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Second voyage of HMS Beagle

The second voyage of HMS Beagle, from 27 December 1831 to 2 October 1836, was the second survey expedition of HMS Beagle, under captain Robert FitzRoy, who had taken over command of the ship on its first voyage after the previous captain, Pringle Stokes, committed suicide. FitzRoy had thought of the advantages of having someone onboard who could investigate geology, and sought a naturalist to accompany them as a supernumerary. At the age of 22, the graduate Charles Darwin hoped to see the tropics before becoming a parson, and accepted the opportunity. He was greatly influenced by reading Charles Lyell's Principles of Geology during the voyage. By the end of the expedition, Darwin had made his name as a geologist and fossil collector, and the publication of his journal (later known as The Voyage of the Beagle) gave him wide renown as a writer.

Second voyage of HMS Beagle
Beagle at Ponsonby Sound in the Beagle Channel, Tierra del Fuego, in March 1834; painting by the ship's draughtsman Conrad Martens
LeaderRobert FitzRoy
Start27 December 1831 (1831-12-27)
End2 October 1836 (1836-10-02)
GoalSurvey South American coast
ShipsHMS Beagle
AchievementsResearch leading to Darwin's theory of evolution
Route

Beagle sailed across the Atlantic Ocean, and then carried out detailed hydrographic surveys around the coasts of southern South America, returning via Tahiti and Australia, after having circumnavigated the Earth. The initial offer to Darwin told him the voyage would last two years; it lasted almost five.

Darwin spent most of this time exploring on land: three years and three months land, 18 months at sea.[1] Early in the voyage, Darwin decided that he could write a geology book, and he showed a gift for theorising. At Punta Alta in Argentina, he made a major find of gigantic fossils of extinct mammals, then known from very few specimens. He collected and made detailed observations of plants and animals. His findings undermined his belief in the doctrine that species are fixed, and provided the basis for ideas which came to him when back in England, leading to his theory of evolution by natural selection.

Aims of the expedition edit

 
Ship's chronometer from HMS Beagle made by Thomas Earnshaw.
British Museum, London.

When the Napoleonic Wars ended in 1815, the Pax Britannica saw seafaring nations competing in colonisation and rapid industrialisation. The logistics of supply and growing commerce needed reliable information about sea routes, but existing nautical charts were incomplete and inaccurate. Spanish American wars of independence ended Spain's monopoly over trade,[2][3] and the UK's 1825 commercial treaty with Argentina recognised its independence, increasing the naval and commercial significance of the east coast of South America.[4] The Admiralty instructed Commander King to make an accurate hydrographic survey of "the Southern Coasts of the Peninsula of South America, from the southern entrance of the River Plata, round to Chilóe; and of Tierra del Fuego".[5][6] As Darwin wrote of his voyage, "The object of the expedition was to complete the survey of Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego, commenced under Captain King in 1826 to 1830—to survey the shores of Chile, Peru, and of some islands in the Pacific—and to carry a chain of chronometrical measurements round the World."[7][6] The expeditions also had diplomatic objectives, visiting disputed territories.[2]

An Admiralty memorandum set out the detailed instructions. The first requirement was to resolve disagreements in the earlier surveys about the longitude of Rio de Janeiro, which was essential as the base point for meridian distances. The accurate marine chronometers needed to determine longitude, had only become affordable since 1800; Beagle carried 22 chronometers to allow corrections. The ship was to stop at specified points for a four-day rating of the chronometers and to check them by astronomical observations: it was essential to take observations at Porto Praya and Fernando de Noronha to calibrate against the previous surveys of William Fitzwilliam Owen and Henry Foster. It was important to survey the extent of the Abrolhos Archipelago reefs, shown incorrectly in Albin Roussin's survey, then proceed to Rio de Janeiro to decide the exact longitude of Villegagnon Island.[8]

The real work of the survey was then to commence south of the Río de la Plata, with return trips to Montevideo for supplies; details were given of priorities, including surveying Tierra del Fuego and approaches to harbours on the Falkland Islands. The west coast was then to be surveyed as far north as time and resources permitted. The commander would then determine his own route west: season permitting, he could survey the Galápagos Islands. Then, Beagle was to proceed to Point Venus, Tahiti, and on to Port Jackson, Australia, which were known points to verify the chronometers.[9]

No time was to be wasted on elaborate drawings; charts and plans should have notes and simple views of the land as seen from the sea showing measured heights of hills. Continued records of tides and meteorological conditions were also required. An additional suggestion was for a geological survey of a circular coral atoll in the Pacific Ocean including its profile and of tidal flows, to investigate the formation of such coral reefs.[10]

Context and preparations edit

The previous survey expedition to South America involved HMS Adventure and HMS Beagle under the overall command of the Australian Commander Phillip Parker King. During the survey, Beagle's captain, Pringle Stokes, committed suicide and command of the ship was given to the young aristocrat Robert FitzRoy, a nephew of George FitzRoy, 4th Duke of Grafton. When a ship's boat was taken by the natives of Tierra del Fuego, FitzRoy tried taking some of them hostage, and after this failed he got occupants of a canoe to put another on the ship in exchange for buttons. He brought four of them back to England to be given a Christian education, with the idea that they could eventually become missionaries. One died of smallpox.[11][12] After Beagle's return to Devonport dockyard on 14 October 1830, Captain King retired.[13]

 
Robert FitzRoy

The 27-year-old FitzRoy had hopes of commanding a second expedition to continue the South American survey, but when he heard that the Lords of the Admiralty no longer supported this, he grew concerned about how to return the Fuegians. He made an agreement with the owner of a small merchant-vessel to take himself and five others back to South America, but a kind uncle heard of this and contacted the Admiralty. Soon afterwards, FitzRoy heard that he was to be appointed commander of HMS Chanticleer to go to Tierra del Fuego, but due to her poor condition, Beagle was substituted. On 27 June 1831, FitzRoy was commissioned as commander of the voyage, and Lieutenants John Clements Wickham and Bartholomew James Sulivan were both appointed.[14]

Captain Francis Beaufort, the Hydrographer of the Admiralty, was invited to decide on the use that could be made of the voyage to continue the survey, and he discussed with FitzRoy plans for a voyage of several years, including a continuation of the trip around the world to establish median distances. Beagle was commissioned on 4 July 1831, under the command of Captain FitzRoy, who promptly spared no expense in having Beagle extensively refitted. Beagle was immediately taken into dock for extensive rebuilding and refitting. As she required a new deck, FitzRoy had the upper-deck raised considerably, by 8 inches (200 mm) aft and 12 inches (300 mm) forward.[15] The Cherokee-class brig-sloops had the reputation of being "coffin brigs", which handled badly and were prone to sinking.[16] By helping the decks to drain more quickly with less water collecting in the gunnels, the raised deck gave Beagle better handling and made her less liable to become top-heavy and capsize. Additional sheathing to the hull added about seven tons to her burthen and perhaps fifteen to her displacement.[15]

The ship was one of the first to test the lightning conductor invented by William Snow Harris. FitzRoy obtained five examples of the Sympiesometer, a kind of mercury-free barometer patented by Alexander Adie and favoured by FitzRoy as giving the accurate readings required by the Admiralty.[15]

In addition to its officers and crew, Beagle carried several supernumeraries, passengers without an official position. FitzRoy employed a mathematical instrument maker to maintain his 22 marine chronometers kept in his cabin, as well as engaging the artist/draughtsman Augustus Earle to go in a private capacity.[15] The three Fuegians taken on the previous voyage were going to be returned to Tierra del Fuego on Beagle together with the missionary Richard Matthews.[14][17]

Naturalist and geologist edit

For Beaufort and the leading Cambridge "gentlemen of science", the opportunity for a naturalist to join the expedition fitted with their drive to revitalise British government policy on science. This elite disdained research done for money and felt that natural philosophy was for gentlemen, not tradesmen. The officer class of the Army and Navy provided a way to ascend this hierarchy; the ship's surgeon often collected specimens on voyages, and Robert McCormick had secured the position on Beagle after taking part in earlier expeditions and studying natural history. A sizeable collection had considerable social value, attracting wide public interest, and McCormick aspired to fame as an exploring naturalist.[18] Collections made by the ship's surgeon and other officers were government property, though the Admiralty was not consistent on this,[19] and went to important London establishments, usually the British Museum.[20] The Admiralty instructions for the first voyage had required officers "to use their best diligence in increasing the Collections in each ship: the whole of which must be understood to belong to the Public", but on the second voyage this requirement was omitted, and the officers were free to keep all the specimens for themselves.[19][21]

FitzRoy's journal written during the first voyage noted that, while investigating magnetic rocks near the Barbara Channel, he regretted "that no person in the vessel was skilled in mineralogy, or at all acquainted with geology", to make use of the opportunity of "ascertaining the nature of the rocks and earths" of the areas surveyed. FitzRoy decided that on any similar future expedition, he would "endeavour to carry out a person qualified to examine the land; while the officers, and myself, would attend to hydrography."[22] This indicated a need for a naturalist qualified to examine geology, who would spend considerable periods onshore away from the ship. McCormick lacked expertise in geology and had to attend to his duties on the ship.[23]

FitzRoy knew that commanding a ship could involve stress and loneliness. He was aware of his uncle Viscount Castlereagh's suicide due to stress from overwork, as well as Captain Stokes's suicide.[24] This was to be the first time that FitzRoy would be fully in charge of a ship with no commanding officer or second captain to consult. It has been suggested that he felt the need for a gentleman companion who shared his scientific interests and could dine with him as an equal,[25] although there is no direct evidence to support this. Professor John Stevens Henslow described the position "more as a companion than a mere collector", but this was an assurance that FitzRoy would treat his guest as a gentleman naturalist. Several other ships at this period carried unpaid civilians as naturalists.[26]

Early in August, FitzRoy discussed this position with Beaufort, who had a scientific network of friends at the University of Cambridge.[27] At Beaufort's request, mathematics lecturer George Peacock wrote from London to Henslow about this "rare opportunity for a naturalist", saying that an "offer has been made to me to recommend a proper person to go out as a naturalist with this expedition", and suggesting the Reverend Leonard Jenyns.[28][29] Though Jenyns nearly accepted and even packed his clothes, he had concerns about his obligations as vicar of Swaffham Bulbeck and about his health, therefore Jenyns declined the offer. Henslow briefly thought of going, but his wife "looked so miserable" that he quickly dropped the idea.[30] Both recommended bringing the 22-year-old Charles Darwin, who was on a geology field trip with Adam Sedgwick. He had just completed the ordinary Bachelor of Arts degree which was a prerequisite for his intended career as a parson.[27]

Offer of place to Darwin edit

 
Darwin in 1840, after the voyage and publication of his Journal and Remarks

Darwin fitted well the expectations of a gentleman natural philosopher and was well trained as a naturalist.[31] When he had studied geology in his second year at Edinburgh, he had found it dull, but from Easter to August 1831, he learned a great deal with Sedgwick and developed a strong interest during their geological field trip.[32] On 24 August Henslow wrote to Darwin:

...that I consider you to be the best qualified person I know of who is likely to undertake such a situation— I state this not on the supposition of yr. being a finished Naturalist, but as amply qualified for collecting, observing, & noting any thing worthy to be noted in Natural History. Peacock has the appointment at his disposal & if he can not find a man willing to take the office, the opportunity will probably be lost— Capt. F. wants a man (I understand) more as a companion than a mere collector & would not take any one however good a Naturalist who was not recommended to him likewise as a gentleman. ... The Voyage is to last 2 yrs. & if you take plenty of Books with you, any thing you please may be done ... there never was a finer chance for a man of zeal & spirit... Don't put on any modest doubts or fears about your disqualifications for I assure you I think you are the very man they are in search of.[33]

The letter went first to George Peacock, who quickly forwarded it to Darwin with further details, confirming that the "ship sails about the end of September". Peacock had discussed the offer with Beaufort, "he entirely approves of it & you may consider the situation as at your absolute disposal".[34] When Darwin returned home from the field trip late on 29 August and opened the letters,[35] his father objected strongly to the voyage so, the next day, he wrote declining the offer[36] and left to go shooting at the estate of his uncle Josiah Wedgwood II. With Wedgwood's help, Darwin's father was persuaded to relent and fund his son's expedition, and on Thursday 1 September, Darwin wrote to Beaufort accepting the offer.[37] That day, Beaufort wrote to tell FitzRoy that his friend Peacock had "succeeded in getting a 'Savant' for you—A Mr Darwin grandson of the well known philosopher and poet—full of zeal and enterprize and having contemplated a voyage on his own account to S. America".[38] On Friday Darwin left for Cambridge, where he, the next day, got advice on preparations of the voyage and references to experts by Henslow.[30]

Alexander Charles Wood (an undergraduate whose tutor was Peacock) wrote from Cambridge to his cousin FitzRoy to recommend Darwin.[39] Around midday on Sunday 4 September, Wood received FitzRoy's response, "straightforward and gentlemanlike" but strongly against Darwin joining the expedition; both Darwin and Henslow then "gave up the scheme". Darwin went to London anyway, and next morning met FitzRoy, who explained that he had promised the place to his friend Mr. Chester (possibly the novelist Harry Chester), but Chester had turned it down in a letter received not five minutes before Darwin arrived. FitzRoy emphasised the difficulties, including cramped conditions and plain food.[40][41] Darwin would be on the Admiralty's books to get provisions (worth £40 a year) and, like the ship's officers and captain, would pay £30 a year towards the mess bill.[42] Including outfitting, the cost to him was unlikely to reach £500.[40] The ship would sail on 10 October, and would probably be away for three years. They talked and dined together, and soon found each other agreeable.[41] The Tory FitzRoy had been cautious at the prospect of companionship with this unknown young gentleman of Whig background, and later admitted that his letter to Wood was "to throw cold water on the scheme" in "a sudden horror of the chances of having somebody he should not like on board". He half-seriously told Darwin later that, as "an ardent disciple of Lavater", he had nearly rejected Darwin on the phrenological basis that the shape (or physiognomy) of Darwin's nose indicated a lack of determination.[43][44]

Darwin's preparations edit

While he continued to get acquainted with FitzRoy, going shopping together, Darwin rushed around to arrange his supplies and equipment.[45] He took advice from experts on specimen preservation including William Yarrell at the Zoological Society of London, Robert Brown at the British Museum, Captain Phillip Parker King who led the first expedition, and invertebrate anatomist Robert Edmond Grant who had tutored Darwin at Edinburgh.[46] Yarrell gave invaluable advice and bargained with shopkeepers, so Darwin paid £50 for two pistols and a rifle, while FitzRoy had spent £400 on firearms.[44] On Sunday, 11 September, FitzRoy and Darwin took the steam packet for Portsmouth.[47] Darwin was not seasick and had a pleasant "sail of three days". For the first time, he saw the "very small" cramped ship, met the officers,[48] and was glad to get a large cabin, shared with the assistant surveyor John Lort Stokes. On Friday, Darwin rushed back to London, "250 miles in 24 hours",[49] and on via Cambridge and St. Albans, travelling on the Wonder coach all day on 22 September to arrive in Shrewsbury that evening, then after a last brief visit to family and friends left for London on 2 October.[47][50] Delays to Beagle gave Darwin an extra week to consult experts and complete packing his baggage.[51] After sending his heavy goods down by steam packet, he took the coach along with Augustus Earle and arrived at Devonport on 24 October.[52]

The geologist Charles Lyell asked FitzRoy to record observations on geological features such as erratic boulders. Before they left England, FitzRoy gave Darwin a copy of the first volume of Lyell's Principles of Geology which explained features as the outcome of a gradual process taking place over extremely long periods of time.[53] In his autobiography, Darwin recalled Henslow giving advice at this time to obtain and study the book, "but on no account to accept the views therein advocated".[54]

Darwin's position as a naturalist on board was as a self-funded guest with no official appointment, and he could leave the voyage at any suitable stage. At the outset, George Peacock had advised that "The Admiralty are not disposed to give a salary, though they will furnish you with an official appointment & every accomodation [sic]: if a salary should be required however I am inclined to think that it would be granted". Far from wanting this,[34][55] Darwin's concern was to maintain control over his collection. He was even reluctant to be on the Admiralty's books for victuals until he got assurances from FitzRoy and Beaufort that this would not affect his rights to assign his specimens.[19][42]

Beaufort initially thought specimens ought to go to the British Museum, but Darwin had heard of many left waiting to be described, including botanical specimens from the first Beagle voyage. Beaufort assured him that he "should have no difficulty" as long as he "presented them to some public body" such as the Zoological or Geological societies. Henslow had set up the small Cambridge Philosophical Society museum, Darwin told him that new finds should go to the "largest & most central collection" rather than a "Country collection, let it be ever so good",[45][56] but soon expressed "hope to be able to assist the Philosoph. Society" with some specimens.[57]

FitzRoy arranged transport of specimens to England as official cargo on the Admiralty Packet Service, at no cost to Darwin even though it was his private collection.[58][59] Henslow agreed to store them at Cambridge, and Darwin confirmed with him arrangements for land carriage from the port,[60] to be funded by Darwin's father.[57]

Darwin's work on the expedition edit

The captain had to record his survey in painstaking paperwork, and Darwin too kept a daily log as well as detailed notebooks of his finds and speculations, and a diary which became his journal. Darwin's notebooks show complete professionalism that he had probably learnt at the University of Edinburgh when making natural history notes while exploring the shores of the Firth of Forth with his brother Erasmus in 1826 and studying marine invertebrates with Robert Edmund Grant for a few months in 1827.[61] Darwin had also collected beetles at Cambridge, but he was a novice in all other areas of natural history. During the voyage, Darwin investigated small invertebrates while collecting specimens of other creatures for experts to examine and describe once Beagle had returned to England.[32] More than half of his carefully organised zoology notes deal with marine invertebrates. The notes also record closely reasoned interpretations of what he found about their complex internal anatomy while dissecting specimens under his microscope and small experiments on their response to stimulation. His onshore observations included intense, analytical comments on possible reasons for the behaviour, distribution, and relation to their environment of the creatures he saw. He made good use of the ship's excellent library of books on natural history but continually questioned their correctness.[62]

Geology was Darwin's "principal pursuit" on the expedition, and his notes on that subject were almost four times larger than his zoology notes, although he kept extensive records on both. During the voyage, he wrote to his sister that "there is nothing like geology; the pleasure of the first days partridge shooting or first days hunting cannot be compared to finding a fine group of fossil bones, which tell their story of former times with almost a living tongue". To him, investigating geology brought reasoning into play and gave him opportunities for theorising.[61]

Voyage edit

 
The voyage of Beagle

Charles Darwin had been told that Beagle was expected to sail about the end of September 1831,[34] but fitting out took longer. The Admiralty Instructions were received on 14 November, and on 23 November, she was moved to anchorage, ready to depart. Repeated Westerly gales caused delays, and forced them to turn back after departing on 10 and 21 December. Drunkenness at Christmas lost another day. Finally, on the morning of 27 December, Beagle left its anchorage in the Barn Pool, under Mount Edgecumbe on the west side of Plymouth Sound and set out on its surveying expedition.[63]

Atlantic islands edit

Beagle touched at Madeira for a confirmed position without stopping. Then on 6 January, it reached Tenerife in the Canary Islands but was quarantined there because of cholera in England. Although tantalisingly near to the town of Santa Cruz, to Darwin's intense disappointment, they were denied landing. With improving weather conditions, they sailed on. On 10 January, Darwin tried out a plankton net he had devised to be towed behind the ship—only the second recorded use of such a net (after use by John Vaughan Thompson in 1816). Next day, he noted the great number of animals collected far from land and wrote: "Many of these creatures so low in the scale of nature are most exquisite in their forms & rich colours. — It creates a feeling of wonder that so much beauty should be apparently created for such little purpose."[64]

Six days later, they made their first landing at Praia on the volcanic island of Santiago in the Cape Verde Islands. It is here that Darwin's description in his published Journal begins.[65] His initial impression was of a desolate and sterile volcanic island. However, upon visiting the town, he came to a deep valley where he "first saw the glory of tropical vegetation" and had "a glorious day", finding overwhelming novelty in the sights and sounds. FitzRoy set up tents and an observatory on Quail Island to determine the exact position of the islands, while Darwin collected numerous sea animals, delighting in vivid tropical corals in tidal pools, and investigating the geology of Quail Island.[66][67] Though Daubeny's book in Beagle's library described the volcanic geology of the Canary Islands, it said that the structure of the Cape Verde Islands was "too imperfectly known". Darwin saw Quail Island as his key to understanding the structure of St. Jago and made careful studies of its stratigraphy in the way he had learnt from Adam Sedgwick. He collected specimens and described a white layer of hard white rock formed from crushed coral and seashells lying between layers of black volcanic rocks, and noted a similar white layer running horizontally in the black cliffs of St. Jago at 40 feet (12 m) above sea level. The seashells were, as far as he could tell, "the same as those of present day". He speculated that in geologically recent times a lava flow had covered this shell sand on the sea bed, and then the strata had slowly risen to their present level. Charles Lyell's Principles of Geology presented a thesis of gradual rising and falling of the Earth's crust illustrated by the changing levels of the Temple of Serapis. Darwin implicitly supported Lyell by remarking that "Dr. Daubeny when mentioning the present state of the temple of Serapis. doubts the possibility of a surface of country being raised without cracking buildings on it. – I feel sure at St Jago in some places a town might have been raised without injuring a house."[68] Later, in his first letter to Henslow, he wrote that "The geology was preeminently interesting & I believe quite new: there are some facts on a large scale of upraised coast ... that would interest Mr. Lyell."[69] While still on the island, Darwin was inspired to think of writing a book on geology,[70] and later wrote of "seeing a thing never seen by Lyell, one yet saw it partially through his eyes".[71]

