Index 



585 



Danaida genittia, 57 

 I), plexippus, 57 

 Dante, 513 

 Dantec, Le, 472 



Darwin, Charles, as an Anthropologist, 

 137-151 



- on ants, 34, 35 



- and the Beagle Voyage, 299, 345-356 



- on the Biology of Flowers, 401-423 



- as a Botanist, 307, 308, 315 



- his influence on Botany, 306, 307 



- and S. Butler, 88 1 , 90 



- at Cambridge, 343, 366 



- on Cirripedia, 375, 457 



- on climbing plants, 387-392 



- on colour, 277, 278, 280, 281 



- on coral reefs, 367-370 



- on the Descent of Man, 112-136 



- his work on Drosera, 390, 392 



- at Edinburgh, 341, 343 



- his influence on Animal Embryology, 

 171-184 



- on Geographical Distribution, 299-303, 

 322, 323 



his work on Earthworms, 377-379 



evolutionist authors referred to in the 

 Origin by, 8 



- and E. Forbes, 303, 304 



- on the geological record, 187 



- and Geology, 337-384 



- his early love for geology, 340 



- his connection with the Geological 

 Society of London, 359-364 



- and Haeckel, 130, 131 



- and Heoslow, 280, 343, 344, 351, 352 



- and History, 529-542 



and Hooker, 1, 2 



- and Huxley, 112, 113, 130 



on ice-action, 365 



on igneous rocks, 373 



- on Lamarck, 22, 125, 224 



- on Language, 121, 521, 522 



- his Scientific Library, 349 



- and the Linnean Society, 355 



- and Lyell, 338, 358, 359, 379-384 



- and Malthus, 16, 19, 88 



- on Patrick Matthew, 16 



- on mental evolution, 424-445 



- on Mimicry, 286-290 



a "Monistic Philosopher," 15 



on the movements of plants, 385-400 



on Natural Selection, 17, 32, 42, 43, 

 120 



a "Naturalist for Naturalists," 85 



on Paley, 275 



Darwin, Charles, his Pangenesis hypothesis, 

 102, 111 



- on the permanence of continents, 300, 

 301 



- his personality, 446 



- his influence on Philosophy, 446-464 



- predecessors of, 3-17 



his views on religion, etc., 114, 115, 

 462-464, 496 



- his influence on religious thought, 

 477-493 



his influence on the study of religions, 

 494-511 



his methods of research, 375, 402, 403 



- and Sedgwick, 343, 344 



- on Sexual Selection, 277, 295 



the first germ of his species theory, 88, 

 350, 351, 366 



on H. Spencer, 305 



causes of his success, 9, 87 



- on Variation, 66-73, 83, 235 



- on the Vestiges of Creation, 13 



- on volcanic islands, 371, 372 



- and Wallace, 18, 436 



letter to Wallace from, 278 



- letter to E. B. Wilson from, 279 

 Darwin, E., ou the colour of animals, 



276-278 



Charles Darwin's reference to, 349 



- on evolution, 7-13, 86 



DAEWIN, F., on Darwin's work on the Move- 

 ments of Plants, 385-400 



on Darwin as a botanist, 306' 2 



observations on Earthworms by, 378 



- on Lamarckism, 10 



on Memory, 507 2 



- on Prichard's "Anticipations," 17 



71 3 , 837 1 , 349, 351, 353 



DAKWIN, Sir G., on The Genesis of Double 

 Stars, 543-564 



on the earth's mass, 300 

 Darwin, H., 378 



Darwin, W., 378 



Darwinism, Sociology, Evolution and, 15 



Davenport and Cannon, experiments on 



Daphniae by, 266 

 David, T. E., his work on Funafuti, 369, 



370 



Death, cause of natural, 257 

 Debey, on Cretaceous plants, 313 

 Debierne, 578 

 Degeneration, 38-40, 89 

 Delage, experiments on parthenogenesis 



by, 253 

 Delbrtick, 516 1 



375 



