Z
Zoellner, Prof., and supernormal phenomena, ii. 198, 199
“Zoological Geography of the Malay Archipelago,” Wallace’s, i, 137, ii. 232
Zoology, lectures on, at Edinburgh, i, 16; Darwin’s
study of, at
Cambridge, 17
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FOOTNOTES:
[1] “It is no doubt the chief work of my life.”—C. DARWIN.
[2] “My Life,” i. 396-7.
[3] “My Life,” ii. 94-5.
[4] “My Life,” pp. 97-8.
[5] “My Life,” pp. 98-9.
[6] Dr. Henry Forbes in a note to the Editor writes: “In his ’Island Life’ Wallace extended his philosophical observations to a wider field, and it is in philosophical biology that Wallace’s name must stand pre-eminent for all time.” “In our own science of biology,” say Profs. Geddes and Thomson in a recent work, “we may recall the ‘Grand Old Men,’ surely second to none in history—Darwin, Wallace, and Hooker.”
[7] “My Life,” ii. 99-101.
[8] “My Life,” ii. 22.
[9] “The Origin of the Races of Man.”
[10] “The Malay Archipelago.”
[11] Private Secretary to Sir Charles Lyell.
[12] “The Descent of Man.”
[13] Probably refers to “The Geographical Distribution of Animals.”
[14] The book referred to is Wallace’s “Island Life,” published in 1880.
[15] For the work on “Darwinism.”
[16] Printed in full as a footnote to Weismann’s “Essays upon Heredity,” etc.
[17] See footnote 3, pp. 172-3, of Weismann’s “Essays upon Heredity,” etc.
[18] “The Origin of Floral Structures through Insect and Other Agencies.” Internat. Sci. Series. 1888.
[19] “The Origin of the Fittest.” London, 1887.
[20] “Essays upon Heredity and Kindred Biological Problems,” Vol. II. 1892.
[21] Trans. Ent. Soc., London, 1892, p. 293.
[22] As Hope Professor of Zoology in the University of Oxford.
[23] A member of a family which has produced several eminent medical men.
[24] Vol. I., p. 445, a review of “A Theory of Development and Heredity,” by Henry B. Orr. 1893.
[25] “Material for the Study of Variation, treated with especial regard to Discontinuity in the Origin of Species.” 1894.
[26] Reprinted in “Essays on Evolution,” p. 95. 1908.
[27] “The Present Evolution of Man.” 1896.
[28] Presidential Address in Section D of British Association, 1896, reprinted in “Essays on Evolution,” p. 1.
[29] To the British Association at Edinburgh, 1892.
[30] Vol. ixx. (1904), p. 313, a review of T.H. Morgan’s “Evolution and Adaptation.”