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Georges Cuvier

Jean Léopold Nicolas Frédéric, Baron Cuvier (23 August 1769 – 13 May 1832), known as Georges Cuvier (French: [ʒɔʁʒ kyvje]), was a French naturalist and zoologist, sometimes referred to as the "founding father of paleontology".[1] Cuvier was a major figure in natural sciences research in the early 19th century and was instrumental in establishing the fields of comparative anatomy and paleontology through his work in comparing living animals with fossils.

The Baron Cuvier

Born
Jean Léopold Nicolas Frédéric Cuvier

(1769-08-23)23 August 1769
Died13 May 1832(1832-05-13) (aged 62)
NationalityFrench
Other namesGeorges Cuvier
Known forLe Règne Animal; establishing the fields of stratigraphy and comparative anatomy, and the principle of faunal succession in the fossil record; making extinction an accepted scientific phenomenon; opposing theories of evolution; popularizing catastrophism
Scientific career
FieldsNatural history, paleontology, anatomy
InstitutionsMuséum national d'histoire naturelle, Collège de France
Author abbrev. (botany)Cuvier
Author abbrev. (zoology)Cuvier

Cuvier's work is considered the foundation of vertebrate paleontology, and he expanded Linnaean taxonomy by grouping classes into phyla and incorporating both fossils and living species into the classification.[2] Cuvier is also known for establishing extinction as a fact—at the time, extinction was considered by many of Cuvier's contemporaries to be merely controversial speculation. In his Essay on the Theory of the Earth (1813) Cuvier proposed that now-extinct species had been wiped out by periodic catastrophic flooding events. In this way, Cuvier became the most influential proponent of catastrophism in geology in the early 19th century.[3] His study of the strata of the Paris basin with Alexandre Brongniart established the basic principles of biostratigraphy.[4]

Among his other accomplishments, Cuvier established that elephant-like bones found in North America belonged to an extinct animal he later would name as a mastodon, and that a large skeleton dug up in present-day Argentina was of Megatherium, a giant, prehistoric ground sloth. He named the pterosaur Pterodactylus, described (but did not discover or name) the aquatic reptile Mosasaurus, and was one of the first people to suggest the earth had been dominated by reptiles, rather than mammals, in prehistoric times.

Cuvier is also remembered for strongly opposing theories of evolution, which at the time (before Darwin's theory) were mainly proposed by Jean-Baptiste de Lamarck and Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire. Cuvier believed there was no evidence for evolution, but rather evidence for cyclical creations and destructions of life forms by global extinction events such as deluges. In 1830, Cuvier and Geoffroy engaged in a famous debate, which is said to exemplify the two major deviations in biological thinking at the time – whether animal structure was due to function or (evolutionary) morphology.[5] Cuvier supported function and rejected Lamarck's thinking.

Cuvier also conducted racial studies which provided part of the foundation for scientific racism, and published work on the supposed differences between racial groups' physical properties and mental abilities.[6] Cuvier subjected Sarah Baartman to examinations alongside other French naturalists during a period in which she was held captive in a state of neglect. Cuvier examined Baartman shortly before her death, and conducted a dissection following her death that disparagingly compared her physical features to those of monkeys.[7]

Cuvier's most famous work is Le Règne Animal (1817; English: The Animal Kingdom). In 1819, he was created a peer for life in honor of his scientific contributions.[8] Thereafter, he was known as Baron Cuvier. He died in Paris during an epidemic of cholera. Some of Cuvier's most influential followers were Louis Agassiz on the continent and in the United States, and Richard Owen in Britain. His name is one of the 72 names inscribed on the Eiffel Tower.

Biography Edit

 
Portrait by François-André Vincent, 1795

Jean Léopold Nicolas Frédéric Cuvier was born in Montbéliard, where his Protestant ancestors had lived since the time of the Reformation.[9] His mother was Anne Clémence Chatel; his father, Jean George Cuvier, was a lieutenant in the Swiss Guards and a bourgeois of the town of Montbéliard.[10] At the time, the town, which would be annexed to France on 10 October 1793, belonged to the Duchy of Württemberg. His mother, who was much younger than his father, tutored him diligently throughout his early years, so he easily surpassed the other children at school.[9] During his gymnasium years, he had little trouble acquiring Latin and Greek, and was always at the head of his class in mathematics, history, and geography.[11] According to Lee,[11] "The history of mankind was, from the earliest period of his life, a subject of the most indefatigable application; and long lists of sovereigns, princes, and the driest chronological facts, once arranged in his memory, were never forgotten."

 
Birthplace of Georges Cuvier in Montbéliard[12]

At the age of 10, soon after entering the gymnasium, he encountered a copy of Conrad Gessner's Historiae Animalium, the work that first sparked his interest in natural history. He then began frequent visits to the home of a relative, where he could borrow volumes of the Comte de Buffon's massive Histoire Naturelle. All of these he read and reread, retaining so much of the information, that by the age of 12, "he was as familiar with quadrupeds and birds as a first-rate naturalist."[11] He remained at the gymnasium for four years.

Cuvier spent an additional four years at the Caroline Academy in Stuttgart, where he excelled in all of his coursework. Although he knew no German on his arrival, after only nine months of study, he managed to win the school prize for that language. Cuvier's German education exposed him to the work of the geologist Abraham Gottlob Werner (1750 - 1817), whose Neptunism and emphasis on the importance of rigorous, direct observation of three-dimensional, structural relationships of rock formations to geological understanding provided models for Cuvier's scientific theories and methods.[13]

Upon graduation, he had no money on which to live as he awaited appointment to an academic office. So in July 1788, he took a job at Fiquainville chateau in Normandy as tutor to the only son of the Comte d'Héricy, a Protestant noble. There, during the early 1790s, he began his comparisons of fossils with extant forms. Cuvier regularly attended meetings held at the nearby town of Valmont for the discussion of agricultural topics. There, he became acquainted with Henri Alexandre Tessier (1741–1837), who had assumed a false identity. Previously, he had been a physician and well-known agronomist, who had fled the Terror in Paris. After hearing Tessier speak on agricultural matters, Cuvier recognized him as the author of certain articles on agriculture in the Encyclopédie Méthodique and addressed him as M. Tessier.

Tessier replied in dismay, "I am known, then, and consequently lost."—"Lost!" replied M. Cuvier, "no; you are henceforth the object of our most anxious care."[14] They soon became intimate and Tessier introduced Cuvier to his colleagues in Paris—"I have just found a pearl in the dunghill of Normandy", he wrote his friend Antoine-Augustin Parmentier.[15] As a result, Cuvier entered into correspondence with several leading naturalists of the day, and was invited to Paris. Arriving in the spring of 1795, at the age of 26, he soon became the assistant of Jean-Claude Mertrud (1728–1802), who had been appointed to the chair of Animal Anatomy at the Jardin des Plantes. When Mertrud died in 1802, Cuvier replaced him in office and the Chair changed its name to Chair of Comparative Anatomy.[16]

The Institut de France was founded in the same year, and he was elected a member of its Academy of Sciences. On 4 April 1796 he began to lecture at the École Centrale du Pantheon and, at the opening of the National Institute in April, he read his first paleontological paper, which subsequently was published in 1800 under the title Mémoires sur les espèces d'éléphants vivants et fossiles.[17] In this paper, he analyzed skeletal remains of Indian and African elephants, as well as mammoth fossils, and a fossil skeleton known at that time as the "Ohio animal".

Cuvier's analysis established, for the first time, the fact that African and Indian elephants were different species and that mammoths were not the same species as either African or Indian elephants, so must be extinct. He further stated that the 'Ohio animal' represented a distinct and extinct species that was even more different from living elephants than mammoths were. Years later, in 1806, he would return to the 'Ohio animal' in another paper and give it the name, "mastodon".

In his second paper in 1796, he described and analyzed a large skeleton found in Paraguay, which he would name Megatherium. He concluded this skeleton represented yet another extinct animal and, by comparing its skull with living species of tree-dwelling sloths, that it was a kind of ground-dwelling giant sloth.

Together, these two 1796 papers were a seminal or landmark event, becoming a turning point in the history of paleontology, and in the development of comparative anatomy, as well. They also greatly enhanced Cuvier's personal reputation and they essentially ended what had been a long-running debate about the reality of extinction.

In 1799, he succeeded Daubenton as professor of natural history in the Collège de France. In 1802, he became titular professor at the Jardin des Plantes; and in the same year, he was appointed commissary of the institute to accompany the inspectors general of public instruction. In this latter capacity, he visited the south of France, but in the early part of 1803, he was chosen permanent secretary of the department of physical sciences of the Academy, and he consequently abandoned the earlier appointment and returned to Paris.[17] In 1806, he became a foreign member of the Royal Society, and in 1812, a foreign member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. In 1812 he became a correspondent for the Royal Institute of the Netherlands, and became member in 1827.[18] Cuvier was elected a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1822.[19]

 
Cuvier's tomb in the Père Lachaise Cemetery, Paris

Cuvier then devoted himself more especially to three lines of inquiry: (i) the structure and classification of the Mollusca; (ii) the comparative anatomy and systematic arrangement of the fishes; (iii) fossil mammals and reptiles and, secondarily, the osteology of living forms belonging to the same groups.[17]

In 1812, Cuvier made what the cryptozoologist Bernard Heuvelmans called his "Rash dictum": he remarked that it was unlikely that any large animal remained undiscovered. Ten years after his death, the word "dinosaur" would be coined by Richard Owen in 1842.

During his lifetime, Cuvier served as an imperial councilor under Napoleon, president of the Council of Public Instruction and chancellor of the university under the restored Bourbons, Grand Officer of the Legion of Honour, a Peer of France, Minister of the Interior, and president of the Council of State under Louis Philippe. He was eminent in all these capacities, and yet the dignity given by such high administrative positions was as nothing compared to his leadership in natural science.[20]

Cuvier was by birth, education, and conviction a devout Lutheran,[21] and remained Protestant throughout his life while regularly attending church services. Despite this, he regarded his personal faith as a private matter; he evidently identified himself with his confessional minority group when he supervised governmental educational programs for Protestants. He also was very active in founding the Parisian Biblical Society in 1818, where he later served as a vice president.[22] From 1822 until his death in 1832, Cuvier was Grand Master of the Protestant Faculties of Theology of the French University.[23]

Scientific ideas and their impact Edit

Opposition to evolution Edit

Cuvier was critical of theories of evolution, in particular those proposed by his contemporaries Lamarck and Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire, which involved the gradual transmutation of one form into another. He repeatedly emphasized that his extensive experience with fossil material indicated one fossil form does not, as a rule, gradually change into a succeeding, distinct fossil form. A deep-rooted source of his opposition to the gradual transformation of species was his goal of creating an accurate taxonomy based on principles of comparative anatomy.[24] Such a project would become impossible if species were mutable, with no clear boundaries between them. According to the University of California Museum of Paleontology, "Cuvier did not believe in organic evolution, for any change in an organism's anatomy would have rendered it unable to survive. He studied the mummified cats and ibises that Geoffroy had brought back from Napoleon's invasion of Egypt, and showed they were no different from their living counterparts; Cuvier used this to support his claim that life forms did not evolve over time."[25][26]

 
Cuvier with a fish fossil

He also observed that Napoleon's expedition to Egypt had retrieved animals mummified thousands of years previously that seemed no different from their modern counterparts.[27] "Certainly", Cuvier wrote, "one cannot detect any greater difference between these creatures and those we see, than between the human mummies and the skeletons of present-day men."[28]

Lamarck dismissed this conclusion, arguing that evolution happened much too slowly to be observed over just a few thousand years. Cuvier, however, in turn criticized how Lamarck and other naturalists conveniently introduced hundreds of thousands of years "with a stroke of a pen" to uphold their theory. Instead, he argued that one may judge what a long time would produce only by multiplying what a lesser time produces. Since a lesser time produced no organic changes, neither, he argued, would a much longer time.[29] Moreover, his commitment to the principle of the correlation of parts caused him to doubt that any mechanism could ever gradually modify any part of an animal in isolation from all the other parts (in the way Lamarck proposed), without rendering the animal unable to survive.[30] In his Éloge de M. de Lamarck (Praise for M. de Lamarck),[31][32] Cuvier wrote that Lamarck's theory of evolution

rested on two arbitrary suppositions; the one, that it is the seminal vapor which organizes the embryo; the other, that efforts and desires may engender organs. A system established on such foundations may amuse the imagination of a poet; a metaphysician may derive from it an entirely new series of systems; but it cannot for a moment bear the examination of anyone who has dissected a hand, a viscus, or even a feather.[31]

Instead, he said, the typical form makes an abrupt appearance in the fossil record, and persists unchanged to the time of its extinction. Cuvier attempted to explain this paleontological phenomenon he envisioned (which would be readdressed more than a century later by "punctuated equilibrium") and to harmonize it with the Bible. He attributed the different time periods he was aware of as intervals between major catastrophes, the last of which is found in Genesis.[33][34]

Cuvier's claim that new fossil forms appear abruptly in the geological record and then continue without alteration in overlying strata was used by later critics of evolution to support creationism,[35] to whom the abruptness seemed consistent with special divine creation (although Cuvier's finding that different types made their paleontological debuts in different geological strata clearly did not). The lack of change was consistent with the supposed sacred immutability of "species", but, again, the idea of extinction, of which Cuvier was the great proponent, obviously was not.

