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HomeIntroductionThe World Before DarwinYoung NaturalistA Trip Around the WorldA Stunning InvitationA Very Small VesselA Five-Year JourneyBut What To Bring?An Emerging MindA Ship and Its CaptainFossils and Living SpeciesA Long Way From HomeNeighboring SpeciesIsland SpeciesThe Idea Takes ShapeA Lifes WorkEvolution TodayEndless Forms Most BeautifulMeet the CuratorBehind the Scenes
A Trip Around the WorldEvidence for Evolution: Island Species

Different On Each Island | Giant Daisies | Winging It | Long Way from the South Pole | 
Galapagos Mockingbirds | Solving A Mystery | An Idea Takes Hold | A New Perspective

An Idea Takes Hold

Near the end of his voyage, Darwin pored over his notes and began to compile them. In a set of notes on birds, written while still on the Beagle, Darwin first began speculating about evolution in writing.

Darwin wondered: Were the different mockingbirds he had seen in the Galápagos just varieties of one species, or were they distinct species? Or might they even be varieties on the way to becoming different species? It would take years of thinking about the idea of evolution, and a great deal more evidence, for Darwin to convince himself his suspicions were correct. But once raised, the question would not go away. Could species evolve?

First Notes on Evolution

Document: Charles Darwin's "Ornithological Notes"
Date: June 1836; Page: 74 of 85

Pondering the Galápagos mockingbirds raised troubling questions for Darwin about the very nature of species. At first Darwin suspected that all the different mockingbirds were just varieties of a single species. Later he speculated on whether these varieties might represent the early stages of the appearance of new species. In the Ornithological Notes, Darwin writes,

"When I see these islands in sight of each other…tenanted by these birds, but slightly differing in structure & filling the same place in Nature, I must suspect they are only varieties."

But what if some time ago a single mockingbird species had migrated from the mainland, spread through the archipelago, and then begun to vary on the different islands? What if these varieties grew to be so different that they actually became separate species-that is, they could no longer breed together? The implications were enormous. As Darwin wrote,

"If there is the slightest foundation for these remarks the zoology of Archipelagoes-will be well worth examining; for such facts [would] undermine the stability of Species."

If species were not stable, but could give rise to new species, everything in natural history would be seen in a new light.

The Syndics of Cambridge University Library

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