Acceleration Of Development In Fossil Cephalopoda (1914) - Couverture souple

Smith, James Perrin

 
9781166429157: Acceleration Of Development In Fossil Cephalopoda (1914)

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Synopsis

""Acceleration of Development in Fossil Cephalopoda"" is a scientific book written by James Perrin Smith in 1914. The book explores the evolution of cephalopods, a group of marine animals that includes octopuses, squids, and nautiluses, through the study of their fossil record. Smith examines the developmental patterns of these animals and proposes that there was a period of rapid acceleration of development during the evolution of cephalopods. He presents evidence from various fossil specimens to support his theory and discusses the implications of this acceleration for the understanding of the evolution of life on Earth. The book is written in a scientific style and is intended for researchers and scholars in the field of paleontology and evolutionary biology.This scarce antiquarian book is a facsimile reprint of the old original and may contain some imperfections such as library marks and notations. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we have made it available as part of our commitment for protecting, preserving, and promoting the world's literature in affordable, high quality, modern editions, that are true to their original work.

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Présentation de l'éditeur

Acceleration of Development in Fossil Cephalopoda JAMES PERRIN SMITH. I deal Recapitulation in Progressive Forms. IN THE development of organisms there are two theoretical extremes, the one with simple persistence without modification, the other with complete modification. The former is almost realized in the Protozoa, the latter is approached by the higher vertebrates. All other organisms, in their development, fall somewhere between the two extremes, coming into being in simpler form, and becoming more complex in the course of life. Each starts out on somewhat the same plane of development as its distant ancestors, inheriting potentially all the characters of all its ancestors, tending to take on some characters that its ancestors never had, and to transmit the old and the new to its own posterity. Theoretically, each organism ought to recapitulate all its race history, each stage of growth corresponding in character and in size to successive ancestral forms. This is true, in a general way, in some groups, for most later members of genetic series have increased in size with increased complexity of development. FIG. 1. This is partly true even of the highly specialized Cephalopods, for there is a constant tendency to increase in size from the simple Goniatites of theD evonian to the complex Ammonites of the Jurassic. The increase in size accompanying the addition of ontogenic stages is especially striking in a primitive genetic series of genera near each other in time, and relatively near the beginning of the race, as in the lineage of GoniatitesG astrioceras-C olumbites.
(Typographical errors above are due to OCR software and don't occur in the book.)

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