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  1. Jan 14, 2015 · As we discover in Haeckel’s Embryos, German biologist Ernst Haeckel included illustrations of the embryological stages of vertebrates in a series of books published between 1868 and 1908....

  2. Jul 6, 2015 · Haeckel’s embryos: the images that would not go away. A new book tells, for the first time in full, the extraordinary story of drawings of embryos initially published in 1868. The artist was accused of fraud – but, copied and recopied, his images gained iconic status as evidence of evolution.

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  4. Famous embryo illustrators Ernst Haeckel (1834–1919) Romanes' 1892 copy of Ernst Haeckel's allegedly fraudulent embryo drawings (this version of the figure is often attributed incorrectly to Haeckel).

  5. Jan 30, 2020 · He produced a series of iconic drawings of embryos from a range of species, captured at various points through development, to support his theory. And he published them in two books - Anthropogenie (The Evolution of Man) and Natürliche Schöpfungsgeschichte, or Natural History of Creation.

  6. May 3, 2014 · Haeckel supported his biogenetic law with his drawings of embryos during different stages of development. In 1874, his work Anthropogenie included drawings of embryonic fish, salamanders, tortoises, chicks, pigs, cows, rabbits, and humans at different stages of development placed next to one another for comparison.

  7. Among Ernst Haeckel’s (1834–1919) many provocative works on evolution, morphology, and philosophy, none has been as continually controversial as his embryo drawings, which depict different species passing through similar sequences of embryonic stages and “recapitulating” their common evolutionary history.

  8. In books, television programs, and websites, new images appear alongside others that have survived from decades ago. Among the most famous are drawings of embryos by the Darwinist Ernst Haeckel in which humans and other vertebrates begin identical, then diverge toward their adult forms.

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