He studied the galapagos islands!
The Galapagos Islands.
Darwin loved collecting beetles. Yet he studied birds closely on the Galapagos Islands.
he studied the differences in finches of the three galapagos islands.
In the Galapagos Islands, Darwin visited Charles Island, Chatham Island, Albemarle Island and James Island.
He studied the galapagos islands!
The Galapagos Islands.
I believe it's the Galapagos Islands.
Darwin loved collecting beetles. Yet he studied birds closely on the Galapagos Islands.
he studied the differences in finches of the three galapagos islands.
In the Galapagos Islands, Darwin visited Charles Island, Chatham Island, Albemarle Island and James Island.
The Galapagos Islands, which are about 600 miles off the coast of Ecuador.
On his trip to the Galapagos Islands, Darwin determined that animals on the islands
On his trip to the Galapagos Islands, Darwin determined that animals on the islands
The second thing Charles Darwin studied was Volcanic islands in 1844. I did a project on him and it has been checked so you can rely on this information.
The key thing that Darwin realised soon after arriving at the Galapagos was that the islands had been formed relatively recently. Because of this, a relatively small number of species had arrived at the islands and variations on these species had arisen on the different islands. This made Darwin ask how the variations had occurred; leading, eventually, to the theory of Natural Selection.
The Falklands and the Galapagos islands helped Darwin's theory