The book made Darwin think that sense the earth is so old, there would be plenty of time for organisms to change slowly.
The observations he made on the island led Darwin to believe that organisms slowly adapt to their environment. This led him to form the survival of the fittest theory. Darwin did not really mean survival of the fittest, he meant survival of the most adapt. For example, a faster and stronger gazelle could out run the cheetah, but still be caught, but a smarter and more intelligent gazelle could out wit the cheetah and survive. So it is in the end, survival of the most adapt.
The observations he made on the island led Darwin to believe that organisms slowly adapt to their environment. This led him to form the survival of the fittest theory. Darwin did not really mean survival of the fittest, he meant survival of the most adapt. For example, a faster and stronger gazelle could out run the cheetah, but still be caught, but a smarter and more intelligent gazelle could out wit the cheetah and survive. So it is in the end, survival of the most adapt.
true
Not at all. Though some anthropological conclusions may have been changed.
One limiting factor for the African Elephant is the climate of the Sahara Desert. They have to migrate from place to place to find a good watering hole.
Charles Lyell's book "Principles of Geology" influenced Darwin by introducing him to the concept of gradual change over long periods of time, which aligned with his ideas of natural selection and evolution. Lyell's emphasis on the slow and steady processes of geological change provided Darwin with evidence and a framework to support his theory of evolution by natural selection. Darwin recognized the importance of Lyell's theories in shaping the environment in which species evolved, helping him develop his own ideas on the mechanisms of evolution.
No Darwin's theory was not directly linked to classification .
Predicting how our parasites are going to evolve under the selection pressure of our prophylactic efforts is vital in the lives of the people.
Charles darwin was an iterresting man he stuby livin organisms
Search Charles Darwin and there is an easy answer. :)
In Darwin's mind his theory took away the need for a god. Darwin's theory of evolution challenged both the Religious and the science communities at that time. He was challenged by Alfred Wallace who had individually come up with the idea so Darwin published his book (Origin of Species...) first.
Yanely doesn't know. she is kinda mental. and francesica likes ice cream, but it has to be vanilla or strawberry. bob a.k.a teresa is charles friend
what affect tectonics have on evolution of new spiecies
The term coevolution (affect) is used to describe cases where two (or more) species reciprocally affect each other's evolution. So for example, an evolutionary change in the morphology of a plant, might affect the morphology of an herbivore that eats the plant, which in turn might affect the evolution of the plant, which might affect the evolution of the herbivore and so on.
Although natural selection is affected by geology, and some knowledge of geology is certainly necessary to be able to interpret the evidence for the various phylogenies of evolution, these theories themselves do not affect geology. Evolution therefore remains a matter of biology, not geology.
HiContrary to many assumptions, evolutionary theory did not begin in 1859 with Charles Darwin and "The Origin of Species".Evolutionary type ideas had existed since the times of the Greeks, and had been in and out of favor in the periods between ancient Greece and Victorian England.By Darwin's time the idea of evolution - called "descent with modification" - or information gathered was not especially controversial, and several other evolutionary theories had already been proposed.Darwin's theories and observations may stand at the beginning of a modern tradition, but he is also considered the final culmination of an ancient speculation.
Not at all. You, as many people are, especially in the Social Sciences, are confused between the theory of evolution by natural selection, which is a theory on the mechanism of adaption and populations evolving, with a bastardization of the theory by one Herbert Spencer who seemed to be positing a form of selection between groups; the antithesis of Darwin's theory. The only connection to social issues that the theory of evolution by natural selection could have is to show that all social interaction has an evolutionary basis based on individual selection and the change evidenced by alleles in human populations.