Beagle's surgeon Robert McCormick sought fame and fortune as an explorer.[72] When they first met at the start of the voyage, Darwin had commented that "My friend [McCormick] is an ass, but we jog on very amicably".[57] They walked into the countryside of St. Jago together,[73] and Darwin, influenced by Lyell, found the surgeon's approach old-fashioned.[74] They found a remarkable baobab tree, which FitzRoy measured and sketched. Darwin went on subsequent "riding expeditions" with Benjamin Bynoe and Rowlett to visit Ribeira Grande and St Domingo. FitzRoy extended their stay to 23 days to complete his measurements of magnetism.[75] Darwin subsequently wrote to Henslow that his collecting included "several specimens of an Octopus, which possessed a most marvellous power of changing its colours; equalling any chamaelion, & evidently accommodating the changes to the colour of the ground which it passed over.—yellowish green, dark brown & red were the prevailing colours: this fact appears to be new, as far as I can find out."[69] Henslow replied that "The fact is not new, but any fresh observations will be highly important."[76]

McCormick increasingly resented the favours FitzRoy gave to assist Darwin with collecting. On 16 February, FitzRoy landed a small party including himself and Darwin on St. Paul's Rocks, finding the seabirds so tame that they could be killed easily, while an exasperated McCormick was left circling the islets in a second small boat.[77] That evening, novices were greeted by a pseudo-Neptune, and in the morning, they crossed the equator with the traditional line-crossing ceremony.[78]

Darwin had a special position as a guest and social equal of the captain, so junior officers called him "sir" until the captain dubbed Darwin Philos for "ship's philosopher", which became his suitably respectful nickname.[79]

Surveying South America edit

In South America, Beagle carried out its survey work going to and fro along the coasts to allow careful measurement and rechecking. Darwin made long journeys inland with travelling companions from the locality. He spent much of the time away from the ship, returning by prearrangement when Beagle returned to ports where mail and newspapers were received, and Darwin's notes, journals, and collections sent back to England, via the Admiralty Packet Service. He had ensured that his collections were his own and, as prearranged, batches of his specimens were shipped to England, then taken by land carriage to Henslow in Cambridge to await his return.[58][80] The first batch was sent in August 1832, journey time varied considerably but all batches were eventually delivered.[81]

Several others on board, including FitzRoy and other officers, were able amateur naturalists, and they gave Darwin generous assistance as well as making collections for the Crown, which the Admiralty placed in the British Museum.[82]

Tropical paradise and slavery edit

Due to heavy surf, they only stayed at Fernando de Noronha for a day to make the required observations, then FitzRoy pressed on to Bahia de Todos Santos, Brazil, to rate the chronometers and take on water. They reached the continent and arrived at the port on 28 February.[8][83] Darwin was thrilled at the magnificent sight of "the town of Bahia or St Salvador", with large ships at harbour scattered across the bay. On the next day, he was in "transports of pleasure" walking by himself in the tropical forest, and in "long naturalizing walks" with others continued to "add raptures to the former raptures".[84]

He found the sights of slavery offensive, and when FitzRoy defended the practice by describing a visit to a slaveowner whose slaves replied "no" on being asked by their master if they wished to be freed, Darwin suggested that answers in such circumstances were worthless. Enraged that his word had been questioned, FitzRoy lost his temper and banned Darwin from his company. The officers had nicknamed such outbursts "hot coffee", and within hours FitzRoy apologised, and asked Darwin to remain.[85] Later, FitzRoy had to remain silent when Captain Paget of the frigate HMS Samarang (another British vessel surveying the region which often crossed paths with the Beagle) visited them and recounted "facts about slavery so revolting" that refuted his claim.[86][87] Surveying of sandbanks around the harbour was completed on 18 March, and the ship made its way down the coast to survey the extent and depths of the Abrolhos reefs, completing and correcting Roussin's survey.[88]

They manoeuvred Beagle into Rio de Janeiro harbour "in first rate style" on 4 April, with Darwin enthusiastically helping. Amidst excitement at opening letters from home, he was taken aback by news that his close friend Fanny Owen was engaged to marry Biddulph of Chirk Castle.[89][90] Augustus Earle showed Darwin round the town, and they found a delightful cottage for lodgings at Botafogo. Darwin made arrangements with local estate owners, and on 8 April set off with them on a strenuous "riding excursion" to Rio Macaè.[91]

McCormick had made himself disagreeable to FitzRoy and first lieutenant Wickham,[74] so was "invalided home",[92] as he also was on other voyages.[23] In his 1884 memoirs, he claimed he had been "very much disappointed in my expectations of carrying out my natural history pursuits, every obstacle having been placed in the way of my getting on shore and making collections". Assistant Surgeon Benjamin Bynoe was made acting surgeon in his place.[93][94]

The required observations from Villegagnon Island at Rio showed a discrepancy of 4 miles (6.4 km) of longitude in the meridian distance from Bahia to Rio, compared to Roussin's results, and FitzRoy wrote telling Beaufort he would go back to check.[8][95]

On 24 April Darwin got back to the ship, next day his books, papers, and equipment suffered minor damage when the boat taking him to Botafogo cottage was swamped. He sent his sister his "commonplace Journal" to date, inviting criticisms, and decided to stay in the cottage with Earle while the ship went to Bahia.[94][96]

Eight of the crew had gone snipe shooting in the cutter, with an overnight stay at the Macacu River near Rio. After their return on 2 May, some fell ill with fever. The ship set off on 10 May, a seaman died en route, a ship's boy and a young midshipman died at Bahia. The ship returned to Rio on 3 June. Having confirmed that his measurements were correct, FitzRoy sent corrections to Roussin.[97][98]

At the cottage, Darwin composed his first letter outlining his collecting to Henslow. He said he would not "send a box till we arrive at Monte Video.—it is too great a loss of time both for Carpenters & myself to pack up whilst in harbor".[69] He returned to the ship on 26 June, and they set sail on 5 July.[99]

Amidst political changes, Beagle had a diplomatic role.[100] As they arrived at Montevideo on 26 July, HMS Druid signalled them to "clear for action" as British property had been seized in growing unrest after "military usurpation" deposed Lavalleja.[101][102] They took observations for the chronometers, then on 31 July sailed to Buenos Aires to meet the governor and get maps, but were met by warning shots from a guard ship. FitzRoy promptly lodged a complaint and departed, threatening a broadside in response to any further provocation. When they got back on 4 August, FitzRoy informed the Druid's captain who set off to demand an apology. On 5 August, Town officials and the British Consul asked FitzRoy for help to quell a mutiny; the garrison was held by Black troops loyal to Lavalleja. With Darwin and 50 well-armed men from the ship he arrived at the fort, then next day withdrew leaving a stand-off. Darwin enjoyed the excitement,[103][104] and wrote "It was something new to me to walk with Pistols & Cutlass through the streets of a Town".[105][106] Druid returned on 15 August, with a long apology from the government and news that the guard-ship captain had been arrested.[107]

Darwin's first box of specimens was ready, and went on the Falmouth packet Emulous departing on 19 August,[108][109] Henslow received the box in mid January.[76] On 22 August, after taking soundings in Samborombón Bay, Beagle began survey work down the coast from Cape San Antonio, Buenos Aires Province, Argentina.[110]

Fossil finds edit

 
Scene on the quarter deck while anchored at Bahia Blanca, painted around 24 September 1832 most likely by Augustus Earle. Darwin is the central figure in a top hat, examining a specimen, FitzRoy the second figure to his left.[111]

At Bahía Blanca, in the southern part of present Buenos Aires Province, Darwin rode inland into Patagonia with gauchos: he saw them use bolas to bring down "ostriches" (rheas) and ate roast armadillo. With FitzRoy, he went for "a very pleasant cruize about the bay" on 22 September, and about ten miles (16 km) from the ship, they stopped for a while at Punta Alta. In low cliffs near the point, Darwin found conglomerate rocks containing numerous shells and fossilised teeth and bones of gigantic extinct mammals,[112] in strata near an earth layer with shells and armadillo fossils, suggesting to him quiet tidal deposits rather than a catastrophe.[113] With assistance (possibly from the young sailor Syms Covington acting as his servant[114][115]), Darwin collected numerous fossils over several days,[116] amusing others with "the cargoes of apparent rubbish which he frequently brought on board".[114]

Much of the second day was taken up with excavating a large skull which Darwin found embedded in soft rock, and seemed to him to be allied to the rhinoceros.[117] On 8 October, he returned to the site and found a jawbone and tooth which he was able to identify using Bory de Saint-Vincent's Dictionnaire classique. He wrote home describing this and the large skull as Megatherium fossils, or perhaps Megalonyx, and excitedly noted that the only specimens in Europe were locked away in the King's collection at Madrid.[118][119] In the same layer he found a large surface of polygonal plates of bony armour. His immediate thought was that they came from an enormous armadillo like the small creatures common in the area. However, from Cuvier's misleading description of the Madrid specimen and a recent newspaper report about a fossil collected by Woodbine Parish, Darwin thought that the bony armour identified the fossil as Megatherium.[120][121] With FitzRoy, Darwin went about 30 miles (48 km) across the bay to Monte Hermoso on 19 October and found numerous fossils of smaller rodents in contrast to the huge Edentatal mammals of Punta Alta.[122][123]

They returned to Montevideo, and on 2 November revisited Buenos Aires, passing the guard-ship which now gave them due respect.[124] From questioning the finder of the Megatherium reported in the newspaper (Woodbine Parish’s agent), Darwin concluded it came from the same geological formation as his own fossil finds.[125] He also "purchased fragments of some enormous bones" which he "was assured belonged to the former giants!!" In Montevideo from 14 November, he packaged his specimens, including all the fossils, and sent this cargo on the Duke of York Falmouth packet.[120][126]

The mail from home included a copy of the second volume of Charles Lyell's Principles of Geology,[54] a refutation of Lamarckism in which there was no shared ancestry of different species or overall progress to match the gradual geological change. Instead, it was a continuing cycle in which species mysteriously appeared, closely adapted to their "centres of creation", then became extinct when the environment changed to their disadvantage.[127]

Tierra del Fuego edit

 
Native of Tierra del Fuego

They reached Tierra del Fuego on 18 December 1832, and Darwin was taken by surprise at what he perceived as the crude savagery of the Yaghan natives, in stark contrast to the "civilised" behaviour of the three Fuegians they were returning as missionaries (who had been given the names York Minster, Fuegia Basket and Jemmy Button). He described his first meeting with the native Fuegians as being "without exception the most curious and interesting spectacle I ever beheld: I could not have believed how wide was the difference between savage and civilised man: it is greater than between a wild and domesticated animal, inasmuch as in man there is a greater power of improvement." They appeared like "the representations of Devils on the Stage" as in Der Freischütz. In contrast, he said of Jemmy that "It seems yet wonderful to me, when I think over all his many good qualities, that he should have been of the same race, and doubtless partaken of the same character, with the miserable, degraded savages whom we first met here." (Four decades later, he recalled these impressions in The Descent of Man to support his argument that just as humans had descended from "a lower form", civilised society had arisen by graduations from a more primitive state. He recalled how closely the Fuegians on board Beagle "resembled us in disposition and in most of our mental faculties."[128])

At the island of "Buttons Land" on 23 January 1833, they set up a mission post with huts, gardens, furniture and crockery. Upon returning nine days later, the possessions had been looted and divided up equally by the natives. Matthews gave up, rejoining the ship and leaving the three civilised Fuegians to continue the missionary work. Beagle went on to the Falkland Islands, arriving just after the British return. Darwin studied the relationships of species to habitats and found ancient fossils like those he found in Wales. FitzRoy bought a schooner to assist with the surveying, and they returned to Patagonia, where it was fitted with a new copper bottom and renamed Adventure. Syms Covington assisted Darwin in preserving specimens, and his collecting was so successful that, with FitzRoy's agreement, he hired Covington as a full-time servant for £30 a year.[129]

Gauchos, rheas, fossils and geology edit

The two ships sailed to the Río Negro in Argentina, and on 8 August 1833, Darwin left on another journey inland with the gauchos. On 12 August, he met General Juan Manuel de Rosas who was then leading a punitive expedition in his military campaign against native "Indians" and obtained a passport from him. As they crossed the pampas, the gauchos and Indians told Darwin of a rare smaller species of rhea.[130] After three days at Bahía Blanca, he grew tired of waiting for Beagle, and on 21 August, revisited Punta Alta where he reviewed the geology of the site in light of his new knowledge, wondering if the bones were older than the seashells. He was very successful with searching for bones, and on 1 September, found a near-complete skeleton with its bones still in position.[131][132]

He set off again and on 1 October, while searching the cliffs of the Carcarañá River, found "an enormous gnawing tooth", and then, in a cliff of the Paraná River, saw "two great groups of immense bones" which were too soft to collect but a tooth fragment identified them as mastodons.[133][134] Illness delayed him at Santa Fe, and after seeing the fossilised casing of a huge armadillo embedded in rock, he was puzzled to find a horse tooth in the same rock layer since horses had been introduced to the continent with European migration.[135][136] They took a riverboat down the Paraná River to Buenos Aires but became entangled in a revolution as rebels allied to Rosas blockaded the city. The passport helped, and with Covington, he managed to escape in a boatload of refugees. They rejoined Beagle at Montevideo.[137]

As surveys were still in progress, Darwin set off on another 400-mile (640 km) "galloping" trip in Banda Oriental to see the Uruguay River and visit the Estancia of Mr Keen near Mercedes on the Río Negro. On 25 November, he "heard of some giants bones, which as usual turned out to be those of the Megatherium" but could only extract a few broken fragments. The next day, he visited a nearby house and bought "a head of a Megatherium which must have been when found quite perfect" for about two shillings, though the teeth had since been broken and the lower jaw had been lost. Mr Keen arranged to ship the skull downriver to Buenos Aires.[138][139][140] At Las Piedras, a clergyman let him see fossils, including a club-like tail which he sketched and called an "extraordinary weapon".[140][141] His notes included a page showing his realisation that the cliff banks of the rivers exposed two strata formed in an estuary interrupted by an undersea stratum, indicating that the land had risen and fallen.[142]

 
Illustration of Darwin's rhea, published in 1841 in John Gould's description of birds collected on Beagle's voyage

Back at Montevideo, Darwin was introduced to Conrad Martens, the replacement artist brought on board Beagle after Augustus Earle had to leave due to health problems. They sailed south, putting in at Port Desire on 23 December, and the following day Darwin shot a guanaco which provided them with a Christmas meal. Early in the new year, Martens shot a rhea which they enjoyed eating before Darwin realised that this was the elusive smaller rhea and preserved the remains.[130] On 9 January 1834, 110 miles (180 km) further south, they reached Port St Julian and exploring the local geology in cliffs near the harbour Darwin found fossils of pieces of spine and a hind leg of "some large animal, I fancy a Mastodon".[143][139] On 26 January, they entered the Straits of Magellan, and at St. Gregory's Bay, they met half-civilised Patagonian "giants" over 6 ft (1.8 m) tall,[144] described by Darwin as "excellent practical naturalists". One told him that the smaller rheas were the only species this far south, while the larger rheas kept to the north, the species meeting around the Rio Negro.[145]

After further surveying in Tierra del Fuego, they returned on 5 March 1834 to visit the missionaries but found the huts deserted. Then canoes approached, and they found that one of the natives was Jemmy Button, who had lost his possessions and had settled into the native ways, taking a wife. Darwin had never seen "so complete & grievous a change". Jemmy came on board and dined using his cutlery properly, speaking English as well as ever, then assured them that he "had not the least wish to return to England" and was "happy and contented", leaving them gifts of otter skins and arrowheads before returning to the canoe to join his wife.[146] Of the first visit, Darwin had written that "Viewing such men, one can hardly make oneself believe that they are fellow creatures placed in the same world. .... It is a common subject of conjecture; what pleasure in life some of the less gifted animals can enjoy? How much more reasonably it may be asked with respect to these men",[147] yet Jemmy had readily adapted to civilisation and then chosen to return to his primitive ways. This raised awkward questions; it jarred with Charles Lyell's sheltered views, expressed in volume 2 of his Principles of Geology, that human races "showed only a slight deviation from a common standard", and that acceptance of transmutation meant renouncing man's "belief in the high genealogy of his species".[148]

About this time Darwin wrote Reflection on Reading My Geological Notes, the first of a series of essays included in his notes.[140] He speculated on possible causes of the land repeatedly being raised, and on a history of life in Patagonia as a sequence of named species.[149]

They returned to the Falkland Islands on 16 March, just after an incident where gauchos and Indians had butchered senior members of Vernet's settlement, and helped to put the revolt down. Darwin noted the immense number of organisms dependent on the kelp forests.[150] He received word from Henslow that his first dispatch of fossils had reached Cambridge, were highly prized by the expert William Clift as showing hitherto unknown species and features of the Megatherium, and had been displayed by William Buckland and Clift before the cream of British science, making Darwin's reputation.[139][151]

Beagle now sailed to southern Patagonia, and on 19 April, an expedition including FitzRoy and Darwin set off to take boats as far as possible up the Santa Cruz river, with all involved taking turns in teams dragging the boats upstream. The river cut through a series of rises, then through plateaux forming wide plains covered with shells and shingle. Darwin discussed with FitzRoy his interpretation that these terraces had been shores that had gradually raised per Lyell's theories. Several of the smaller rheas were seen in the distance but were too elusive to catch.[130] The expedition approached the Andes but had to turn back.

Darwin summarised his speculation in his essay on the Elevation of Patagonia. Though tentative, it challenged Lyell's ideas. Darwin drew on measurements by Beagle's officers, as well as his own measurements, to propose that the plains had been raised in successive stages by forces acting over a wide area, rather than smaller-scale actions in a continuous movement. However, he supported Lyell in finding evidence to dismiss a sudden deluge when normal processes were suddenly speeded. Seashells he had found far inland still showing their colour suggested to him that the process had been relatively recent and could have affected human history.[152]

West coast of South America edit

 
Cerro La Campana ("The Bell Mountain"), which Darwin ascended on 17 August 1834

Beagle and Adventure now surveyed the Straits of Magellan before sailing north up the west coast, reaching Chiloé Island in the wet and heavily wooded Chiloé Archipelago on 28 June 1834. They then spent the next six months surveying the coast and islands southwards.[a] On Chiloé, Darwin found fragments of black lignite and petrified wood, at least two of which the British Geological Survey discovered in 2011 locked away in their collection labelled "unregistered fossil plants". Exchanged with Joseph Dalton Hooker about ten years later, one slide was signed "Chiloe, C. Darwin Esq".[156]

They arrived at Valparaíso on 23 July, and Darwin "got scent of some fossil bones .... if gold or galloping will get them, they shall be mine." After several walks in the area, he obtained horses and, on 14 August, set off up the volcanic Andes with a companion. Three days later they spent an enjoyable day on the summit of the "Campana or Bell" mountain, Cerro La Campana. Darwin visited a copper mine and spent five days scrambling in the mountains before going on to Santiago, Chile. On his way back, he fell ill on 20 September and had to spend a month in bed. It is possible that he contracted Chagas' disease here, leading to his health problems after his return to England, but this diagnosis of his symptoms is disputed. He learnt that the Admiralty had reprimanded FitzRoy for buying Adventure. FitzRoy had taken it badly, selling the ship and announcing they would go back to recheck his survey. He then had resigned his command, doubting his sanity, but was persuaded by his officers to withdraw his resignation and proceed. The artist Conrad Martens left the ship and took passage to Australia.[157][158]

After waiting for Darwin, Beagle sailed on 11 November to survey the Chonos Archipelago. From here, they saw the eruption of the volcano Osorno in the Andes. They sailed north, and Darwin wondered about the fossils he had found. The giant Mastodons and Megatheriums were extinct, but he had found no geological signs of a "diluvial debacle" or of the changed circumstances that, in Lyell's view, led to species no longer being adapted to the position they were created to fit. He agreed with Lyell's idea of "the gradual birth & death of species", but, unlike Lyell, Darwin was willing to believe Giovanni Battista Brocchi's idea that extinct species had somehow aged and died out.[159][160]

 
Concepción after the earthquake, as drawn by Lieutenant John Clements Wickham of Beagle

They arrived at the port of Valdivia on 8 February 1835. Twelve days later, Darwin was on shore when he experienced a severe earthquake and returned to find the port town badly damaged. They sailed two hundred miles (320 km) north to Concepción, and arrived on 4 March to find that the same earthquake had devastated the city by repeated shocks and a tsunami, with even the cathedral in ruins. Darwin noted the horrors of death and destruction, and FitzRoy carefully established that mussel beds were now above high tide, giving clear evidence of the ground rising some 9 ft (2.7 m), which he confirmed a month later. They had actually experienced the gradual process of the continent emerging from the ocean, as Lyell had indicated.[161][162]

They returned to Valparaiso on 11 March, Darwin set out on another trek up the Andes three days later and, on 21 March, reached the continental divide at 13,000 ft (4,000 m): even here, he found fossil seashells in the rocks. He felt the glorious view "was like watching a thunderstorm, or hearing in the full Orchestra a Chorus of the Messiah."[163] After going on to Mendoza, they were returning by a different pass when they found a petrified forest of fossilised trees, crystallised in a sandstone escarpment showing him that they had been on a Pacific beach when the land sank, burying them in the sand which had been compressed into rock, then had gradually been raised with the continent to stand at 7,000 ft (2,100 m) in the mountains. On returning to Valparaiso with half a mule's load of specimens, he wrote to his family on 23 April that his findings, if accepted, would be crucial to the theory of the formation of the world. After another gruelling expedition in the Andes, while Beagle was refitted, he rejoined it at Copiapó on 5 July and sailed to Lima but found an armed insurrection in progress and had to stay with the ship. Here he was writing up his notes when he realised that Lyell's idea, that coral atolls were on the rims of rising extinct volcanoes, made less sense than the volcanoes gradually sinking so that the coral reefs around the island kept building themselves close to sea level and became an atoll as the volcano disappeared below. This was a theory he would examine when they reached such islands.[164][165]

On 14 June, when about to leave Valparaiso,[166] FitzRoy had received news of the shipwreck of HMS Challenger captained by his friend Michael Seymour[167] (Darwin had arranged two boxes for this packet ship early in the year[81][168]). On investigation, FitzRoy found that Commodore Mason was unwilling to take HMS Blonde to the rescue for fear of lee-shore hazards, so FitzRoy "had to bully him & at last offered to go as Pilot". After "a tremendous quarrel" with hints to the Commodore of court-martial, they took Blonde to Concepción. FitzRoy rode about 64 kilometres (40 mi) on horseback with a guide to reach Seymour's camp at the Lebu River, then returned to further disputes before Blonde set out and rescued the survivors of the shipwreck on 5 July.[169][167] Wickham took Beagle on to reach Copiapò on 3 July, two days before Darwin rejoined the ship and they continued on to Lima. On 9 September Blonde brought FitzRoy to join them at Lima.[170]

Galápagos Islands edit

A week out of Lima, Beagle reached the Galápagos Islands on 15 September 1835. The next day Captain FitzRoy dropped anchor near where the town of Puerto Baquerizo Moreno is now sited, at Chatham Island. At the location that is now known as Frigatebird Hill (Cerro Tijeretas), Darwin spent his first hour onshore in the Galapagos islands.[171]

Darwin eagerly looked forward to seeing newly formed volcanic islands and took every opportunity to go ashore while Beagle was methodically moved round to chart the coast. He found broken black rocky volcanic lava scorching under the hot sun, and made detailed geological notes of features including volcanic cones like chimneys which reminded him of the iron foundries of industrial Staffordshire.[172] He was disappointed that he did not see active volcanoes or find strata showing uplift as he had hoped, though one of the officers found broken oyster-shells high above the sea on one of the islands.[173] Abundant giant Galápagos tortoises appeared to him almost antediluvian, and large black marine iguanas seemed "most disgusting, clumsy Lizards" well suited to their habitat—he noted that someone had called them "imps of darkness".[172] Darwin had learnt from Henslow about studying the geographical distribution of species, and particularly of linked species on oceanic islands and nearby continents, so he endeavoured to collect plants in flower. He found widespread "wretched-looking" thin scrub thickets of only ten species and very few insects. Birds were remarkably unafraid of humans, and in his first field note, he recorded that a mockingbird was similar to those he had seen on the continent.[32][174]

 
The various Galápagos mockingbirds Darwin caught resembled the Chilean mockingbird Mimus thenka, but differed from island to island.

