More information

2/17/17. B. Four scientists important in development of evolution theory

2/17/17. B. Four scientists important in development of evolution theory UNIT 4: EVOLUTION Chapter 10: Principles of Evolution I. Early Ideas about Evolution (10.1) A. Early scientists proposed ideas about evolution 1. Evolution- process of biological change by which descendants

More information

15 Darwin's Theory of Natural Selection. Publication of The Origin of Species

15 Darwin's Theory of Natural Selection. Publication of The Origin of Species Publication of The Origin of Species -He continued observing the specimens he collected and thinking about natural selection, but kept it to himself for the next 20 YEARS! -In 1858, he received a manuscript

More information

History of. Charles Darwin ( ) Today s OUTLINE: Evolutionary Thought: The Grand Evolutionary Synthesis. Carol Eunmi Lee 9/17/18

History of. Charles Darwin ( ) Today s OUTLINE: Evolutionary Thought: The Grand Evolutionary Synthesis. Carol Eunmi Lee 9/17/18 Today s OUTLINE: History of Evolutionary Thought: The Grand Evolutionary Synthesis Considered one of the most important Biological Revolutions of the Century Dr. Carol Eunmi Lee University of Wisconsin,

More information

History of. Charles Darwin ( ) Today s OUTLINE: Evolutionary Thought: The Grand Evolutionary Synthesis. Carol Eunmi Lee 9/13/17

History of. Charles Darwin ( ) Today s OUTLINE: Evolutionary Thought: The Grand Evolutionary Synthesis. Carol Eunmi Lee 9/13/17 Today s OUTLINE: History of Evolutionary Thought: The Grand Evolutionary Synthesis (1) The Sources of Confusion (2) Reconciling Mendel and Darwin (3) The Main Tenets of the Evolutionary Synthesis (4) Key

More information

Biology 11 UNIT 1: EVOLUTION LESSON 1: WHY EVOLUTION?? TEXTBOOK: UNIT 5

Biology 11 UNIT 1: EVOLUTION LESSON 1: WHY EVOLUTION?? TEXTBOOK: UNIT 5 Biology 11 UNIT 1: EVOLUTION LESSON 1: WHY EVOLUTION?? TEXTBOOK: UNIT 5 Objectives: By the end of the lesson you should be able to: Explain why DNA is so important to the theory of evolution State the

More information

Chapter 15 Theory of Evolution

Chapter 15 Theory of Evolution Chapter 15 Theory of Evolution 15-1 History of Evolutionary Thought Evolution- the development of new species form pre-existing species. -change over time. In the 1800 s scientists began to present evidence

More information

Darwin and Evolution. Chapter 17. Mid-Eighteenth Century. History of Evolutionary Thought

Darwin and Evolution. Chapter 17. Mid-Eighteenth Century. History of Evolutionary Thought Darwin and Evolution Chapter 17 Outline History of Evolutionary Thought Darwin s Theory of Evolution Occurrence of Descent Biogeography Natural Selection and Adaptation The Evidence of Evolution Fossil

More information

Darwin spent 20 years conducting research, after his voyage, in attempt to understand HOW evolution occurs.

Darwin spent 20 years conducting research, after his voyage, in attempt to understand HOW evolution occurs. Darwin spent 20 years conducting research, after his voyage, in attempt to understand HOW evolution occurs. One of his biggest influences was the work of farmers and breeders. He noticed that domesticated

More information

Developing the Theory of Evolution

Developing the Theory of Evolution Developing the Theory of Evolution Evolution is the core theme of biology Nothing in biology makes sense except in the light of evolution Theodosius Dobzhansky Pre-Darwin Naturalists of the 1700s were

More information

How the Theory Developed

How the Theory Developed How the Theory The science of evolutionary biology begins in 1859 with the publication of Charles Darwin s On the Origin of Species by Natural Selection, but there is a long history of evolutionary thought

More information

Darwin and Evolution. Chapter 15

Darwin and Evolution. Chapter 15 Darwin and Evolution Chapter 15 In the time before Darwin Evolution has been called one of the great unifying theories of biology due to the amount of time it has been tested, and lack of any exception

More information

14. A small change in gene frequencies to a population overtime is called a. Macroevolution b. Speciation c. Microevolution d.