Many writers have unjustly accused Cuvier of obstinately maintaining that fossil human beings could never be found. In his Essay on the Theory of the Earth, he did say, "no human bones have yet been found among fossil remains", but he made it clear exactly what he meant: "When I assert that human bones have not been hitherto found among extraneous fossils, I must be understood to speak of fossils, or petrifactions, properly so called".[36] Petrified bones, which have had time to mineralize and turn to stone, are typically far older than bones found to that date. Cuvier's point was that all human bones found that he knew of, were of relatively recent age because they had not been petrified and had been found only in superficial strata.[37] He was not dogmatic in this claim, however; when new evidence came to light, he included in a later edition an appendix describing a skeleton that he freely admitted was an "instance of a fossil human petrifaction".[38]

The harshness of his criticism and the strength of his reputation, however, continued to discourage naturalists from speculating about the gradual transmutation of species, until Charles Darwin published On the Origin of Species more than two decades after Cuvier's death.[39]

Extinction Edit

 
Georges Cuvier's 1812 skeletal reconstruction of Anoplotherium commune. The stratigraphy and lack of modern analogue in the extinct mammal was proof of extinction and ecological succession.

Early in his tenure at the National Museum in Paris, Cuvier published studies of fossil bones in which he argued that they belonged to large, extinct quadrupeds. His first two such publications were those identifying mammoth and mastodon fossils as belonging to extinct species rather than modern elephants and the study in which he identified the Megatherium as a giant, extinct species of sloth.[40] His primary evidence for his identifications of mammoths and mastodons as separate, extinct species was the structure of their jaws and teeth.[41] His primary evidence that the Megatherium fossil had belonged to a massive sloth came from his comparison of its skull with those of extant sloth species.[42]

Cuvier wrote of his paleontological method that "the form of the tooth leads to the form of the condyle, that of the scapula to that of the nails, just as an equation of a curve implies all of its properties; and, just as in taking each property separately as the basis of a special equation we are able to return to the original equation and other associated properties, similarly, the nails, the scapula, the condyle, the femur, each separately revel the tooth or each other; and by beginning from each of them the thoughtful professor of the laws of organic economy can reconstruct the entire animal."[43] However, Cuvier's actual method was heavily dependent on the comparison of fossil specimens with the anatomy of extant species in the necessary context of his vast knowledge of animal anatomy and access to unparallelled natural history collections in Paris.[44] This reality, however, did not prevent the rise of a popular legend that Cuvier could reconstruct the entire bodily structures of extinct animals given only a few fragments of bone.[45]

At the time Cuvier presented his 1796 paper on living and fossil elephants, it was still widely believed that no species of animal had ever become extinct. Authorities such as Buffon had claimed that fossils found in Europe of animals such as the woolly rhinoceros and the mammoth were remains of animals still living in the tropics (i.e. rhinoceros and elephants), which had shifted out of Europe and Asia as the earth became cooler.

Thereafter, Cuvier performed a pioneering research study on some elephant fossils excavated around Paris. The bones he studied, however, were remarkably different from the bones of elephants currently thriving in India and Africa. This discovery led Cuvier to denounce the idea that fossils came from those that are currently living. The idea that these bones belonged to elephants living – but hiding – somewhere on Earth seemed ridiculous to Cuvier, because it would be nearly impossible to miss them due to their enormous size. The Megatherium provided another compelling datapoint for this argument. Ultimately, his repeated identification of fossils as belonging to species unknown to man, combined with mineralogical evidence from his stratigraphical studies in Paris, drove Cuvier to the proposition that the abrupt changes the Earth underwent over a long period of time caused some species to go extinct.[46]

Cuvier's theory on extinction has met opposition from other notable natural scientists like Darwin and Charles Lyell. Unlike Cuvier, they didn't believe that extinction was a sudden process; they believed that like the Earth, animals collectively undergo gradual change as a species. This differed widely from Cuvier's theory, which seemed to propose that animal extinction was catastrophic.

However, Cuvier's theory of extinction is still justified in the case of mass extinctions that occurred in the last 600 million years, when approximately half of all living species went completely extinct within a short geological span of two million years, due in part by volcanic eruptions, asteroids, and rapid fluctuations in sea level. At this time, new species rose and others fell, precipitating the arrival of human beings.

Cuvier's early work demonstrated conclusively that extinction was indeed a credible natural global process.[47] Cuvier's thinking on extinctions was influenced by his extensive readings in Greek and Latin literature; he gathered every ancient report known in his day relating to discoveries of petrified bones of remarkable size in the Mediterranean region.[48]

Influence on Cuvier's theory of extinction was his collection of specimens from the New World, many of them obtained from Native Americans. He also maintained an archive of Native American observations, legends, and interpretations of immense fossilized skeletal remains, sent to him by informants and friends in the Americas. He was impressed that most of the Native American accounts identified the enormous bones, teeth, and tusks as animals of the deep past that had been destroyed by catastrophe.[49]

Catastrophism Edit

 
These Indian elephant and mammoth jaws were included in 1799 when Cuvier's 1796 paper on living and fossil elephants was printed.

Cuvier came to believe that most, if not all, the animal fossils he examined were remains of species that had become extinct. Near the end of his 1796 paper on living and fossil elephants, he said:

All of these facts, consistent among themselves, and not opposed by any report, seem to me to prove the existence of a world previous to ours, destroyed by some kind of catastrophe.

Contrary to many natural scientists' beliefs at the time, Cuvier believed that animal extinction was not a product of anthropogenic causes. Instead, he proposed that humans were around long enough to indirectly maintain the fossilized records of ancient Earth. He also attempted to verify the water catastrophe by analyzing records of various cultural backgrounds. Though he found many accounts of the water catastrophe unclear, he did believe that such an event occurred at the brink of human history nonetheless.

This led Cuvier to become an active proponent of the geological school of thought called catastrophism, which maintained that many of the geological features of the earth and the history of life could be explained by catastrophic events that had caused the extinction of many species of animals. Over the course of his career, Cuvier came to believe there had not been a single catastrophe, but several, resulting in a succession of different faunas. He wrote about these ideas many times, in particular he discussed them in great detail in the preliminary discourse (an introduction) to a collection of his papers, Recherches sur les ossements fossiles de quadrupèdes (Researches on quadruped fossil bones), on quadruped fossils published in 1812.

Cuvier's own explanation for such a catastrophic event is derived from two different sources, including those from Jean-André Deluc and Déodat de Dolomieu. The former proposed that the continents existing ten millennia ago collapsed, allowing the ocean floors to rise higher than the continental plates and become the continents that now exist today. The latter proposed that a massive tsunami hit the globe, leading to mass extinction. Whatever the case was, he believed that the deluge happened quite recently in human history. In fact, he believed that Earth's existence was limited and not as extended as many natural scientists, like Lamarck, believed it to be.

Much of the evidence he used to support his catastrophist theories have been taken from his fossil records. He strongly suggested that the fossils he found were evidence of the world's first reptiles, followed chronologically by mammals and humans. Cuvier didn't wish to delve much into the causation of all the extinction and introduction of new animal species but rather focused on the sequential aspects of animal history on Earth. In a way, his chronological dating of Earth history somewhat reflected Lamarck's transformationist theories.

Cuvier also worked alongside Alexandre Brongniart in analyzing the Parisian rock cycle. Using stratigraphical methods, they were both able to extrapolate key information regarding Earth history from studying these rocks. These rocks contained remnants of mollusks, bones of mammals, and shells. From these findings, Cuvier and Brongniart concluded that many environmental changes occurred in quick catastrophes, though Earth itself was often placid for extended periods of time in between sudden disturbances.

The 'Preliminary Discourse' became very well known and, unauthorized translations were made into English, German, and Italian (and in the case of those in English, not entirely accurately). In 1826, Cuvier would publish a revised version under the name, Discours sur les révolutions de la surface du globe (Discourse on the upheavals of the surface of the globe).[50]

After Cuvier's death, the catastrophic school of geological thought lost ground to uniformitarianism, as championed by Charles Lyell and others, which claimed that the geological features of the earth were best explained by currently observable forces, such as erosion and volcanism, acting gradually over an extended period of time. The increasing interest in the topic of mass extinction starting in the late twentieth century, however, has led to a resurgence of interest among historians of science and other scholars in this aspect of Cuvier's work.[51]

Stratigraphy Edit

Cuvier collaborated for several years with Alexandre Brongniart, an instructor at the Paris mining school, to produce a monograph on the geology of the region around Paris. They published a preliminary version in 1808 and the final version was published in 1811.

In this monograph they identified characteristic fossils of different rock layers that they used to analyze the geological column, the ordered layers of sedimentary rock, of the Paris basin. They concluded that the layers had been laid down over an extended period during which there clearly had been faunal succession and that the area had been submerged under sea water at times and at other times under fresh water. Along with William Smith's work during the same period on a geological map of England, which also used characteristic fossils and the principle of faunal succession to correlate layers of sedimentary rock, the monograph helped establish the scientific discipline of stratigraphy. It was a major development in the history of paleontology and the history of geology.[52]

Age of reptiles Edit

 
Ichthyosaurus and Plesiosaurus from the 1834 Czech edition of Cuvier's Discours sur les revolutions de la surface du globe

In 1800 and working only from a drawing, Cuvier was the first to correctly identify in print, a fossil found in Bavaria as a small flying reptile,[53] which he named the Ptero-Dactyle in 1809,[54] (later Latinized as Pterodactylus antiquus)—the first known member of the diverse order of pterosaurs. In 1808 Cuvier identified a fossil found in Maastricht as a giant marine lizard, the first known mosasaur.

Cuvier speculated correctly that there had been a time when reptiles rather than mammals had been the dominant fauna.[55] This speculation was confirmed over the two decades following his death by a series of spectacular finds, mostly by English geologists and fossil collectors such as Mary Anning, William Conybeare, William Buckland, and Gideon Mantell, who found and described the first ichthyosaurs, plesiosaurs, and dinosaurs.

Principle of the correlation of parts Edit

In a 1798 paper on the fossil remains of an animal found in some plaster quarries near Paris, Cuvier states what is known as the principle of the correlation of parts. He writes:[56]

If an animal's teeth are such as they must be, in order for it to nourish itself with flesh, we can be sure without further examination that the whole system of its digestive organs is appropriate for that kind of food, and that its whole skeleton and locomotive organs, and even its sense organs, are arranged in such a way as to make it skillful at pursuing and catching its prey. For these relations are the necessary conditions of existence of the animal; if things were not so, it would not be able to subsist.

This idea is referred to as Cuvier's principle of correlation of parts, which states that all organs in an animal's body are deeply interdependent. Species' existence relies on the way in which these organs interact. For example, a species whose digestive tract is best suited to digesting flesh but whose body is best suited to foraging for plants cannot survive. Thus in all species, the functional significance of each body part must be correlated to the others, else the species cannot sustain itself.[57]

Applications Edit

Cuvier believed that the power of his principle came in part from its ability to aid in the reconstruction of fossils. In most cases, fossils of quadrupeds were not found as complete, assembled skeletons, but rather as scattered pieces that needed to be put together by anatomists. To make matters worse, deposits often contained the fossilized remains of several species of animals mixed together. Anatomists reassembling these skeletons ran the risk of combining remains of different species, producing imaginary composite species. However, by examining the functional purpose of each bone and applying the principle of correlation of parts, Cuvier believed that this problem could be avoided.

This principle's ability to aid in reconstruction of fossils was also helpful to Cuvier's work in providing evidence in favor extinction. The strongest evidence Cuvier could provide in favor of extinction would be to prove that the fossilized remains of an animal belonged to a species that no longer existed. By applying Cuvier's principle of correlation of parts, it would be easier to verify that a fossilized skeleton had been authentically reconstructed, thus validating any observations drawn from comparing it to skeletons of existing species.

In addition to helping anatomists reconstruct fossilized remains, Cuvier believed that his principle held enormous predictive power as well. For example, when he discovered a fossil that resembled a marsupial in the gypsum quarries of Montmartre, he correctly predicted that the fossil would contain bones commonly found in marsupials in its pelvis as well.[57]

Impact Edit

Cuvier hoped that his principles of anatomy would provide the law-based framework that would elevate natural history to the truly scientific level occupied by physics and chemistry thanks to the laws established by Isaac Newton (1643 - 1727) and Antoine Lavoisier (1743 - 1794), respectively. He expressed confidence in the introduction to Le Règne Animal that some day anatomy would be expressed as laws as simple, mathematical, and predictive as Newton's laws of physics, and he viewed his principle as an important step in that direction.[58] To him, the predictive capabilities of his principles demonstrated in his prediction of the existence of marsupial pelvic bones in the gypsum quarries of Montmartre demonstrated that these goals were not only in reach, but imminent.[59]

The principle of correlation of parts was also Cuvier's way of understanding function in a non-evolutionary context, without invoking a divine creator.[60] In the same 1798 paper on the fossil remains of an animal found in plaster quarries near Paris, Cuvier emphasizes the predictive power of his principle, writing,[56]

Today comparative anatomy has reached such a point of perfection that, after inspecting a single bone, one can often determine the class, and sometimes even the genus of the animal to which it belonged, above all if that bone belonged to the head or the limbs ... This is because the number, direction, and shape of the bones that compose each part of an animal's body are always in a necessary relation to all the other parts, in such a way that—up to a point—one can infer the whole from any one of them and vice versa.