Beagle sailed on to Charles Island. By chance, they were greeted by the "Englishman" Nicholas Lawson, acting Governor of Galápagos for the Republic of the Equator, who accompanied them up to the penal colony. It was said that tortoises differed in the shape of the shells from island to island, and Darwin noted Lawson's statement that on seeing a tortoise, he could "pronounce with certainty from which island it has been brought".[175] Though Darwin remembered this later, he did not pay much attention at the time. However, he found a mockingbird and "fortunately happened to observe" that it differed from the Chatham Island specimen, so from then on, he carefully noted where mockingbirds had been caught.[32][174] He industriously collected all the animals, plants, insects and reptiles, and speculated about finding "from future comparison to what district or 'centre of creation' the organized beings of this archipelago must be attached."[176] At this stage, his thoughts reflected Lyell's rejection of transmutation of species.[177]

They went on to Albemarle Island, where Darwin saw a small jet of smoke from a recently active volcano. On 1 October, he landed near Tagus Cove and explored Beagle Crater.[178] There, he saw his first Galapagos land iguanas. Water pits were disappointingly inadequate for drinking, but attracted swarms of small birds, and Darwin made his only note of the finches he was not bothering to label by island.[179] He caught a third species of mockingbird.[174]

After passing the northern islands of Abingdon, Tower and Bindloe, Darwin was put ashore at James Island for nine days together with the surgeon Benjamin Bynoe and their servants. They busily collected all sorts of specimens while Beagle went back to Chatham Island for freshwater.[180]

After further surveying, Beagle set sail for Tahiti on 20 October 1835. Darwin wrote up his notes, and to his astonishment, found that all the mockingbirds caught on Charles, Albemarle, James and Chatham Islands differed from island to island.[32] He wrote "This birds which is so closely allied to the Thenca of Chili (Callandra of B. Ayres) is singular from existing as varieties or distinct species in the different Isds.— I have four specimens from as many Isds.— These will be found to be 2 or 3 varieties.— Each variety is constant in its own Island....".[181]

Tahiti to Australia edit

They sailed on, dining on Galapagos tortoises, and passed the atoll of Honden Island on 9 November. They passed through the Low Islands archipelago, with Darwin remarking that they had "a very uninteresting appearance; a long brilliantly white beach is capped by a low bright line of green vegetation." Arriving at Tahiti on 15 November, he soon found interest in luxuriant vegetation and the pleasant intelligent natives who showed the benefits of Christianity, refuting allegations he had read about tyrannical missionaries overturning indigenous cultures.[182]

On 19 December, they reached New Zealand, where Darwin thought the tattooed Māori to be savages with the character of a much lower order than the Tahitians. He also noted that they and their homes were "filthily dirty and offensive". Darwin saw missionaries bringing improvement in character, as well as new farming practices with an exemplary "English farm" employing natives. Richard Matthews was left here with his elder brother Joseph Matthews who was a missionary at Kaitaia. Darwin and FitzRoy agreed that missionaries had been unfairly misrepresented in tracts, particularly one written by the artist Augustus Earle which he had left on the ship. Darwin also noted many English residents of the most worthless character, including runaway convicts from New South Wales. By 30 December, he was glad to leave New Zealand.[183]

The first sight of Australia on 12 January 1836 reminded him of Patagonia, but inland the country improved, and he was soon filled with admiration at the bustling city of Sydney. On a journey into the interior, he came across a group of Aboriginal peoples who looked "good-humoured & pleasant & they appeared far from such utterly degraded beings as usually represented". They gave him a display of spear throwing for a shilling, and he reflected sadly on how their numbers were rapidly decreasing.[184] At a large sheep farm, he joined a hunting party and caught his first marsupial, a "potoroo" (rat-kangaroo). Reflecting on the strange animals of the country, he thought that an unbeliever "might exclaim 'Surely two distinct Creators must have been [at] work; their object however has been the same & certainly the end in each case is complete'," yet an antlion he was watching was very similar to its European counterpart. That evening he saw the even stranger platypus and noticed that its bill was soft, unlike the preserved specimens he had seen. Aboriginal stories that they laid eggs were believed by few Europeans.[185][186]

Beagle visited Hobart, Tasmania, where Darwin was impressed by the agreeable high society of the settlers but noted that the island's "Aboriginal blacks are all removed & kept (in reality as prisoners) in a Promontory, the neck of which is guarded. I believe it was not possible to avoid this cruel step; although without doubt the misconduct of the Whites first led to the Necessity."[187] They then sailed to King George's Sound in south-west Australia, a dismal settlement then being replaced by the Swan River Colony. Darwin was impressed by the "good disposition of the aboriginal blacks... Although true Savages, it is impossible not to feel an inclination to like such quiet good-natured men." He provided boiled rice for an aboriginal "Corrobery" dancing party performed by the men of two tribes to the great pleasure of the women and children, a "most rude barbarous scene" in which everyone appeared in high spirits, "all moving in hideous harmony" and "perfectly at their ease".[188] Beagle's departure in a storm was delayed when she ran aground. She was refloated and got on her way.

Keeling Island homewards edit

FitzRoy's instructions from the Admiralty required a detailed geological survey of a circular coral atoll to investigate how coral reefs formed, particularly whether they rose from the bottom of the sea or the summits of extinct volcanoes, and the effects of tides measured with specially constructed gauges. He chose the Keeling Islands in the Indian Ocean, and on arrival on 1 April, the entire crew set to work.[189] Darwin found a coconut economy, serving both the small settlement and wildlife. There was a limited range of native plants and no land birds, but hermit crabs everywhere. The lagoons teemed with a wide variety of invertebrates and fish, and he examined the atoll's structure in view of the theory he had developed in Lima, of encircling reefs becoming atolls as an island sank.[190] This idea was supported by the numerous soundings FitzRoy had taken, showing a steep slope outside the reef with no living corals below 20–30 fathoms (40–60 m).[191]

Arriving at Mauritius on 29 April 1836, Darwin was impressed by the civilised prosperity of the French colony, which had come under British rule. He toured the island, examining its volcanic mountains and fringing coral reefs. The Surveyor-general Captain Lloyd took him on the only elephant on the island to see an elevated coral plain.[186][192] By then, FitzRoy was writing the official Narrative of the Beagle voyages, and after reading Darwin's diary he proposed a joint publication. Darwin asked his family about FitzRoy's idea "to have the disposal & arranging of my journal & to mingle it with his own".[193]

Beagle reached the Cape of Good Hope on 31 May. In Cape Town, Darwin received a letter dated 29 January from his sister Catherine which briefly mentioned "the little books, with the Extracts from your Letters; every body is much pleased, with them, who has seen them".[194] Darwin was horrified that his careless words were in print, but No hay remedio (it can't be helped).[195] Unknown to Darwin, his fame was spreading; extracts from his letters to Henslow had been read to the Cambridge Philosophical Society on 16 November 1835 by Henslow and Sedgwick.[196] On 18 November, Sedgwick had read extracts to the Geological Society of London, and this had been reported in The Athenæum on 21 November. On 25 December, their father received a letter from Henslow which said that Darwin would become one of the premier naturalists of the time and enclosed some copies of the pamphlet Extracts from letters addressed to Professor Henslow which had been printed for private distribution. Their father "did not move from his seat till he had read every word of your book & he was very much gratified – he liked so much the simple clear way you gave your information".[197][198]

Darwin explored the geology of the area, reaching conclusions about the slate formation and the injection of granite seams as a liquid which differed from the ideas of Lyell and Sedgwick. The zoologist Andrew Smith showed him formations, and later discussed the large animals living on sparse vegetation, showing that a lack of luxuriant vegetation did not explain the extinction of the giant creatures in South America.[199]

Around 15 June, Darwin and FitzRoy visited the noted astronomer Sir John Herschel. In his diary, Darwin called this "the most memorable event which, for a long period, I have had the good fortune to enjoy." His zeal for science had been stirred at Cambridge by reading Herschel's book on philosophy of science, which had guided his theorising during the voyage.[199] Their discussion is not recorded, but a few months earlier, on 20 February 1836, Herschel had written to Lyell praising his Principles of Geology as a work which would bring "a complete revolution in [its] subject, by altering entirely the point of view in which it must thenceforward be contemplated." and opening a way for bold speculation on "that mystery of mysteries, the replacement of extinct species by others." Herschel himself thought catastrophic extinction and renewal "an inadequate conception of the Creator", and by analogy with other intermediate causes "the origination of fresh species, could it ever come under our cognizance, would be found to be a natural in contradistinction to a miraculous process".[200]

In Cape Town, missionaries were being accused of causing racial tension and profiteering, and after Beagle set to sea on 18 June, FitzRoy wrote an open letter to the evangelical South African Christian Recorder on the Moral State of Tahiti incorporating extracts from both his and Darwin's diaries to defend the reputation of missionaries. This was given to a passing ship that took it to Cape Town to become FitzRoy's (and Darwin's) first published work.[201]

On 8 July, they stopped at St. Helena for six days. Darwin took lodgings near Napoleon's tomb, and when writing to Henslow asking to be proposed for the Geological Society, he mentioned his suspicions "that differently from most Volcanic Islds. its structure is rather complicated. It seems strange, that this little centre of a distinct creation should, as is asserted, bear marks of recent elevation."[199][202] With a guide, he wandered over the island, noting its complex sloping strata showing fault lines, interlaced with volcanic dykes. He examined beds high on the hill that had been taken as seashells showing that St. Helena had risen from the ocean in recent times, but Darwin identified them as extinct species of land-shells. He noted that woodland had been destroyed by goats and hogs that had run wild since being introduced in 1502,[203] and native vegetation only predominated on high steep ridges, having been replaced by imported species.[204]

At this stage, Darwin had an acute interest in the island biogeography, and his description of St Helena as "a little centre of creation" in his geological diary reflects Charles Lyell's speculation in volume 2 of Principles of Geology that the island would have acted as a "focus of creative force".[199] He later recalled believing in the permanence of species, but "as far as I can remember, vague doubts occasionally flitted across my mind".[205] When organising his Ornithological Notes between mid June and August,[206] Darwin expanded on his initial notes on the Galapagos mockingbird Mimus thenca:[32]

These birds are closely allied in appearance to the Thenca of Chile or Callandra of la Plata. ... In each Isld. each kind is exclusively found: habits of all are indistinguishable. When I recollect, the fact that the form of the body, shape of scales & general size, the Spaniards can at once pronounce, from which Island any Tortoise may have been brought. When I see these Islands in sight of each other, & [but del.] possessed of but a scanty stock of animals, tenanted by these birds, but slightly differing in structure & filling the same place in Nature, I must suspect they are only varieties.
The only fact of a similar kind of which I am aware, is the constant asserted difference – between the wolf-like Fox of East & West Falkland Islds.
If there is the slightest foundation for these remarks the zoology of Archipelagoes – will be well worth examining; for such facts [would inserted] undermine the stability of Species.[207]

The term "would" before "undermine" had been added after writing what is now noted as the first expression of his doubts about species being immutable. That led to him becoming convinced about the transmutation of species and hence evolution.[177] In opposing transmutation, Lyell had proposed that varieties arose due to changes in the environment, but these varieties lived in similar conditions though each on its own island. Darwin had just reviewed similar inconsistencies with mainland bird genera such as Pteroptochos.[208] Though his suspicions about the Falkland Island fox may have been unsupported, the differences in Galápagos tortoises between islands were remembered, and he later wrote that he had been greatly struck from around March 1836 by the character of South American fossils and species on the Galapagos Archipelago, noting "These facts origin (especially latter) of all my views".[209]

Beagle reached Ascension Island on 19 July 1836,[210] and Darwin was delighted to receive letters from his sisters with news that Sedgwick had written to Dr. Butler: "He is doing admirably in S. America, & has already sent home a Collection above all praise.— It was the best thing in the world for him that he went out on the Voyage of Discovery— There was some risk of his turning out an idle man: but his character will now be fixed, & if God spare his life, he will have a great name among the Naturalists of Europe."[211] Darwin later recalled how he "clambered over the mountains... with a bounding step and made the volcanic rocks resound under my geological hammer!."[212] He agreed with the saying attributed to the people of St Helena that "We know we live on a rock, but the poor people at Ascension live on a cinder", and noted the care taken to sustain "houses, gardens & fields placed near the summit of the central mountain".[210] (In the 1840s, Darwin worked with Hooker, who proposed in 1847 that the Royal Navy shall import tree species, a project started in 1850 which led to the creation of an artificial cloud forest on what is now Green Mountain.[213])

On 23 July, they set off again longing to reach home, but FitzRoy, who wanted to ensure the accuracy of his longitude measurements, took the ship across the Atlantic back to Bahia in Brazil to take check readings. Darwin was glad to see the beauties of the jungle for one last time but now compared "the stately Mango trees with the Horse Chesnuts of England."[214] The return trip was delayed for a further 11 days when weather forced Beagle to shelter further up the coast at Pernambuco, where Darwin examined rocks for signs of elevation, noted "Mangroves like rank grass", and investigated marine invertebrates at various depths on the sandbar. Beagle departed for home on 17 August.[199] After a stormy passage including a stop for supplies at the Azores, the Beagle finally reached England on 2 October 1836 and anchored at Falmouth, Cornwall.[215]

Return edit

 
In 1837 HMS Beagle set off on a survey of Australia, shown here in an 1841 watercolour by Owen Stanley.

On the stormy night of 2 October 1836, immediately after arriving in Falmouth,[215] Darwin set off on the Royal Mail coach from Fish Strand Hill (a plaque now marks the site[216]) for the two day journey to his family home, The Mount House in Shrewsbury, Shropshire. As he wrote to FitzRoy, the countryside they passed was "beautiful & cheerful", and though the "stupid people on the coach did not seem to think the fields one bit greener than usual", he now knew "that the wide world does not contain so happy a prospect as the rich cultivated land of England".[217][218] In April 1835 Darwin had written that he was undecided whether to "sleep at the Lion, the first night," when he arrived by the daily Wonder coach, "or disturb you all in the dead of the night".[50][164] He arrived late at night on 4 October 1836,[217][219] and at breakfast the next morning greeted his family, to their delight and celebrations. His sisters assured him he did "not look the least different",[217][218] but his father's first reaction was to tell them "Why, the shape of his head is quite altered."[220][221] After time spent catching up with family, Darwin went on to Cambridge on 15 October and sought Henslow's advice on organising the description and cataloguing of his collections.[222]

Darwin's father gave him an allowance that enabled him to put aside other careers. As a scientific celebrity with a reputation established by his fossils and the wide distribution of Extracts from Letters to Henslow on South American natural history and geology, Darwin toured London's social institutions. By this time, he was part of the "scientific establishment", collaborating with expert naturalists to describe his specimens and working on ideas he had been developing during the voyage. Charles Lyell gave him enthusiastic backing. In December 1836, Darwin presented a talk to the Cambridge Philosophical Society. He wrote a paper proving that Chile, and the South American continent, was slowly rising, which he read to the Geological Society of London on 4 January 1837.[223]

Darwin was willing to have his diary published mixed in with FitzRoy's account, but his relatives, including Emma and Hensleigh Wedgwood, urged that it be published separately. On 30 December, the question was settled by FitzRoy taking the advice of William Broderip that Darwin's journal should form the third volume of the Narrative. Darwin set to work reorganising his diary, trimming it, and incorporating scientific material from his notes. He completed his Journal and Remarks (now commonly known as The Voyage of the Beagle) in August 1837, but FitzRoy was slower, and the three volumes were published in August 1839.[224]

Syms Covington stayed with Darwin as his servant. Then, on 25 February 1839, (shortly after Darwin's marriage), Covington left on good terms and migrated to Australia.[225]

Expert publications on Darwin's collections edit

Darwin had shown great ability as a collector and had done the best he could with the reference books he had on the ship. It was now the province of recognised expert specialists to establish which specimens were unknown, and make their considered taxonomic decisions on defining and naming new species.[226]

Fossils edit

Richard Owen had expertise in comparative anatomy, and his professional judgements revealed a succession of similar species in the same locality, giving Darwin insights which he would later recall as being central to his new views.[226] Owen met Darwin on 29 October 1836 and quickly took on the task of describing these new fossils. At that time the only fully described fossil mammals from South America were three species of Mastodon and the gigantic Megatherium.[227] On 9 November, Darwin wrote to his sister that "Some of them are turning out great treasures." The near-complete skeleton from Punta Alta was apparently very closely allied to anteaters, but of the extraordinary size of a small horse. The rhinoceros-sized head bought for two shillings near the city of Mercedes was not a megatherium, but "as far as they can guess, must have been a gnawing animal. Conceive a Rat or a Hare of such a size— What famous Cats they ought to have had in those days!"[228]

 
A Scelidotherium skeleton in Paris

Over the following years, Owen published descriptions of the most important fossils, naming several as new species. He described the fossils from Punta Alta as including a nearly perfect head and three fragments of heads of Megatherium Cuvierii, the jaw of a related species which Owen named Mylodon Darwinii, and jaws of Megalonyx Jeffersonii. The near-complete skeleton was named Scelidotherium by Owen, who found that it had most of its bones nearly in their proper relative positions.[116] At the nearby Monte Hermoso beds, numerous rodents included species allied to the Brazilian tuco-tuco and the capybara.[123]

Owen decided that the fossils of polygonal plates of bony armour found at several locations were not from the Megatherium as Cuvier's description implied, but from a huge armadillo, as Darwin had briefly thought. Owen found a description of an earlier unnamed specimen which he named Glyptodon clavipes in 1839.[229] Darwin's find from Punta Alta, a large surface about 3 by 2 ft (0.91 by 0.61 m) doubled over with toe bones still inside the folded armour,[116] was identified as a slightly smaller Glyptodont named Hoplophorus by Peter Wilhelm Lund in the same year.[118][229]

The huge skull from near Mercedes was named Toxodon by Owen,[230] and he showed that the "enormous gnawing tooth" from the cliffs of the Carcarañá River was a molar from this species.[231] The finds near Mercedes also included a large fragment of Glyptodont armour and a head that Owen initially identified as a Glossotherium, but later decided was a Mylodon.[232] Owen found fragments of the jaw and a tooth of another Toxodon in the fossils from Punta Alta.[116]

The fossils from near Santa Fe included the horse tooth which had puzzled Darwin as it had been previously thought that horses had only come to the Americas in the 16th century, close to a Toxodon tooth and a tooth of Mastodon andium (now Cuvieronius hyodon). Owen confirmed that the horse tooth was of an extinct South American species which he named Equus curvidens, and its age was confirmed by a corroded horse tooth among the Punta Alta fossils.[233] This discovery was later explained as part of the evolution of the horse.

