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  2. Young Man! | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/young-man
    Menu. Main navigation. Work. Darwin & Cambridge Today. Young Man! The most common image of Darwin is as an old man with a bushy beard, a bald head, and usually a bit of sour expression on his face. This is a great shame as such images fail to get
  3. Human Evolution | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/human-evolution
    Menu. Main navigation. Work. Evolution. Human Evolution. Please see the corresponding article in the Works section. 2015 Christ's College, Cambridge. Primate 6 Faces by Stephen D. Nash/Conservation International. 1997. Used with permission. 2024.
  4. Symbiosis | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/symbiosis
    Menu. Main navigation. Work. Case Studies. Symbiosis: No Man Is An Island. John Donne once wrote that no man is an island. Biology can go one better and can assert that no organism is an island either! Clearly no organism exists wholly by itself in
  5. Natural Selection | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/natural-selection
    Menu. Main navigation. Work. Evolution. Natural Selection. Natural selection is Darwin’s most famous theory; it states that evolutionary change comes through the production of variation in each generation and differential survival of individuals
  6. Philosophy | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/philosophy
    Menu. Main navigation. Darwin The Philosopher. Darwin is remembered for his brilliant science: in many ways though he was equally gifted in philosophy. He himself made many fundamental changes to the way we approach philosophy, and his work has
  7. Updating Darwin | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/updating-darwin
    Menu. Main navigation. Work. Updating Darwin. Science works by continually testing and revising its theories. Darwin's theories on how evolution works have been no exception. 150 years worth of research has shown that Darwin was right, but have also
  8. What Is Evolution? | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/what-evolution
    Menu. Main navigation. Work. For Kids. What Is Evolution? Evolution is the slow process that changes animals and plants and it’s a great piece of science! It describes loads of things in nature like fossils, peacocks' tails, lions’ teeth,
  9. Trilobites | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/trilobites
    Menu. Main navigation. Work. Case Studies. Trilobites. This case study focuses on a group of extinct early arthropods called trilobites. Trilobites were a hugely successful group and they are the most diverse group recorded in the fossil record, but
  10. Childhood | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/childhood
    Menu. Main navigation. Life. Work. Darwin's Childhood. Born on 12th February 1809 into a wealthy family, Charles Robert Darwin had a pretty ordinary childhood. He didn’t enjoy or do well at school but he had, from an early age, a passion for
  11. Flowers | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/flowers
    Menu. Main navigation. Work. Case Studies. Flowers. When Darwin first proposed his theory of evolution by natural selection many people collected orchids. Their complicated and delicate flowers were held up by some as an example of nature’s beauty
  12. Weismann And Inheritance | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/weismann-and-inheritance
    Menu. Main navigation. Work. Updating Darwin. Weismann & Inheritance. Darwin’s theory of natural selection is critical for the modern study of evolution. However, as important as its central idea is, The Origin of Species is not the 'bible' of
  13. Mimicry | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/mimicry
    Menu. Main navigation. Work. Case Studies. Mimicry. When one species looks very similar to another we say they mimic one another. You’ll be familiar with some common mimics, for example many bee, wasp and hoverfly species mimic each other all
  14. Speciation | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/speciation
    Menu. Main navigation. Work. Evolution. Speciation: The Origin Of Species. Darwin’s great book is titled On the Origin of Species, but some have said this is misleading. Darwin discusses evolution, common descent and natural selection at great
  15. Hox Genes | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/hox-genes
    Menu. Main navigation. Work. Case Studies. Hox Genes & Animal Body Plans. Animals have very different body plans. Compare, for example, a centipede to a bird, or a mouse to a fly, and it’s easy to see the differences. How has evolution produced
  16. Activities & Books | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/activities-books
    Menu. Main navigation. Work. For Kids. Activities & Books For Kids. There are many good children's books and other materials about Darwin's life and evolution. Below is a non-exhaustive list. The Amazing Voyage of Charles Darwin. by Anna Nilsen,
  17. Back To The Beagle | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/back-beagle
    It was his first lesson in gradualism. He didn’t wait long to put it into practice either.
