42 min listen
Alfred Russel Wallace
ratings:
Length:
42 minutes
Released:
Mar 21, 2013
Format:
Podcast episode
Description
Melvyn Bragg and his guests discuss the work of Alfred Russel Wallace, a pioneer of evolutionary theory. Born in 1823, Wallace travelled extensively, charting the distribution of animal species throughout the world. This fieldwork in the Amazon and later the Malay Archipelago led him to formulate a theory of evolution through natural selection. In 1858 he sent the paper he wrote on the subject to Charles Darwin, who was spurred into the writing and publication of his own masterpiece On the Origin of Species. Wallace was also the founder of the science of biogeography and made important discoveries about the nature of animal coloration. But despite his visionary work, Wallace has been overshadowed by the greater fame of his contemporary Darwin.
With:
Steve Jones
Emeritus Professor of Genetics at University College London
George Beccaloni
Curator of Cockroaches and Related Insects and Director of the Wallace Correspondence Project at the Natural History Museum
Ted Benton
Professor of Sociology at the University of Essex
Producer: Thomas Morris.
With:
Steve Jones
Emeritus Professor of Genetics at University College London
George Beccaloni
Curator of Cockroaches and Related Insects and Director of the Wallace Correspondence Project at the Natural History Museum
Ted Benton
Professor of Sociology at the University of Essex
Producer: Thomas Morris.
Released:
Mar 21, 2013
Format:
Podcast episode
Titles in the series (100)
Xenophon: Melvyn Bragg and his guests discuss the ancient Greek historian and soldier Xenophon. by In Our Time: History