Darwin and the Barnacle

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W. W. Norton & Company, 2003 - Biography & Autobiography - 309 pages
A scientific detective story that illuminates the remarkable saga of Darwin's greatest achievement. Pairing Charles Darwin and a rare species of barnacle as her unlikely protagonists, Rebecca Stott has written an absorbing work of history that guides readers through the treacherous shoals of nineteenth-century biology. Beginning her scientific detective story in the 1820s, even before Darwin's Beagle voyage, Stott examines the mystery of why Darwin waited over two decades between formulating his pivotal theory of natural selection and publishing it. Lavishly illustrated, filled with riddles and concepts that challenge our notion of Victorian science, Darwin and the Barnacle is a thrilling account of how genius proceeds through indirection—and how one small item of curiosity contributed to history's most spectacular scientific breakthrough.
 

Contents

IV
1
V
22
VI
42
VII
68
VIII
92
IX
112
X
135
XI
154
XIII
194
XIV
216
XV
240
XVI
255
XVII
262
XVIII
273
XIX
298
Copyright

XII
172

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About the author (2003)

Rebecca Stott is a writer, academic, and radio broadcaster. She is an affiliated scholar in the Department of History and Philosophy of Science at Cambridge University.

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