Though Cuvier believed that his principle's major contribution was that it was a rational, mathematical way to reconstruct fossils and make predictions, in reality it was difficult for Cuvier to use his principle. The functional significance of many body parts were still unknown at the time, and so relating those body parts to other body parts using Cuvier's principle was impossible. Though Cuvier was able to make accurate predictions about fossil finds, in practice the accuracy of his predictions came not from application of his principle, but rather from his vast knowledge of comparative anatomy. However, despite Cuvier's exaggerations of the power of his principle, the basic concept is central to comparative anatomy and paleontology.[57]

Scientific work Edit

Comparative anatomy and classification Edit

 
Plate from Le Règne Animal, 1817 edition

At the Paris Museum, Cuvier furthered his studies on the anatomical classification of animals. He believed that classification should be based on how organs collectively function, a concept he called functional integration. Cuvier reinforced the idea of subordinating less vital body parts to more critical organ systems as part of anatomical classification. He included these ideas in his 1817 book, The Animal Kingdom.

In his anatomical studies, Cuvier believed function played a bigger role than form in the field of taxonomy. His scientific beliefs rested in the idea of the principles of the correlation of parts and of the conditions of existence. The former principle accounts for the connection between organ function and its practical use for an organism to survive. The latter principle emphasizes the animal's physiological function in relation to its surrounding environment. These findings were published in his scientific readings, including Leçons d'anatomie comparée (Lessons on Comparative Anatomy) between 1800 and 1805,[a] and The Animal Kingdom in 1817.

Ultimately, Cuvier developed four embranchements, or branches, through which he classified animals based on his taxonomical and anatomical studies. He later performed groundbreaking work in classifying animals in vertebrate and invertebrate groups by subdividing each category. For instance, he proposed that the invertebrates could be segmented into three individual categories, including Mollusca, Radiata, and Articulata. He also articulated that species cannot move across these categories, a theory called transmutation. He reasoned that organisms cannot acquire or change their physical traits over time and still retain optimal survival. As a result, he often conflicted with Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire and Jean-Baptiste Lamarck's theories of transmutation.

 
Plate from Le Règne Animal, 1828 edition

In 1798, Cuvier published his first independent work, the Tableau élémentaire de l'histoire naturelle des animaux, which was an abridgment of his course of lectures at the École du Pantheon and may be regarded as the foundation and first statement of his natural classification of the animal kingdom.[17]

Mollusks Edit

Cuvier categorized snails, cockles, and cuttlefish into one category he called molluscs (Mollusca), an embranchment. Though he noted how all three of these animals were outwardly different in terms of shell shape and diet, he saw a noticeable pattern pertaining to their overall physical appearance.

Cuvier began his intensive studies of molluscs during his time in Normandy – the first time he had ever seen the sea – and his papers on the so-called Mollusca began appearing as early as 1792.[61] However, most of his memoirs on this branch were published in the Annales du museum between 1802 and 1815; they were subsequently collected as Mémoires pour servir à l'histoire et à l'anatomie des mollusques, published in one volume at Paris in 1817.[17]

Fish Edit

Cuvier's researches on fish, begun in 1801, finally culminated in the publication of the Histoire naturelle des poissons, which contained descriptions of 5,000 species of fishes, and was a joint production with Achille Valenciennes. Cuvier's work on this project extended over the years 1828–1831.[17]

Palaeontology and osteology Edit

 
Plate from Le Règne Animal, 1828 edition

In palaeontology, Cuvier published a long list of memoirs, partly relating to the bones of extinct animals, and partly detailing the results of observations on the skeletons of living animals, specially examined with a view toward throwing light upon the structure and affinities of the fossil forms.[17]

Among living forms he published papers relating to the osteology of the Rhinoceros Indicus, the tapir, Hyrax capensis, the hippopotamus, the sloths, the manatee, etc.[17]

He produced an even larger body of work on fossils, dealing with the extinct mammals of the Eocene beds of Montmartre and other localities near Paris, such as the Buttes Chaumont,[62] the fossil species of hippopotamus, Palaeotherium, Anoplotherium, a marsupial (which he called Didelphys gypsorum), the Megalonyx, the Megatherium, the cave-hyena, the pterodactyl, the extinct species of rhinoceros, the cave bear, the mastodon, the extinct species of elephant, fossil species of manatee and seals, fossil forms of crocodilians, chelonians, fish, birds, etc.[17] If his identification of fossil animals was dependent upon comparison with the osteology of extant animals whose anatomy was poorly known, Cuvier would often publish a thorough documentation of the relevant extant species' anatomy before publishing his analyses of the fossil specimens.[63] The department of palaeontology dealing with the Mammalia may be said to have been essentially created and established by Cuvier.[17]

The results of Cuvier's principal palaeontological and geological investigations ultimately were given to the world in the form of two separate works: Recherches sur les ossemens fossiles de quadrupèdes (Paris, 1812; later editions in 1821 and 1825); and Discours sur les revolutions de la surface du globe (Paris, 1825).[17] In this latter work he expounded a scientific theory of Catastrophism.

The Animal Kingdom (Le Règne Animal) Edit

 
Plate from Le Règne Animal, 1828 edition

Cuvier's most admired work was his Le Règne Animal. It appeared in four octavo volumes in 1817; a second edition in five volumes was brought out in 1829–1830. In this classic work, Cuvier presented the results of his life's research into the structure of living and fossil animals. With the exception of the section on insects, in which he was assisted by his friend Latreille, the whole of the work was his own.[17] It was translated into English many times, often with substantial notes and supplementary material updating the book in accordance with the expansion of knowledge.

Racial studies Edit

Cuvier was a Protestant and a believer in monogenism, who held that all men descended from the biblical Adam, although his position usually was confused as polygenist. Some writers who have studied his racial work have dubbed his position as "quasi-polygenist", and most of his racial studies have influenced scientific racism. Cuvier believed there were three distinct races: the Caucasian (white), Mongolian (yellow), and the Ethiopian (black). Cuvier claimed that Adam and Eve were Caucasian, the original race of mankind. The other two races originated by survivors escaping in different directions after a major catastrophe hit the earth 5,000 years ago, with those survivors then living in complete isolation from each other.[6][64]

Cuvier categorized these divisions he identified into races according to his perception of the beauty or ugliness of their skulls and the quality of their civilizations. Cuvier's racial studies held the supposed features of polygenism, namely fixity of species; limits on environmental influence; unchanging underlying type; anatomical and cranial measurement differences in races; physical and mental differences between distinct races.[6]

Sarah Baartman Edit

Alongside other French naturalists, Cuvier subjected Sarah Baartman, a South African Khokhoi woman exhibited in European freak shows as the "Hottentot Venus", to examinations. At the time that Cuvier interacted with Baartman, Baartman's "existence was really quite miserable and extraordinarily poor. Sara was literally [sic] treated like an animal."[65] In 1815, while Baartman was very ill, Cuvier commissioned a nude painting of her. She died shortly afterward, aged 26.[66]

Following Baartman's death, Cuvier sought out and received permission to dissect her body, focusing on her genitalia, buttocks and skull shape. In his examination, Cuvier concluded that many of Baartman's features more closely resembled the anatomy of a monkey than a human.[7] Her remains were displayed in the Musée de l’Homme in Paris until 1970, then were put into storage.[67] Her remains were returned to South Africa in 2002.[68]

Taxon described by him Edit

Official and public work Edit

 
Engraving by James Thomson

Apart from his own original investigations in zoology and paleontology Cuvier carried out a vast amount of work as perpetual secretary of the National Institute, and as an official connected with public education generally; and much of this work appeared ultimately in a published form. Thus, in 1808 he was placed by Napoleon upon the council of the Imperial University, and in this capacity he presided (in the years 1809, 1811, and 1813) over commissions charged to examine the state of the higher educational establishments in the districts beyond the Alps and the Rhine that had been annexed to France, and to report upon the means by which these could be affiliated with the central university. He published three separate reports on this subject.[69]

In his capacity, again, of perpetual secretary of the Institute, he not only prepared a number of éloges historiques on deceased members of the Academy of Sciences, but was also the author of a number of reports on the history of the physical and natural sciences, the most important of these being the Rapport historique sur le progrès des sciences physiques depuis 1789, published in 1810.[70]

Prior to the fall of Napoleon (1814) he had been admitted to the council of state, and his position remained unaffected by the restoration of the Bourbons. He was elected chancellor of the university, in which capacity he acted as interim president of the council of public instruction, while he also, as a Lutheran, superintended the faculty of Protestant theology. In 1819 he was appointed president of the committee of the interior, an office he retained until his death.[70]

In 1826 he was made grand officer of the Legion of Honour; he subsequently was appointed president of the council of state. He served as a member of the Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres from 1830 to his death. A member of the Doctrinaires, he was nominated to the ministry of the interior in the beginning of 1832.[70]

Commemorations Edit

 
Statue of Cuvier by David d'Angers, 1838

Cuvier is commemorated in the naming of several animals; they include Cuvier's beaked whale (which he first thought to be extinct), Cuvier's gazelle, Cuvier's toucan, Cuvier's bichir, Cuvier's dwarf caiman, and Galeocerdo cuvier (tiger shark). Cuvier is commemorated in the scientific name of the following reptiles: Anolis cuvieri (a lizard from Puerto Rico), Bachia cuvieri (a synonym of Bachia alleni), and Oplurus cuvieri.[71]

The fish Hepsetus cuvieri, sometimes known as the African pike or Kafue pike characin, which is a predatory freshwater fish found in southern Africa was named after him.[72]

There also are some extinct animals named after Cuvier, such as the South American giant sloth Catonyx cuvieri.

Cuvier Island in New Zealand was named after Cuvier by D'Urville.[73]

The professor of English Wayne Glausser argues at length that the Aubrey-Maturin series of 21 novels (1970–2004) by Patrick O'Brian make the character Stephen Maturin "an advocate of the neo-classical paradigm articulated .. by Georges Cuvier."[74]

Cuvier is referenced in Edgar Allan Poe's short story The Murders in the Rue Morgue as having written a description of the orangutan. Arthur Conan Doyle also refers to Cuvier in The Five Orange Pips, in which Sherlock Holmes compares Cuvier's methods to his own.

Works Edit

 
Tableau élémentaire de l'histoire naturelle des animaux, 1797
  • Tableau élémentaire de l'histoire naturelle des animaux (1797–1798)
  • Leçons d'anatomie comparée (5 volumes, 1800–1805)
  • Essais sur la géographie minéralogique des environs de Paris, avec une carte géognostique et des coupes de terrain, with Alexandre Brongniart (1811)
  • Le Règne animal distribué d'après son organisation, pour servir de base à l'histoire naturelle des animaux et d'introduction à l'anatomie comparée (4 volumes, 1817)
  • Recherches sur les ossemens fossiles de quadrupèdes, où l'on rétablit les caractères de plusieurs espèces d'animaux que les révolutions du globe paroissent avoir détruites (4 volumes, 1812) (text in French) 2 3 4
  • Mémoires pour servir à l'histoire et à l'anatomie des mollusques (1817)
  • Éloges historiques des membres de l'Académie royale des sciences, lus dans les séances de l'Institut royal de France par M. Cuvier (3 volumes, 1819–1827) Vol. 1, Vol. 2, and Vol. 3
  • Théorie de la terre (1821)
--- Essay on the theory of the earth, 1813; 1815, trans. Robert Kerr.
  • Recherches sur les ossemens fossiles, 1821–1823 (5 vols).
  • Discours sur les révolutions de la surface du globe et sur les changements qu'elles ont produits dans le règne animal (1822). New edition: Christian Bourgeois, Paris, 1985. (text in French)
  • Histoire des progrès des sciences naturelles depuis 1789 jusqu'à ce jour (5 volumes, 1826–1836)
  • Histoire naturelle des poissons (11 volumes, 1828–1848), continued by Achille Valenciennes
  • Histoire des sciences naturelles depuis leur origine jusqu'à nos jours, chez tous les peuples connus, professée au Collège de France (5 volumes, 1841–1845), edited, annotated, and published by Magdeleine de Saint-Agit
  • Cuvier's History of the Natural Sciences: twenty-four lessons from Antiquity to the Renaissance [edited and annotated by Theodore W. Pietsch, translated by Abby S. Simpson, foreword by Philippe Taquet], Paris: Publications scientifiques du Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle, 2012, 734 p. (coll. Archives; 16) ISBN 978-2-85653-684-1
  • Variorum of the works of Georges Cuvier: Preliminary Discourse of the Recherches sur les ossemens fossiles 1812, containing the Memory on the ibis of the ancient Egyptians, and the Discours sur les révolutions de la surface du Globe 1825, containing the Determination of the birds called ibis by the ancient Egyptians[75]

Cuvier also collaborated on the Dictionnaire des sciences naturelles (61 volumes, 1816–1845) and on the Biographie universelle (45 volumes, 1843-18??)

Taxon named in his honor Edit

is a fish found in the Pacific Ocean.[77]

See also Edit

References Edit

Footnotes Edit

  1. ^ Cuvier was assisted by A. M. C. Duméril for the first two volumes and Georges Louis Duvernoy for the three later ones.

