2010
DOI: 10.1890/0012-9623-91.1.21
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History of Ecological Sciences, Part 34: A Changing Economy of Nature

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Cited by 15 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…Phytogeography along ecological lines laid down by Humboldt (Egerton 2009 b ) and Augustin‐Pyramus de Candolle (Egerton 2010:26–29) continued throughout the 1800s (Pritzel 1871–1877:458–462, Nicolson 1996) and can be seen in such treatises as Joakim F. Schouw's Grundtraek til en almindelig Plantgeographie (1822, German, 1823), Franz Meyen's Grundriss der Pflanzengeographie (1836, English 1846, English 1977), Arthur Henfrey's Vegetation of Europe, Its Conditions and Causes (1852, 1977), and Alphonse de Candolle's Géographie botanique raisonée (1855) (Reed 1942:128–129). German botanists led the way, with Russian botanists following a parallel, rather independent, course (Becking 1957:417–419).…”
Section: Europementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Phytogeography along ecological lines laid down by Humboldt (Egerton 2009 b ) and Augustin‐Pyramus de Candolle (Egerton 2010:26–29) continued throughout the 1800s (Pritzel 1871–1877:458–462, Nicolson 1996) and can be seen in such treatises as Joakim F. Schouw's Grundtraek til en almindelig Plantgeographie (1822, German, 1823), Franz Meyen's Grundriss der Pflanzengeographie (1836, English 1846, English 1977), Arthur Henfrey's Vegetation of Europe, Its Conditions and Causes (1852, 1977), and Alphonse de Candolle's Géographie botanique raisonée (1855) (Reed 1942:128–129). German botanists led the way, with Russian botanists following a parallel, rather independent, course (Becking 1957:417–419).…”
Section: Europementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Nor did anyone else later find any alive. France's leading vertebrate anatomist, Georges Cuvier, published Mémoire sur les espèces d’éléphants vivantes et fossils (, , ), which distinguished two living species and two fossil species (Coleman :119, Smith :19, 52, Rudwick :13–18, Barrow :39–42, Egerton :23–25, Kolbert :28–44).…”
Section: Historical Background Of Extinctionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Frenchman Jean Baptiste de Lamarck (1744–1829) is most remembered for his theory of evolution (transformism) due to use or disuse of organs, and inheritance of acquired traits (Burlingame , Burkhardt , Thorpe :13–14, Singer :266). The shift in Lamarck's belief from unchanging to changing species occurred during the French Revolution, which he supported, and opposition to the concept of evolution came from his nemesis, Georges Cuvier (1769–1832), who also opposed the Revolution (Egerton :21, :131–132). The theoretical climax of Lamarck's case for evolution was in his Philosophie Zoologique (, English ), which did discuss animal behavior.…”
Section: Natural Historymentioning
confidence: 99%