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      sciencebuzz.org

      James Hutton

      • For inspiration, Lyell turned to the fifty-year-old ideas of a Scottish farmer named James Hutton. In the 1790s, Hutton had argued that the Earth was transformed not by unimaginable catastrophes but by imperceptibly slow changes, many of which we can see around us today.
      evolution.berkeley.edu › the-history-of-evolutionary-thought › 1800s
  1. For the first one or two billion years of Earth’s history, plate tectonics didn’t even exist as we know it today. Lyell had an equally profound effect on our understanding of life’s history. He influenced Darwin so deeply that Darwin envisioned evolution as a sort of biological uniformitarianism.

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  3. May 28, 2019 · Charles Darwin's theory of evolution was influenced by geologist Charles Lyell’s Principles of Geology. Lyell extrapolated on James Hutton's work related to uniformitarianism. Darwin and Lyell offered evidence that natural laws explain how the Earth and living organisms gradually change over time.

    • Mary Dowd
  4. Charles Lyell, Scottish geologist largely responsible for the general acceptance of the view that all features of the Earth’s surface are produced by physical, chemical, and biological processes through long periods of geological time. His achievements laid the foundations for evolutionary biology.

  5. Although Darwin discussed evolutionary ideas with him from 1842, Lyell continued to reject evolution in each of the first nine editions of the Principles. He encouraged Darwin to publish, and following the 1859 publication of On the Origin of Species, Lyell finally offered a tepid endorsement of evolution in the tenth edition of Principles.

  6. McKinney gives a full discussion of Lyell's thinking on evolution and, in particular, examines Lyell's response to Wallace's 1855 paper 'On the law which has regulated the introduction of new species'.

    • Michael Bartholomew
    • 1973
  7. friends. It was Lyell who suggested that Darwin and Wallace should publish a joint paper on the origin of species. Clearly Lyell did not readily accept Darwin's idea on the origin of species, but over time was gradually converted to the idea of evolution but not necessarily by natural selection.

  8. Oct 19, 2019 · Charles Darwin was greatly influenced by Lyell's ideas of a slow, natural change of geological formations. Charles Lyell was an acquaintance of Captain FitzRoy, the captain of the HMS Beagle on Darwin's voyages.

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