Citations Edit

  1. ^ Reybrouck, David Van (2012). From Primitives to Primates: A History of Ethnographic and Primatological Analogies in the Study of Prehistory. Sidestone Press. p. 54. ISBN 978-90-8890-095-2.
  2. ^ Felipe Faria (2013). "Georges Cuvier et le premier paradigme de la paléontologie" [Georges Cuvier and the first paradigm of paleontology] (PDF). Revue de Paléobiologie (in French). 32 (2). ISSN 0253-6730.
  3. ^ Faria 2012, pp. 64–74
  4. ^ J., Bowler, Peter (2009). Evolution : the history of an idea (25th anniversary ed.). Berkeley, Calif.: University of California Press. pp. 112–113. ISBN 9780520261280. OCLC 426118505.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  5. ^ Appel, Toby (1987). The Cuvier-Geoffroy Debate: French Biology in the Decades Before Darwin. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-504138-5.
  6. ^ a b c Jackson & Weidman 2005, pp. 41–42
  7. ^ a b Terry, Jennifer (1995). Deviant Bodies: critical perspectives on difference in science and popular culture. Bloomington, Indiana: Bloomington: Indiana University Press. pp. 19–39. ISBN 0253209757.
  8. ^ Lee 1833
  9. ^ a b Lee 1833, p. 8
  10. ^ 'Extrait du 7.e Registre des Enfants baptises dans l'Eglise françoise de Saint Martin de la Ville de Montbéliard deposé aux Archives de l'Hôtel de Ville', Culture.gouv.fr
  11. ^ a b c Lee 1833, p. 11
  12. ^ Taquet, Philippe (2006). [Georges Cuvier's early years] (PDF) (in French). Société d'émulation de Montbéliard. p. 217. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 March 2016. Retrieved 1 July 2015.
  13. ^ S., Rudwick, M. J. (1998). Georges Cuvier, fossil bones, and geological catastrophes : new translations & interpretations of the primary texts ([Pbk. ed., 1998] ed.). Chicago, Ill.: University of Chicago Press. pp. 4, 7. ISBN 978-0226731063. OCLC 45730036.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  14. ^ Lee 1833, p. 22
  15. ^ Lee 1833, p. 22, footnote
  16. ^ Thierry Malvésy, Georges Cuvier : Montbéliard 1769 - Paris 1832, Les Amis du Muséum national d'histoire naturelle - Publication trimestrielle (quarterly publication). N° 242, June 2010, ISSN 1161-9104, p. 18 (in French)
  17. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Chisholm 1911, p. 676.
  18. ^ "Georges Léopold Chrétien Frédéric Dagobert Cuvier (1769–1832)". Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences. Retrieved 19 July 2015.
  19. ^ "Book of Members, 1780–2010: Chapter C" (PDF). American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Retrieved 8 September 2016.
  20. ^ Andrew Dickson White, A History of the Warfare of Science with Theology in Christendom Appleton (1922) Vol.1 p.64
  21. ^ Coleman 1962, p. 16
  22. ^ Larson 2004, p. 8
  23. ^ Taquet 2006, p. 127
  24. ^ Coleman, William (1964). Georges Cuvier, zoologist a study in the history of evolution theory. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. pp. 141–169. ISBN 9780674283701. OCLC 614625731.
  25. ^ Waggoner 1996
  26. ^ Curtis, Caitlin; Millar, Craig; Lambert, David (27 September 2018). "The Sacred Ibis debate: The first test of evolution". PLOS Biology. 16 (9): e2005558. doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.2005558. PMC 6159855. PMID 30260949.
  27. ^ Zimmer 2006, p. 19
  28. ^ Rudwick 1997, p. 229
  29. ^ Rudwick 1997, pp. 228–229
  30. ^ Hall 1999, p. 62
  31. ^ a b [In Praise of M. de Lamarck, by Baron Georges Cuvier]. cnrs.fr (in French). 27 June 1831. Archived from the original on 7 May 2015. Retrieved 1 July 2015.
  32. ^ "Cuvier's elegy of Lamarck". victorianweb.org. Retrieved 1 July 2015.
  33. ^ Turner 1984, p. 35
  34. ^ Kuznar 2008, p. 37
  35. ^ Gillispie 1996, p. 103
  36. ^ Cuvier 1818, p. 130
  37. ^ Cuvier 1818, pp. 133–134; English translation quoted from Cuvier 1827, p. 121
  38. ^ Cuvier 1827, p. 407
  39. ^ Larson 2004, pp. 9–10
  40. ^ Chandler., Smith, Jean (1993). Georges Cuvier : an annotated bibliography of his published works. Washington: Smithsonian Institution Press. ISBN 978-1560981992. OCLC 25367530.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  41. ^ Cuvier, Georges (1998) [1796]. "Memoir on the Species of Elephants, Both Living and Fossil". Fossil Bones, and Geological Catastrophes. doi:10.7208/chicago/9780226731087.001.0001. ISBN 9780226731070.
  42. ^ Cuvier, Georges (1796). "Note on the skeleton of a very large species of quadruped, hitherto unknown, found in Paraguay and deposited in the Cabinet of Natural History in Madrid". Magasin Encyclopédique.
  43. ^ Georges Cuvier, Robert Jameson (1818). Essay on the Theory of the Earth. University of California. Kirk & Mercein. pp. 98–99.
  44. ^ Coleman, William (1964). Georges Cuvier, zoologist a study in the history of evolution theory. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. pp. 119–122. ISBN 9780674283701. OCLC 614625731.
  45. ^ Gowan, Dawson (21 April 2016). Show me the bone : reconstructing prehistoric monsters in nineteenth-century Britain and America. Chicago. ISBN 9780226332734. OCLC 913164287.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  46. ^ Georges Cuvier, Robert Jameson (1818). Essay on the Theory of the Earth. University of California. Kirk & Mercein.
  47. ^ Rudwick 1997, pp. 22–24
  48. ^ Mayor 2011, pp. 6, 8, 202–207
  49. ^ Mayor 2005, pp. 2, 61–63, 94–95 and Mayor 2008, pp. 163–82
  50. ^ Baron Georges Cuvier A Discourse on the Revolutions of the Surface of the Globe. 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine
  51. ^ "Georges Cuvier facts, information, pictures - Encyclopedia.com articles about Georges Cuvier". Encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 9 June 2018.
  52. ^ Rudwick 1997, pp. 129–133
  53. ^ Cuvier 1801
  54. ^ Cuvier 1809
  55. ^ Rudwick 1997, p. 158
  56. ^ a b Rudwick 1997, p. 36
  57. ^ a b c Rudwick, Martin (1972). The Meaning of Fossils: Episodes in the History of Palaeontology. New York, NY: Elsevier Publishing Company, Inc. pp. 104–115. ISBN 0444-19576-9.
  58. ^ Cuvier, Georges; McMurtrie, Henry (1834). Cuvier's animal kingdom : arranged according to its organization. Orr and Smith. pp. 1–4. doi:10.5962/bhl.title.28915. hdl:2027/ncs1.ark:/13960/t9280ss6c.
  59. ^ S., Rudwick, M. J. (1998). Georges Cuvier, fossil bones, and geological catastrophes : new translations & interpretations of the primary texts ([Pbk. ed., 1998] ed.). Chicago, Ill.: University of Chicago Press. pp. 69–73. ISBN 978-0226731063. OCLC 45730036.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  60. ^ See discussion in Reiss 2009
  61. ^ Coleman, William (1964). Georges Cuvier, zoologist a study in the history of evolution theory. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. p. 9. ISBN 9780674283701. OCLC 614625731.
  62. ^ De Wever, Patrick; Baudin, F.; Pereira, D.; Cornée, A.; Egoroff, G.; Page, K. (2010). "The importance of geosites and heritage stones in cities—A review". Geoheritage. 9 (4): 561–575. doi:10.1007/s12371-016-0210-3. hdl:10026.1/8308. S2CID 164769996.
  63. ^ RUDWICK, MARTIN (6 July 2010). "Georges Cuvier's paper museum of fossil bones". Archives of Natural History. 27 (1): 51–68. doi:10.3366/anh.2000.27.1.51.
  64. ^ Kidd 2006, p. 28
  65. ^ Clifton C. Crais; Pamela Scully (2009). Sara Baartman and the Hottentot Venus: A ghost story and a biography. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-13580-9.
  66. ^ Young, Jean (1997). "The Re-Objectification and Re-Commodification of Saartjie Baartman in Suzan-Lori Parks's Venus". African American Review. 31 (4): 699–708. doi:10.2307/3042338. ISSN 1062-4783. JSTOR 3042338.
  67. ^ Gordon-Chipembere, Natasha (2011). Representation and Black Womanhood: The Legacy of Sarah Baartman. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-349-29798-6.
  68. ^ Reuters (9 August 2002). "Remains of Abused South African Woman Given Final Resting Place". The New York Times. Retrieved 28 March 2019. {{cite news}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  69. ^ Chisholm 1911, pp. 676–677.
  70. ^ a b c Chisholm 1911, p. 677.
  71. ^ Beolens, Bo; Watkins, Michael; Grayson, Michael (2011). The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. xiii + 296 pp. ISBN 978-1-4214-0135-5. ("Cuvier", p. 63).
  72. ^ Christopher Scharpf & Kenneth J. Lazara (22 September 2018). "Order CHARACIFORMES: Families DISTICHODONTIDAE, CITHARINIDAE, CRENUCHIDAE, ALESTIDAE and HEPSETIDAE". The ETYFish Project Fish Name Etymology Database. Christopher Scharpf and Kenneth J. Lazara. Retrieved 5 November 2021.
  73. ^ . Archived from the original on 17 March 2002.
  74. ^ Glausser, Wayne (March 2003). "Stephen Maturin in the Age of Lamarck: A Fictional Restoration of Cuvier". Mosaic (Winnipeg). 36 (1).
  75. ^ Faria, Felipe. . Variorum of the Works of Georges Cuvier: Preliminary Discourse of the Recherches Sur les Ossemens Fossiles 1812, Containing the Memory on the Ibis of the Ancient Egyptians, and the Discours Sur les Révolutions de la Surface du Globe 1825. Archived from the original on 17 March 2020.
  76. ^ International Plant Names Index.  Cuvier.
  77. ^ Christopher Scharpf & Kenneth J. Lazara (22 September 2018). "Order LABRIFORMES: Family LABRIDAE (a-h)". The ETYFish Project Fish Name Etymology Database. Christopher Scharpf and Kenneth J. Lazara. Retrieved 21 February 2023.

Sources Edit

  • Faria, F. (2012). Georges Cuvier: do estudo dos fósseis à paleontologia. São Paulo: Scientiae Studia & Editora 34. ISBN 9788573264876.
  • Coleman, W. (1962). Georges Cuvier, Zoologist. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. ISBN 9780674349766.
  • Cuvier, G. (1801). "Reptile volant". Journal de Physique, de Chimie et d'Histoire Naturelle. 52: 253–267. Extrait d'un ouvrage sur les espèces de quadrupèdes dont on a trouvé les ossemens dans l'intérieur de la terre
  • Cuvier, G. (1809). "Mémoire sur le squelette fossile d'un reptile volant des environs d'Aichstedt, que quelques naturalistes ont pris pour un oiseau, et dont nous formons un genre de Sauriens, sous le nom de Ptero-Dactyle". Annales du Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle, Paris. 13: 424–437.
  • Cuvier, G. (Baron) (1818). Essay on the Theory of the Earth. New York: Kirk & Mercein.
  • Cuvier, G. (Baron) (1827). Essay on the Theory of the Earth (5th ed.). London: T. Cadell.
  • Gillispie, Charles Coulson (1996). Genesis and Geology. Harvard historical studies. Vol. 58. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-34481-5.
  • Hall, Brian Keith (1999). Evolutionary Developmental Biology (2nd ed.). Springer. ISBN 978-0-412-78590-0.
  • Isaac, Benjamin H. (2006). The Invention of Racism in Classical Antiquity. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-12598-5.
  • Jackson, John P.; Weidman, Nadine M. (2005). Race, Racism, and Science: Social Impact and Interaction. Rutgers University Press. ISBN 978-0-8135-3736-8.
  • Kidd, Colin (2006). The Forging of Races: Race and Scripture in the Protestant Atlantic World, 1600–2000. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-79324-7.
  • Kuznar, Lawrence A. (30 September 2008). Reclaiming a Scientific Anthropology. Rowman Altamira. ISBN 978-0-7591-1109-7. Retrieved 3 November 2012.
  • Larson, Edward J. (2004). Evolution: The Remarkable History of a Scientific Theory. New York: Modern Library. ISBN 978-0-679-64288-6.
  • Lee, Mrs. R. (1833). Memoirs of Baron Cuvier. London: Longman, Reese, Orme, Brown, Green, and Longman. ISBN 9780795012709.
  • McClellan, C. (2001). "The legacy of Georges Cuvier in Auguste Comte's natural philosophy". Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A. 32 (1): 1–29. Bibcode:2001SHPSA..32....1M. doi:10.1016/S0039-3681(00)00041-8.
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  • O'Neil, Dennis (2012). . Dennis O'Neil. Archived from the original on 13 August 2016. Retrieved 6 August 2016.
  • Racine, Valeria (2013). "Georges Cuvier (1769-1832)". Arizona Board. Retrieved 6 August 2016.
  • Reiss, John O. (2009). Not by Design: Retiring Darwin's Watchmaker. Berkeley, California: University of California Press.
  • Rudwick, Martin J. S. (1997). Georges Cuvier, Fossil Bones, and Geological Catastrophes. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-73106-3.
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  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Cuvier, Georges Leopold Chretien Frederic Dagobert, Baron". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 7 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 676–677.

Further reading Edit

  • Histoire des travaux de Georges Cuvier (3rd ed.). Paris. 1858.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • de Candolle, A. P. (1832). "Mort de G. Cuvier". Bibliothique universelle. Vol. 59. p. 442.
  • Flourens, P. J. M. (1834). Éloge historique de G. Cuvier. Published as an introduction to the Éloges historiques of Cuvier.
  • Kolbert, Elizabeth. (16 December 2013). "Annals of Extinction Part One: The Lost World." The New Yorker. p. 28. [1] Profile of Cuvier and his work on extinction and taxonomy.
  • Laurillard, C. L. (1836). "Cuvier". Biographie universelle. Vol. Supp. vol. 61.
  • Outram, Dorinda (1984). Georges Cuvier: Vocation, Science and Authority in Post-Revolutionary France. Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Corsi, Pietro (2005). Rapport historique sur les progrès des sciences naturelles depuis 1789, et sur leur état actuel, présenté à Sa Majesté l'Empereur et Roi, en son Conseil d'État, le 6 février 1808, par la classe des sciences physiques et mathématiques de l'Institut... conformément à l'arrêté du gouvernement du 13 ventôse an X. Paris.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Taquet, Philippe (2006). Georges Cuvier, Naissance d'un Génie. Paris: Odile jacob. ISBN 978-2-7381-0969-9.

