Where Worlds Collide: The Wallace Line

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Cornell University Press, 1997 - 234 páginas
Alfred Russel Wallace, the father of biogeography, discovered the flora and fauna of the South East Asian islands and the extraordinary way in which they are geographically distinct. In a lively historical narrative, Penny van Oosterzee tells the story of his achievement. His legacy is the Wallace Line, a faunal barrier separating the Asian from the Australian: monkeys from kangaroos, weaver birds from cockatoos, and pheasants from parrots. This invisible boundary and the difference between the species it divides catalyzed Wallace's theory of evolution and prodded Darwin to articulate his own theory.

In Where Worlds Collide, van Oosterzee follows Wallace's journeys through the islands of South East Asia. She draws on Wallace's natural history travelogue, The Malay Archipelago, a book he wrote after spending the years from 1854 to 1862 in Malaysia, Indonesia, and New Guinea. Explaining his theory and how it has been interpreted by biologists, van Oosterzee also re-creates Wallace's sense of excitement with his discoveries. She devotes a chapter to the diversity of butterfly wing patterns, for example, because Wallace was so enamored of them.

 

Contenido

BLIND TO THE RISING SUN
xiii
WALLACES LINE
19
WHERE WORLDS COLLIDE
39
FIRESPITTING MOUNTAINS
67
STEGOLAND
81
ISLANDS IN THE SEA
95
ISLANDS IN THE SKY
121
THE ULTIMATE ISLAND
133
THE BUTTERFLY EFFECT
157
THE RED APE OF ASIA
175
WALLACE IN WONDERLAND
195
THEY HAVE ALL LATELY GONE
215
REFERENCES
219
INDEX
227
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