14. A small change in gene frequencies to a population overtime is called a. Macroevolution b. Speciation c. Microevolution d. Section: Evolution Review Questions Section Title: Evolution Review Questions Name: Review of Old Information: Match the people listed below with the influential ideas they proposed: 1. Carolus Linneus

More information

15 Darwin's Theory of Natural Selection 15-1 The Puzzle of Life's Diversity

15 Darwin's Theory of Natural Selection 15-1 The Puzzle of Life's Diversity 15-1 The Puzzle of Life's Diversity Study the photo of leaves... What else do you see? How did the Leaf Mantis come to look like decaying leaves? Define evolution in its simplest meaning? Review the meaning

More information

Chapter 15 Darwin s Theory of Evolution. Essential Question: What evidence did Darwin use to develop his theory of evolution?

Chapter 15 Darwin s Theory of Evolution. Essential Question: What evidence did Darwin use to develop his theory of evolution? Chapter 15 Darwin s Theory of Evolution Essential Question: What evidence did Darwin use to develop his theory of evolution? 15-1 The Puzzle of Life s Diversity How did life change from a prokaryote to

More information

History of Genetics in Evolution

History of Genetics in Evolution History of Genetics in Evolution Joe Felsenstein GENOME 453, Autumn 2009 History of Genetics in Evolution p.1/38 The Great Chain of Being (1600 s onward) Deity Angels Man Mammals Birds Reptiles Amphibians

More information

Guided Questions. Who first suggested evolution? Who first suggested creationism? What did humans evolve from?

Guided Questions. Who first suggested evolution? Who first suggested creationism? What did humans evolve from? Guided Questions Who first suggested evolution? Who first suggested creationism? What did humans evolve from? Evolution The Darwinian View of Life The Importance of Evolution This is the most important

More information

Chapter 16.1 Introduction to Evolution and Evidence

Chapter 16.1 Introduction to Evolution and Evidence Chapter 16.1 Introduction to Evolution and Evidence Vocabulary Evolution Artificial Selection Natural Selection Homologous Structures Vestigial Structures Adaptation Variation Key Concepts Who was Darwin

More information

Evidence of Evolution. Chapter 17

Evidence of Evolution. Chapter 17 Evidence of Evolution Chapter 17 Overview Current species are descendents of ancestral species Evolution is both a pattern and a process Origin of Species Views of Aristotle Fixed species Old Testament

More information

Ch 22 Descent with Modification Darwin was influenced by the work of others during his time.

Ch 22 Descent with Modification Darwin was influenced by the work of others during his time. AP Biology Ch 22 Descent with Modification Name 22.1 Darwin was influenced by the work of others during his time., the study of fossils, was largely developed by Georges Cuvier. His explanation for why

More information

Genes Within Populations

Genes Within Populations Genes Within Populations Chapter 20 1 Nothing in Biology Makes Sense Except in the Light of Evolution The American Biology Teacher, March 1973 (35:125-129). Theodosius Dobzhansky (1900-1975). 2 Genetic

More information

Along his journey, Darwin kept notes on the variation in different species. His book, Origin of Species, outlined his findings & theories in 1859.

Along his journey, Darwin kept notes on the variation in different species. His book, Origin of Species, outlined his findings & theories in 1859. CHARLES DARWIN Born February 12, 1809 At the age of 16 entered medical school in England and flunked out His dad sent him to Univ. of Cambridge in 1827 to study divinity 1831: Darwin left Cambridge and

More information

Who developed the theory of acquired characteristics? a. Darwin b. Lamarck c. Charles Lyell d. Aristotle

Who developed the theory of acquired characteristics? a. Darwin b. Lamarck c. Charles Lyell d. Aristotle Who developed the theory of acquired characteristics? a. Darwin b. Lamarck c. Charles Lyell d. Aristotle 1 Who developed the theory of natural selection, and survival of the fittest? a. Darwin b. Lamarck

More information

Understanding Natural Selection

Understanding Natural Selection Understanding Natural Selection Charles Darwin (1809-1882) Sailed around the world 1831-1836 What did Darwin s Travels reveal The diversity of living species was far greater than anyone had previously

More information

Early Ideas about Evolution

Early Ideas about Evolution Early Ideas about Evolution Though Darwin gets much of the credit today for his theory of evolution, he? wasn t the first person to come up with the idea! First off, what is evolution? In the most general

More information

History of Genetics in Evolution

History of Genetics in Evolution History of Genetics in Evolution Joe Felsenstein GENOME 453, Winter 2005 History of Genetics in Evolution p.1/39 The Great Chain of Being (1600 s onward) Deity Angels Man Mammals Birds Reptiles Amphibians

More information

natural selection evolution

natural selection evolution Honors Biology Bellringer: signintoaclicker! natural selection evolution Standard: Students will evaluate the role of natural selection in the development of the theory of evolution. Element: a. Trace

More information

Chapter 19: Descent with Modification: A Darwinian View of Life

Chapter 19: Descent with Modification: A Darwinian View of Life Chapter 19: Descent with Modification: A Darwinian View of Life As you study this chapter, read several paragraphs at a time to catch the flow of ideas and understand the reasoning that is being described.