External links Edit

  • Works by or about Georges Cuvier at Internet Archive
  • Works by Georges Cuvier at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Victorian Web Bio
  • Cuvier's principle of the correlation of parts
  • Cuvier's Elegy of Lamarck

georges, cuvier, cuvier, redirects, here, other, uses, cuvier, disambiguation, jean, léopold, nicolas, frédéric, baron, cuvier, august, 1769, 1832, known, french, ʒɔʁʒ, kyvje, french, naturalist, zoologist, sometimes, referred, founding, father, paleontology, . Cuvier redirects here For other uses see Cuvier disambiguation Jean Leopold Nicolas Frederic Baron Cuvier 23 August 1769 13 May 1832 known as Georges Cuvier French ʒɔʁʒ kyvje was a French naturalist and zoologist sometimes referred to as the founding father of paleontology 1 Cuvier was a major figure in natural sciences research in the early 19th century and was instrumental in establishing the fields of comparative anatomy and paleontology through his work in comparing living animals with fossils The Baron CuvierForMemRSBornJean Leopold Nicolas Frederic Cuvier 1769 08 23 23 August 1769Montbeliard Duchy of Wurttemberg Holy Roman Empire now Doubs France Died13 May 1832 1832 05 13 aged 62 Paris Kingdom of FranceNationalityFrenchOther namesGeorges CuvierKnown forLe Regne Animal establishing the fields of stratigraphy and comparative anatomy and the principle of faunal succession in the fossil record making extinction an accepted scientific phenomenon opposing theories of evolution popularizing catastrophismScientific careerFieldsNatural history paleontology anatomyInstitutionsMuseum national d histoire naturelle College de FranceAuthor abbrev botany CuvierAuthor abbrev zoology CuvierCuvier s work is considered the foundation of vertebrate paleontology and he expanded Linnaean taxonomy by grouping classes into phyla and incorporating both fossils and living species into the classification 2 Cuvier is also known for establishing extinction as a fact at the time extinction was considered by many of Cuvier s contemporaries to be merely controversial speculation In his Essay on the Theory of the Earth 1813 Cuvier proposed that now extinct species had been wiped out by periodic catastrophic flooding events In this way Cuvier became the most influential proponent of catastrophism in geology in the early 19th century 3 His study of the strata of the Paris basin with Alexandre Brongniart established the basic principles of biostratigraphy 4 Among his other accomplishments Cuvier established that elephant like bones found in North America belonged to an extinct animal he later would name as a mastodon and that a large skeleton dug up in present day Argentina was of Megatherium a giant prehistoric ground sloth He named the pterosaur Pterodactylus described but did not discover or name the aquatic reptile Mosasaurus and was one of the first people to suggest the earth had been dominated by reptiles rather than mammals in prehistoric times Cuvier is also remembered for strongly opposing theories of evolution which at the time before Darwin s theory were mainly proposed by Jean Baptiste de Lamarck and Geoffroy Saint Hilaire Cuvier believed there was no evidence for evolution but rather evidence for cyclical creations and destructions of life forms by global extinction events such as deluges In 1830 Cuvier and Geoffroy engaged in a famous debate which is said to exemplify the two major deviations in biological thinking at the time whether animal structure was due to function or evolutionary morphology 5 Cuvier supported function and rejected Lamarck s thinking Cuvier also conducted racial studies which provided part of the foundation for scientific racism and published work on the supposed differences between racial groups physical properties and mental abilities 6 Cuvier subjected Sarah Baartman to examinations alongside other French naturalists during a period in which she was held captive in a state of neglect Cuvier examined Baartman shortly before her death and conducted a dissection following her death that disparagingly compared her physical features to those of monkeys 7 Cuvier s most famous work is Le Regne Animal 1817 English The Animal Kingdom In 1819 he was created a peer for life in honor of his scientific contributions 8 Thereafter he was known as Baron Cuvier He died in Paris during an epidemic of cholera Some of Cuvier s most influential followers were Louis Agassiz on the continent and in the United States and Richard Owen in Britain His name is one of the 72 names inscribed on the Eiffel Tower Contents 1 Biography 2 Scientific ideas and their impact 2 1 Opposition to evolution 2 2 Extinction 2 3 Catastrophism 2 4 Stratigraphy 2 5 Age of reptiles 2 6 Principle of the correlation of parts 2 6 1 Applications 2 6 2 Impact 3 Scientific work 3 1 Comparative anatomy and classification 3 2 Mollusks 3 3 Fish 3 4 Palaeontology and osteology 3 5 The Animal Kingdom Le Regne Animal 3 6 Racial studies 3 6 1 Sarah Baartman 4 Taxon described by him 5 Official and public work 6 Commemorations 7 Works 8 Taxon named in his honor 9 See also 10 References 10 1 Footnotes 10 2 Citations 10 3 Sources 11 Further reading 12 External linksBiography Edit nbsp Portrait by Francois Andre Vincent 1795Jean Leopold Nicolas Frederic Cuvier was born in Montbeliard where his Protestant ancestors had lived since the time of the Reformation 9 His mother was Anne Clemence Chatel his father Jean George Cuvier was a lieutenant in the Swiss Guards and a bourgeois of the town of Montbeliard 10 At the time the town which would be annexed to France on 10 October 1793 belonged to the Duchy of Wurttemberg His mother who was much younger than his father tutored him diligently throughout his early years so he easily surpassed the other children at school 9 During his gymnasium years he had little trouble acquiring Latin and Greek and was always at the head of his class in mathematics history and geography 11 According to Lee 11 The history of mankind was from the earliest period of his life a subject of the most indefatigable application and long lists of sovereigns princes and the driest chronological facts once arranged in his memory were never forgotten nbsp Birthplace of Georges Cuvier in Montbeliard 12 At the age of 10 soon after entering the gymnasium he encountered a copy of Conrad Gessner s Historiae Animalium the work that first sparked his interest in natural history He then began frequent visits to the home of a relative where he could borrow volumes of the Comte de Buffon s massive Histoire Naturelle All of these he read and reread retaining so much of the information that by the age of 12 he was as familiar with quadrupeds and birds as a first rate naturalist 11 He remained at the gymnasium for four years Cuvier spent an additional four years at the Caroline Academy in Stuttgart where he excelled in all of his coursework Although he knew no German on his arrival after only nine months of study he managed to win the school prize for that language Cuvier s German education exposed him to the work of the geologist Abraham Gottlob Werner 1750 1817 whose Neptunism and emphasis on the importance of rigorous direct observation of three dimensional structural relationships of rock formations to geological understanding provided models for Cuvier s scientific theories and methods 13 Upon graduation he had no money on which to live as he awaited appointment to an academic office So in July 1788 he took a job at Fiquainville chateau in Normandy as tutor to the only son of the Comte d Hericy a Protestant noble There during the early 1790s he began his comparisons of fossils with extant forms Cuvier regularly attended meetings held at the nearby town of Valmont for the discussion of agricultural topics There he became acquainted with Henri Alexandre Tessier 1741 1837 who had assumed a false identity Previously he had been a physician and well known agronomist who had fled the Terror in Paris After hearing Tessier speak on agricultural matters Cuvier recognized him as the author of certain articles on agriculture in the Encyclopedie Methodique and addressed him as M Tessier Tessier replied in dismay I am known then and consequently lost Lost replied M Cuvier no you are henceforth the object of our most anxious care 14 They soon became intimate and Tessier introduced Cuvier to his colleagues in Paris I have just found a pearl in the dunghill of Normandy he wrote his friend Antoine Augustin Parmentier 15 As a result Cuvier entered into correspondence with several leading naturalists of the day and was invited to Paris Arriving in the spring of 1795 at the age of 26 he soon became the assistant of Jean Claude Mertrud 1728 1802 who had been appointed to the chair of Animal Anatomy at the Jardin des Plantes When Mertrud died in 1802 Cuvier replaced him in office and the Chair changed its name to Chair of Comparative Anatomy 16 The Institut de France was founded in the same year and he was elected a member of its Academy of Sciences On 4 April 1796 he began to lecture at the Ecole Centrale du Pantheon and at the opening of the National Institute in April he read his first paleontological paper which subsequently was published in 1800 under the title Memoires sur les especes d elephants vivants et fossiles 17 In this paper he analyzed skeletal remains of Indian and African elephants as well as mammoth fossils and a fossil skeleton known at that time as the Ohio animal Cuvier s analysis established for the first time the fact that African and Indian elephants were different species and that mammoths were not the same species as either African or Indian elephants so must be extinct He further stated that the Ohio animal represented a distinct and extinct species that was even more different from living elephants than mammoths were Years later in 1806 he would return to the Ohio animal in another paper and give it the name mastodon In his second paper in 1796 he described and analyzed a large skeleton found in Paraguay which he would name Megatherium He concluded this skeleton represented yet another extinct animal and by comparing its skull with living species of tree dwelling sloths that it was a kind of ground dwelling giant sloth Together these two 1796 papers were a seminal or landmark event becoming a turning point in the history of paleontology and in the development of comparative anatomy as well They also greatly enhanced Cuvier s personal reputation and they essentially ended what had been a long running debate about the reality of extinction In 1799 he succeeded Daubenton as professor of natural history in the College de France In 1802 he became titular professor at the Jardin des Plantes and in the same year he was appointed commissary of the institute to accompany the inspectors general of public instruction In this latter capacity he visited the south of France but in the early part of 1803 he was chosen permanent secretary of the department of physical sciences of the Academy and he consequently abandoned the earlier appointment and returned to Paris 17 In 1806 he became a foreign member of the Royal Society and in 1812 a foreign member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences In 1812 he became a correspondent for the Royal Institute of the Netherlands and became member in 1827 18 Cuvier was elected a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1822 19 nbsp Cuvier s tomb in the Pere Lachaise Cemetery ParisCuvier then devoted himself more especially to three lines of inquiry i the structure and classification of the Mollusca ii the comparative anatomy and systematic arrangement of the fishes iii fossil mammals and reptiles and secondarily the osteology of living forms belonging to the same groups 17 In 1812 Cuvier made what the cryptozoologist Bernard Heuvelmans called his Rash dictum he remarked that it was unlikely that any large animal remained undiscovered Ten years after his death the word dinosaur would be coined by Richard Owen in 1842 During his lifetime Cuvier served as an imperial councilor under Napoleon president of the Council of Public Instruction and chancellor of the university under the restored Bourbons Grand Officer of the Legion of Honour a Peer of France Minister of the Interior and president of the Council of State under Louis Philippe He was eminent in all these capacities and yet the dignity given by such high administrative positions was as nothing compared to his leadership in natural science 20 Cuvier was by birth education and conviction a devout Lutheran 21 and remained Protestant throughout his life while regularly attending church services Despite this he regarded his personal faith as a private matter he evidently identified himself with his confessional minority group when he supervised governmental educational programs for Protestants He also was very active in founding the Parisian Biblical Society in 1818 where he later served as a vice president 22 From 1822 until his death in 1832 Cuvier was Grand Master of the Protestant Faculties of Theology of the French University 23 Scientific ideas and their impact EditOpposition to evolution Edit Cuvier was critical of theories of evolution in particular those proposed by his contemporaries Lamarck and Geoffroy Saint Hilaire which involved the gradual transmutation of one form into another He repeatedly emphasized that his extensive experience with fossil material indicated one fossil form does not as a rule gradually change into a succeeding distinct fossil form A deep rooted source of his opposition to the gradual transformation of species was his goal of creating an accurate taxonomy based on principles of comparative anatomy 24 Such a project would become impossible if species were mutable with no clear boundaries between them According to the University of California Museum of Paleontology Cuvier did not believe in organic evolution for any change in an organism s anatomy would have rendered it unable to survive He studied the mummified cats and ibises that Geoffroy had brought back from Napoleon s invasion of Egypt and showed they were no different from their living counterparts Cuvier used this to support his claim that life forms did not evolve over time 25 26 nbsp Cuvier with a fish fossilHe also observed that Napoleon s expedition to Egypt had retrieved animals mummified thousands of years previously that seemed no different from their modern counterparts 27 Certainly Cuvier wrote one cannot detect any greater difference between these creatures and those we see than between the human mummies and the skeletons of present day men 28 Lamarck dismissed this conclusion arguing that evolution happened much too slowly to be observed over just a few thousand years Cuvier however in turn criticized how Lamarck and other naturalists conveniently introduced hundreds of thousands of years with a stroke of a pen to uphold their theory Instead he argued that one may judge what a long time would produce only by multiplying what a lesser time produces Since a lesser time produced no organic changes neither he argued would a much longer time 29 Moreover his commitment to the principle of the correlation of parts caused him to doubt that any mechanism could ever gradually modify any part of an animal in isolation from all the other parts in the way Lamarck proposed without rendering the animal unable to survive 30 In his Eloge de M de Lamarck Praise for M de Lamarck 31 32 Cuvier wrote that Lamarck s theory of evolution rested on two arbitrary suppositions the one that it is the seminal vapor which organizes the embryo the other that efforts and desires may engender organs A system established on such foundations may amuse the imagination of a poet a metaphysician may derive from it an entirely new series of systems but it cannot for a moment bear the examination of