Charles Robert Darwin.

“[Mister] Renous, alluding to myself, asked him what he thought of the King of England sending out a collector to their country, to pick up lizards and beetles, and to break stones? The old gentlemen thought seriously for some time, and then said, “… no man is so rich as to send out people to pick up such rubbish.” – Journal and remarks, 1832-1836, by Charles Darwin.

Charles Robert Darwin was born on February 12, 1809, in Shrewsbury, county town of Shropshire, and from an early age on loved to collect things as he later notes in his autobiography,”It was soon after I began collecting stones, i.e., when 9 or 10, that I distinctly recollect the desire I had of being able to know something about every pebble in front of the hall door–it was my earliest and only geological aspiration at that time.” During his school years Darwin remains interested in chemistry and minerals, however, he laments that “I continued to collecting minerals with much zeal, but quite unscientifically – all that I cared was a new named mineral, and I hardly attempted to classify them.” As a student of medicine at Edinburgh University Darwin frequented various courses on natural sciences, including lectures by mineralogist Robert Jameson. “During my second year at Edinburgh I attended Jameson’s lectures on Geology and Zoology, but they were incredibly dull. The sole effect they produced on me was the determination never as long as I lived to read a book on Geology, or in any way to study the science.” Despite Darwin’s criticism of Jameson’s public lectures, he regularly used Jameson’s Manual of Mineralogy for his private studies, as it is one of the most heavily annotated books found in his library. He remembers in his autobiography, “…an old Mr. Cotton, in Shropshire, who knew a good deal about rocks, had pointed out to me … a well-known large erratic boulder in the town of Shrewsbury, called the “bell-stone;” …. [] …. This produced a deep impression on me, and I meditated over this wonderful stone.” At the time mineralogy manuals used physical properties, such as color, crystal shape and degree of hardness for mineral and rock identification. Especially German geologist pioneered the identification of minerals. Carl Friedrich Christian Mohs published in 1824 one of the first modern textbooks on mineral classification and identification. In his later career as geologist Darwin will describe rocks based on their visible properties. For example he used terms like “porphyry” for rocks with large, well visible, crystals, or he used names like “greystone” or “greenstone” to describe greenish-dark magmatic rocks, today classified as a dolerite-basalt (and to confuse modern geologists, greenstone is nowadays the name used for a metamorphic rock). He will also use many terms introduced by German geologists, like “amygdaloid”, describing cavities filled with crystals found in basaltic lava flows.

Darwin’s interest in nature led him to neglect his medical education at the University of Edinburgh. His disappointed father, a physician himself, sent him to Christ’s College, Cambridge, to study for a Bachelor of Arts degree as the first step towards becoming an Anglican country parson. At Cambridge, Darwin met William Whewell, an amateur mineralogist himself, and befriended one of the top geologists of the day, Adam Sedgwick, president of the newly formed Geological Society of London. He visited the private lectures on geology and botany by Sedgwick and John Stephen Henslow, botanist and geologist. Sedgwick took the young Darwin on a geological field trip to Wales in summer of 1831. Darwin was interested in acquiring the basics of geological fieldwork, structural geology and rock classification. Twenty pages of notes made by Darwin during this tour are still preserved today and in his autobiography, he will later remember, “This tour was of decided use in teaching me a little how to make out the geology of a country.” When Darwin returned back home a letter from Captain Robert FitzRoy was waiting for him. It offered him a position as gentlemen companion on board of the H.M.S. Beagle, ready to set sail from Plymouth at the end of the year. FitzRoy was himself an amateur geologist and delighted to get a “young man of promising ability, extremely fond of geology” as companion during the long voyage of the Beagle around the world. Darwin used the remaining time to exercise mineral identification and proudly remarks “hornblende determined by myself.”

Hornblende crystals.D.Bressan

On board the Beagle, Darwin had access to a complete library for mineral identification, including A selection of the Geological Memoirs (1824), featuring a mineral identification chart compiled by famous French geologist Alexandre Brongniart. These manuals used, like modern books, properties like color, hardness and shape to identify crystals and minerals and, unlike modern textbooks, also taste and odor.

Especially interesting were classification charts based on the color of a sample. Werner’s nomenclature of colors published in 1821 by Patrick Syme is a book displaying just a chart and the description of various colors to be compared with minerals, animals and plants. Darwin himself brought this book on board of the Beagle and used it to describe snakes, rocks and even the “beryl blue” glaciers visited in South America.