More information

Vocab Darwin & Evolution (Chap 15)

Vocab Darwin & Evolution (Chap 15) Vocab Darwin & Evolution (Chap 15) 1. Evolution 2. Theory 3. Charles Darwin 4. Fossil 5. Species 6. Natural variation 7. Artificial selection 8. Struggle for existence 9. Fitness 10.Adaptation 11.Survival

More information

Evolution after Darwin

Evolution after Darwin Evolution after Darwin Evolution After Darwin Peppered Moth (Biston betularia) as classic example of natural selection Peppered Moth populations respond to changing environment (pollution). Why has the

More information

Evidence of evolution

Evidence of evolution The Theory of Evolution Charles Darwin Evidence for evolution Mechanisms for evolution Natural selection Speciation Evidence of evolution Structural adaptations Mimicry Camouflage Physiological adaptations

More information

Chapter 10 Study Guide SECTION 1: Early Ideas about Evolution

Chapter 10 Study Guide SECTION 1: Early Ideas about Evolution NAME Chapter 10 Study Guide SECTION 1: Early Ideas about Evolution BIOLOGY PREAP/GT Match each scientist with the statement that best reflects his ideas about evolutionary theory. 1. Linnaeus a. Species

More information

Our Place in Nature? Voyage of the Beagle. Jeanne Sept 9/8/04. P200 Lecture 1. Historical context for ideas of Charles Darwin

Our Place in Nature? Voyage of the Beagle. Jeanne Sept 9/8/04. P200 Lecture 1. Historical context for ideas of Charles Darwin Our Place in Nature? Historical context for ideas of Charles Darwin Charles Darwin Restless young guy! 1831: HMS Beagle Voyage of the Beagle 4 years P200 Lecture 1 Supernatural arguments Linnaeus Natural

More information

Evolution. In the 18 th century, people became more mobile. Lamarck. Organisms acquire characteristics and pass them on WRONG!!!

Evolution. In the 18 th century, people became more mobile. Lamarck. Organisms acquire characteristics and pass them on WRONG!!! Evolution In the 18 th century, people became more mobile Why are the different animals and plants in different geographic areas? How do we explain this diversity? As fossils were discovered: why don t

More information

Today s Topic History of Evolutionary Thought Learning Goal: SWBAT identify the contributions of the evolutionary innovators prior to Charles Darwin.

Today s Topic History of Evolutionary Thought Learning Goal: SWBAT identify the contributions of the evolutionary innovators prior to Charles Darwin. Today s Topic History of Evolutionary Thought Learning Goal: SWBAT identify the contributions of the evolutionary innovators prior to Charles Darwin. Please submit your Solar Eclipse article now, if you

More information

Biology. Evolution: History & Process

Biology. Evolution: History & Process Biology Evolution: History & Process Terms: A species is a group of organisms, or population, that can be interbreed & produce fertile offspring. Variations are the differences found within species. Ex:

More information

Selection 10: Theory of Natural Selection

Selection 10: Theory of Natural Selection Selection 10: Theory of Natural Selection Darwin began his voyage thinking that species could not change His experience during the five-year journey altered his thinking Variation of similar species among

More information

Darwin s Theory of Evolution

Darwin s Theory of Evolution Chapter 15 Darwin s Theory of Evolution Section 15 1 The Puzzle of Life s Diversity (pages 369 372) This section outlines Charles Darwin s contribution to science It also describes the pattern of diversity

More information

Chapter 22: Descent with Modification: A Darwinian View of Life

Chapter 22: Descent with Modification: A Darwinian View of Life Name Period Chapter 22: Descent with Modification: A Darwinian View of Life As you study this chapter, read several paragraphs at a time to catch the flow of ideas and understand the reasoning that is

More information

Principles of Evolution. Ch Early Ideas About Evolution Early Ideas About Evolution Early Ideas About Evolution 3/21/2016

Principles of Evolution. Ch Early Ideas About Evolution Early Ideas About Evolution Early Ideas About Evolution 3/21/2016 Principles of Evolution Ch. 10 "Nothing in biology makes sense except in the light of evolution." 10.1 Early Ideas About Evolution The Puzzle of Life s Diversity o Evolution - modern organisms have descended

More information