anyone who has dissected a hand a viscus or even a feather 31 Instead he said the typical form makes an abrupt appearance in the fossil record and persists unchanged to the time of its extinction Cuvier attempted to explain this paleontological phenomenon he envisioned which would be readdressed more than a century later by punctuated equilibrium and to harmonize it with the Bible He attributed the different time periods he was aware of as intervals between major catastrophes the last of which is found in Genesis 33 34 Cuvier s claim that new fossil forms appear abruptly in the geological record and then continue without alteration in overlying strata was used by later critics of evolution to support creationism 35 to whom the abruptness seemed consistent with special divine creation although Cuvier s finding that different types made their paleontological debuts in different geological strata clearly did not The lack of change was consistent with the supposed sacred immutability of species but again the idea of extinction of which Cuvier was the great proponent obviously was not Many writers have unjustly accused Cuvier of obstinately maintaining that fossil human beings could never be found In his Essay on the Theory of the Earth he did say no human bones have yet been found among fossil remains but he made it clear exactly what he meant When I assert that human bones have not been hitherto found among extraneous fossils I must be understood to speak of fossils or petrifactions properly so called 36 Petrified bones which have had time to mineralize and turn to stone are typically far older than bones found to that date Cuvier s point was that all human bones found that he knew of were of relatively recent age because they had not been petrified and had been found only in superficial strata 37 He was not dogmatic in this claim however when new evidence came to light he included in a later edition an appendix describing a skeleton that he freely admitted was an instance of a fossil human petrifaction 38 The harshness of his criticism and the strength of his reputation however continued to discourage naturalists from speculating about the gradual transmutation of species until Charles Darwin published On the Origin of Species more than two decades after Cuvier s death 39 Extinction Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Georges Cuvier s 1812 skeletal reconstruction of Anoplotherium commune The stratigraphy and lack of modern analogue in the extinct mammal was proof of extinction and ecological succession Early in his tenure at the National Museum in Paris Cuvier published studies of fossil bones in which he argued that they belonged to large extinct quadrupeds His first two such publications were those identifying mammoth and mastodon fossils as belonging to extinct species rather than modern elephants and the study in which he identified the Megatherium as a giant extinct species of sloth 40 His primary evidence for his identifications of mammoths and mastodons as separate extinct species was the structure of their jaws and teeth 41 His primary evidence that the Megatherium fossil had belonged to a massive sloth came from his comparison of its skull with those of extant sloth species 42 Cuvier wrote of his paleontological method that the form of the tooth leads to the form of the condyle that of the scapula to that of the nails just as an equation of a curve implies all of its properties and just as in taking each property separately as the basis of a special equation we are able to return to the original equation and other associated properties similarly the nails the scapula the condyle the femur each separately revel the tooth or each other and by beginning from each of them the thoughtful professor of the laws of organic economy can reconstruct the entire animal 43 However Cuvier s actual method was heavily dependent on the comparison of fossil specimens with the anatomy of extant species in the necessary context of his vast knowledge of animal anatomy and access to unparallelled natural history collections in Paris 44 This reality however did not prevent the rise of a popular legend that Cuvier could reconstruct the entire bodily structures of extinct animals given only a few fragments of bone 45 At the time Cuvier presented his 1796 paper on living and fossil elephants it was still widely believed that no species of animal had ever become extinct Authorities such as Buffon had claimed that fossils found in Europe of animals such as the woolly rhinoceros and the mammoth were remains of animals still living in the tropics i e rhinoceros and elephants which had shifted out of Europe and Asia as the earth became cooler Thereafter Cuvier performed a pioneering research study on some elephant fossils excavated around Paris The bones he studied however were remarkably different from the bones of elephants currently thriving in India and Africa This discovery led Cuvier to denounce the idea that fossils came from those that are currently living The idea that these bones belonged to elephants living but hiding somewhere on Earth seemed ridiculous to Cuvier because it would be nearly impossible to miss them due to their enormous size The Megatherium provided another compelling datapoint for this argument Ultimately his repeated identification of fossils as belonging to species unknown to man combined with mineralogical evidence from his stratigraphical studies in Paris drove Cuvier to the proposition that the abrupt changes the Earth underwent over a long period of time caused some species to go extinct 46 Cuvier s theory on extinction has met opposition from other notable natural scientists like Darwin and Charles Lyell Unlike Cuvier they didn t believe that extinction was a sudden process they believed that like the Earth animals collectively undergo gradual change as a species This differed widely from Cuvier s theory which seemed to propose that animal extinction was catastrophic However Cuvier s theory of extinction is still justified in the case of mass extinctions that occurred in the last 600 million years when approximately half of all living species went completely extinct within a short geological span of two million years due in part by volcanic eruptions asteroids and rapid fluctuations in sea level At this time new species rose and others fell precipitating the arrival of human beings Cuvier s early work demonstrated conclusively that extinction was indeed a credible natural global process 47 Cuvier s thinking on extinctions was influenced by his extensive readings in Greek and Latin literature he gathered every ancient report known in his day relating to discoveries of petrified bones of remarkable size in the Mediterranean region 48 Influence on Cuvier s theory of extinction was his collection of specimens from the New World many of them obtained from Native Americans He also maintained an archive of Native American observations legends and interpretations of immense fossilized skeletal remains sent to him by informants and friends in the Americas He was impressed that most of the Native American accounts identified the enormous bones teeth and tusks as animals of the deep past that had been destroyed by catastrophe 49 Catastrophism Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp These Indian elephant and mammoth jaws were included in 1799 when Cuvier s 1796 paper on living and fossil elephants was printed Main article Catastrophism Cuvier came to believe that most if not all the animal fossils he examined were remains of species that had become extinct Near the end of his 1796 paper on living and fossil elephants he said All of these facts consistent among themselves and not opposed by any report seem to me to prove the existence of a world previous to ours destroyed by some kind of catastrophe Contrary to many natural scientists beliefs at the time Cuvier believed that animal extinction was not a product of anthropogenic causes Instead he proposed that humans were around long enough to indirectly maintain the fossilized records of ancient Earth He also attempted to verify the water catastrophe by analyzing records of various cultural backgrounds Though he found many accounts of the water catastrophe unclear he did believe that such an event occurred at the brink of human history nonetheless This led Cuvier to become an active proponent of the geological school of thought called catastrophism which maintained that many of the geological features of the earth and the history of life could be explained by catastrophic events that had caused the extinction of many species of animals Over the course of his career Cuvier came to believe there had not been a single catastrophe but several resulting in a succession of different faunas He wrote about these ideas many times in particular he discussed them in great detail in the preliminary discourse an introduction to a collection of his papers Recherches sur les ossements fossiles de quadrupedes Researches on quadruped fossil bones on quadruped fossils published in 1812 Cuvier s own explanation for such a catastrophic event is derived from two different sources including those from Jean Andre Deluc and Deodat de Dolomieu The former proposed that the continents existing ten millennia ago collapsed allowing the ocean floors to rise higher than the continental plates and become the continents that now exist today The latter proposed that a massive tsunami hit the globe leading to mass extinction Whatever the case was he believed that the deluge happened quite recently in human history In fact he believed that Earth s existence was limited and not as extended as many natural scientists like Lamarck believed it to be Much of the evidence he used to support his catastrophist theories have been taken from his fossil records He strongly suggested that the fossils he found were evidence of the world s first reptiles followed chronologically by mammals and humans Cuvier didn t wish to delve much into the causation of all the extinction and introduction of new animal species but rather focused on the sequential aspects of animal history on Earth In a way his chronological dating of Earth history somewhat reflected Lamarck s transformationist theories Cuvier also worked alongside Alexandre Brongniart in analyzing the Parisian rock cycle Using stratigraphical methods they were both able to extrapolate key information regarding Earth history from studying these rocks These rocks contained remnants of mollusks bones of mammals and shells From these findings Cuvier and Brongniart concluded that many environmental changes occurred in quick catastrophes though Earth itself was often placid for extended periods of time in between sudden disturbances The Preliminary Discourse became very well known and unauthorized translations were made into English German and Italian and in the case of those in English not entirely accurately In 1826 Cuvier would publish a revised version under the name Discours sur les revolutions de la surface du globe Discourse on the upheavals of the surface of the globe 50 After Cuvier s death the catastrophic school of geological thought lost ground to uniformitarianism as championed by Charles Lyell and others which claimed that the geological features of the earth were best explained by currently observable forces such as erosion and volcanism acting gradually over an extended period of time The increasing interest in the topic of mass extinction starting in the late twentieth century however has led to a resurgence of interest among historians of science and other scholars in this aspect of Cuvier s work 51 Stratigraphy Edit Cuvier collaborated for several years with Alexandre Brongniart an instructor at the Paris mining school to produce a monograph on the geology of the region around Paris They published a preliminary version in 1808 and the final version was published in 1811 In this monograph they identified characteristic fossils of different rock layers that they used to analyze the geological column the ordered layers of sedimentary rock of the Paris basin They concluded that the layers had been laid down over an extended period during which there clearly had been faunal succession and that the area had been submerged under sea water at times and at other times under fresh water Along with William Smith s work during the same period on a geological map of England which also used characteristic fossils and the principle of faunal succession to correlate layers of sedimentary rock the monograph helped establish the scientific discipline of stratigraphy It was a major development in the history of paleontology and the history of geology 52 Age of reptiles Edit nbsp Ichthyosaurus and Plesiosaurus from the 1834 Czech edition of Cuvier s Discours sur les revolutions de la surface du globeIn 1800 and working only from a drawing Cuvier was the first to correctly identify in print a fossil found in Bavaria as a small flying reptile 53 which he named the Ptero Dactyle in 1809 54 later Latinized as Pterodactylus antiquus the first known member of the diverse order of pterosaurs In 1808 Cuvier identified a fossil found in Maastricht as a giant marine lizard the first known mosasaur Cuvier speculated correctly that there had been a time when reptiles rather than mammals had been the dominant fauna 55 This speculation was confirmed over the two decades following his death by a series of spectacular finds mostly by English geologists and fossil collectors such as Mary Anning William Conybeare William Buckland and Gideon Mantell who found and described the first ichthyosaurs plesiosaurs and dinosaurs Principle of the correlation of parts Edit In a 1798 paper on the fossil remains of an animal found in some plaster quarries near Paris Cuvier states what is known as the principle of the correlation of parts He writes 56 If an animal s teeth are such as they must be in order for it to nourish itself with flesh we can be sure without further examination that the whole system of its digestive organs is appropriate for that kind of food and that its whole skeleton and locomotive organs and even its sense organs are arranged in such a way as to make it skillful at pursuing and catching its prey For these relations are the necessary conditions of existence of the animal if things were not so it would not be able to subsist This idea is referred to as Cuvier s principle of correlation of parts which states that all organs in an animal s body are deeply interdependent Species existence relies on the way in which these organs interact For example a species whose digestive tract is best suited to digesting flesh but whose body is best suited to foraging for plants cannot survive Thus in all species the functional significance of each body part must be correlated to the others else the species cannot sustain itself 57 Applications Edit Cuvier believed that the power of his principle came in part from its ability to aid in the reconstruction of fossils In most cases fossils of quadrupeds were not found as complete assembled skeletons but rather as scattered pieces that needed to be put together by anatomists To make matters worse deposits often contained the fossilized remains of several species of animals mixed together Anatomists reassembling these skeletons ran the risk of combining remains of different species producing imaginary composite species However by examining the functional purpose of each bone and applying the principle of correlation of parts Cuvier believed that this problem could be avoided This principle s ability to aid in reconstruction of fossils was also helpful to Cuvier s work in providing evidence in favor extinction The strongest evidence Cuvier could provide in favor of extinction would be to prove that the fossilized remains of an animal