Werner’s nomenclature of colors.Syme 1821

During the five years long voyage of the Beagle, Darwin compiled 1.383 pages of notes about geology. By comparison, the biological observations that made him famous comprised a mere 368 pages. In April 1832, the Beagle arrived at Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on board a seasick Charles Darwin. On land, Darwin received news from home including a letter by Fanny Owen, a woman he hoped was waiting for him back home. She had married someone else. Maybe to raise his mood Darwin decided to geologize a bit around the city, climbing the Pão de Açúcar (Sugarloaf Mountain). Darwin describes in detail the rock and collects various samples of “gneiss, abounding with garnets, and porphyritic with large crystals, even three and four inches in length, of orthoclase feldspar: in these crystals, mica and garnets are often enclosed.”

Feldspar-augen-gneiss from the Pão de Açúcar/Sugarloaf Mountain in Rio de Jainero. Same rock as collected by Darwin in 1832.D.Bressan

Darwin’s final advice for collecting rocks and minerals is still important today. “Put a number on every specimen, and every fragment of a specimen; and during the very same minute let it be entered in the catalogue, so that if hereafter its locality be doubted, the collector may say in good truth, “Every specimen of mine was ticketed on the spot.” Any thing which is folded up in paper, or put into a separate box, ought to have a number on the outside (with the exception perhaps of geological specimens), but more especially a duplicate number on the inside attached to the specimen itself.”

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Charles Robert Darwin.(*********** )(******* )

(************ )” [Mister] Renous, mentioning myself, asked him what he thought about the King of England sending a collector to their nation, to get lizards and beetles, and to break stones? The old gentlemen believed seriously for some time, and after that stated, “… no male is so abundant regarding send individuals to get such rubbish.”- Journal and remarks,1832 -1836, by Charles Darwin.

Charles Robert Darwin was born upon February12, (********************************************************** ), in Shrewsbury, county town of Shropshire, and from an early age on liked to gather things as he later on keeps in mind in his autobiography,” It was right after I started gathering stones, i.e., when 9 or10, that I definitely remember the desire I had of having the ability to understand something about every pebble in front of the hall door– it was my earliest and just geological goal at that time.” Throughout his academic year Darwin stays thinking about chemistry and minerals, nevertheless, he regrets that” I continued to gathering minerals with much passion, however rather unscientifically– all that I cared was a brand-new called mineral, and I barely tried to categorize them.” As a trainee of medication at Edinburgh University Darwin often visited different courses on lives sciences, consisting of lectures by mineralogist Robert Jameson.” Throughout my 2nd year at Edinburgh I went to Jameson’s lectures on Geology and Zoology, however they were exceptionally dull. The sole impact they produced on me was the decision never ever as long as I lived to check out a book on Geology, or in any method to study the science.” In spite of Darwin’s criticism of Jameson’s public lectures, he routinely utilized Jameson’s (*************** ) Handbook of Mineralogy(************** ) for his personal research studies, as it is among the most greatly annotated books discovered in his library. He keeps in mind in his autobiography,” … an old Mr. Cotton, in Shropshire, who understood a bargain about rocks, had actually mentioned to me … a widely known big irregular stone in the town of Shrewsbury, called the “bell-stone;” …[] … This produced a deep impression on me, and I practiced meditation over this terrific stone.” At the time mineralogy handbooks utilized physical residential or commercial properties, such as color, crystal shape and degree of solidity for mineral and rock recognition. Specifically German geologist originated the recognition of minerals. Carl Friedrich Christian Mohs released in1824 among the very first modern-day books on mineral category and recognition. In his later profession as geologist Darwin will explain rocks based upon their noticeable residential or commercial properties. For instance he utilized terms like “porphyry” for rocks with big, well noticeable, crystals, or he utilized names like” greystone “or” greenstone” to explain greenish-dark magmatic rocks, today categorized as a dolerite-basalt(and to puzzle modern-day geologists, greenstone is nowadays the name utilized for a metamorphic rock). He will likewise utilize lots of terms presented by German geologists, like” amygdaloid”, explaining cavities filled with crystals discovered in basaltic lava circulations.

Darwin’s interest in nature led him to disregard his medical education at the University of Edinburgh. His dissatisfied daddy, a doctor himself, sent him to Christ’s College, Cambridge, to study for a Bachelor of Arts degree as the primary step
towards ending up being an Anglican nation parson. At Cambridge, Darwin satisfied William Whewell, an amateur mineralogist himself, and befriended among the leading geologists of the day, Adam Sedgwick, president of the recently formed Geological Society of London. He checked out the personal lectures on geology and botany by Sedgwick and John Stephen Henslow, botanist and geologist. Sedgwick took the young Darwin on a geological excursion to Wales in summertime of(******************************************************* ) Darwin had an interest in getting the fundamentals of geological fieldwork, structural geology and rock category. Twenty pages of notes made by Darwin throughout this trip are still maintained today and in his autobiography, he will later on keep in mind,” This trip was of chosen usage in mentor me a little how to construct the geology of a nation. “When Darwin returned back house a letter from Captain Robert FitzRoy was awaiting him. It provided him a position as gentlemen buddy on board of the H.M.S. Beagle, prepared to set sail from Plymouth at the end of the year. FitzRoy was himself an amateur geologist and pleased to get a “boy of appealing capability, exceptionally keen on geology” as buddy throughout the long trip of the Beagle worldwide Darwin utilized the staying time to work out mineral recognition and (*********************** )happily mentions” hornblende figured out by myself. “