The "soft as cheese" Mastodon bones at the Paraná River were identified as two gigantic skeletons of Mastodon andium, and mastodon teeth were also identified from Santa Fe and the Carcarañá River.[234] The pieces of spine and a hind leg from Port S. Julian, which Darwin had thought came from "some large animal, I fancy a Mastodon", gave Owen difficulties, as the creature which he named Macrauchenia appeared to be a "gigantic and most extraordinary pachyderm", allied to the Palaeotherium, but with affinities to the llama and the camel.[235] The fossils at Punta Alta included a pachyderm tooth which was thought probably came from Macrauchenia.[116]

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ FitzRoy's and Darwin's publications arising from the expedition were a major reference point for 19th-century Chilean explorers of western Patagonia. FitzRoy's book Sailing Directions for South America led Chilean Navy hydrographer Francisco Hudson to investigate in the 1850s the possible existence of a sailing route through internal waters from the Chiloé Archipelago to the Straits of Magellan. Hudson was the first to realise that the Isthmus of Ofqui made this route impossible.[153] Enrique Simpson found instead FitzRoy's mapping of little use noting in 1870 that "Fitzroy's chart, that is quite exact until that point [Melinka 43°53' S], is worthless further ahead...". Thus, south of Melinka Simpson relied more on the late 18th century sketches of José de Moraleda y Montero.[154] Simpson's contemporary Francisco Vidal Gormaz was critical of the over-all work of FitzRoy and Darwin stating that they had failed to acknowledge the importance of the Patagonian islands.[155]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Browne & Neve 1989, p. 16
  2. ^ a b Browne & Neve 1989, p. 9.
  3. ^ Taylor 2008, p. 17.
  4. ^ Browne & Neve 1989, p. 3.
  5. ^ King 1839, p. xv.
  6. ^ a b Taylor 2008, p. 18.
  7. ^ Darwin 1845, p. 1.
  8. ^ a b c FitzRoy 1839, pp. 24–26
  9. ^ FitzRoy 1839, pp. 26–33
  10. ^ FitzRoy 1839, pp. 33–40
  11. ^ Browne 1995, pp. 147–148.
  12. ^ FitzRoy 1839, pp. 4–14
  13. ^ Browne & Neve 1989, pp. 3–4
  14. ^ a b FitzRoy 1839, pp. 13–16
  15. ^ a b c d FitzRoy 1839, pp. 17–22
  16. ^ "HMS Beagle – Port of science and discovery – Port Cities". Retrieved 30 January 2009.
  17. ^ Browne & Neve 1989, pp. 4–5
  18. ^ Browne 1995, pp. 150–151, 204–209
  19. ^ a b c "Letter no. 131, Charles Darwin to Robert FitzRoy, [19 September 1831], [London]". Darwin Correspondence Project. Retrieved 3 January 2022.
  20. ^ Browne 1995, p. 208
  21. ^ "Letter no. 387, Robert FitzRoy to Charles Darwin, 16 November 1837". Darwin Correspondence Project. Retrieved 3 January 2022.
  22. ^ King 1839, pp. 360, 385
  23. ^ a b van Wyhe 2013, p. 3.
  24. ^ Desmond & Moore 1991, p. 104
  25. ^ Browne 1995, pp. 148–149
  26. ^ van Wyhe 2013, pp. 5–7.
  27. ^ a b Browne & Neve 1989, pp. 4–7
  28. ^ "Letter no. 104, George Peacock to J. S. Henslow [6 or 13 August 1831]". Darwin Correspondence Project. Retrieved 27 January 2022.
  29. ^ "George Peacock". Darwin Correspondence Project. 18 October 2017. Retrieved 29 January 2022.
  30. ^ a b "Letter no. 115, Charles Darwin to Susan Darwin, [4 September 1831], Cambridge". Darwin Correspondence Project. Retrieved 27 January 2022.
  31. ^ van Wyhe 2013, p. 6.
  32. ^ a b c d e f Gordon Chancellor; Randal Keynes (October 2006). "Darwin's field notes on the Galapagos: 'A little world within itself'". Darwin Online.
  33. ^ "Letter no. 105, J. S. Henslow to Charles Darwin, 24 August 1831, Cambridge". Darwin Correspondence Project. Retrieved 27 January 2022.
  34. ^ a b c "Letter no. 106, George Peacock to Charles Darwin, [c. 26 August 1831]". Darwin Correspondence Project. Retrieved 2 January 2022.
  35. ^ Peter Lucas (1 January 2010). "The recovery of time past: Darwin at Barmouth on the eve of the Beagle". Darwin Online. Retrieved 5 December 2021. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  36. ^ "Letter no. 107, Charles Darwin to J. S. Henslow, 30 [August 1831], Shrewsbury". Darwin Correspondence Project. Retrieved 27 January 2022.
  37. ^ "Letter no. 112, Charles Darwin to Francis Beaufort, 1 September [1831], Shrewsbury". Darwin Correspondence Project. Retrieved 27 January 2022.
  38. ^ "Letter no. 113, Francis Beaufort to Robert FitzRoy, 1 September [1831]". Darwin Correspondence Project. Retrieved 27 January 2022.
  39. ^ Browne 1995, pp. 158–159
  40. ^ a b "Darwin Correspondence Project » letter: 117 Darwin, C. R. to Darwin, S. E., (5 Sept 1831)". Retrieved 12 November 2014.
  41. ^ a b "Darwin Correspondence Project » letter: 118 – Darwin, C. R. to Henslow, J. S., (5 Sept 1831)". Retrieved 13 November 2014.
  42. ^ a b "Letter no. 132, Charles Darwin to W. D. Fox, 19 [September 1831], 17 Spring Gardens (& here I shall remain till I start)". Darwin Correspondence Project. Retrieved 2 January 2022.
  43. ^ Browne 1995, pp. 160–161
    Darwin, C. R. Recollections of the development of my mind & character [Autobiography [1876-4.1882] CUL-DAR26.1–121) Transcribed by Kees Rookmaaker. Darwin Online. p. 49
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  45. ^ a b "Letter no. 123, Charles Darwin to J. S. Henslow, 9 [September 1831], [London]". Darwin Correspondence Project. Retrieved 3 January 2022.
  46. ^ Darwin, C. R. (1831). "[Notes on preserving Beagle specimens]. CUL-DAR29.3.78". darwin-online.org.uk. Retrieved 3 January 2021. refers to: Benjamin Leadbeater, Henslow, Yarrell, Phillip Parker King, John Lort Stokes, Robert Edmond Grant, Frederick William Hope
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  49. ^ "Darwin Correspondence Project » letter: 127 – Darwin, C. R. to Darwin, S. E., 17 (Sept 1831)". Retrieved 13 November 2014.
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  52. ^ "Darwin Correspondence Project » letter: 139 – Darwin, C. R. to FitzRoy, Robert (4 or 11 Oct 1831)". Retrieved 13 November 2014.
  53. ^ Browne & Neve 1989, pp. 12
  54. ^ a b Keynes 2001, p. 27
  55. ^ "Letter 119 – Darwin, C. R. to Darwin, S. E. (6 Sept 1831)". Darwin Correspondence Project.
  56. ^ Browne 1995, pp. 208–209
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  58. ^ a b Browne 1995, p. 210.
  59. ^ Browne & Neve 1989, pp. 14–15.
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  61. ^ a b Keynes 2000, pp. ix–xi.
  62. ^ Keynes 2000, pp. x.
  63. ^ Keynes 2001, pp. 4–17.
    FitzRoy 1839, p. 42.
  64. ^ Keynes 2001, pp. 19–22
  65. ^ Darwin 1839, pp. 1–7.
  66. ^ Keynes 2001, pp. 22–26
  67. ^ He also collected what would in 1837 be described by John Gould as the type specimen of Passer iagoensis, the Cape Verde sparrow or Iago sparrow.
  68. ^ Herbert 1991, pp. 164–170.
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  70. ^ Darwin 1958, p. 81
  71. ^ Letter to L. Horner, Down, 29 August 1844
  72. ^ Freeman 2007, p. 196
  73. ^ Keynes 2001, pp. 26–28
  74. ^ a b "Letter no. 171, Charles Darwin to J. S. Henslow, 18 May – 16 June 1832, Rio de Janeiro". Darwin Correspondence Project. 2 January 2022. Retrieved 2 January 2022. as for the Doctor he has gone back to England.—as he chose to make himself disagreeable to the Captain & to Wickham He was a philosopher of rather an antient date; at St Jago by his own account he made general remarks during the first fortnight & collected particular facts during the last.
  75. ^ Keynes 2001, pp. 28–34
  76. ^ a b "Letter 196 — Henslow, J. S. to Darwin, C. R., 15 & 21 Jan (1833)". Darwin Correspondence Project. Retrieved 8 July 2011.
  77. ^ Browne 1995, pp. 202–204
  78. ^ FitzRoy 1839, pp. 56–58.
    Keynes 2001, pp. 36–38.
  79. ^ Browne 1995, p. 195
  80. ^ Browne & Neve 1989, pp. 14–17.
  81. ^ a b Keynes 2000, p. 319.
  82. ^ Browne & Neve 1989, pp. 11–12.
  83. ^ FitzRoy 1839, pp. 58–60..
  84. ^ Keynes 2001, pp. 41–44..
  85. ^ Darwin 1958, pp. 73–74..
  86. ^ Keynes 2001, p. 45.
  87. ^ Chaffin 2022, pp. iii.
  88. ^ Keynes 2001, p. 48..
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  92. ^ Browne 1995, pp. 204–205 "invalided home, a naval euphemism for personal disagreements and dissatisfactions."
  93. ^ Keynes 2001, pp. 60–61..
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  96. ^ Keynes 2001, pp. 60–61, 64–65..
  97. ^ Keynes 2001, pp. 64–65, 71–72..
  98. ^ FitzRoy 1839, pp. 76–79..
  99. ^ Keynes 2001, pp. 77–80..
  100. ^ Thomson 2003, pp. 162–163.
  101. ^ Taylor 2008, p. 101.
  102. ^ Keynes 2001, p. 85.
  103. ^ Thomson 2003, pp. 163–164.
  104. ^ Keynes 2001, pp. 86–90.
  105. ^ Taylor 2008, pp. 101, 104.
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  107. ^ Keynes 2001, pp. 93.
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  200. ^ van Wyhe 2007, p. 197
    Babbage 1838, pp. 225–227
  201. ^ Browne 1995, pp. 330–331
    FitzRoy, R; Darwin, C (September 1836). "A letter, containing remarks on the moral state of Tahiti, New Zealand, &c". South African Christian Recorder. pp. 221–238. At Sea, 28th June, 1836
  202. ^ "Darwin Correspondence Project – Letter 304 — Darwin, C. R. to Henslow, J. S., 9 July 1836".
  203. ^ Darwin 1844, pp. 89–90.
  204. ^ Darwin 1845, pp. 486–488.
  205. ^ Poulton 1896, pp. 28–29.
  206. ^ Keynes 2000, p. xx.
  207. ^ Barlow 1963, p. 262.
  208. ^ Hodge 2009, pp. 93–98.
  209. ^ Barlow 1933, p. xiii.
  210. ^ a b Keynes 2001, pp. 431–432
  211. ^ "Darwin Correspondence Project – Letter 288 — Darwin, S. E. to Darwin, C. R., 22 Nov 1835".
  212. ^ Darwin 1958, pp. 81–82.
  213. ^ Falcon, Howard (1 September 2010). "Creation of an artificial cloud forest". Bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 18 September 2010.
  214. ^ "Darwin Correspondence Project – Letter 306 — Darwin, C. R. to Darwin, S. E., 4 Aug (1836)".
  215. ^ a b Keynes 2001, p. 447
  216. ^ Paul Van Helvert; John Van Wyhe (12 January 2021). Darwin: A Companion - With Iconographies By John Van Wyhe. World Scientific Publishing Company. p. 95. ISBN 9789811208225. – see photographs.
  217. ^ a b c Desmond & Moore 1991, p. 195.
  218. ^ a b "Letter 310 – Darwin, C. R. to FitzRoy, Robert 6 October (1836)". Darwin Correspondence Project.
  219. ^ "Letter 307 – Darwin, C. R. to Josiah Wedgwood II (5 October 1836)". Darwin Correspondence Project.
  220. ^ Browne 1995, p. 340.
  221. ^ Darwin 1958, p. 79.
  222. ^ Desmond & Moore 1991, p. 197.
  223. ^ Darwin, C. R. (1837). "Observations of proofs of recent elevation on the coast of Chili, made during the survey of His Majesty's Ship Beagle commanded by Capt. FitzRoy R.N." Proceedings of the Geological Society of London. 2: 446–449.
  224. ^ Keynes 2001, p. xviii–xx.
  225. ^ Keynes 2001, p. 449.
  226. ^ a b Herbert 1980, p. 11.
  227. ^ Owen 1840, p. 13
  228. ^ "Darwin Correspondence Project – Letter 321 — Darwin, C. R. to Darwin, C. S., (9 Nov 1836)".
  229. ^ a b Owen 1840, pp. 106–108
  230. ^ Owen 1837, pp. 541–542
  231. ^ Owen 1840, pp. 16–18
  232. ^ Darwin 1846, p. 92
  233. ^ Darwin 1846, p. 90
  234. ^ Darwin 1846, pp. 88–92.
  235. ^ Darwin 1846, p. 95

References edit

  • Babbage, Charles (1838), The Ninth Bridgewater Treatise (2nd ed.), London: John Murray, retrieved 2 February 2009
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  • Desmond, Adrian; Moore, James (1991), Darwin, London: Michael Joseph, Penguin Group, ISBN 978-0-7181-3430-3
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  • FitzRoy, Robert (1836), "Sketch of the Surveying Voyages of his Majesty's Ships Adventure and Beagle, 1825–1836. Commanded by Captains P. P. King, P. Stokes, and R. Fitz-Roy, Royal Navy. (Communicated by John Barrow)", Journal of the Geological Society of London, 6: 311–343, retrieved 14 May 2012
  • FitzRoy, Robert (1839), Narrative of the surveying voyages of His Majesty's Ships Adventure and Beagle between the years 1826 and 1836, describing their examination of the southern shores of South America, and the Beagle's circumnavigation of the globe. Proceedings of the second expedition, 1831–36, under the command of Captain Robert Fitz-Roy, R.N., vol. II, London: Henry Colburn, retrieved 27 January 2009
  • FitzRoy, Robert (1839a), Narrative of the surveying voyages of His Majesty's Ships Adventure and Beagle between the years 1826 and 1836, describing their examination of the southern shores of South America, and the Beagle's circumnavigation of the globe, vol. Appendix to Volume II, London: Henry Colburn, retrieved 27 January 2009
  • Freeman, R. B. (2007), Charles Darwin: A companion. 2d online edition, compiled by Sue Asscher and edited by John van Wyhe. (2d online edition, compiled by Sue Asscher and edited by John van Wyhe ed.), Darwin Online, retrieved 1 August 2010
  • Gould, John (1839), Darwin, C. R. (ed.), Birds Part 3 No. 4, The zoology of the voyage of H.M.S. Beagle, London: Smith Elder and Co., retrieved 18 April 2009
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  • Herbert, Sandra (1995), "From Charles Darwin's portfolio: An early essay on South American geology and species", Earth Sciences History, vol. 14, no. 1, pp. 23–36, doi:10.17704/eshi.14.1.76570264u727jh36
  • Hodge, Jonathan (2009), "Darwin, the Galapagos and his changing thoughts about species origins: 1835–1837", Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences, 61 (Supplement II, No. 7): 89–106, retrieved 19 February 2012
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  • King, P. P. (1839), FitzRoy, Robert (ed.), Narrative of the surveying voyages of His Majesty's Ships Adventure and Beagle between the years 1826 and 1836, describing their examination of the southern shores of South America, and the Beagle's circumnavigation of the globe. Proceedings of the first expedition, 1826–30, under the command of Captain P. Parker King, R.N., F.R.S., vol. I, London: Henry Colburn, retrieved 27 January 2009
  • Owen, Richard (1837), "A description of the Cranium of the Toxodon Platensis, a gigantic extinct mammiferous species, referrible by its dentition to the Rodentia, but with affinities to the Pachydermata and the Herbivorous Cetacea [Read 19 April]", Proceedings of the Geological Society of London, no. 2, pp. 541–542, retrieved 27 January 2009
  • Owen, Richard (1840), Darwin, C. R. (ed.), Fossil Mammalia Part 1, The zoology of the voyage of H.M.S. Beagle, London: Smith Elder and Co., retrieved 27 January 2009
  • Poulton, Edward Bagnall (1896), Charles Darwin and the theory of natural selection, London: Cassell & Co., retrieved 27 January 2009
  • Taylor, James (2008), The Voyage of the Beagle: Darwin's Extraordinary Adventure in Fitzroy's Famous Survey Ship, Conway, ISBN 978-1-84486-066-1
  • Thomson, Keith S. (2003), HMS Beagle : the story of Darwin's ship, London: Phoenix, ISBN 978-0-7538-1733-9, OCLC 52143718
  • van Wyhe, John (27 March 2007), "Mind the gap: Did Darwin avoid publishing his theory for many years?", Notes and Records of the Royal Society, 61 (2): 177–205, doi:10.1098/rsnr.2006.0171, S2CID 202574857, retrieved 2 February 2009
  • van Wyhe, John (2013), ""My appointment received the sanction of the Admiralty": Why Charles Darwin really was the naturalist on HMS Beagle" (PDF), Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences, Elsevier BV, 44 (3): 316–326, doi:10.1016/j.shpsc.2013.03.022, PMID 23664568

External links edit

  • "Darwin, a naturalist's voyage around world". CNRS, Paris, France. Retrieved 9 November 2009.
  • . Archived from the original on 12 November 2007. Retrieved 21 November 2007.
  • Rookmaaker, Kees (2009), Darwin's itinerary on the voyage of the Beagle, Darwin Online, retrieved 18 August 2009
  • Grant K. Thalia and, Estes Gregory B. (2009), Darwin's itinerary in Galapagos
  • "Darwin and the Beagle voyage". Darwin Correspondence Project. 11 February 2021. Retrieved 20 December 2021.

Further reading edit

  • The Complete Works of Charles Darwin Online – Darwin Online; Darwin's publications, private papers and bibliography, supplementary works including biographies, obituaries and reviews. Free to use, includes items not in public domain.
  • Works by Charles Darwin at Project Gutenberg; public domain
  • Darwin Correspondence Project Text and notes for most of his letters
  • Darwin in Galapagos: Footsteps to a New World