belonged to a species that no longer existed By applying Cuvier s principle of correlation of parts it would be easier to verify that a fossilized skeleton had been authentically reconstructed thus validating any observations drawn from comparing it to skeletons of existing species In addition to helping anatomists reconstruct fossilized remains Cuvier believed that his principle held enormous predictive power as well For example when he discovered a fossil that resembled a marsupial in the gypsum quarries of Montmartre he correctly predicted that the fossil would contain bones commonly found in marsupials in its pelvis as well 57 Impact Edit Cuvier hoped that his principles of anatomy would provide the law based framework that would elevate natural history to the truly scientific level occupied by physics and chemistry thanks to the laws established by Isaac Newton 1643 1727 and Antoine Lavoisier 1743 1794 respectively He expressed confidence in the introduction to Le Regne Animal that some day anatomy would be expressed as laws as simple mathematical and predictive as Newton s laws of physics and he viewed his principle as an important step in that direction 58 To him the predictive capabilities of his principles demonstrated in his prediction of the existence of marsupial pelvic bones in the gypsum quarries of Montmartre demonstrated that these goals were not only in reach but imminent 59 The principle of correlation of parts was also Cuvier s way of understanding function in a non evolutionary context without invoking a divine creator 60 In the same 1798 paper on the fossil remains of an animal found in plaster quarries near Paris Cuvier emphasizes the predictive power of his principle writing 56 Today comparative anatomy has reached such a point of perfection that after inspecting a single bone one can often determine the class and sometimes even the genus of the animal to which it belonged above all if that bone belonged to the head or the limbs This is because the number direction and shape of the bones that compose each part of an animal s body are always in a necessary relation to all the other parts in such a way that up to a point one can infer the whole from any one of them and vice versa Though Cuvier believed that his principle s major contribution was that it was a rational mathematical way to reconstruct fossils and make predictions in reality it was difficult for Cuvier to use his principle The functional significance of many body parts were still unknown at the time and so relating those body parts to other body parts using Cuvier s principle was impossible Though Cuvier was able to make accurate predictions about fossil finds in practice the accuracy of his predictions came not from application of his principle but rather from his vast knowledge of comparative anatomy However despite Cuvier s exaggerations of the power of his principle the basic concept is central to comparative anatomy and paleontology 57 Scientific work EditComparative anatomy and classification Edit nbsp Plate from Le Regne Animal 1817 editionAt the Paris Museum Cuvier furthered his studies on the anatomical classification of animals He believed that classification should be based on how organs collectively function a concept he called functional integration Cuvier reinforced the idea of subordinating less vital body parts to more critical organ systems as part of anatomical classification He included these ideas in his 1817 book The Animal Kingdom In his anatomical studies Cuvier believed function played a bigger role than form in the field of taxonomy His scientific beliefs rested in the idea of the principles of the correlation of parts and of the conditions of existence The former principle accounts for the connection between organ function and its practical use for an organism to survive The latter principle emphasizes the animal s physiological function in relation to its surrounding environment These findings were published in his scientific readings including Lecons d anatomie comparee Lessons on Comparative Anatomy between 1800 and 1805 a and The Animal Kingdom in 1817 Ultimately Cuvier developed four embranchements or branches through which he classified animals based on his taxonomical and anatomical studies He later performed groundbreaking work in classifying animals in vertebrate and invertebrate groups by subdividing each category For instance he proposed that the invertebrates could be segmented into three individual categories including Mollusca Radiata and Articulata He also articulated that species cannot move across these categories a theory called transmutation He reasoned that organisms cannot acquire or change their physical traits over time and still retain optimal survival As a result he often conflicted with Geoffroy Saint Hilaire and Jean Baptiste Lamarck s theories of transmutation nbsp Plate from Le Regne Animal 1828 editionIn 1798 Cuvier published his first independent work the Tableau elementaire de l histoire naturelle des animaux which was an abridgment of his course of lectures at the Ecole du Pantheon and may be regarded as the foundation and first statement of his natural classification of the animal kingdom 17 Mollusks Edit Cuvier categorized snails cockles and cuttlefish into one category he called molluscs Mollusca an embranchment Though he noted how all three of these animals were outwardly different in terms of shell shape and diet he saw a noticeable pattern pertaining to their overall physical appearance Cuvier began his intensive studies of molluscs during his time in Normandy the first time he had ever seen the sea and his papers on the so called Mollusca began appearing as early as 1792 61 However most of his memoirs on this branch were published in the Annales du museum between 1802 and 1815 they were subsequently collected as Memoires pour servir a l histoire et a l anatomie des mollusques published in one volume at Paris in 1817 17 Fish Edit Cuvier s researches on fish begun in 1801 finally culminated in the publication of the Histoire naturelle des poissons which contained descriptions of 5 000 species of fishes and was a joint production with Achille Valenciennes Cuvier s work on this project extended over the years 1828 1831 17 Palaeontology and osteology Edit nbsp Plate from Le Regne Animal 1828 editionIn palaeontology Cuvier published a long list of memoirs partly relating to the bones of extinct animals and partly detailing the results of observations on the skeletons of living animals specially examined with a view toward throwing light upon the structure and affinities of the fossil forms 17 Among living forms he published papers relating to the osteology of the Rhinoceros Indicus the tapir Hyrax capensis the hippopotamus the sloths the manatee etc 17 He produced an even larger body of work on fossils dealing with the extinct mammals of the Eocene beds of Montmartre and other localities near Paris such as the Buttes Chaumont 62 the fossil species of hippopotamus Palaeotherium Anoplotherium a marsupial which he called Didelphys gypsorum the Megalonyx the Megatherium the cave hyena the pterodactyl the extinct species of rhinoceros the cave bear the mastodon the extinct species of elephant fossil species of manatee and seals fossil forms of crocodilians chelonians fish birds etc 17 If his identification of fossil animals was dependent upon comparison with the osteology of extant animals whose anatomy was poorly known Cuvier would often publish a thorough documentation of the relevant extant species anatomy before publishing his analyses of the fossil specimens 63 The department of palaeontology dealing with the Mammalia may be said to have been essentially created and established by Cuvier 17 The results of Cuvier s principal palaeontological and geological investigations ultimately were given to the world in the form of two separate works Recherches sur les ossemens fossiles de quadrupedes Paris 1812 later editions in 1821 and 1825 and Discours sur les revolutions de la surface du globe Paris 1825 17 In this latter work he expounded a scientific theory of Catastrophism The Animal Kingdom Le Regne Animal Edit Main article Le Regne Animal nbsp Plate from Le Regne Animal 1828 editionCuvier s most admired work was his Le Regne Animal It appeared in four octavo volumes in 1817 a second edition in five volumes was brought out in 1829 1830 In this classic work Cuvier presented the results of his life s research into the structure of living and fossil animals With the exception of the section on insects in which he was assisted by his friend Latreille the whole of the work was his own 17 It was translated into English many times often with substantial notes and supplementary material updating the book in accordance with the expansion of knowledge Racial studies Edit Cuvier was a Protestant and a believer in monogenism who held that all men descended from the biblical Adam although his position usually was confused as polygenist Some writers who have studied his racial work have dubbed his position as quasi polygenist and most of his racial studies have influenced scientific racism Cuvier believed there were three distinct races the Caucasian white Mongolian yellow and the Ethiopian black Cuvier claimed that Adam and Eve were Caucasian the original race of mankind The other two races originated by survivors escaping in different directions after a major catastrophe hit the earth 5 000 years ago with those survivors then living in complete isolation from each other 6 64 Cuvier categorized these divisions he identified into races according to his perception of the beauty or ugliness of their skulls and the quality of their civilizations Cuvier s racial studies held the supposed features of polygenism namely fixity of species limits on environmental influence unchanging underlying type anatomical and cranial measurement differences in races physical and mental differences between distinct races 6 Sarah Baartman Edit Alongside other French naturalists Cuvier subjected Sarah Baartman a South African Khokhoi woman exhibited in European freak shows as the Hottentot Venus to examinations At the time that Cuvier interacted with Baartman Baartman s existence was really quite miserable and extraordinarily poor Sara was literally sic treated like an animal 65 In 1815 while Baartman was very ill Cuvier commissioned a nude painting of her She died shortly afterward aged 26 66 Following Baartman s death Cuvier sought out and received permission to dissect her body focusing on her genitalia buttocks and skull shape In his examination Cuvier concluded that many of Baartman s features more closely resembled the anatomy of a monkey than a human 7 Her remains were displayed in the Musee de l Homme in Paris until 1970 then were put into storage 67 Her remains were returned to South Africa in 2002 68 Taxon described by him EditSee Category Taxa named by Georges CuvierOfficial and public work Edit nbsp Engraving by James ThomsonApart from his own original investigations in zoology and paleontology Cuvier carried out a vast amount of work as perpetual secretary of the National Institute and as an official connected with public education generally and much of this work appeared ultimately in a published form Thus in 1808 he was placed by Napoleon upon the council of the Imperial University and in this capacity he presided in the years 1809 1811 and 1813 over commissions charged to examine the state of the higher educational establishments in the districts beyond the Alps and the Rhine that had been annexed to France and to report upon the means by which these could be affiliated with the central university He published three separate reports on this subject 69 In his capacity again of perpetual secretary of the Institute he not only prepared a number of eloges historiques on deceased members of the Academy of Sciences but was also the author of a number of reports on the history of the physical and natural sciences the most important of these being the Rapport historique sur le progres des sciences physiques depuis 1789 published in 1810 70 Prior to the fall of Napoleon 1814 he had been admitted to the council of state and his position remained unaffected by the restoration of the Bourbons He was elected chancellor of the university in which capacity he acted as interim president of the council of public instruction while he also as a Lutheran superintended the faculty of Protestant theology In 1819 he was appointed president of the committee of the interior an office he retained until his death 70 In 1826 he was made grand officer of the Legion of Honour he subsequently was appointed president of the council of state He served as a member of the Academie des Inscriptions et Belles Lettres from 1830 to his death A member of the Doctrinaires he was nominated to the ministry of the interior in the beginning of 1832 70 Commemorations Edit nbsp Statue of Cuvier by David d Angers 1838Cuvier is commemorated in the naming of several animals they include Cuvier s beaked whale which he first thought to be extinct Cuvier s gazelle Cuvier s toucan Cuvier s bichir Cuvier s dwarf caiman and Galeocerdo cuvier tiger shark Cuvier is commemorated in the scientific name of the following reptiles Anolis cuvieri a lizard from Puerto Rico Bachia cuvieri a synonym of Bachia alleni and Oplurus cuvieri 71 The fish Hepsetus cuvieri sometimes known as the African pike or Kafue pike characin which is a predatory freshwater fish found in southern Africa was named after him 72 There also are some extinct animals named after Cuvier such as the South American giant sloth Catonyx cuvieri Cuvier Island in New Zealand was named after Cuvier by D Urville 73 The professor of English Wayne Glausser argues at length that the Aubrey Maturin series of 21 novels 1970 2004 by Patrick O Brian make the character Stephen Maturin an advocate of the neo classical paradigm articulated by Georges Cuvier 74 Cuvier is referenced in Edgar Allan Poe s short story The Murders in the Rue Morgue as having written a description of the orangutan Arthur Conan Doyle also refers to Cuvier in The Five Orange Pips in which Sherlock Holmes compares Cuvier s methods to his own Works Edit nbsp Tableau elementaire de l histoire naturelle des animaux 1797See also Category Taxa named by Georges Cuvier Tableau elementaire de l histoire naturelle des animaux 1797 1798 Lecons d anatomie comparee 5 volumes 1800 1805 Essais sur la geographie mineralogique des environs de Paris avec une carte geognostique et des coupes de terrain with Alexandre Brongniart 1811 Le Regne animal distribue d apres son organisation pour servir de base a l histoire naturelle des animaux et d introduction a l anatomie comparee 4 volumes 1817 Recherches sur les ossemens fossiles de quadrupedes ou l on retablit les caracteres de plusieurs especes d animaux que les revolutions du globe paroissent avoir detruites 4 volumes 1812 text in French 2 3 4 Memoires pour servir a l histoire et a l anatomie des mollusques 1817 Eloges historiques des membres de l Academie royale des sciences lus dans les seances de l Institut royal de France par M Cuvier 3 volumes 1819 1827 Vol 1 Vol 2 and Vol 3 Theorie de la terre 1821 Essay on the theory of the earth 1813 1815 trans Robert Kerr dd Recherches sur les ossemens fossiles 1821 1823 5 vols Discours sur les revolutions de la surface du globe et sur les changements qu elles ont produits dans le regne animal 1822 New edition Christian Bourgeois Paris 1985 text in French Histoire des progres des sciences naturelles depuis 1789 jusqu a ce jour 5 volumes 1826 1836 Histoire naturelle des poissons 11 volumes 1828 1848 continued by Achille Valenciennes Histoire des sciences naturelles depuis leur origine jusqu a nos jours chez tous les peuples connus professee au College de France 5 volumes 1841 