(************************** )(******* )

Hornblende crystals. D.Bressan(**************************** )

On board the Beagle, Darwin had access to a total library for mineral recognition

, consisting of A choice of the Geological Memoirs((******************************************************** )), including a mineral recognition chart assembled by well-known French geologist Alexandre Brongniart. These handbooks utilized, like modern-day books, residential or commercial properties like color, solidity and shape to recognize crystals and minerals and, unlike modern-day books, likewise taste and smell.

(************ )Specifically intriguing were category charts based upon the color of a sample.(******************************* )Werner’s classification of colors(*****************

) released in 1821 by Patrick Syme is a book showing simply a chart and the description of different colors to be compared to minerals, animals and plants. Darwin himself brought this book on board of the Beagle and utilized it to explain snakes, rocks and even the” beryl blue” glaciers gone to in South America.

(********************************* )(****** )
(********* )

Werner’s classification of colors. Syme1821

(******* )

Throughout the 5 years long trip of the Beagle, Darwin assembled 1.(*********************************************************************

) pages of notes about geology. By contrast, the biological observations that made him well-known made up a simple368 pages. In April1832, the Beagle got to Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on board a seasick Charles Darwin. On land, Darwin got news from house consisting of a letter by Fanny Owen, a lady he hoped was awaiting him back house. She had actually wed somebody else. Perhaps to raise his state of mind Darwin chose to geologize a bit around the city, climbing up the Pão de Açúcar (Sugarloaf Mountain). Darwin explains in information the rock(***************** )and gathers different samples of” gneiss, being plentiful with garnets, and porphyritic with big crystals, even 3 and 4 inches in length, of orthoclase feldspar: in these crystals, mica and garnets are typically confined.”

(******* )(******** )(********* )

Feldspar-augen-gneiss from the Pão de Açúcar/ Sugarloaf Mountain in Rio de Jainero.

Exact same rock as gathered by Darwin in1832

D.Bressan(**************************** )(*********** )

Darwin’s last suggestions for gathering rocks and minerals is still crucial today.” Put a number on every specimen, and every piece of a specimen; and throughout the really exact same minute let it be gone into in the brochure

, so that if hereafter its area be questioned
, the collector might state in excellent fact,” Every specimen of mine was ticketed on the area. “Any thing which is folded in paper, or take into a different box, should have a number on the outdoors( with the exception maybe of geological specimens), however more particularly a replicate number on the within connected to the specimen itself.”

“readability =” 120.(******************************************** )” >(************************************** )“[Mister] Renous, mentioning myself, asked him what he thought about the King of England sending a collector to their nation, to get lizards and beetles, and to break stones? The old gentlemen believed seriously for some time, and after that stated,” … no male is so abundant regarding send individuals to get such rubbish.” – Journal and remarks, 1832 -1836, by Charles Darwin.(************** )(*********** ).

Charles Robert Darwin was born upon February 12,1809, in Shrewsbury, county town of Shropshire, and from an early age on liked to gather things as he later on keeps in mind in his autobiography, “It was right after I started gathering stones, i.e., when 9 or(**************************************************************************** ), that I definitely remember the desire I had of having the ability to understand something about every pebble in front of the hall door– it was my earliest and just geological goal at that time. “Throughout his academic year Darwin stays thinking about chemistry and minerals, nevertheless, he regrets that” I continued to gathering minerals with much passion, however rather unscientifically– all that I cared was a brand-new called mineral, and I barely tried to categorize them.” As a trainee of medication at Edinburgh University Darwin often visited different courses on lives sciences, consisting of lectures by mineralogist Robert Jameson. “Throughout my 2nd year at Edinburgh I went to Jameson’s lectures on Geology and Zoology, however they were exceptionally dull. The sole impact they produced on me was the decision never ever as long as I lived to check out a book on Geology, or in any method to study the science.
” In spite of Darwin’s criticism of Jameson’s public lectures, he routinely utilized Jameson’s Handbook of Mineralogy for his personal research studies, as it is among the most greatly annotated books discovered in his library.
He keeps in mind in his autobiography,” … an old Mr. Cotton, in Shropshire, who understood a bargain about rocks, had actually mentioned to me … a widely known big irregular stone in the town of Shrewsbury, called the “bell-stone;” … [] … This produced a deep impression on me, and I practiced meditation over this terrific stone.” At the time mineralogy handbooks utilized physical residential or commercial properties, such as color, crystal shape and degree of solidity for mineral and rock recognition. Specifically German geologist originated the recognition of minerals. Carl Friedrich Christian Mohs released in 1824 among the very first modern-day books on mineral category and recognition. In his later profession as geologist Darwin will explain rocks based upon their noticeable residential or commercial properties. For instance he utilized terms like “porphyry” for rocks with big, well noticeable, crystals, or he utilized names like “greystone” or “greenstone” to explain greenish-dark magmatic rocks, today categorized as a dolerite-basalt (and to puzzle modern-day geologists, greenstone is nowadays the name utilized for a metamorphic rock ). He will likewise utilize lots of terms presented by German geologists, like “amygdaloid”, explaining cavities filled with crystals discovered in basaltic lava circulations.