second, voyage, beagle, second, voyage, beagle, from, december, 1831, october, 1836, second, survey, expedition, beagle, under, captain, robert, fitzroy, taken, over, command, ship, first, voyage, after, previous, captain, pringle, stokes, committed, suicide, . The second voyage of HMS Beagle from 27 December 1831 to 2 October 1836 was the second survey expedition of HMS Beagle under captain Robert FitzRoy who had taken over command of the ship on its first voyage after the previous captain Pringle Stokes committed suicide FitzRoy had thought of the advantages of having someone onboard who could investigate geology and sought a naturalist to accompany them as a supernumerary At the age of 22 the graduate Charles Darwin hoped to see the tropics before becoming a parson and accepted the opportunity He was greatly influenced by reading Charles Lyell s Principles of Geology during the voyage By the end of the expedition Darwin had made his name as a geologist and fossil collector and the publication of his journal later known as The Voyage of the Beagle gave him wide renown as a writer Second voyage of HMS BeagleBeagle at Ponsonby Sound in the Beagle Channel Tierra del Fuego in March 1834 painting by the ship s draughtsman Conrad MartensLeaderRobert FitzRoyStart27 December 1831 1831 12 27 End2 October 1836 1836 10 02 GoalSurvey South American coastShipsHMS BeagleAchievementsResearch leading to Darwin s theory of evolutionRoute Voyage of the Beagle redirects here For other uses see Voyage of the Beagle disambiguation Beagle sailed across the Atlantic Ocean and then carried out detailed hydrographic surveys around the coasts of southern South America returning via Tahiti and Australia after having circumnavigated the Earth The initial offer to Darwin told him the voyage would last two years it lasted almost five Darwin spent most of this time exploring on land three years and three months land 18 months at sea 1 Early in the voyage Darwin decided that he could write a geology book and he showed a gift for theorising At Punta Alta in Argentina he made a major find of gigantic fossils of extinct mammals then known from very few specimens He collected and made detailed observations of plants and animals His findings undermined his belief in the doctrine that species are fixed and provided the basis for ideas which came to him when back in England leading to his theory of evolution by natural selection Contents 1 Aims of the expedition 2 Context and preparations 2 1 Naturalist and geologist 2 1 1 Offer of place to Darwin 2 1 2 Darwin s preparations 2 1 3 Darwin s work on the expedition 3 Voyage 3 1 Atlantic islands 3 2 Surveying South America 3 2 1 Tropical paradise and slavery 3 2 2 Fossil finds 3 2 3 Tierra del Fuego 3 2 4 Gauchos rheas fossils and geology 3 2 5 West coast of South America 3 3 Galapagos Islands 3 4 Tahiti to Australia 3 5 Keeling Island homewards 4 Return 5 Expert publications on Darwin s collections 5 1 Fossils 6 Footnotes 7 Notes 8 References 9 External links 10 Further readingAims of the expedition edit nbsp Ship s chronometer from HMS Beagle made by Thomas Earnshaw British Museum London When the Napoleonic Wars ended in 1815 the Pax Britannica saw seafaring nations competing in colonisation and rapid industrialisation The logistics of supply and growing commerce needed reliable information about sea routes but existing nautical charts were incomplete and inaccurate Spanish American wars of independence ended Spain s monopoly over trade 2 3 and the UK s 1825 commercial treaty with Argentina recognised its independence increasing the naval and commercial significance of the east coast of South America 4 The Admiralty instructed Commander King to make an accurate hydrographic survey of the Southern Coasts of the Peninsula of South America from the southern entrance of the River Plata round to Chiloe and of Tierra del Fuego 5 6 As Darwin wrote of his voyage The object of the expedition was to complete the survey of Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego commenced under Captain King in 1826 to 1830 to survey the shores of Chile Peru and of some islands in the Pacific and to carry a chain of chronometrical measurements round the World 7 6 The expeditions also had diplomatic objectives visiting disputed territories 2 An Admiralty memorandum set out the detailed instructions The first requirement was to resolve disagreements in the earlier surveys about the longitude of Rio de Janeiro which was essential as the base point for meridian distances The accurate marine chronometers needed to determine longitude had only become affordable since 1800 Beagle carried 22 chronometers to allow corrections The ship was to stop at specified points for a four day rating of the chronometers and to check them by astronomical observations it was essential to take observations at Porto Praya and Fernando de Noronha to calibrate against the previous surveys of William Fitzwilliam Owen and Henry Foster It was important to survey the extent of the Abrolhos Archipelago reefs shown incorrectly in Albin Roussin s survey then proceed to Rio de Janeiro to decide the exact longitude of Villegagnon Island 8 The real work of the survey was then to commence south of the Rio de la Plata with return trips to Montevideo for supplies details were given of priorities including surveying Tierra del Fuego and approaches to harbours on the Falkland Islands The west coast was then to be surveyed as far north as time and resources permitted The commander would then determine his own route west season permitting he could survey the Galapagos Islands Then Beagle was to proceed to Point Venus Tahiti and on to Port Jackson Australia which were known points to verify the chronometers 9 No time was to be wasted on elaborate drawings charts and plans should have notes and simple views of the land as seen from the sea showing measured heights of hills Continued records of tides and meteorological conditions were also required An additional suggestion was for a geological survey of a circular coral atoll in the Pacific Ocean including its profile and of tidal flows to investigate the formation of such coral reefs 10 Context and preparations editThe previous survey expedition to South America involved HMS Adventure and HMS Beagle under the overall command of the Australian Commander Phillip Parker King During the survey Beagle s captain Pringle Stokes committed suicide and command of the ship was given to the young aristocrat Robert FitzRoy a nephew of George FitzRoy 4th Duke of Grafton When a ship s boat was taken by the natives of Tierra del Fuego FitzRoy tried taking some of them hostage and after this failed he got occupants of a canoe to put another on the ship in exchange for buttons He brought four of them back to England to be given a Christian education with the idea that they could eventually become missionaries One died of smallpox 11 12 After Beagle s return to Devonport dockyard on 14 October 1830 Captain King retired 13 nbsp Robert FitzRoyThe 27 year old FitzRoy had hopes of commanding a second expedition to continue the South American survey but when he heard that the Lords of the Admiralty no longer supported this he grew concerned about how to return the Fuegians He made an agreement with the owner of a small merchant vessel to take himself and five others back to South America but a kind uncle heard of this and contacted the Admiralty Soon afterwards FitzRoy heard that he was to be appointed commander of HMS Chanticleer to go to Tierra del Fuego but due to her poor condition Beagle was substituted On 27 June 1831 FitzRoy was commissioned as commander of the voyage and Lieutenants John Clements Wickham and Bartholomew James Sulivan were both appointed 14 Captain Francis Beaufort the Hydrographer of the Admiralty was invited to decide on the use that could be made of the voyage to continue the survey and he discussed with FitzRoy plans for a voyage of several years including a continuation of the trip around the world to establish median distances Beagle was commissioned on 4 July 1831 under the command of Captain FitzRoy who promptly spared no expense in having Beagle extensively refitted Beagle was immediately taken into dock for extensive rebuilding and refitting As she required a new deck FitzRoy had the upper deck raised considerably by 8 inches 200 mm aft and 12 inches 300 mm forward 15 The Cherokee class brig sloops had the reputation of being coffin brigs which handled badly and were prone to sinking 16 By helping the decks to drain more quickly with less water collecting in the gunnels the raised deck gave Beagle better handling and made her less liable to become top heavy and capsize Additional sheathing to the hull added about seven tons to her burthen and perhaps fifteen to her displacement 15 The ship was one of the first to test the lightning conductor invented by William Snow Harris FitzRoy obtained five examples of the Sympiesometer a kind of mercury free barometer patented by Alexander Adie and favoured by FitzRoy as giving the accurate readings required by the Admiralty 15 In addition to its officers and crew Beagle carried several supernumeraries passengers without an official position FitzRoy employed a mathematical instrument maker to maintain his 22 marine chronometers kept in his cabin as well as engaging the artist draughtsman Augustus Earle to go in a private capacity 15 The three Fuegians taken on the previous voyage were going to be returned to Tierra del Fuego on Beagle together with the missionary Richard Matthews 14 17 Naturalist and geologist edit For Beaufort and the leading Cambridge gentlemen of science the opportunity for a naturalist to join the expedition fitted with their drive to revitalise British government policy on science This elite disdained research done for money and felt that natural philosophy was for gentlemen not tradesmen The officer class of the Army and Navy provided a way to ascend this hierarchy the ship s surgeon often collected specimens on voyages and Robert McCormick had secured the position on Beagle after taking part in earlier expeditions and studying natural history A sizeable collection had considerable social value attracting wide public interest and McCormick aspired to fame as an exploring naturalist 18 Collections made by the ship s surgeon and other officers were government property though the Admiralty was not consistent on this 19 and went to important London establishments usually the British Museum 20 The Admiralty instructions for the first voyage had required officers to use their best diligence in increasing the Collections in each ship the whole of which must be understood to belong to the Public but on the second voyage this requirement was omitted and the officers were free to keep all the specimens for themselves 19 21 FitzRoy s journal written during the first voyage noted that while investigating magnetic rocks near the Barbara Channel he regretted that no person in the vessel was skilled in mineralogy or at all acquainted with geology to make use of the opportunity of ascertaining the nature of the rocks and earths of the areas surveyed FitzRoy decided that on any similar future expedition he would endeavour to carry out a person qualified to examine the land while the officers and myself would attend to hydrography 22 This indicated a need for a naturalist qualified to examine geology who would spend considerable periods onshore away from the ship McCormick lacked expertise in geology and had to attend to his duties on the ship 23 FitzRoy knew that commanding a ship could involve stress and loneliness He was aware of his uncle Viscount Castlereagh s suicide due to stress from overwork as well as Captain Stokes s suicide 24 This was to be the first time that FitzRoy would be fully in charge of a ship with no commanding officer or second captain to consult It has been suggested that he felt the need for a gentleman companion who shared his scientific interests and could dine with him as an equal 25 although there is no direct evidence to support this Professor John Stevens Henslow described the position more as a companion than a mere collector but this was an assurance that FitzRoy would treat his guest as a gentleman naturalist Several other ships at this period carried unpaid civilians as naturalists 26 Early in August FitzRoy discussed this position with Beaufort who had a scientific network of friends at the University of Cambridge 27 At Beaufort s request mathematics lecturer George Peacock wrote from London to Henslow about this rare opportunity for a naturalist saying that an offer has been made to me to recommend a proper person to go out as a naturalist with this expedition and suggesting the Reverend Leonard Jenyns 28 29 Though Jenyns nearly accepted and even packed his clothes he had concerns about his obligations as vicar of Swaffham Bulbeck and about his health therefore Jenyns declined the offer Henslow briefly thought of going but his wife looked so miserable that he quickly dropped the idea 30 Both recommended bringing the 22 year old Charles Darwin who was on a geology field trip with Adam Sedgwick He had just completed the ordinary Bachelor of Arts degree which was a prerequisite for his intended career as a parson 27 Offer of place to Darwin edit nbsp Darwin in 1840 after the voyage and publication of his Journal and RemarksDarwin fitted well the expectations of a gentleman natural philosopher and was well trained as a naturalist 31 When he had studied geology in his second year at Edinburgh he had found it dull but from Easter to August 1831 he learned a great deal with Sedgwick and developed a strong interest during their geological field trip 32 On 24 August Henslow wrote to Darwin that I consider you to be the best qualified person I know of who is likely to undertake such a situation I state this not on the supposition of yr being a finished Naturalist but as amply qualified for collecting observing amp noting any thing worthy to be noted in Natural History Peacock has the appointment at his disposal amp if he can not find a man willing to take the office the opportunity will probably be lost Capt F wants a man I understand more as a companion than a mere collector amp would not take any one however good a Naturalist who was not recommended to him likewise as a gentleman The Voyage is to last 2 yrs amp if you take plenty of Books with you any thing you please may be done there never was a finer chance for a man of zeal amp spirit Don t put on any modest doubts or fears about your disqualifications for I assure you I think you are the very man they are in search of 33 The letter went first to George Peacock who quickly forwarded it to Darwin with further details confirming that the ship sails about the end of September Peacock had discussed the offer with Beaufort he entirely approves of it amp you may consider the situation as at your absolute disposal 34 When Darwin returned home from the field trip late on 29 August and opened the letters 35 his father objected strongly to the voyage so the next day he wrote declining the offer 36 and left to go shooting at the estate of his uncle Josiah Wedgwood II With Wedgwood s help Darwin s father was persuaded to relent and fund his son s expedition and on Thursday 1 September Darwin wrote to Beaufort accepting the offer 37 That day Beaufort wrote to tell FitzRoy that his friend Peacock had succeeded in getting a Savant for you A Mr Darwin grandson of the well known philosopher and poet full of zeal and enterprize and having contemplated a voyage on his own account to S America 38 On Friday Darwin left for Cambridge where he the next day got advice on preparations of the voyage and references to experts by Henslow 30 Alexander Charles Wood an undergraduate whose tutor was Peacock wrote from Cambridge to his cousin FitzRoy to recommend Darwin 39 Around midday on Sunday 4 September Wood received FitzRoy s response straightforward and gentlemanlike but strongly against Darwin joining the expedition both Darwin and Henslow then gave up the scheme Darwin went to London anyway and next morning met FitzRoy who explained that he had promised the place to his friend Mr Chester possibly the novelist Harry Chester but Chester had turned it down in a letter received not five minutes before Darwin arrived FitzRoy emphasised the difficulties including cramped conditions and plain food 40 41 Darwin would be on the Admiralty s books to get provisions worth 40 a year and like the ship s officers and captain would pay 30 a year towards the mess bill 42 Including outfitting the cost to him was unlikely to reach 500 40 The ship would sail on 10 October and would probably be away for three years They talked and dined together and soon found each other agreeable 41 The Tory FitzRoy had been cautious at the prospect of companionship with this unknown young gentleman of Whig background and later admitted that his letter to Wood was to throw cold water on the scheme in a sudden horror of the chances of having somebody he should not like on board He half seriously told Darwin later that as an ardent disciple of Lavater he had nearly rejected Darwin on the phrenological basis that the shape or physiognomy of Darwin s nose indicated a lack of determination 43 44 Darwin s preparations edit While he continued to get acquainted with FitzRoy going shopping together Darwin rushed around to arrange his supplies and equipment 45 He took advice from experts on specimen preservation including William Yarrell at the Zoological Society of London Robert Brown at the British Museum Captain Phillip Parker King who led the first expedition and invertebrate anatomist Robert Edmond Grant who had tutored Darwin at Edinburgh 46 Yarrell gave invaluable advice and bargained with shopkeepers so Darwin paid 50 for two pistols and a rifle while FitzRoy had spent 400 on firearms 44 On Sunday 11 September FitzRoy and Darwin took the steam packet for Portsmouth 47 Darwin was not seasick and had a pleasant sail of three days For the first time he saw the very small cramped ship met the officers 48 and was glad to get a large cabin shared with the assistant surveyor John Lort Stokes On Friday Darwin rushed back to London 250 miles in 24 hours 49 and on via Cambridge and St Albans travelling on the Wonder coach all day on 22 September to arrive in Shrewsbury that evening then after a last brief visit to family and friends left for London on 2 October 47 50 Delays to Beagle gave Darwin an extra week to consult experts and complete packing his baggage 51 After sending his heavy goods down by steam packet he took the coach along with Augustus Earle and arrived at Devonport on 24 October 52 The geologist Charles Lyell asked FitzRoy to record observations on geological features such as erratic boulders Before they left England FitzRoy gave Darwin a copy of the first volume of Lyell s Principles of Geology which explained features as the outcome of a gradual process taking place over extremely long periods of time 53 In his autobiography Darwin recalled Henslow giving advice at this time to obtain and study the book but on no account to accept the views therein advocated 54 Darwin s position as a naturalist on board was as a self funded guest with no official appointment and he could leave the voyage at any suitable stage At the outset George Peacock had advised that The Admiralty are not disposed to give a salary though they will furnish you with an official appointment amp every accomodation sic if a salary should be required however I am inclined to think that it would be granted Far from wanting this 34 55 Darwin s concern was to maintain control over his collection He was even reluctant to be on the Admiralty s books for victuals until he got assurances from FitzRoy and Beaufort that this would not affect his rights to assign his specimens 19 42 Beaufort initially thought specimens ought to go to the British Museum but Darwin had heard of many left waiting to be described including botanical specimens from the first Beagle voyage Beaufort assured him that he should have no difficulty as long as he presented them to some public body such as the Zoological or Geological societies Henslow had set up the small Cambridge Philosophical Society museum Darwin told him that new finds should go to the largest amp most central collection rather than a Country collection let it be ever so good 45 56 but soon expressed hope to be able to assist the Philosoph Society with some specimens 57 FitzRoy arranged transport of specimens to England as official cargo on the Admiralty Packet Service at no cost to Darwin even though it was his private collection 58 59 Henslow agreed to store them at Cambridge and Darwin confirmed with him arrangements for land carriage from the port 60 to be funded by Darwin s father 57 Darwin s work on the expedition edit The captain had to record his survey in painstaking paperwork and Darwin too kept a daily log as well as detailed notebooks of his finds and speculations and a diary which became his journal Darwin s notebooks show complete professionalism that he had probably learnt at the University of Edinburgh when making natural history notes while exploring the shores of the Firth of Forth with his brother Erasmus in 1826 and studying marine invertebrates with Robert Edmund Grant for a few months in 1827 61 Darwin had also collected beetles at Cambridge but he was a novice in all other areas of natural history During the voyage Darwin investigated small invertebrates while collecting specimens of other creatures for experts to examine and describe once Beagle had returned to England 32 More than half of his carefully organised zoology notes deal with marine invertebrates The notes also record closely reasoned interpretations of what he found about their complex internal anatomy while dissecting specimens under his microscope and small experiments on their response to stimulation His onshore observations included intense analytical comments on possible reasons for the behaviour distribution and relation to their environment of the creatures he saw He made good use of the ship s excellent library of books on natural history but continually questioned their correctness 62 Geology was Darwin s principal pursuit on the expedition and his notes on that subject were almost four times larger than his zoology notes although he kept extensive records on both During the voyage he wrote to his sister that there is nothing like geology the pleasure of the first days partridge shooting or first days hunting cannot be compared to finding a fine group of fossil bones which tell their story of former times with almost a living tongue To him investigating geology brought reasoning into play and gave him opportunities for theorising 61 Voyage edit nbsp The voyage of BeagleCharles Darwin had been told that Beagle was expected to sail about the end of September 1831 34 but fitting out took longer The Admiralty Instructions were received on 14 November and on 23 November she was moved to anchorage ready to depart Repeated Westerly gales caused delays and forced them to turn back after departing on 10 and 21 December Drunkenness at Christmas lost another day Finally on the morning of 27 December Beagle left its anchorage in the Barn Pool under Mount Edgecumbe on the west side of Plymouth Sound and set out on its surveying expedition 63 Atlantic islands edit Beagle touched at Madeira for a confirmed position without stopping Then on 6 January it reached Tenerife in the Canary Islands but was quarantined there because of cholera in England Although tantalisingly near to the town of Santa Cruz to Darwin s intense disappointment they were denied landing With improving weather conditions they sailed on On 10 January Darwin tried out a plankton net he had devised to be towed behind the ship only the second recorded use of such a net after use by John Vaughan Thompson in 1816 Next day he noted the great number of animals collected far from land and wrote Many of these creatures so low in the scale of nature are most exquisite in their forms amp rich colours It creates a feeling of wonder that so much beauty should be apparently created for such little purpose 64 Six days later they made their first landing at Praia on the volcanic island of Santiago in the Cape Verde Islands It is here that Darwin s description in his published Journal begins 65 His initial impression was of a desolate and sterile volcanic island However upon visiting the town he came to a deep valley where he first saw the glory of tropical vegetation and had a glorious day finding overwhelming novelty in the sights and sounds FitzRoy set up tents and an observatory on Quail Island to determine the exact position of the islands while Darwin collected numerous sea animals delighting in vivid tropical corals in tidal pools and investigating the geology of Quail Island 66 67 Though Daubeny s book in Beagle s library described the volcanic geology of the Canary Islands it said that the structure of the Cape Verde Islands was too imperfectly known Darwin saw Quail Island as his key to understanding the structure of St Jago and made careful studies of its stratigraphy in the way he had learnt from Adam Sedgwick He collected specimens and described a white layer of hard white rock formed from crushed coral and seashells lying