1845 edited annotated and published by Magdeleine de Saint Agit Cuvier s History of the Natural Sciences twenty four lessons from Antiquity to the Renaissance edited and annotated by Theodore W Pietsch translated by Abby S Simpson foreword by Philippe Taquet Paris Publications scientifiques du Museum national d Histoire naturelle 2012 734 p coll Archives 16 ISBN 978 2 85653 684 1 Variorum of the works of Georges Cuvier Preliminary Discourse of the Recherches sur les ossemens fossiles 1812 containing the Memory on the ibis of the ancient Egyptians and the Discours sur les revolutions de la surface du Globe 1825 containing the Determination of the birds called ibis by the ancient Egyptians 75 Cuvier also collaborated on the Dictionnaire des sciences naturelles 61 volumes 1816 1845 and on the Biographie universelle 45 volumes 1843 18 The standard author abbreviation Cuvier is used to indicate this person as the author when citing a botanical name 76 Taxon named in his honor EditAnampses cuvier commonly known as the Pearl wrasse is a fish found in the Pacific Ocean 77 See also Edit nbsp Biography portal nbsp Biology portalSaartjie Baartman the Hottentot Venus whose body Cuvier examined Frederic Cuvier also a naturalist was Georges Cuvier s younger brother History of paleontology for more on the impact of Cuvier s scientific ideas List of works by James PradierReferences EditFootnotes Edit Cuvier was assisted by A M C Dumeril for the first two volumes and Georges Louis Duvernoy for the three later ones Citations Edit Reybrouck David Van 2012 From Primitives to Primates A History of Ethnographic and Primatological Analogies in the Study of Prehistory Sidestone Press p 54 ISBN 978 90 8890 095 2 Felipe Faria 2013 Georges Cuvier et le premier paradigme de la paleontologie Georges Cuvier and the first paradigm of paleontology PDF Revue de Paleobiologie in French 32 2 ISSN 0253 6730 Faria 2012 pp 64 74 J Bowler Peter 2009 Evolution the history of an idea 25th anniversary ed Berkeley Calif University of California Press pp 112 113 ISBN 9780520261280 OCLC 426118505 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Appel Toby 1987 The Cuvier Geoffroy Debate French Biology in the Decades Before Darwin New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 504138 5 a b c Jackson amp Weidman 2005 pp 41 42 a b Terry Jennifer 1995 Deviant Bodies critical perspectives on difference in science and popular culture Bloomington Indiana Bloomington Indiana University Press pp 19 39 ISBN 0253209757 Lee 1833 a b Lee 1833 p 8 Extrait du 7 e Registre des Enfants baptises dans l Eglise francoise de Saint Martin de la Ville de Montbeliard depose aux Archives de l Hotel de Ville Culture gouv fr a b c Lee 1833 p 11 Taquet Philippe 2006 Les annees de jeunesse de Georges Cuvier Georges Cuvier s early years PDF in French Societe d emulation de Montbeliard p 217 Archived from the original PDF on 6 March 2016 Retrieved 1 July 2015 S Rudwick M J 1998 Georges Cuvier fossil bones and geological catastrophes new translations amp interpretations of the primary texts Pbk ed 1998 ed Chicago Ill University of Chicago Press pp 4 7 ISBN 978 0226731063 OCLC 45730036 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Lee 1833 p 22 Lee 1833 p 22 footnote Thierry Malvesy Georges Cuvier Montbeliard 1769 Paris 1832 Les Amis du Museum national d histoire naturelle Publication trimestrielle quarterly publication N 242 June 2010 ISSN 1161 9104 p 18 in French a b c d e f g h i j k l Chisholm 1911 p 676 Georges Leopold Chretien Frederic Dagobert Cuvier 1769 1832 Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences Retrieved 19 July 2015 Book of Members 1780 2010 Chapter C PDF American Academy of Arts and Sciences Retrieved 8 September 2016 Andrew Dickson White A History of the Warfare of Science with Theology in Christendom Appleton 1922 Vol 1 p 64 Coleman 1962 p 16 Larson 2004 p 8 Taquet 2006 p 127 Coleman William 1964 Georges Cuvier zoologist a study in the history of evolution theory Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press pp 141 169 ISBN 9780674283701 OCLC 614625731 Waggoner 1996 Curtis Caitlin Millar Craig Lambert David 27 September 2018 The Sacred Ibis debate The first test of evolution PLOS Biology 16 9 e2005558 doi 10 1371 journal pbio 2005558 PMC 6159855 PMID 30260949 Zimmer 2006 p 19 Rudwick 1997 p 229 Rudwick 1997 pp 228 229 Hall 1999 p 62 a b Eloge de M de Lamarck par le Baron Georges Cuvier In Praise of M de Lamarck by Baron Georges Cuvier cnrs fr in French 27 June 1831 Archived from the original on 7 May 2015 Retrieved 1 July 2015 Cuvier s elegy of Lamarck victorianweb org Retrieved 1 July 2015 Turner 1984 p 35 Kuznar 2008 p 37 Gillispie 1996 p 103 Cuvier 1818 p 130 Cuvier 1818 pp 133 134 English translation quoted from Cuvier 1827 p 121 Cuvier 1827 p 407 Larson 2004 pp 9 10 Chandler Smith Jean 1993 Georges Cuvier an annotated bibliography of his published works Washington Smithsonian Institution Press ISBN 978 1560981992 OCLC 25367530 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Cuvier Georges 1998 1796 Memoir on the Species of Elephants Both Living and Fossil Fossil Bones and Geological Catastrophes doi 10 7208 chicago 9780226731087 001 0001 ISBN 9780226731070 Cuvier Georges 1796 Note on the skeleton of a very large species of quadruped hitherto unknown found in Paraguay and deposited in the Cabinet of Natural History in Madrid Magasin Encyclopedique Georges Cuvier Robert Jameson 1818 Essay on the Theory of the Earth University of California Kirk amp Mercein pp 98 99 Coleman William 1964 Georges Cuvier zoologist a study in the history of evolution theory Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press pp 119 122 ISBN 9780674283701 OCLC 614625731 Gowan Dawson 21 April 2016 Show me the bone reconstructing prehistoric monsters in nineteenth century Britain and America Chicago ISBN 9780226332734 OCLC 913164287 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Georges Cuvier Robert Jameson 1818 Essay on the Theory of the Earth University of California Kirk amp Mercein Rudwick 1997 pp 22 24 Mayor 2011 pp 6 8 202 207 Mayor 2005 pp 2 61 63 94 95 and Mayor 2008 pp 163 82 Baron Georges Cuvier A Discourse on the Revolutions of the Surface of the Globe Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Georges Cuvier facts information pictures Encyclopedia com articles about Georges Cuvier Encyclopedia com Retrieved 9 June 2018 Rudwick 1997 pp 129 133 Cuvier 1801 Cuvier 1809 Rudwick 1997 p 158 a b Rudwick 1997 p 36 a b c Rudwick Martin 1972 The Meaning of Fossils Episodes in the History of Palaeontology New York NY Elsevier Publishing Company Inc pp 104 115 ISBN 0444 19576 9 Cuvier Georges McMurtrie Henry 1834 Cuvier s animal kingdom arranged according to its organization Orr and Smith pp 1 4 doi 10 5962 bhl title 28915 hdl 2027 ncs1 ark 13960 t9280ss6c S Rudwick M J 1998 Georges Cuvier fossil bones and geological catastrophes new translations amp interpretations of the primary texts Pbk ed 1998 ed Chicago Ill University of Chicago Press pp 69 73 ISBN 978 0226731063 OCLC 45730036 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link See discussion in Reiss 2009 Coleman William 1964 Georges Cuvier zoologist a study in the history of evolution theory Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press p 9 ISBN 9780674283701 OCLC 614625731 De Wever Patrick Baudin F Pereira D Cornee A Egoroff G Page K 2010 The importance of geosites and heritage stones in cities A review Geoheritage 9 4 561 575 doi 10 1007 s12371 016 0210 3 hdl 10026 1 8308 S2CID 164769996 RUDWICK MARTIN 6 July 2010 Georges Cuvier s paper museum of fossil bones Archives of Natural History 27 1 51 68 doi 10 3366 anh 2000 27 1 51 Kidd 2006 p 28 Clifton C Crais Pamela Scully 2009 Sara Baartman and the Hottentot Venus A ghost story and a biography Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 13580 9 Young Jean 1997 The Re Objectification and Re Commodification of Saartjie Baartman in Suzan Lori Parks s Venus African American Review 31 4 699 708 doi 10 2307 3042338 ISSN 1062 4783 JSTOR 3042338 Gordon Chipembere Natasha 2011 Representation and Black Womanhood The Legacy of Sarah Baartman New York Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 1 349 29798 6 Reuters 9 August 2002 Remains of Abused South African Woman Given Final Resting Place The New York Times Retrieved 28 March 2019 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a last has generic name help Chisholm 1911 pp 676 677 a b c Chisholm 1911 p 677 Beolens Bo Watkins Michael Grayson Michael 2011 The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press xiii 296 pp ISBN 978 1 4214 0135 5 Cuvier p 63 Christopher Scharpf amp Kenneth J Lazara 22 September 2018 Order CHARACIFORMES Families DISTICHODONTIDAE CITHARINIDAE CRENUCHIDAE ALESTIDAE and HEPSETIDAE The ETYFish Project Fish Name Etymology Database Christopher Scharpf and Kenneth J Lazara Retrieved 5 November 2021 New Zealand Lighthouses Cuvier Island Archived from the original on 17 March 2002 Glausser Wayne March 2003 Stephen Maturin in the Age of Lamarck A Fictional Restoration of Cuvier Mosaic Winnipeg 36 1 Faria Felipe Variorum of the works of Georges Cuvier Preliminary Discourse of the Recherches sur les ossemens fossiles 1812 containing the Memory on the ibis of the ancient Egyptians and the Discours sur les revolutions de la surface du Globe 1825 containing the Determination of the birds called ibis by the ancient Egyptian Variorum of the Works of Georges Cuvier Preliminary Discourse of the Recherches Sur les Ossemens Fossiles 1812 Containing the Memory on the Ibis of the Ancient Egyptians and the Discours Sur les Revolutions de la Surface du Globe 1825 Archived from the original on 17 March 2020 International Plant Names Index Cuvier Christopher Scharpf amp Kenneth J Lazara 22 September 2018 Order LABRIFORMES Family LABRIDAE a h The ETYFish Project Fish Name Etymology Database Christopher Scharpf and Kenneth J Lazara Retrieved 21 February 2023 Sources Edit Faria F 2012 Georges Cuvier do estudo dos fosseis a paleontologia Sao Paulo Scientiae Studia amp Editora 34 ISBN 9788573264876 Coleman W 1962 Georges Cuvier Zoologist Cambridge Harvard University Press ISBN 9780674349766 Cuvier G 1801 Reptile volant Journal de Physique de Chimie et d Histoire Naturelle 52 253 267 Extrait d un ouvrage sur les especes de quadrupedes dont on a trouve les ossemens dans l interieur de la terre Cuvier G 1809 Memoire sur le squelette fossile d un reptile volant des environs d Aichstedt que quelques naturalistes ont pris pour un oiseau et dont nous formons un genre de Sauriens sous le nom de Ptero Dactyle Annales du Museum National d Histoire Naturelle Paris 13 424 437 Cuvier G Baron 1818 Essay on the Theory of the Earth New York Kirk amp Mercein Cuvier G Baron 1827 Essay on the Theory of the Earth 5th ed London T Cadell Gillispie Charles Coulson 1996 Genesis and Geology Harvard historical studies Vol 58 Cambridge Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 34481 5 Hall Brian Keith 1999 Evolutionary Developmental Biology 2nd ed Springer ISBN 978 0 412 78590 0 Isaac Benjamin H 2006 The Invention of Racism in Classical Antiquity Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 12598 5 Jackson John P Weidman Nadine M 2005 Race Racism and Science Social Impact and Interaction Rutgers University Press ISBN 978 0 8135 3736 8 Kidd Colin 2006 The Forging of Races Race and Scripture in the Protestant Atlantic World 1600 2000 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 79324 7 Kuznar Lawrence A 30 September 2008 Reclaiming a Scientific Anthropology Rowman Altamira ISBN 978 0 7591 1109 7 Retrieved 3 November 2012 Larson Edward J 2004 Evolution The Remarkable History of a Scientific Theory New York Modern Library ISBN 978 0 679 64288 6 Lee Mrs R 1833 Memoirs of Baron Cuvier London Longman Reese Orme Brown Green and Longman ISBN 9780795012709 McClellan C 2001 The legacy of Georges Cuvier in Auguste Comte s natural philosophy Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 32 1 1 29 Bibcode 2001SHPSA 32 1M doi 10 1016 S0039 3681 00 00041 8 Mayor Adrienne 2011 2000 The First Fossil Hunters Dinosaurs Mammoths and Myths in Greek and Roman Times Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 15013 0 Mayor Adrienne 2005 Fossil Legends of the First Americans Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 13049 1 Mayor Adrienne 2008 Suppression of Indigenous Fossil Knowledge in Agnology ed R Proctor and L Schiebinger Stanford CA Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 5901 4 Nordsieck Robert 2008 Molluscs Mollusca Molluscs at Retrieved 6 August 2016 O Neil Dennis 2012 Early Theories of Evolution Pre Darwinian Theories Dennis O Neil Archived from the original on 13 August 2016 Retrieved 6 August 2016 Racine Valeria 2013 Georges Cuvier 1769 1832 Arizona Board Retrieved 6 August 2016 Reiss John O 2009 Not by Design Retiring Darwin s Watchmaker Berkeley California University of California Press Rudwick Martin J S 1997 Georges Cuvier Fossil Bones and Geological Catastrophes University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 73106 3 Russell E S 1982 Form and Function a Contribution to the History of Animal Morphology PDF Nature 98 2460 306 307 Bibcode 1916Natur 98R 306 doi 10 1038 098306b0 hdl 2027 mdp 39015005647725 S2CID 3955438 Martina Kolbl Ebert 2009 Geology and Religion A History of Harmony and Hostility Geological Society of London p 127 ISBN 978 1 86239 269 4 Retrieved 1 July 2015 Turner John 9 February 1984 Why we need evolution by jerks New Scientist vol 101 no 1396 pp 34 35 retrieved 4 November 2012 Waggoner Ben 1996 Georges Cuvier 1769 1832 University of California Berkeley Retrieved 19 July 2011 Zimmer Carl 2006 Evolution the Triumph of an Idea New York Harper Perennial ISBN 978 0 06 113840 9 nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Cuvier Georges Leopold Chretien Frederic Dagobert Baron Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 7 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 676 677 Further reading EditHistoire des travaux de Georges Cuvier 3rd ed Paris 1858 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link de Candolle A P 1832 Mort de G Cuvier Bibliothique universelle Vol 59 p 442 Flourens P J M 1834 Eloge historique de G Cuvier Published as an introduction to the Eloges historiques of Cuvier Kolbert Elizabeth 16 December 2013 Annals of Extinction Part One The Lost World The New Yorker p 28 1 Profile of Cuvier and his work on extinction and taxonomy Laurillard C L 1836 Cuvier Biographie universelle Vol Supp vol 61 Outram Dorinda 1984 Georges Cuvier Vocation Science and Authority in Post Revolutionary France Palgrave Macmillan Corsi Pietro 2005 Rapport historique sur les progres des sciences naturelles depuis 1789 et sur leur etat actuel presente a Sa Majeste l Empereur et Roi en son Conseil d Etat le 6 fevrier 1808 par la classe des sciences physiques et mathematiques de l Institut conformement a l arrete du gouvernement du 13 ventose an X Paris a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Taquet Philippe 2006 Georges Cuvier Naissance d un Genie Paris Odile jacob ISBN 978 2 7381 0969 9 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Georges Cuvier nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Georges Cuvier nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Georges Cuvier Works by or about Georges Cuvier at Internet Archive Works by Georges Cuvier at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Victorian Web Bio Infoscience English translation of Discourses Cuvier s principle of the correlation of parts Cuvier s Elegy of Lamarck Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Georges Cuvier amp oldid 1179838441, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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