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Charles Darwin wrote the original, although there have been more recent people to revamp the idea of natural selection. best source of this type of information would be something related to ecology.

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13y ago

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Related Questions

Who wrote the theory of natural selection?

Charles Darwin


In 1858 who sent Charles Darwin a draft of an essay he had written on natural selection?

Wallace.


Who wrote the book The Evolution of the Species by the Means of Natural Selection?

The book "On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection" was written by Charles Darwin.


Who wrote a book in 1859 on the study of evolution by natural selection?

Charles Robert Darwin.


What did Darwin do in 1831?

The naturalist, Charles Darwin, who wrote On The Origin of the Species by Means of Natural Selection, was four years old in 1813. In a letter, he mentioned that one Dr. Wells presented an "Essay on Dew" (which proposed the principle of natural selection) to the Royal Society in 1813.


Who wrote the orgin of species which proposed a theory of evolution?

On The Origin Of Species By Means Of Natural Selection, Or the Preservation Of Favored Races In The Struggle For LifeCharles Robert Darwin ( of course! )


What kind of essay in the selection?

The essay in the selection is a personal narrative essay, which focuses on the author's experience of learning to swim as an adult. It combines storytelling elements with reflection on the challenges and triumphs of the experience.


Who wrote the essay Appeal?

WHO WROTE THE BOOK APPEAL


What is the name for the process in which the organisms best adapted to their environment survive?

Its NaTuRaL sElEcTiOn if you didn't know.


The of your process essay should remind the readers of what you wrote about in your essay?

the conclusion


The of your process essay should remind the readers of what you wrote about in your essay.?

the conclusion


Who said whatever is is right?

Alexander Pope wrote "Whatever is, is right" in his poem "An Essay on Man." The phrase reflects the idea that the natural order of things is inherently just and moral.