between layers of black volcanic rocks and noted a similar white layer running horizontally in the black cliffs of St Jago at 40 feet 12 m above sea level The seashells were as far as he could tell the same as those of present day He speculated that in geologically recent times a lava flow had covered this shell sand on the sea bed and then the strata had slowly risen to their present level Charles Lyell s Principles of Geology presented a thesis of gradual rising and falling of the Earth s crust illustrated by the changing levels of the Temple of Serapis Darwin implicitly supported Lyell by remarking that Dr Daubeny when mentioning the present state of the temple of Serapis doubts the possibility of a surface of country being raised without cracking buildings on it I feel sure at St Jago in some places a town might have been raised without injuring a house 68 Later in his first letter to Henslow he wrote that The geology was preeminently interesting amp I believe quite new there are some facts on a large scale of upraised coast that would interest Mr Lyell 69 While still on the island Darwin was inspired to think of writing a book on geology 70 and later wrote of seeing a thing never seen by Lyell one yet saw it partially through his eyes 71 Beagle s surgeon Robert McCormick sought fame and fortune as an explorer 72 When they first met at the start of the voyage Darwin had commented that My friend McCormick is an ass but we jog on very amicably 57 They walked into the countryside of St Jago together 73 and Darwin influenced by Lyell found the surgeon s approach old fashioned 74 They found a remarkable baobab tree which FitzRoy measured and sketched Darwin went on subsequent riding expeditions with Benjamin Bynoe and Rowlett to visit Ribeira Grande and St Domingo FitzRoy extended their stay to 23 days to complete his measurements of magnetism 75 Darwin subsequently wrote to Henslow that his collecting included several specimens of an Octopus which possessed a most marvellous power of changing its colours equalling any chamaelion amp evidently accommodating the changes to the colour of the ground which it passed over yellowish green dark brown amp red were the prevailing colours this fact appears to be new as far as I can find out 69 Henslow replied that The fact is not new but any fresh observations will be highly important 76 McCormick increasingly resented the favours FitzRoy gave to assist Darwin with collecting On 16 February FitzRoy landed a small party including himself and Darwin on St Paul s Rocks finding the seabirds so tame that they could be killed easily while an exasperated McCormick was left circling the islets in a second small boat 77 That evening novices were greeted by a pseudo Neptune and in the morning they crossed the equator with the traditional line crossing ceremony 78 Darwin had a special position as a guest and social equal of the captain so junior officers called him sir until the captain dubbed Darwin Philos for ship s philosopher which became his suitably respectful nickname 79 Surveying South America edit In South America Beagle carried out its survey work going to and fro along the coasts to allow careful measurement and rechecking Darwin made long journeys inland with travelling companions from the locality He spent much of the time away from the ship returning by prearrangement when Beagle returned to ports where mail and newspapers were received and Darwin s notes journals and collections sent back to England via the Admiralty Packet Service He had ensured that his collections were his own and as prearranged batches of his specimens were shipped to England then taken by land carriage to Henslow in Cambridge to await his return 58 80 The first batch was sent in August 1832 journey time varied considerably but all batches were eventually delivered 81 Several others on board including FitzRoy and other officers were able amateur naturalists and they gave Darwin generous assistance as well as making collections for the Crown which the Admiralty placed in the British Museum 82 Tropical paradise and slavery edit Due to heavy surf they only stayed at Fernando de Noronha for a day to make the required observations then FitzRoy pressed on to Bahia de Todos Santos Brazil to rate the chronometers and take on water They reached the continent and arrived at the port on 28 February 8 83 Darwin was thrilled at the magnificent sight of the town of Bahia or St Salvador with large ships at harbour scattered across the bay On the next day he was in transports of pleasure walking by himself in the tropical forest and in long naturalizing walks with others continued to add raptures to the former raptures 84 He found the sights of slavery offensive and when FitzRoy defended the practice by describing a visit to a slaveowner whose slaves replied no on being asked by their master if they wished to be freed Darwin suggested that answers in such circumstances were worthless Enraged that his word had been questioned FitzRoy lost his temper and banned Darwin from his company The officers had nicknamed such outbursts hot coffee and within hours FitzRoy apologised and asked Darwin to remain 85 Later FitzRoy had to remain silent when Captain Paget of the frigate HMS Samarang another British vessel surveying the region which often crossed paths with the Beagle visited them and recounted facts about slavery so revolting that refuted his claim 86 87 Surveying of sandbanks around the harbour was completed on 18 March and the ship made its way down the coast to survey the extent and depths of the Abrolhos reefs completing and correcting Roussin s survey 88 They manoeuvred Beagle into Rio de Janeiro harbour in first rate style on 4 April with Darwin enthusiastically helping Amidst excitement at opening letters from home he was taken aback by news that his close friend Fanny Owen was engaged to marry Biddulph of Chirk Castle 89 90 Augustus Earle showed Darwin round the town and they found a delightful cottage for lodgings at Botafogo Darwin made arrangements with local estate owners and on 8 April set off with them on a strenuous riding excursion to Rio Macae 91 McCormick had made himself disagreeable to FitzRoy and first lieutenant Wickham 74 so was invalided home 92 as he also was on other voyages 23 In his 1884 memoirs he claimed he had been very much disappointed in my expectations of carrying out my natural history pursuits every obstacle having been placed in the way of my getting on shore and making collections Assistant Surgeon Benjamin Bynoe was made acting surgeon in his place 93 94 The required observations from Villegagnon Island at Rio showed a discrepancy of 4 miles 6 4 km of longitude in the meridian distance from Bahia to Rio compared to Roussin s results and FitzRoy wrote telling Beaufort he would go back to check 8 95 On 24 April Darwin got back to the ship next day his books papers and equipment suffered minor damage when the boat taking him to Botafogo cottage was swamped He sent his sister his commonplace Journal to date inviting criticisms and decided to stay in the cottage with Earle while the ship went to Bahia 94 96 Eight of the crew had gone snipe shooting in the cutter with an overnight stay at the Macacu River near Rio After their return on 2 May some fell ill with fever The ship set off on 10 May a seaman died en route a ship s boy and a young midshipman died at Bahia The ship returned to Rio on 3 June Having confirmed that his measurements were correct FitzRoy sent corrections to Roussin 97 98 At the cottage Darwin composed his first letter outlining his collecting to Henslow He said he would not send a box till we arrive at Monte Video it is too great a loss of time both for Carpenters amp myself to pack up whilst in harbor 69 He returned to the ship on 26 June and they set sail on 5 July 99 Amidst political changes Beagle had a diplomatic role 100 As they arrived at Montevideo on 26 July HMS Druid signalled them to clear for action as British property had been seized in growing unrest after military usurpation deposed Lavalleja 101 102 They took observations for the chronometers then on 31 July sailed to Buenos Aires to meet the governor and get maps but were met by warning shots from a guard ship FitzRoy promptly lodged a complaint and departed threatening a broadside in response to any further provocation When they got back on 4 August FitzRoy informed the Druid s captain who set off to demand an apology On 5 August Town officials and the British Consul asked FitzRoy for help to quell a mutiny the garrison was held by Black troops loyal to Lavalleja With Darwin and 50 well armed men from the ship he arrived at the fort then next day withdrew leaving a stand off Darwin enjoyed the excitement 103 104 and wrote It was something new to me to walk with Pistols amp Cutlass through the streets of a Town 105 106 Druid returned on 15 August with a long apology from the government and news that the guard ship captain had been arrested 107 Darwin s first box of specimens was ready and went on the Falmouth packet Emulous departing on 19 August 108 109 Henslow received the box in mid January 76 On 22 August after taking soundings in Samborombon Bay Beagle began survey work down the coast from Cape San Antonio Buenos Aires Province Argentina 110 Fossil finds edit nbsp Scene on the quarter deck while anchored at Bahia Blanca painted around 24 September 1832 most likely by Augustus Earle Darwin is the central figure in a top hat examining a specimen FitzRoy the second figure to his left 111 At Bahia Blanca in the southern part of present Buenos Aires Province Darwin rode inland into Patagonia with gauchos he saw them use bolas to bring down ostriches rheas and ate roast armadillo With FitzRoy he went for a very pleasant cruize about the bay on 22 September and about ten miles 16 km from the ship they stopped for a while at Punta Alta In low cliffs near the point Darwin found conglomerate rocks containing numerous shells and fossilised teeth and bones of gigantic extinct mammals 112 in strata near an earth layer with shells and armadillo fossils suggesting to him quiet tidal deposits rather than a catastrophe 113 With assistance possibly from the young sailor Syms Covington acting as his servant 114 115 Darwin collected numerous fossils over several days 116 amusing others with the cargoes of apparent rubbish which he frequently brought on board 114 Much of the second day was taken up with excavating a large skull which Darwin found embedded in soft rock and seemed to him to be allied to the rhinoceros 117 On 8 October he returned to the site and found a jawbone and tooth which he was able to identify using Bory de Saint Vincent s Dictionnaire classique He wrote home describing this and the large skull as Megatherium fossils or perhaps Megalonyx and excitedly noted that the only specimens in Europe were locked away in the King s collection at Madrid 118 119 In the same layer he found a large surface of polygonal plates of bony armour His immediate thought was that they came from an enormous armadillo like the small creatures common in the area However from Cuvier s misleading description of the Madrid specimen and a recent newspaper report about a fossil collected by Woodbine Parish Darwin thought that the bony armour identified the fossil as Megatherium 120 121 With FitzRoy Darwin went about 30 miles 48 km across the bay to Monte Hermoso on 19 October and found numerous fossils of smaller rodents in contrast to the huge Edentatal mammals of Punta Alta 122 123 They returned to Montevideo and on 2 November revisited Buenos Aires passing the guard ship which now gave them due respect 124 From questioning the finder of the Megatherium reported in the newspaper Woodbine Parish s agent Darwin concluded it came from the same geological formation as his own fossil finds 125 He also purchased fragments of some enormous bones which he was assured belonged to the former giants In Montevideo from 14 November he packaged his specimens including all the fossils and sent this cargo on the Duke of York Falmouth packet 120 126 The mail from home included a copy of the second volume of Charles Lyell s Principles of Geology 54 a refutation of Lamarckism in which there was no shared ancestry of different species or overall progress to match the gradual geological change Instead it was a continuing cycle in which species mysteriously appeared closely adapted to their centres of creation then became extinct when the environment changed to their disadvantage 127 Tierra del Fuego edit nbsp Native of Tierra del FuegoThey reached Tierra del Fuego on 18 December 1832 and Darwin was taken by surprise at what he perceived as the crude savagery of the Yaghan natives in stark contrast to the civilised behaviour of the three Fuegians they were returning as missionaries who had been given the names York Minster Fuegia Basket and Jemmy Button He described his first meeting with the native Fuegians as being without exception the most curious and interesting spectacle I ever beheld I could not have believed how wide was the difference between savage and civilised man it is greater than between a wild and domesticated animal inasmuch as in man there is a greater power of improvement They appeared like the representations of Devils on the Stage as in Der Freischutz In contrast he said of Jemmy that It seems yet wonderful to me when I think over all his many good qualities that he should have been of the same race and doubtless partaken of the same character with the miserable degraded savages whom we first met here Four decades later he recalled these impressions in The Descent of Man to support his argument that just as humans had descended from a lower form civilised society had arisen by graduations from a more primitive state He recalled how closely the Fuegians on board Beagle resembled us in disposition and in most of our mental faculties 128 At the island of Buttons Land on 23 January 1833 they set up a mission post with huts gardens furniture and crockery Upon returning nine days later the possessions had been looted and divided up equally by the natives Matthews gave up rejoining the ship and leaving the three civilised Fuegians to continue the missionary work Beagle went on to the Falkland Islands arriving just after the British return Darwin studied the relationships of species to habitats and found ancient fossils like those he found in Wales FitzRoy bought a schooner to assist with the surveying and they returned to Patagonia where it was fitted with a new copper bottom and renamed Adventure Syms Covington assisted Darwin in preserving specimens and his collecting was so successful that with FitzRoy s agreement he hired Covington as a full time servant for 30 a year 129 Gauchos rheas fossils and geology edit The two ships sailed to the Rio Negro in Argentina and on 8 August 1833 Darwin left on another journey inland with the gauchos On 12 August he met General Juan Manuel de Rosas who was then leading a punitive expedition in his military campaign against native Indians and obtained a passport from him As they crossed the pampas the gauchos and Indians told Darwin of a rare smaller species of rhea 130 After three days at Bahia Blanca he grew tired of waiting for Beagle and on 21 August revisited Punta Alta where he reviewed the geology of the site in light of his new knowledge wondering if the bones were older than the seashells He was very successful with searching for bones and on 1 September found a near complete skeleton with its bones still in position 131 132 He set off again and on 1 October while searching the cliffs of the Carcarana River found an enormous gnawing tooth and then in a cliff of the Parana River saw two great groups of immense bones which were too soft to collect but a tooth fragment identified them as mastodons 133 134 Illness delayed him at Santa Fe and after seeing the fossilised casing of a huge armadillo embedded in rock he was puzzled to find a horse tooth in the same rock layer since horses had been introduced to the continent with European migration 135 136 They took a riverboat down the Parana River to Buenos Aires but became entangled in a revolution as rebels allied to Rosas blockaded the city The passport helped and with Covington he managed to escape in a boatload of refugees They rejoined Beagle at Montevideo 137 As surveys were still in progress Darwin set off on another 400 mile 640 km galloping trip in Banda Oriental to see the Uruguay River and visit the Estancia of Mr Keen near Mercedes on the Rio Negro On 25 November he heard of some giants bones which as usual turned out to be those of the Megatherium but could only extract a few broken fragments The next day he visited a nearby house and bought a head of a Megatherium which must have been when found quite perfect for about two shillings though the teeth had since been broken and the lower jaw had been lost Mr Keen arranged to ship the skull downriver to Buenos Aires 138 139 140 At Las Piedras a clergyman let him see fossils including a club like tail which he sketched and called an extraordinary weapon 140 141 His notes included a page showing his realisation that the cliff banks of the rivers exposed two strata formed in an estuary interrupted by an undersea stratum indicating that the land had risen and fallen 142 nbsp Illustration of Darwin s rhea published in 1841 in John Gould s description of birds collected on Beagle s voyageBack at Montevideo Darwin was introduced to Conrad Martens the replacement artist brought on board Beagle after Augustus Earle had to leave due to health problems They sailed south putting in at Port Desire on 23 December and the following day Darwin shot a guanaco which provided them with a Christmas meal Early in the new year Martens shot a rhea which they enjoyed eating before Darwin realised that this was the elusive smaller rhea and preserved the remains 130 On 9 January 1834 110 miles 180 km further south they reached Port St Julian and exploring the local geology in cliffs near the harbour Darwin found fossils of pieces of spine and a hind leg of some large animal I fancy a Mastodon 143 139 On 26 January they entered the Straits of Magellan and at St Gregory s Bay they met half civilised Patagonian giants over 6 ft 1 8 m tall 144 described by Darwin as excellent practical naturalists One told him that the smaller rheas were the only species this far south while the larger rheas kept to the north the species meeting around the Rio Negro 145 After further surveying in Tierra del Fuego they returned on 5 March 1834 to visit the missionaries but found the huts deserted Then canoes approached and they found that one of the natives was Jemmy Button who had lost his possessions and had settled into the native ways taking a wife Darwin had never seen so complete amp grievous a change Jemmy came on board and dined using his cutlery properly speaking English as well as ever then assured them that he had not the least wish to return to England and was happy and contented leaving them gifts of otter skins and arrowheads before returning to the canoe to join his wife 146 Of the first visit Darwin had written that Viewing such men one can hardly make oneself believe that they are fellow creatures placed in the same world It is a common subject of conjecture what pleasure in life some of the less gifted animals can enjoy How much more reasonably it may be asked with respect to these men 147 yet Jemmy had readily adapted to civilisation and then chosen to return to his primitive ways This raised awkward questions it jarred with Charles Lyell s sheltered views expressed in volume 2 of his Principles of Geology that human races showed only a slight deviation from a common standard and that acceptance of transmutation meant renouncing man s belief in the high genealogy of his species 148 About this time Darwin wrote Reflection on Reading My Geological Notes the first of a series of essays included in his notes 140 He speculated on possible causes of the land repeatedly being raised and on a history of life in Patagonia as a sequence of named species 149 They returned to the Falkland Islands on 16 March just after an incident where gauchos and Indians had butchered senior members of Vernet s settlement and helped to put the revolt down Darwin noted the immense number of organisms dependent on the kelp forests 150 He received word from Henslow that his first dispatch of fossils had reached Cambridge were highly prized by the expert William Clift as showing hitherto unknown species and features of the Megatherium and had been displayed by William Buckland and Clift before the cream of British science making Darwin s reputation 139 151 Beagle now sailed to southern Patagonia and on 19 April an expedition including FitzRoy and Darwin set off to take boats as far as possible up the Santa Cruz river with all involved taking turns in teams dragging the boats upstream The river cut through a series of rises then through plateaux forming wide plains covered with shells and shingle Darwin discussed with FitzRoy his interpretation that these terraces had been shores that had gradually raised per Lyell s theories Several of the smaller rheas were seen in the distance but were too elusive to catch 130 The expedition approached the Andes but had to turn back Darwin summarised his speculation in his essay on the Elevation of Patagonia Though tentative it challenged Lyell s ideas Darwin drew on measurements by Beagle s officers as well as his own measurements to propose that the plains had been raised in successive stages by forces acting over a wide area rather than smaller scale actions in a continuous movement However he supported Lyell in finding evidence to dismiss a sudden deluge when normal processes were suddenly speeded Seashells he had found far inland still showing their colour suggested to him that the process had been relatively recent and could have affected human history 152 West coast of South America edit nbsp Cerro La Campana The Bell Mountain which Darwin ascended on 17 August 1834Beagle and Adventure now surveyed the Straits of Magellan before sailing north up the west coast reaching Chiloe Island in the wet and heavily wooded Chiloe Archipelago on 28 June 1834 They then spent the next six months surveying the coast and islands southwards a On Chiloe Darwin found fragments of black lignite and petrified wood at least two of which the British Geological Survey discovered in 2011 locked away in their collection labelled unregistered fossil plants Exchanged with Joseph Dalton Hooker about ten years later one slide was signed Chiloe C Darwin Esq 156 They arrived at Valparaiso on 23 July and Darwin got scent of some fossil bones if gold or galloping will get them they shall be mine After several walks in the area he obtained horses and on 14 August set off up the volcanic Andes with a companion Three days later they spent an enjoyable day on the summit of the Campana or Bell mountain Cerro La Campana Darwin visited a copper mine and spent five days scrambling in the mountains before going on to Santiago Chile On his way back he fell ill on 20 September and had to spend a month in bed It is possible that he contracted Chagas disease here leading to his health problems after his return to England but this diagnosis of his symptoms is disputed He learnt that the Admiralty had reprimanded FitzRoy for buying Adventure FitzRoy had taken it badly selling the ship and announcing they would go back to recheck his survey He then had resigned his command doubting his sanity but was persuaded by his officers to withdraw his resignation and proceed The artist Conrad Martens left the ship and took passage to Australia 157 158 After waiting for Darwin Beagle sailed on 11 November to survey the Chonos Archipelago From here they saw the eruption of the volcano Osorno in the Andes They sailed north and Darwin wondered about the fossils he had found The giant Mastodons and Megatheriums were extinct but he had found no geological signs of a diluvial debacle or of the changed circumstances that in Lyell s view led to species no longer being adapted to the position they were created to fit He agreed with Lyell s idea of the gradual birth amp death of species but unlike Lyell Darwin was willing to believe Giovanni Battista Brocchi s idea that extinct species had somehow aged and died out 159 160 nbsp Concepcion after the earthquake as drawn by Lieutenant John Clements Wickham of BeagleThey arrived at the port of Valdivia on 8 February 1835 Twelve days later Darwin was on shore when he experienced a severe earthquake and returned to find the port town badly damaged They sailed two hundred miles 320 km north to Concepcion and arrived on 4 March to find that the same earthquake had devastated the city by repeated shocks and a tsunami with even the cathedral in ruins Darwin noted the horrors of death and destruction and FitzRoy carefully established that mussel beds were now above high tide giving clear evidence of the ground rising some 9 ft 2 7 m which he confirmed a month later They had actually experienced the gradual process of the continent emerging from the ocean as Lyell had indicated 161 162 They returned to Valparaiso on 11 March Darwin set out on another trek up the Andes three days later and on 21 March reached the continental divide at 13 000 ft 4 000 m even here he