Animal Kingdom : Volume 9, the Class Reptilia
Arranged in Conformity with Its Organization
By Baron Georges Cuvier, Edward Griffith, Edward Pidgeon, Henry McMurtrie, Edward Blyth, John Edward Gray, George Robert Gray, P. A. Latreille, Metcalf Collection Ncrs, Henry 1793-1865 McMurtrie, Edward 1790-1858 Griffith and Charles Hamilton Smith
"Animal Kingdom : Volume 9, the Class Reptilia" was published by Cambridge University Press in 2013 - Cambridge, it has 1 pages and the language of the book is English.
“Animal Kingdom : Volume 9, the Class Reptilia” Metadata:
- Title: ➤ Animal Kingdom : Volume 9, the Class Reptilia
- Authors: ➤ Baron Georges CuvierEdward GriffithEdward PidgeonHenry McMurtrieEdward BlythJohn Edward GrayGeorge Robert GrayP. A. LatreilleMetcalf Collection NcrsHenry 1793-1865 McMurtrieEdward 1790-1858 GriffithCharles Hamilton Smith
- Language: English
- Number of Pages: 1
- Publisher: Cambridge University Press
- Publish Date: 2013
- Publish Location: Cambridge
“Animal Kingdom : Volume 9, the Class Reptilia” Subjects and Themes:
- Subjects: ➤ Zoology - Comparative Anatomy - Animals - Classification - Pictorial works - Nomenclature - Forms (Mathematics) - Connexes - Contact transformations - Mammals - Natural history - Human beings
Edition Identifiers:
- The Open Library ID: OL34557513M - OL198898W
- ISBN-13: 9781139226998
- All ISBNs: 9781139226998
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"Animal Kingdom : Volume 9, the Class Reptilia" Description:
Open Data:
Georges Cuvier (1769–1832), made a peer of France in 1819 in recognition of his work, was perhaps the most important European scientist of his day. His most famous work, Le Règne Animal, was published in French in 1817; Edward Griffith (1790–1858), a solicitor and amateur naturalist, embarked on in 1824, with a team of colleagues, an English version which resulted in this illustrated sixteen-volume edition with additional material, published between 1827 and 1835. Cuvier was the first biologist to compare the anatomy of fossil animals with living species, and he named the now familiar 'mastodon' and 'megatherium'. However, his studies convinced him that the evolutionary theories of Lamarck and St Hilaire were wrong, and his influence on the scientific world was such that the possibility of evolution was widely discounted by many scholars both before and after Darwin. Volume 9 covers the class of reptiles
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