  18. Sexual Selection | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/sexual-selection
    Menu. Main navigation. Work. Evolution. Sexual Selection. In order to leave an evolutionary legacy survival is not enough. Individuals must also reproduce. Over 90% of species reproduce sexually, meaning two individuals from each sex must mate in
  19. Drug Design | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/drug-design
    Menu. Main navigation. Work. Applications. Evolving Drug Design. Humans are the product of evolution. Many of the diseases we have to put up with are also either the product, or by-product of evolution. Can we turn this on its head and use
  20. The Eclipse Of Darwin | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/eclipse-darwin
    Menu. Main navigation. Work. Updating Darwin. The Eclipse Of Darwin. Like many revolutionary scientific theories, Darwin's ideas were not accepted immediately. His theory suggested that the origins of life are both cruel and blind - relying on death
  21. Then & Now | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/then-now
    Menu. Main navigation. Work. Darwin & Cambridge Today. Cambridge Then & Now. The University of Cambridge celebrates the 800th anniversary of its foundation in 2009. Since Darwin became an undergraduate in 1827 the university has changed rapidly from
  22. Intelligent Design | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/intelligent-design
    Menu. Main navigation. Intelligent Design. Life is complicated. How have the many varied and complex beings come into existence? Why are they so good at scratching out a life in their own particular way? In the eighteenth century William Paley
  23. Typical Students | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/typical-students
    Menu. Main navigation. Life. Work. Typical Students. Perhaps somewhat surprisingly, Darwin was never really a model student and he didn’t particularly enjoy his university studies, either at Edinburgh or Cambridge. At Edinburgh he spent more time
  24. Finches & Fishes | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/finches-fishes
    Menu. Main navigation. Work. Case Studies. Finches & Fishes. Evolution can be a very slow process. Too slow to observe within a human life time? Darwin seemed to think so, but actually we now have numerous examples where long term studies of
  25. Life's Orgins | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/lifes-orgins
    Menu. Main navigation. Work. Updating Darwin. Life's Orgins. ‘Probably all the organic beings which have ever lived on this earth have descended from some primordial form, into which life was first breathed’. This is all Darwin says in The
  26. The Modern Synthesis | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/modern-synthesis
    Menu. Main navigation. Work. Updating Darwin. The Modern Synthesis. The Modern Evolutionary Synthesis is the name given to the school of thought which is now broadly accepted by evolutionary scientists around the world. Formal amalgamation
  27. Linguistics & Literature | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/linguistics-literature
    Menu. Main navigation. Darwin, Literature & Language. Darwin’s work quickly captured the minds of many writers. More recently, evolutionary ideas have been used to explore how texts and even languages change over time. Darwin’s work captivated
  28. Conservation | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/conservation
    Menu. Main navigation. Work. Applications. Evolution & Conservation. Life on earth is currently undergoing one of the largest mass extinctions our planet has seen. Human activities affect the natural world in a number of ways; we destroy natural
  29. Vaccines | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/vaccines
    Menu. Main navigation. Work. Applications. Viruses & Vaccines. All of us have experienced an illness caused by a virus at sometime in our life, from flu to verrucas to much worse. Understanding how these viruses evolve is key if we are to be able to
  30. Darwin & Cambridge Today | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/darwin-cambridge-today
    Menu. Main navigation. Work. Darwin & Cambridge Today. Darwin's time in Cambridge was very important for him. It was here that he met Henslow and Sedgwick, two great scientists, who saw the potential in the young beetle collector and encouraged him
  31. How Do We Know? | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/how-do-we-know
    Menu. Main navigation. Work. For Kids. How Do We Know? Darwin’s ideas have been about for 150 years, and they haven’t always been popular. At first scientists played around with several different ideas. But scientists are picky people who love
  32. Later Life | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/later-life
    Menu. Main navigation. Life. Work. Later In Life. Darwin had published his great work on evolution. He was recognised as a leading geologist and zoologist, but still Darwin continued to work as vigorously as his health would allow him. He still had
  33. Bibliography | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/bibliography
    Menu. Main navigation. Bibliography. Darwin was incredibly productive throughout his life. He was limited to working for only a few hours a day for the majority of his life after returning from the Beagle voyage. But despite this he published over
  34. Invasive Species | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/invasive-species
    In some cases, a non-native species can spread widely, outcompeting the native community, and causing massive ecological and economic damage.