found fossil seashells in the rocks He felt the glorious view was like watching a thunderstorm or hearing in the full Orchestra a Chorus of the Messiah 163 After going on to Mendoza they were returning by a different pass when they found a petrified forest of fossilised trees crystallised in a sandstone escarpment showing him that they had been on a Pacific beach when the land sank burying them in the sand which had been compressed into rock then had gradually been raised with the continent to stand at 7 000 ft 2 100 m in the mountains On returning to Valparaiso with half a mule s load of specimens he wrote to his family on 23 April that his findings if accepted would be crucial to the theory of the formation of the world After another gruelling expedition in the Andes while Beagle was refitted he rejoined it at Copiapo on 5 July and sailed to Lima but found an armed insurrection in progress and had to stay with the ship Here he was writing up his notes when he realised that Lyell s idea that coral atolls were on the rims of rising extinct volcanoes made less sense than the volcanoes gradually sinking so that the coral reefs around the island kept building themselves close to sea level and became an atoll as the volcano disappeared below This was a theory he would examine when they reached such islands 164 165 On 14 June when about to leave Valparaiso 166 FitzRoy had received news of the shipwreck of HMS Challenger captained by his friend Michael Seymour 167 Darwin had arranged two boxes for this packet ship early in the year 81 168 On investigation FitzRoy found that Commodore Mason was unwilling to take HMS Blonde to the rescue for fear of lee shore hazards so FitzRoy had to bully him amp at last offered to go as Pilot After a tremendous quarrel with hints to the Commodore of court martial they took Blonde to Concepcion FitzRoy rode about 64 kilometres 40 mi on horseback with a guide to reach Seymour s camp at the Lebu River then returned to further disputes before Blonde set out and rescued the survivors of the shipwreck on 5 July 169 167 Wickham took Beagle on to reach Copiapo on 3 July two days before Darwin rejoined the ship and they continued on to Lima On 9 September Blonde brought FitzRoy to join them at Lima 170 Galapagos Islands edit A week out of Lima Beagle reached the Galapagos Islands on 15 September 1835 The next day Captain FitzRoy dropped anchor near where the town of Puerto Baquerizo Moreno is now sited at Chatham Island At the location that is now known as Frigatebird Hill Cerro Tijeretas Darwin spent his first hour onshore in the Galapagos islands 171 Darwin eagerly looked forward to seeing newly formed volcanic islands and took every opportunity to go ashore while Beagle was methodically moved round to chart the coast He found broken black rocky volcanic lava scorching under the hot sun and made detailed geological notes of features including volcanic cones like chimneys which reminded him of the iron foundries of industrial Staffordshire 172 He was disappointed that he did not see active volcanoes or find strata showing uplift as he had hoped though one of the officers found broken oyster shells high above the sea on one of the islands 173 Abundant giant Galapagos tortoises appeared to him almost antediluvian and large black marine iguanas seemed most disgusting clumsy Lizards well suited to their habitat he noted that someone had called them imps of darkness 172 Darwin had learnt from Henslow about studying the geographical distribution of species and particularly of linked species on oceanic islands and nearby continents so he endeavoured to collect plants in flower He found widespread wretched looking thin scrub thickets of only ten species and very few insects Birds were remarkably unafraid of humans and in his first field note he recorded that a mockingbird was similar to those he had seen on the continent 32 174 nbsp The various Galapagos mockingbirds Darwin caught resembled the Chilean mockingbird Mimus thenka but differed from island to island Beagle sailed on to Charles Island By chance they were greeted by the Englishman Nicholas Lawson acting Governor of Galapagos for the Republic of the Equator who accompanied them up to the penal colony It was said that tortoises differed in the shape of the shells from island to island and Darwin noted Lawson s statement that on seeing a tortoise he could pronounce with certainty from which island it has been brought 175 Though Darwin remembered this later he did not pay much attention at the time However he found a mockingbird and fortunately happened to observe that it differed from the Chatham Island specimen so from then on he carefully noted where mockingbirds had been caught 32 174 He industriously collected all the animals plants insects and reptiles and speculated about finding from future comparison to what district or centre of creation the organized beings of this archipelago must be attached 176 At this stage his thoughts reflected Lyell s rejection of transmutation of species 177 They went on to Albemarle Island where Darwin saw a small jet of smoke from a recently active volcano On 1 October he landed near Tagus Cove and explored Beagle Crater 178 There he saw his first Galapagos land iguanas Water pits were disappointingly inadequate for drinking but attracted swarms of small birds and Darwin made his only note of the finches he was not bothering to label by island 179 He caught a third species of mockingbird 174 After passing the northern islands of Abingdon Tower and Bindloe Darwin was put ashore at James Island for nine days together with the surgeon Benjamin Bynoe and their servants They busily collected all sorts of specimens while Beagle went back to Chatham Island for freshwater 180 After further surveying Beagle set sail for Tahiti on 20 October 1835 Darwin wrote up his notes and to his astonishment found that all the mockingbirds caught on Charles Albemarle James and Chatham Islands differed from island to island 32 He wrote This birds which is so closely allied to the Thenca of Chili Callandra of B Ayres is singular from existing as varieties or distinct species in the different Isds I have four specimens from as many Isds These will be found to be 2 or 3 varieties Each variety is constant in its own Island 181 Tahiti to Australia edit They sailed on dining on Galapagos tortoises and passed the atoll of Honden Island on 9 November They passed through the Low Islands archipelago with Darwin remarking that they had a very uninteresting appearance a long brilliantly white beach is capped by a low bright line of green vegetation Arriving at Tahiti on 15 November he soon found interest in luxuriant vegetation and the pleasant intelligent natives who showed the benefits of Christianity refuting allegations he had read about tyrannical missionaries overturning indigenous cultures 182 On 19 December they reached New Zealand where Darwin thought the tattooed Maori to be savages with the character of a much lower order than the Tahitians He also noted that they and their homes were filthily dirty and offensive Darwin saw missionaries bringing improvement in character as well as new farming practices with an exemplary English farm employing natives Richard Matthews was left here with his elder brother Joseph Matthews who was a missionary at Kaitaia Darwin and FitzRoy agreed that missionaries had been unfairly misrepresented in tracts particularly one written by the artist Augustus Earle which he had left on the ship Darwin also noted many English residents of the most worthless character including runaway convicts from New South Wales By 30 December he was glad to leave New Zealand 183 The first sight of Australia on 12 January 1836 reminded him of Patagonia but inland the country improved and he was soon filled with admiration at the bustling city of Sydney On a journey into the interior he came across a group of Aboriginal peoples who looked good humoured amp pleasant amp they appeared far from such utterly degraded beings as usually represented They gave him a display of spear throwing for a shilling and he reflected sadly on how their numbers were rapidly decreasing 184 At a large sheep farm he joined a hunting party and caught his first marsupial a potoroo rat kangaroo Reflecting on the strange animals of the country he thought that an unbeliever might exclaim Surely two distinct Creators must have been at work their object however has been the same amp certainly the end in each case is complete yet an antlion he was watching was very similar to its European counterpart That evening he saw the even stranger platypus and noticed that its bill was soft unlike the preserved specimens he had seen Aboriginal stories that they laid eggs were believed by few Europeans 185 186 Beagle visited Hobart Tasmania where Darwin was impressed by the agreeable high society of the settlers but noted that the island s Aboriginal blacks are all removed amp kept in reality as prisoners in a Promontory the neck of which is guarded I believe it was not possible to avoid this cruel step although without doubt the misconduct of the Whites first led to the Necessity 187 They then sailed to King George s Sound in south west Australia a dismal settlement then being replaced by the Swan River Colony Darwin was impressed by the good disposition of the aboriginal blacks Although true Savages it is impossible not to feel an inclination to like such quiet good natured men He provided boiled rice for an aboriginal Corrobery dancing party performed by the men of two tribes to the great pleasure of the women and children a most rude barbarous scene in which everyone appeared in high spirits all moving in hideous harmony and perfectly at their ease 188 Beagle s departure in a storm was delayed when she ran aground She was refloated and got on her way Keeling Island homewards edit FitzRoy s instructions from the Admiralty required a detailed geological survey of a circular coral atoll to investigate how coral reefs formed particularly whether they rose from the bottom of the sea or the summits of extinct volcanoes and the effects of tides measured with specially constructed gauges He chose the Keeling Islands in the Indian Ocean and on arrival on 1 April the entire crew set to work 189 Darwin found a coconut economy serving both the small settlement and wildlife There was a limited range of native plants and no land birds but hermit crabs everywhere The lagoons teemed with a wide variety of invertebrates and fish and he examined the atoll s structure in view of the theory he had developed in Lima of encircling reefs becoming atolls as an island sank 190 This idea was supported by the numerous soundings FitzRoy had taken showing a steep slope outside the reef with no living corals below 20 30 fathoms 40 60 m 191 Arriving at Mauritius on 29 April 1836 Darwin was impressed by the civilised prosperity of the French colony which had come under British rule He toured the island examining its volcanic mountains and fringing coral reefs The Surveyor general Captain Lloyd took him on the only elephant on the island to see an elevated coral plain 186 192 By then FitzRoy was writing the official Narrative of the Beagle voyages and after reading Darwin s diary he proposed a joint publication Darwin asked his family about FitzRoy s idea to have the disposal amp arranging of my journal amp to mingle it with his own 193 Beagle reached the Cape of Good Hope on 31 May In Cape Town Darwin received a letter dated 29 January from his sister Catherine which briefly mentioned the little books with the Extracts from your Letters every body is much pleased with them who has seen them 194 Darwin was horrified that his careless words were in print but No hay remedio it can t be helped 195 Unknown to Darwin his fame was spreading extracts from his letters to Henslow had been read to the Cambridge Philosophical Society on 16 November 1835 by Henslow and Sedgwick 196 On 18 November Sedgwick had read extracts to the Geological Society of London and this had been reported in The Athenaeum on 21 November On 25 December their father received a letter from Henslow which said that Darwin would become one of the premier naturalists of the time and enclosed some copies of the pamphlet Extracts from letters addressed to Professor Henslow which had been printed for private distribution Their father did not move from his seat till he had read every word of your book amp he was very much gratified he liked so much the simple clear way you gave your information 197 198 Darwin explored the geology of the area reaching conclusions about the slate formation and the injection of granite seams as a liquid which differed from the ideas of Lyell and Sedgwick The zoologist Andrew Smith showed him formations and later discussed the large animals living on sparse vegetation showing that a lack of luxuriant vegetation did not explain the extinction of the giant creatures in South America 199 Around 15 June Darwin and FitzRoy visited the noted astronomer Sir John Herschel In his diary Darwin called this the most memorable event which for a long period I have had the good fortune to enjoy His zeal for science had been stirred at Cambridge by reading Herschel s book on philosophy of science which had guided his theorising during the voyage 199 Their discussion is not recorded but a few months earlier on 20 February 1836 Herschel had written to Lyell praising his Principles of Geology as a work which would bring a complete revolution in its subject by altering entirely the point of view in which it must thenceforward be contemplated and opening a way for bold speculation on that mystery of mysteries the replacement of extinct species by others Herschel himself thought catastrophic extinction and renewal an inadequate conception of the Creator and by analogy with other intermediate causes the origination of fresh species could it ever come under our cognizance would be found to be a natural in contradistinction to a miraculous process 200 In Cape Town missionaries were being accused of causing racial tension and profiteering and after Beagle set to sea on 18 June FitzRoy wrote an open letter to the evangelical South African Christian Recorder on the Moral State of Tahiti incorporating extracts from both his and Darwin s diaries to defend the reputation of missionaries This was given to a passing ship that took it to Cape Town to become FitzRoy s and Darwin s first published work 201 On 8 July they stopped at St Helena for six days Darwin took lodgings near Napoleon s tomb and when writing to Henslow asking to be proposed for the Geological Society he mentioned his suspicions that differently from most Volcanic Islds its structure is rather complicated It seems strange that this little centre of a distinct creation should as is asserted bear marks of recent elevation 199 202 With a guide he wandered over the island noting its complex sloping strata showing fault lines interlaced with volcanic dykes He examined beds high on the hill that had been taken as seashells showing that St Helena had risen from the ocean in recent times but Darwin identified them as extinct species of land shells He noted that woodland had been destroyed by goats and hogs that had run wild since being introduced in 1502 203 and native vegetation only predominated on high steep ridges having been replaced by imported species 204 At this stage Darwin had an acute interest in the island biogeography and his description of St Helena as a little centre of creation in his geological diary reflects Charles Lyell s speculation in volume 2 of Principles of Geology that the island would have acted as a focus of creative force 199 He later recalled believing in the permanence of species but as far as I can remember vague doubts occasionally flitted across my mind 205 When organising his Ornithological Notes between mid June and August 206 Darwin expanded on his initial notes on the Galapagos mockingbird Mimus thenca 32 These birds are closely allied in appearance to the Thenca of Chile or Callandra of la Plata In each Isld each kind is exclusively found habits of all are indistinguishable When I recollect the fact that the form of the body shape of scales amp general size the Spaniards can at once pronounce from which Island any Tortoise may have been brought When I see these Islands in sight of each other amp but del possessed of but a scanty stock of animals tenanted by these birds but slightly differing in structure amp filling the same place in Nature I must suspect they are only varieties The only fact of a similar kind of which I am aware is the constant asserted difference between the wolf like Fox of East amp West Falkland Islds If there is the slightest foundation for these remarks the zoology of Archipelagoes will be well worth examining for such facts would inserted undermine the stability of Species 207 The term would before undermine had been added after writing what is now noted as the first expression of his doubts about species being immutable That led to him becoming convinced about the transmutation of species and hence evolution 177 In opposing transmutation Lyell had proposed that varieties arose due to changes in the environment but these varieties lived in similar conditions though each on its own island Darwin had just reviewed similar inconsistencies with mainland bird genera such as Pteroptochos 208 Though his suspicions about the Falkland Island fox may have been unsupported the differences in Galapagos tortoises between islands were remembered and he later wrote that he had been greatly struck from around March 1836 by the character of South American fossils and species on the Galapagos Archipelago noting These facts origin especially latter of all my views 209 Beagle reached Ascension Island on 19 July 1836 210 and Darwin was delighted to receive letters from his sisters with news that Sedgwick had written to Dr Butler He is doing admirably in S America amp has already sent home a Collection above all praise It was the best thing in the world for him that he went out on the Voyage of Discovery There was some risk of his turning out an idle man but his character will now be fixed amp if God spare his life he will have a great name among the Naturalists of Europe 211 Darwin later recalled how he clambered over the mountains with a bounding step and made the volcanic rocks resound under my geological hammer 212 He agreed with the saying attributed to the people of St Helena that We know we live on a rock but the poor people at Ascension live on a cinder and noted the care taken to sustain houses gardens amp fields placed near the summit of the central mountain 210 In the 1840s Darwin worked with Hooker who proposed in 1847 that the Royal Navy shall import tree species a project started in 1850 which led to the creation of an artificial cloud forest on what is now Green Mountain 213 On 23 July they set off again longing to reach home but FitzRoy who wanted to ensure the accuracy of his longitude measurements took the ship across the Atlantic back to Bahia in Brazil to take check readings Darwin was glad to see the beauties of the jungle for one last time but now compared the stately Mango trees with the Horse Chesnuts of England 214 The return trip was delayed for a further 11 days when weather forced Beagle to shelter further up the coast at Pernambuco where Darwin examined rocks for signs of elevation noted Mangroves like rank grass and investigated marine invertebrates at various depths on the sandbar Beagle departed for home on 17 August 199 After a stormy passage including a stop for supplies at the Azores the Beagle finally reached England on 2 October 1836 and anchored at Falmouth Cornwall 215 Return edit nbsp In 1837 HMS Beagle set off on a survey of Australia shown here in an 1841 watercolour by Owen Stanley On the stormy night of 2 October 1836 immediately after arriving in Falmouth 215 Darwin set off on the Royal Mail coach from Fish Strand Hill a plaque now marks the site 216 for the two day journey to his family home The Mount House in Shrewsbury Shropshire As he wrote to FitzRoy the countryside they passed was beautiful amp cheerful and though the stupid people on the coach did not seem to think the fields one bit greener than usual he now knew that the wide world does not contain so happy a prospect as the rich cultivated land of England 217 218 In April 1835 Darwin had written that he was undecided whether to sleep at the Lion the first night when he arrived by the daily Wonder coach or disturb you all in the dead of the night 50 164 He arrived late at night on 4 October 1836 217 219 and at breakfast the next morning greeted his family to their delight and celebrations His sisters assured him he did not look the least different 217 218 but his father s first reaction was to tell them Why the shape of his head is quite altered 220 221 After time spent catching up with family Darwin went on to Cambridge on 15 October and sought Henslow s advice on organising the description and cataloguing of his collections 222 Darwin s father gave him an allowance that enabled him to put aside other careers As a scientific celebrity with a reputation established by his fossils and the wide distribution of Extracts from Letters to Henslow on South American natural history and geology Darwin toured London s social institutions By this time he was part of the scientific establishment collaborating with expert naturalists to describe his specimens and working on ideas he had been developing during the voyage Charles Lyell gave him enthusiastic backing In December 1836 Darwin presented a talk to the Cambridge Philosophical Society He wrote a paper proving that Chile and the South American continent was slowly rising which he read to the Geological Society of London on 4 January 1837 223 Darwin was willing to have his diary published mixed in with FitzRoy s account but his relatives including Emma and Hensleigh Wedgwood urged that it be published separately On 30 December the question was settled by FitzRoy taking the advice of William Broderip that Darwin s journal should form the third volume of the Narrative Darwin set to work reorganising his diary trimming it and incorporating scientific material from his notes He completed his Journal and Remarks now commonly known as The Voyage of the Beagle in August 1837 but FitzRoy was slower and the three volumes were published in August 1839 224 Syms Covington stayed with Darwin as his servant Then on 25 February 1839 shortly after Darwin s marriage Covington left on good terms and migrated to Australia 225 Expert publications on Darwin s collections editDarwin had shown great ability as a collector and had done the best he could with the reference books he had on the ship It was now the province of recognised expert specialists to establish which specimens were unknown and make their considered taxonomic decisions on defining and naming new species 226 Fossils edit Richard Owen had expertise in comparative anatomy and his professional judgements revealed a succession of similar species in the same locality giving Darwin insights which he would later recall as being central to his new views 226 Owen met Darwin on 29 October 1836 and quickly took on the task of describing these new fossils At that time the only fully described fossil mammals from South America were three species of Mastodon and the gigantic Megatherium 227 On 9 November Darwin wrote to his sister that Some of them are turning out great treasures The near complete skeleton from Punta Alta was apparently very closely allied to anteaters but of the extraordinary size of a small horse The rhinoceros sized head bought for two shillings near the city of Mercedes was not a megatherium but as far as they can guess must have been a gnawing animal Conceive a Rat or a Hare of such a size What famous Cats they ought to have had in those days 228 nbsp A Scelidotherium skeleton in ParisOver the following years Owen published descriptions of the most important fossils naming several as new species He described the fossils from Punta Alta as including a nearly perfect head and three fragments of heads of Megatherium Cuvierii the jaw of a related species which Owen named Mylodon Darwinii and jaws of Megalonyx Jeffersonii The near complete skeleton was named Scelidotherium by Owen who found that it had most of its bones nearly in their proper relative positions 116 At the nearby Monte Hermoso beds numerous rodents included species allied to the Brazilian tuco tuco and the capybara 123 Owen decided that the fossils of polygonal plates of bony armour found at several locations were not from the Megatherium as Cuvier s description implied but from a huge armadillo as Darwin had briefly thought Owen found a description of an earlier unnamed specimen which he named Glyptodon clavipes in 1839 229 Darwin s find from Punta Alta a large surface about 3 by 2 ft 0 91 by 0 61 m doubled over with toe bones still inside the folded armour 116 was identified as a slightly smaller Glyptodont named Hoplophorus by Peter Wilhelm Lund in the same year 118 229 The huge skull from near Mercedes was named Toxodon by Owen 230 and he showed that the enormous gnawing tooth from the cliffs of the Carcarana River was a molar from this species 231 The finds near Mercedes also included a large fragment of Glyptodont