ARTICLE: Darwin and palaeontology: a re-evaluation of his interpretation of the fossil record

The Dispersal of Darwin

In the journal Historical Biology (online first):

Darwin and palaeontology: a re-evaluation of his interpretation of the fossil record

Warren D. Allmon

Abstract Charles Darwin’s empirical research in palaeontology, especially on fossil invertebrates, has been relatively neglected as a source of insight into his thinking, other than to note that he viewed the fossil record as very incomplete. During the Beagle voyage, Darwin gained extensive experience with a wide diversity of fossil taxa, and he thought deeply about the nature of the fossil record. That record was, for him, a major source of evidence for large-scale transmutation, but much less so for natural selection or single lineages. Darwin’s interpretation of the fossil record has been criticised for its focus on incompleteness, but the record as he knew it was extremely incomplete. He was compelled to address this in arguing for descent with modification, which was likely his primary goal. Darwin’s…

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I am Rashid Aziz Faridi ,Writer, Teacher and a Voracious Reader.oss Za
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2 Responses to ARTICLE: Darwin and palaeontology: a re-evaluation of his interpretation of the fossil record

  1. Pingback: Fossil, probably of polar bear, found in Svalbard | Dear Kitty. Some blog

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