Darwin’s interest in nature led him to disregard his medical education at the University of Edinburgh. His dissatisfied daddy, a doctor himself, sent him to Christ’s College, Cambridge, to study for a Bachelor of Arts degree as the primary step towards ending up being an Anglican nation parson. At Cambridge, Darwin satisfied William Whewell, an amateur mineralogist himself, and befriended among the leading geologists of the day, Adam Sedgwick, president of the recently formed Geological Society of London. He checked out the personal lectures on geology and botany by Sedgwick and John Stephen Henslow, botanist and geologist. Sedgwick took the young Darwin on a geological excursion to Wales in summertime of 1831 Darwin had an interest in getting the fundamentals of geological fieldwork, structural geology and rock category. Twenty pages of notes made by Darwin throughout this trip are still maintained today and in his autobiography, he will later on keep in mind, “This trip was of chosen usage in mentor me a little how to construct the geology of a nation.” When Darwin returned back house a letter from Captain Robert FitzRoy was awaiting him. It provided him a position as gentlemen buddy on board of the H.M.S. Beagle, prepared to set sail from Plymouth at the end of the year. FitzRoy was himself an amateur geologist and pleased to get a “boy of appealing capability, exceptionally keen on geology” as buddy throughout the long trip of the Beagle worldwide Darwin utilized the staying time to work out mineral recognition and happily mentions “hornblende figured out by myself.”

.

.

Hornblende crystals. D.Bressan

.

.

On board the Beagle, Darwin had access to a total library for mineral recognition, consisting of A choice of the Geological Memoirs (1824), including a mineral recognition chart assembled by well-known French geologist Alexandre Brongniart. These handbooks utilized, like modern-day books, residential or commercial properties like color, solidity and shape to recognize crystals and minerals and, unlike modern-day books, likewise taste and smell.

Specifically intriguing were category charts based upon the color of a sample. Werner’s classification of colors released in 1821 by Patrick Syme is a book showing simply a chart and the description of different colors to be compared to minerals, animals and plants. Darwin himself brought this book on board of the Beagle and utilized it to explain snakes, rocks and even the “beryl blue” glaciers gone to in South America.

.

.

Werner’s classification of colors. Syme 1821

.

.

Throughout the 5 years long trip of the Beagle, Darwin assembled 1. 383 pages of notes about geology. By contrast, the biological observations that made him well-known made up a simple 368 pages. In April 1832, the Beagle got to Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on board a seasick Charles Darwin. On land, Darwin got news from house consisting of a letter by Fanny Owen, a lady he hoped was awaiting him back house. She had actually wed somebody else. Perhaps to raise his state of mind Darwin chose to geologize a bit around the city, climbing up the Pão de Açúcar (Sugarloaf Mountain). Darwin explains in information the rock and gathers different samples of” gneiss , being plentiful with garnets, and porphyritic with big crystals, even 3 and 4 inches in length, of orthoclase feldspar: in these crystals, mica and garnets are typically confined.”

.

.

Feldspar-augen-gneiss from the Pão de Açúcar/ Sugarloaf Mountain in Rio de Jainero. Exact same rock as gathered by Darwin in1832 D.Bressan

.

.

Darwin’s last suggestions for gathering rocks and minerals is still crucial today. “Put a number on every specimen, and every piece of a specimen; and throughout the really exact same minute let it be gone into in the brochure, so that if hereafter its area be questioned, the collector might state in excellent fact, “Every specimen of mine was ticketed on the area.” Any thing which is folded in paper, or take into a different box, should have a number on the outdoors (with the exception maybe of geological specimens), however more particularly a replicate number on the within connected to the specimen itself.”

.