Clarendon Press, Oxford
Essays on Evolution, 1889-1907
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Title: Essays on Evolution, 1889-1907
Author: M.A. Edward Bagnall Poulton, D.Sc.
Publisher: Clarendon Press, Oxford
Published: 1908
Binding: Hardcover
Language: English
Edition: First Edition
Number of Pages: 479
Catalogs: Evolution, Science, Essays
Description: Ex-library. Original green cloth binding with gilt lettering on spine. Spine ends are slightly crushed, library call number pasted to spine. Withdrawn ink stamp and embossed stamp form American Congregational Library, Boston. Contains a few small illustrations. Pages are lightly tanned but otherwise clean. The essays included in this volume are: Mutation, Mendelism, and Natural Selection; A Naturalist's Contribution to the Discussion upon the Age of the Earth; What is a Species?; Theories of Evolution; Theories of Heredity; The Bearing of the Study of Insects upon the Question, Are Acquired Characteristics Hereditary?; A Remarkable Anticipation of Modern Views on Evolution; Thomas Henry Huxley and the Theory of Natural Selection; Natural Selection and the Cause of Mimetic Resemblance and Common Warning Colors; Mimicry and Natural Selection; The Place of Mimicry in a Scheme of Defensive Coloration; and the appendix A Classification and Index of the Examples of Mimicry Quoted in the Text. Edward Bagnall Poulton (1856-1943) was a British evolutionary biologist, and a lifelong advocate of natural selection through a period in which many scientists such as Reginald Punnett doubted its importance. He invented the term sympatric for evolution of species in the same place, and in his book The Colours of Animals (1890) was the first to recognize frequency-dependent selection. He is remembered for his pioneering work on animal coloration and camouflage, and in particular for inventing the term aposematism for warning coloration. He became Hope Professor of Zoology at the University of Oxford in 1893. Hardcover, good condition. 479 pages, octavo.
Author: M.A. Edward Bagnall Poulton, D.Sc.
Publisher: Clarendon Press, Oxford
Published: 1908
Binding: Hardcover
Language: English
Edition: First Edition
Number of Pages: 479
Catalogs: Evolution, Science, Essays
Description: Ex-library. Original green cloth binding with gilt lettering on spine. Spine ends are slightly crushed, library call number pasted to spine. Withdrawn ink stamp and embossed stamp form American Congregational Library, Boston. Contains a few small illustrations. Pages are lightly tanned but otherwise clean. The essays included in this volume are: Mutation, Mendelism, and Natural Selection; A Naturalist's Contribution to the Discussion upon the Age of the Earth; What is a Species?; Theories of Evolution; Theories of Heredity; The Bearing of the Study of Insects upon the Question, Are Acquired Characteristics Hereditary?; A Remarkable Anticipation of Modern Views on Evolution; Thomas Henry Huxley and the Theory of Natural Selection; Natural Selection and the Cause of Mimetic Resemblance and Common Warning Colors; Mimicry and Natural Selection; The Place of Mimicry in a Scheme of Defensive Coloration; and the appendix A Classification and Index of the Examples of Mimicry Quoted in the Text. Edward Bagnall Poulton (1856-1943) was a British evolutionary biologist, and a lifelong advocate of natural selection through a period in which many scientists such as Reginald Punnett doubted its importance. He invented the term sympatric for evolution of species in the same place, and in his book The Colours of Animals (1890) was the first to recognize frequency-dependent selection. He is remembered for his pioneering work on animal coloration and camouflage, and in particular for inventing the term aposematism for warning coloration. He became Hope Professor of Zoology at the University of Oxford in 1893. Hardcover, good condition. 479 pages, octavo.
