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The origin of species

Charles Darwin

EPUB
19,99

Digital World img Link Publisher

Kinder- und Jugendbücher / Naturwissenschaft, Technik

Beschreibung

Published in 1859, Charles Darwin's The Origin of Species became known as ''The Book that Shook the World''. Its first edition sold out on the first day, and the same happened with six subsequent versions. To this day, the naturalist's theory of evolution is controversial. According to Darwin, species compete for survival, and those that survive give rise to the next generation, which in turn incorporates favorable natural variations and passes them on hereditarily. Until his death, Darwin tirelessly rewrote his theory, and new research was included in each of the six editions. This is what can be considered his definitive work. Still considered one of the most innovative and challenging biological treatises ever written, The Origin of Species, with its approach to evolutionary processes, shocked much of the Western world when it was released in 1859. In this new edition, readers will come into contact with the most important work on Biology ever written.

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Schlagwörter

bottleneck effect, tree of life, mechanical isolation, species, genetic drift, allopatric speciation, analogy, fossilization, cladogram, interspecific variation, biological fitness, survival of the fittest, Darwin, fossil record, reproductive isolation, evolutionary biology, disruptive selection, inheritance, theory of single origin, directional selection, phylogeny, stabilizing selection, struggle for existence, biogeography, evolutionary change, adaptive radiation, hybrid zones, camouflage, mimicry, kin selection, behavioral adaptation, extinction, mutation, ecology, natural selection, origin of life, HMS Beagle, peripatric speciation, genetic variability, offspring, intraspecific variation, survival, molecular genetics, divergent development, phenotypic plasticity, common ancestor, evolutionary evidence, neo-Darwinism, phenotypic variability, morphological adaptation, adaptation, population genetics, taxonomy, environment, synthetic theory of evolution, biodiversity, Darwinian natural selection., gene flow, artificial selection, RNA, DNA, migration, temporal isolation, hybridization, punctuated equilibrium, cladistics, coevolution, embryonic development, gradual evolution, biological diversity, theory of evolution, ecological succession, genetic mutation, genetics, speciation, competition, sympatric speciation, Evolution, paleontology, comparative embryology, sexual selection, animal behavior, morphology, adaptability, acquired characters, geographical isolation, variation, differential selection, founder effects, parapatric Speciation, convergent evolution, homology, Darwinism, ecological niche, selective pressure, behavioral isolation