armour and a head that Owen initially identified as a Glossotherium but later decided was a Mylodon 232 Owen found fragments of the jaw and a tooth of another Toxodon in the fossils from Punta Alta 116 The fossils from near Santa Fe included the horse tooth which had puzzled Darwin as it had been previously thought that horses had only come to the Americas in the 16th century close to a Toxodon tooth and a tooth of Mastodon andium now Cuvieronius hyodon Owen confirmed that the horse tooth was of an extinct South American species which he named Equus curvidens and its age was confirmed by a corroded horse tooth among the Punta Alta fossils 233 This discovery was later explained as part of the evolution of the horse The soft as cheese Mastodon bones at the Parana River were identified as two gigantic skeletons of Mastodon andium and mastodon teeth were also identified from Santa Fe and the Carcarana River 234 The pieces of spine and a hind leg from Port S Julian which Darwin had thought came from some large animal I fancy a Mastodon gave Owen difficulties as the creature which he named Macrauchenia appeared to be a gigantic and most extraordinary pachyderm allied to the Palaeotherium but with affinities to the llama and the camel 235 The fossils at Punta Alta included a pachyderm tooth which was thought probably came from Macrauchenia 116 Footnotes edit FitzRoy s and Darwin s publications arising from the expedition were a major reference point for 19th century Chilean explorers of western Patagonia FitzRoy s book Sailing Directions for South America led Chilean Navy hydrographer Francisco Hudson to investigate in the 1850s the possible existence of a sailing route through internal waters from the Chiloe Archipelago to the Straits of Magellan Hudson was the first to realise that the Isthmus of Ofqui made this route impossible 153 Enrique Simpson found instead FitzRoy s mapping of little use noting in 1870 that Fitzroy s chart that is quite exact until that point Melinka 43 53 S is worthless further ahead Thus south of Melinka Simpson relied more on the late 18th century sketches of Jose de Moraleda y Montero 154 Simpson s contemporary Francisco Vidal Gormaz was critical of the over all work of FitzRoy and Darwin stating that they had failed to acknowledge the importance of the Patagonian islands 155 Notes edit Browne amp Neve 1989 p 16 a b Browne amp Neve 1989 p 9 Taylor 2008 p 17 Browne amp Neve 1989 p 3 King 1839 p xv a b Taylor 2008 p 18 Darwin 1845 p 1 a b c FitzRoy 1839 pp 24 26 FitzRoy 1839 pp 26 33 FitzRoy 1839 pp 33 40 Browne 1995 pp 147 148 FitzRoy 1839 pp 4 14 Browne amp Neve 1989 pp 3 4 a b FitzRoy 1839 pp 13 16 a b c d FitzRoy 1839 pp 17 22 HMS Beagle Port of science and discovery Port Cities Retrieved 30 January 2009 Browne amp Neve 1989 pp 4 5 Browne 1995 pp 150 151 204 209 a b c Letter no 131 Charles Darwin to Robert FitzRoy 19 September 1831 London Darwin Correspondence Project Retrieved 3 January 2022 Browne 1995 p 208 Letter no 387 Robert FitzRoy to Charles Darwin 16 November 1837 Darwin Correspondence Project Retrieved 3 January 2022 King 1839 pp 360 385 a b van Wyhe 2013 p 3 Desmond amp Moore 1991 p 104 Browne 1995 pp 148 149 van Wyhe 2013 pp 5 7 a b Browne amp Neve 1989 pp 4 7 Letter no 104 George Peacock to J S Henslow 6 or 13 August 1831 Darwin Correspondence Project Retrieved 27 January 2022 George Peacock Darwin Correspondence Project 18 October 2017 Retrieved 29 January 2022 a b Letter no 115 Charles Darwin to Susan Darwin 4 September 1831 Cambridge Darwin Correspondence Project Retrieved 27 January 2022 van Wyhe 2013 p 6 a b c d e f Gordon Chancellor Randal Keynes October 2006 Darwin s field notes on the Galapagos A little world within itself Darwin Online Letter no 105 J S Henslow to Charles Darwin 24 August 1831 Cambridge Darwin Correspondence Project Retrieved 27 January 2022 a b c Letter no 106 George Peacock to Charles Darwin c 26 August 1831 Darwin Correspondence Project Retrieved 2 January 2022 Peter Lucas 1 January 2010 The recovery of time past Darwin at Barmouth on the eve of the Beagle Darwin Online Retrieved 5 December 2021 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Letter no 107 Charles Darwin to J S Henslow 30 August 1831 Shrewsbury Darwin Correspondence Project Retrieved 27 January 2022 Letter no 112 Charles Darwin to Francis Beaufort 1 September 1831 Shrewsbury Darwin Correspondence Project Retrieved 27 January 2022 Letter no 113 Francis Beaufort to Robert FitzRoy 1 September 1831 Darwin Correspondence Project Retrieved 27 January 2022 Browne 1995 pp 158 159 a b Darwin Correspondence Project letter 117 Darwin C R to Darwin S E 5 Sept 1831 Retrieved 12 November 2014 a b Darwin Correspondence Project letter 118 Darwin C R to Henslow J S 5 Sept 1831 Retrieved 13 November 2014 a b Letter no 132 Charles Darwin to W D Fox 19 September 1831 17 Spring Gardens amp here I shall remain till I start Darwin Correspondence Project Retrieved 2 January 2022 Browne 1995 pp 160 161Darwin C R Recollections of the development of my mind amp character Autobiography 1876 4 1882 CUL DAR26 1 121 Transcribed by Kees Rookmaaker Darwin Online p 49 a b Letter no 122 Charles Darwin to Susan Darwin 9 September 1831 17 Spring Gardens Darwin Correspondence Project Retrieved 27 January 2022 a b Letter no 123 Charles Darwin to J S Henslow 9 September 1831 London Darwin Correspondence Project Retrieved 3 January 2022 Darwin C R 1831 Notes on preserving Beagle specimens CUL DAR29 3 78 darwin online org uk Retrieved 3 January 2021 refers to Benjamin Leadbeater Henslow Yarrell Phillip Parker King John Lort Stokes Robert Edmond Grant Frederick William Hope a b John van Wyhe ed Darwin s Journal 1809 1881 CUL DAR158 1 76 Darwin Online pp 7 verso 8 verso 1831 Retrieved 13 November 2014 Darwin Correspondence Project letter 126 Darwin C R to Darwin S E 14 Sept 1831 Retrieved 13 November 2014 Darwin Correspondence Project letter 127 Darwin C R to Darwin S E 17 Sept 1831 Retrieved 13 November 2014 a b Kees Rookmaaker amp John van Wyhe ed Darwin C R Beagle diary 1831 1836 EH88202366 Darwin Online p 2 Retrieved 9 December 2021 got to St Albans amp so by the Wonder to Shrewsbury on Thursday 22d September 1831 The Wonder coach ran daily from Shrewsbury to London via Wolverhampton Coventry and St Albans covering the 158 miles in 15 3 4 hours It was started in 1825 by the landlord of the Lion Inn Isaac Taylor and his two brothers Darwin Correspondence Project letter 142 Darwin C R to FitzRoy Robert 10 Oct 1831 Retrieved 13 November 2014 Darwin Correspondence Project letter 139 Darwin C R to FitzRoy Robert 4 or 11 Oct 1831 Retrieved 13 November 2014 Browne amp Neve 1989 pp 12 a b Keynes 2001 p 27 Letter 119 Darwin C R to Darwin S E 6 Sept 1831 Darwin Correspondence Project Browne 1995 pp 208 209 a b c Letter no 144 Charles Darwin to J S Henslow 30 October 1831 London Darwin Correspondence Project Retrieved 2 January 2022 a b Browne 1995 p 210 Browne amp Neve 1989 pp 14 15 Letter no 140 Charles Darwin to J S Henslow 4 or 11 October 1831 London Darwin Correspondence Project Retrieved 3 January 2022 a b Keynes 2000 pp ix xi Keynes 2000 pp x Keynes 2001 pp 4 17 FitzRoy 1839 p 42 Keynes 2001 pp 19 22 Darwin 1839 pp 1 7 Keynes 2001 pp 22 26 He also collected what would in 1837 be described by John Gould as the type specimen of Passer iagoensis the Cape Verde sparrow or Iago sparrow Herbert 1991 pp 164 170 a b c Letter no 171 Charles Darwin to J S Henslow 18 May 16 June 1832 Rio de Janeiro Darwin Correspondence Project Retrieved 2 January 2022 Darwin 1958 p 81 Letter to L Horner Down 29 August 1844 Freeman 2007 p 196 Keynes 2001 pp 26 28 a b Letter no 171 Charles Darwin to J S Henslow 18 May 16 June 1832 Rio de Janeiro Darwin Correspondence Project 2 January 2022 Retrieved 2 January 2022 as for the Doctor he has gone back to England as he chose to make himself disagreeable to the Captain amp to Wickham He was a philosopher of rather an antient date at St Jago by his own account he made general remarks during the first fortnight amp collected particular facts during the last Keynes 2001 pp 28 34 a b Letter 196 Henslow J S to Darwin C R 15 amp 21 Jan 1833 Darwin Correspondence Project Retrieved 8 July 2011 Browne 1995 pp 202 204 FitzRoy 1839 pp 56 58 Keynes 2001 pp 36 38 Browne 1995 p 195 Browne amp Neve 1989 pp 14 17 a b Keynes 2000 p 319 Browne amp Neve 1989 pp 11 12 FitzRoy 1839 pp 58 60 Keynes 2001 pp 41 44 Darwin 1958 pp 73 74 Keynes 2001 p 45 Chaffin 2022 pp iii Keynes 2001 p 48 Letter no 164 Charles Darwin to Caroline Darwin 2 6 April 1832 Darwin Correspondence Project Retrieved 6 January 2022 Darwin s first love Darwin Correspondence Project 10 February 2021 Retrieved 8 January 2022 Keynes 2001 pp 51 52 Browne 1995 pp 204 205 invalided home a naval euphemism for personal disagreements and dissatisfactions Keynes 2001 pp 60 61 a b Letter no 166 Charles Darwin to Caroline Darwin 25 26 April 1832 Botofogo Bay Darwin Correspondence Project Retrieved 3 January 2022 FitzRoy 1839 pp 74 75 Keynes 2001 pp 60 61 64 65 Keynes 2001 pp 64 65 71 72 FitzRoy 1839 pp 76 79 Keynes 2001 pp 77 80 Thomson 2003 pp 162 163 Taylor 2008 p 101 Keynes 2001 p 85 Thomson 2003 pp 163 164 Keynes 2001 pp 86 90 Taylor 2008 pp 101 104 Letter no 177 Charles Darwin to Susan Darwin 14 July 7 August 1832 Darwin Correspondence Project Retrieved 10 January 2022 Keynes 2001 pp 93 Letter no 178 Charles Darwin to J S Henslow 23 July 15 August 1832 Monte Video Darwin Correspondence Project Retrieved 10 January 2022 Desmond amp Moore 1991 p 127 FitzRoy 1839 pp 94 97 Armitstead Claire 25 November 2015 Unique watercolour of Darwin on HMS Beagle tipped to fetch upwards of 50 000 at auction The Guardian Retrieved 25 November 2015 Keynes 2001 pp 104 109 p 109 Keynes notes the site is now under Puerto Belgrano naval base Cinnamon and port wine an introduction to the Rio Notebook Bahia Blanca September October 1832 a b FitzRoy 1839 pp 106 107 The Journal of Syms Covington Chapter Three Archived from the original on 26 August 2006 Retrieved 29 July 2008 a b c d e Darwin 1846 p 84 Keynes 2001 p 107 a b Keynes 2001 p 109 Darwin Correspondence Project Letter 188 Darwin C R to Darwin C S 24 Oct amp 24 Nov 1832 a b Darwin Correspondence Project Letter 192 Darwin C R to Henslow J S 26 Oct 24 Nov 1832 Browne 1995 pp 223 224 Darwin 1835 p 7 Desmond amp Moore 1991 p 210 Eldredge 2006 Keynes 2001 p 110 a b Darwin 1846 p 81 Keynes 2001 pp 111 113 Letter no 204 Charles Darwin to J S Henslow 11 April 1833 Darwin Correspondence Project Retrieved 12 January 2022 Keynes 2001 pp 117 118 Desmond amp Moore 1991 p 131 Darwin 1871 pp 34 35 180 181 Beagle Diary 1832 December 18th Desmond amp Moore 1991 pp 134 138 a b c Barlow 1963 pp 271 5 Barlow 1945 pp 193 196 Darwin Correspondence Project Letter 215 Darwin C R to Darwin C S 20 Sept 1833 Keynes 2001 p 193 Darwin Correspondence Project Letter 229 Darwin C R to Henslow J S 12 Nov 1833 Filled with astonishment an introduction to the St Fe Notebook Darwin Online Barlow 1945 p 210 Keynes 2001 pp 195 198 Keynes 2001 pp 203 204 a b c Darwin Correspondence Project Letter 238 Darwin C R to Henslow J S Mar 1834 a b c A man who has seen half the world Introduction to the Banda Oriental Notebook Banda Oriental S Cruz Beagle field notebook EH1 9 p 36 a typical Glyptodont tail Banda Oriental S Cruz Beagle field notebook EH1 9 p 37 Keynes 2001 pp 208 214Barlow 1967 p 84 Keynes 2001 pp 217 218 Barlow 1963 p 272 Keynes 2001 pp 226 227 Keynes 2001 pp 222 223 Desmond amp Moore 1991 pp 146 147 Herbert 1995 p 23 Keynes 2000 p xix Darwin Correspondence Project Letter 213 Henslow J S to Darwin C R 31 Aug 1833 Herbert 1991 pp 174 179 Sepulveda Ortiz Jorge 1998 Francisco Hudson un destacado marino poco conocido en nuestra historia PDF Revista de Marina in Spanish 1 20 archived from the original PDF on 23 January 2019 retrieved 17 February 2019 Simpson E 1874 Esploraciones hechas por la Corbeta Chacabuco al mando del capitan de fragata don Enrique M Simpson en los Archipielagos de Guaitecas Chonos i Taitao Santiago Imprenta Nacional Nunez Andres G Molina O Raul Aliste A Enrique Bello A Alvaro 2016 Silencios geograficos de Patagonia Aysen Territorio nomadismo y perspectivas para re pensar los margenes de la nacion en el siglo XIX Geographical silences in Patagonia Aysen Territory nomadism and perspectives for re thinking the margins of Chile in the nineteenth century Magallania in Spanish 44 2 107 130 doi 10 4067 S0718 22442016000200006 Joseph Hooker botanist to the Survey British Geological Survey Archived from the original on 3 July 2017 Retrieved 17 January 2012 Letter no 251 Charles Darwin to J S Henslow 24 July 7 November 1834 Valparaiso Darwin Correspondence Project Retrieved 14 January 2022 Keynes 2001 pp 249 264 Charles Darwin February 1835 The position of the bones of Mastodon at Port St Julian is of interest Darwin Online Hurrah Chiloe an introduction to the Port Desire Notebook Keynes 2001 pp 292 303 Desmond amp Moore 1991 pp 158 162 Keynes 2001 pp 304 308 309 a b Letter no 275 Charles Darwin to Susan Elizabeth Darwin 23 April 1835 Darwin Correspondence Project 6 December 2021 Retrieved 6 December 2021 Herbert 1991 pp 187 190 Thomson 2003 p 190 a b Letter no 281 Charles Darwin to Caroline Darwin 19 July 12 August 1835 Lima Darwin Correspondence Project Retrieved 24 January 2022 Letter no 263 Charles Darwin to J S Henslow 8 November 1834 Beagle Valparaiso Darwin Correspondence Project Retrieved 25 January 2022 Thomson 2003 pp 190 193 Keynes 2001 pp 343 344 350 Grant K Thalia and Estes Gregory B Darwin in Galapagos Footsteps to a New World 2009 Princeton University Press a b Keynes 2001 pp 353 354 Darwin 1845 pp 114 115 a b c Gould 1839 pp 62 64 Keynes 2000 p 291 Keynes 2001 p 356 a b Keynes 2000 p xix Eldredge 2006 Grant K Thalia and Estes Gregory B Darwin in Galapagos Footsteps to a New World 2009 Princeton University Press Keynes 2001 pp 357 360 Keynes 2001 pp 360 367 Keynes 2000 p 298 Keynes 2001 pp 364 378 Keynes 2001 pp 380 395 Keynes 2001 pp 398 399 Keynes 2001 pp 402 403 a b Darwin Online Coccatoos amp Crows An introduction to the Sydney Notebook Keynes 2001 pp 408 410 Keynes 2001 pp 410 412 FitzRoy 1839 pp 38 39 629 637 Keynes 2001 pp 413 419 Darwin 1845 pp 467 468 Darwin 1845 pp 483 486 Letter no 301 Charles Darwin to Caroline Darwin 29 April 1836 Port Lewis Mauritius Darwin Correspondence Project Retrieved 12 February 2022 Letter no 296 Catherine Darwin to Charles Darwin 29 January 1836 Shrewsbury Darwin Correspondence Project Retrieved 12 February 2022 Letter no 302 Charles Darwin to Catherine Darwin 3 June 1836 Cape of Good Hope Darwin Correspondence Project Retrieved 27 January 2022 Darwin 1835 Letter no 291 Caroline Darwin amp Charlotte Langton to Charles Darwin 29 December 1835 Shrewsbury Darwin Correspondence Project Retrieved 11 February 2022 Darwin 1835 Darwin 1836 Darwin Correspondence Project Letter 290 Darwin R W to Henslow J S 28 Dec 1835 a b c d e Darwin Online Runaway Rascals an introduction to the Despoblado Notebook van Wyhe 2007 p 197Babbage 1838 pp 225 227 Browne 1995 pp 330 331FitzRoy R Darwin C September 1836 A letter containing remarks on the moral state of Tahiti New Zealand amp c South African Christian Recorder pp 221 238 At Sea 28th June 1836 Darwin Correspondence Project Letter 304 Darwin C R to Henslow J S 9 July 1836 Darwin 1844 pp 89 90 Darwin 1845 pp 486 488 Poulton 1896 pp 28 29 Keynes 2000 p xx Barlow 1963 p 262 Hodge 2009 pp 93 98 Barlow 1933 p xiii a b Keynes 2001 pp 431 432 Darwin Correspondence Project Letter 288 Darwin S E to Darwin C R 22 Nov 1835 Darwin 1958 pp 81 82 Falcon Howard 1 September 2010 Creation of an artificial cloud forest Bbc co uk Retrieved 18 September 2010 Darwin Correspondence Project Letter 306 Darwin C R to Darwin S E 4 Aug 1836 a b Keynes 2001 p 447 Paul Van Helvert John Van Wyhe 12 January 2021 Darwin A Companion With Iconographies By John Van Wyhe World Scientific Publishing Company p 95 ISBN 9789811208225 see photographs a b c Desmond amp Moore 1991 p 195 a b Letter 310 Darwin C R to FitzRoy Robert 6 October 1836 Darwin Correspondence Project Letter 307 Darwin C R to Josiah Wedgwood II 5 October 1836 Darwin Correspondence Project Browne 1995 p 340 Darwin 1958 p 79 Desmond amp Moore 1991 p 197 Darwin C R 1837 Observations of proofs of recent elevation on the coast of Chili made during the survey of His Majesty s Ship Beagle commanded by Capt FitzRoy R N Proceedings of the Geological Society of London 2 446 449 Keynes 2001 p xviii xx Keynes 2001 p 449 a b Herbert 1980 p 11 Owen 1840 p 13 Darwin Correspondence Project Letter 321 Darwin C R to Darwin C S 9 Nov 1836 a b Owen 1840 pp 106 108 Owen 1837 pp 541 542 Owen 1840 pp 16 18 Darwin 1846 p 92 Darwin 1846 p 90 Darwin 1846 pp 88 92 Darwin 1846 p 95References editBabbage Charles 1838 The Ninth Bridgewater Treatise 2nd ed London John Murray retrieved 2 February 2009 Barlow Nora ed 1933 Charles Darwin s diary of the voyage of H M S Beagle Cambridge University Press retrieved 29 January 2009 Barlow Nora ed 1945 Charles Darwin and the voyage of the Beagle London Pilot Press retrieved 29 January 2009 Barlow Nora ed 1963 With introduction notes and appendix by the editor Bulletin of the British Museum Natural History vol 2 no 7 pp 201 278 retrieved 29 January 2009 Barlow Nora ed 1967 Darwin and Henslow The growth of an idea London Bentham Moxon Trust John Murray retrieved 29 January 2009 Browne E Janet Neve Michael 1989 Introduction in Darwin Charles ed Voyage of the Beagle Charles Darwin s Journal of researches London Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 14 043268 8 Browne E Janet 1995 Charles Darwin vol 1 Voyaging London Jonathan Cape ISBN 1 84413 314 1Chaffin Tom 2022 Odyssey Young Charles Darwin The Beagle and The Voyage that Changed the World New York Pegasus Books retrieved 30 July 2023Darwin Charles 1835 Extracts from letters to Professor Henslow Cambridge privately printed retrieved 27 January 2009 Darwin Charles 1836 Geological notes made during a survey of the east and west coasts of S America in the years 1832 1833 1834 and 1835 with an account of a transverse section of the Cordilleras of the Andes between Valparaiso and Mendoza Read 18 November 1835 Proceedings of the Geological Society of London 2 210 212 retrieved 23 February 2013 Darwin Charles 1839 Narrative of the surveying voyages of His Majesty s Ships Adventure and Beagle between the years 1826 and 1836 describing their examination of the southern shores of South America and the Beagle s circumnavigation of the globe Journal and remarks 1832 1836 vol III London Henry Colburn retrieved 27 January 2009 Darwin Charles 1842 The Structure and Distribution of Coral Reefs Being the first part of the geology of the voyage of the Beagle under the command of Capt Fitzroy R N during the years 1832 to 1836 London Smith Elder and Co retrieved 29 January 2009 Darwin Charles 1844 Geological Observations on the Volcanic Islands visited during the Voyage of H M S Beagle together with some brief notices of the geology of Australia and the Cape of Good Hope Being the second part of the geology of the voyage of the Beagle under the command of Capt Fitzroy R N during the years 1832 to 1836 London Smith Elder and Co retrieved 29 January 2009 Darwin Charles 1845 Journal of Researches into the natural history and geology of the countries visited during the voyage of H M S Beagle round the world under the Command of Capt Fitz Roy R N 2d edition London John Murray Darwin Charles 1846 Geological Observations on South America Being the third part of the geology of the voyage of the Beagle under the command of Capt Fitzroy R N during the years 1832 to 1836 London Smith Elder and Co retrieved 27 January 2009 Darwin Charles 1871 The Descent of Man and Selection in Relation to Sex 1st ed London John Murray Darwin Charles 1958 Barlow Nora ed The Autobiography of Charles Darwin 1809 1882 With the original omissions restored Edited and with appendix and notes by his granddaughter Nora Barlow London Collins Desmond Adrian Moore James 1991 Darwin London Michael Joseph Penguin Group ISBN 978 0 7181 3430 3 Eldredge Niles 2006 Confessions of a Darwinist The Virginia Quarterly Review no Spring 2006 pp 32 53 retrieved 27 January 2009 FitzRoy Robert 1836 Sketch of the Surveying Voyages of his Majesty s Ships Adventure and Beagle 1825 1836 Commanded by Captains P P King P Stokes and R Fitz Roy Royal Navy Communicated by John Barrow Journal of the Geological Society of London 6 311 343 retrieved 14 May 2012 FitzRoy Robert 1839 Narrative of the surveying voyages of His Majesty s Ships Adventure and Beagle between the years 1826 and 1836 describing their examination of the southern shores of South America and the Beagle s circumnavigation of the globe Proceedings of the second expedition 1831 36 under the command of Captain Robert Fitz Roy R N vol II London Henry Colburn retrieved 27 January 2009 FitzRoy Robert 1839a Narrative of the surveying voyages of His Majesty s Ships Adventure and Beagle between the years 1826 and 1836 describing their examination of the southern shores of South America and the Beagle s circumnavigation of the globe vol Appendix to Volume II London Henry Colburn retrieved 27 January 2009 Freeman R B 2007 Charles Darwin A companion 2d online edition compiled by Sue Asscher and edited by John van Wyhe 2d online edition compiled by Sue Asscher and edited by John van Wyhe ed Darwin Online retrieved 1 August 2010 Gould John 1839 Darwin C R ed Birds Part 3 No 4 The zoology of the voyage of H M S Beagle London Smith Elder and Co retrieved 18 April 2009 Herbert Sandra 1980 The red notebook of Charles Darwin Bulletin of the British Museum Natural History vol 7 retrieved 26 February 2021 Herbert Sandra 1991 Charles Darwin as a prospective geological author British Journal for the History of Science vol 24 no 2 pp 159 192 doi 10 1017 s0007087400027060 S2CID 143748414 retrieved 29 January 2009 Herbert Sandra 1995 From Charles Darwin s portfolio An early essay on South American geology and species Earth Sciences History vol 14 no 1 pp 23 36 doi 10 17704 eshi 14 1 76570264u727jh36 Hodge Jonathan 2009 Darwin the Galapagos and his changing thoughts about species origins 1835 1837 Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences 61 Supplement II No 7 89 106 retrieved 19 February 2012 Keynes Richard 2000 Charles Darwin s zoology notes amp specimen lists from H M S Beagle Cambridge University Press retrieved 27 January 2009 Keynes Richard 2001 Charles Darwin s Beagle Diary Cambridge University Press retrieved 27 January 2009 King P P 1839 FitzRoy Robert ed Narrative of the surveying voyages of His Majesty s Ships Adventure and Beagle between the years 1826 and 1836 describing their examination of the southern shores of South America and the Beagle s circumnavigation of the globe Proceedings of the first expedition 1826 30 under the command of Captain P Parker King R N F R S vol I London Henry Colburn retrieved 27 January 2009 Owen Richard 1837 A description of the Cranium of the Toxodon Platensis a gigantic extinct mammiferous species referrible by its dentition to the Rodentia but with affinities to the Pachydermata and the Herbivorous Cetacea Read 19 April Proceedings of the Geological Society of London no 2 pp 541 542 retrieved 27 January 2009 Owen Richard 1840 Darwin C R ed Fossil Mammalia Part 1 The zoology of the voyage of H M S Beagle London Smith Elder and Co retrieved 27 January 2009 Poulton Edward Bagnall 1896 Charles Darwin and the theory of natural selection London Cassell amp Co retrieved 27 January 2009 Taylor James 2008 The Voyage of the Beagle Darwin s Extraordinary Adventure in Fitzroy s Famous Survey Ship Conway ISBN 978 1 84486 066 1 Thomson Keith S 2003 HMS Beagle the story of Darwin s ship London Phoenix ISBN 978 0 7538 1733 9 OCLC 52143718 van Wyhe John 27 March 2007 Mind the gap Did Darwin avoid publishing his theory for many years Notes and Records of the Royal Society 61 2 177 205 doi 10 1098 rsnr 2006 0171 S2CID 202574857 retrieved 2 February 2009 van Wyhe John 2013 My appointment received the sanction of the Admiralty Why Charles Darwin really was the naturalist on HMS Beagle PDF Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences Elsevier BV 44 3 316 326 doi 10 1016 j shpsc 2013 03 022 PMID 23664568External links edit Darwin a naturalist s voyage around world CNRS Paris France Retrieved 9 November 2009 AboutDarwin com Beagle Voyage Archived from the original on 12 November 2007 Retrieved 21 November 2007 Rookmaaker Kees 2009 Darwin s itinerary on the voyage of the Beagle Darwin Online retrieved 18 August 2009 Grant K Thalia and Estes Gregory B 2009 Darwin s itinerary in Galapagos Darwin and the Beagle voyage Darwin Correspondence Project 11 February 2021 Retrieved 20 December 2021 Further reading editThe Complete Works of Charles Darwin Online Darwin Online Darwin s publications private papers and bibliography supplementary works including biographies obituaries and reviews Free to use includes items not in public domain Works by Charles Darwin at Project Gutenberg public domain Darwin Correspondence Project Text and notes for most of his letters Darwin in Galapagos Footsteps to a New World Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Second voyage of HMS Beagle amp oldid 1176434989, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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