Materials for the Study of Variation: Treated with Especial Regard to Discontinuity in the Origin of Species - Couverture souple

Bateson, William

 
9781108053129: Materials for the Study of Variation: Treated with Especial Regard to Discontinuity in the Origin of Species

Synopsis

Published in 1894, this pioneering work offers insight into how the study of genetics and inheritance itself evolved.

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Présentation de l'éditeur

Building on the work of Darwin and Mendel, the biologist William Bateson (1861–1926) was the first scientist to combine the study of variation, heredity and evolution, and to use the term 'genetics'. This book was first published in 1894 after many years of experimental and theoretical work - particularly in the embryology of the acorn worm genus Balanoglossus - which had been guided by the principle that embryonic developmental stages replay the evolutionary transitions of adult forms of an organism's ancestors. Bateson was the first to challenge this theory, which made him unpopular among the scientific establishment of the time, but he was proved right. Organising his material by anatomical sections, Bateson explores speciation, phylogeny and discontinuous and continuous variation among a wide range of species, including vertebrates, invertebrates and plants. This pioneering work offers great insight into how the study of genetics and inheritance itself evolved.

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