  35. Antibiotics | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/antibiotics
    Menu. Main navigation. Work. Case Studies. Antibiotics. The archetypal image of evolution is the ascent of man. This image represents Homo sapiens as a sort of pinnacle of evolutionary achievement. This is probably because, as humans, we like to
  36. Transitional Fossils | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/transitional-fossils
    Menu. Main navigation. Work. Case Studies. Transitional Fossils. A lot of people look to the fossil record for evidence of evolution. This is reasonable, if all the species we see today are connected by intermediates there should be some evidence of
  37. What About Wallace? | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/what-about-wallace
    Menu. Main navigation. Work. Evolution. What About Wallace? This website is a tribute to the life, work and influence of Charles Darwin. However it would be unfair to omit Alfred Russel Wallace from any discussion of evolution. He co-authored, with
  38. Darwin's Evolution | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/darwins-evolution
    Menu. Main navigation. Darwin's Evolution. On the Origin of Species, written by Charles Robert Darwin and published in November 1859, is the most defining and important book in evolutionary biology. In this book, Darwin argued that different forms
  39. Credits & Acknowledgements | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/credits-acknowledgements
    Menu. Main navigation. We are very grateful toand Excellence for helping to fund this project. We wish to thank the Master and fellows of Christ's College, especially Prof. Jim Smith, Prof. Martin Johnson, Rev'd Christopher Woods and those on the
  40. Melanism & Moths | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/melanism-moths
    Menu. Main navigation. Work. Case Studies. Peppered Moths & Melanism. Darwin’s ideas of natural selection are well-supported by the fossil record and the relationships between living species, but as evolution is often a slow process the changes
  41. Settling Down | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/settling-down
    On 28th September 1838 Darwin read Thomas Malthus’ economics book An Essay on the Principle of Population, which stated that the human population grows geometrically, unless somehow checked, and food production
  42. Why Does It Matter? | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/why-does-it-matter
    Menu. Main navigation. Work. For Kids. Why Does Evolution Matter? Some people don’t think Darwin was right, despite all the evidence! It’s very important that people do accept the truth of evolution. Why? Well for one it’s REALLY interesting,
  43. Pre-Darwinian Ideas | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/pre-darwinian-ideas
    Menu. Main navigation. Work. Evolution. Pre-Darwinian Evolutionary Thought. Darwin didn’t ‘discover evolution’. Evolutionary ideas had been proposed and debated long before Darwin came along. Darwin proposed the mechanism which brought about
  44. Global Warming | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/global-warming
    Menu. Main navigation. Work. Applications. Adaptation, Global Warming And Evolution. The whole idea of natural selection rests on the gradual adaptation of organisms to their environment. If the environment changes, some individuals will have
  45. Irreducibly Complex? | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/irreducibly-complex
    Menu. Main navigation. Work. Case Studies. Irreducibly Complex? Imagine you’re walking along a beach one day and you find a watch. Surely the presence of that device would prove to any rational person the existence of an architect of such a
  46. Rewritting History | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/rewritting-history
    Menu. Main navigation. Life. Work. Rewritting History. Darwin is best remembered for his work on evolution. Before the publication of his famous On the Origin of Species Darwin had been working on the subject for 20 years. There are many myths
  47. Who Was Charles Darwin? | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/who-was-charles-darwin
    Menu. Main navigation. Work. For Kids. Who Was Charles Darwin? Who was Charles Darwin? You’ve probably seen a picture of him and he probably had a bald head, a huge bushy beard, a bit of a funny nose and he probably looked a bit miserable. But he
  48. Study In Cambridge | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/study-cambridge
    Menu. Main navigation. Work. Darwin & Cambridge Today. Study In Cambridge. The UK is full of great universities and the University of Cambridge is one of the best. It’s particularly good for sciences and there are opportunities to study
  49. Why Did Darwin Need Updating? | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/why-did-darwin-need-updating
    Menu. Main navigation. Work. Updating Darwin. Why Did Darwin Need Updating? Darwin revolutionised biology, indeed no-one else has ever had such an impact on the field. But science doesn’t simply stop and applaud its heroes for a job well done. It

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