Scientific evidence for Darwin’s theory mounted and became overwhelming. Marie Curie’s discovery of radioactivity in the 1890s led to carbon dating, which confirmed that the earth was much older than those before Darwin had believed. Biblical scholars had established the Creation at 4004 B.C. Today the latest estimate of our planet’s age is about 4.5 billion years old.
   Transitional fossils—the “intermediate forms” he predicted—continue to be found. One of the major finds was Lucy, the fossilized skeleton of a creature less than four feet tall, with some ape traits and some humanlike traits, discovered in Ethiopia in 1974. Lucy (named after the Beatles’ song “Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds”) is estimated to be 3.2 million years old.
   In 2006 University of Chicago researchers discovered the tiktaalik, a transitional species of fish. Estimated to be 375 million years old, with fins that functioned like legs, it was a transition between fish and four-legged animals.
   The most hardened resistance to Darwin’s theory is in the United States, where scientific literacy lags behind that of other industrialized nations. A significant percentage of Americans do not accept the theory of evolution and think that all the supporting evidence for it has been somehow faked or staged.
   In the United States the Constitution provides a separation of church and state, meaning the government does not support any particular religion. Public schools, funded by the government, therefore, do not teach religion. Yet, through court cases, religious groups have long tried to keep Darwin out of the classroom on the basis that his theory contradicts the Bible’s story of Creation.
   The most famous court case involving evolution was the “Monkey Trial” of 1925.
   John Scopes, who taught biology in Tennessee, discussed evolution with his students, in violation of the new state law that made it illegal to teach anything that contradicted the biblical story of Creation.
   Scopes was arrested, and at his trial, lawyers on both sides argued passionately for ten days. The entire nation was spellbound. Scopes was found guilty, which led other states to ban the teaching of evolution.
   Later on, Scopes’s conviction was overturned on a technicality, and every subsequent court case since then involving the teaching of evolution has resulted in a verdict supporting the separation of church and state.
   Yet in the last fifty years, in the United States creationism (a word coined in 1868 to describe opposition to Darwin) has become more popular than ever, its proponents claiming scientific evidence in support of the biblical version of Creation. Intelligent Design, a concept introduced in 1989, is a variation on creationism stating that an intelligent being—never specifically called God—is the controlling force behind life on Earth. Creationists argue that their theory of the beginning of life should be included in textbooks alongside evolution.
   It is important to note that many scientists with strong religious beliefs see no conflict between science and their faith in God. These are just two different ways of understanding the world and don’t have to cancel each other out. In September 2008, the Church of England, in advance of the two hundredth anniversary of Darwin’s birth, issued a belated apology to Darwin “for misunderstanding you and, by getting our first reaction wrong, encouraging others to misunderstand you still.”
   So much of cutting-edge science is based on Darwin. Since evolution is ongoing and unpredictable, we need to learn about it to find ways to solve problems—what we can do to prevent animals from becoming extinct and bacteria becoming resistant to antibiotics, and to help us to identify and treat new viruses like the one that causes swine flu.
   Today, to some extent, we can control things in nature that would have killed us in the past—we have vaccines for smallpox, for example. We no longer have to be the fastest or strongest in order to survive, as long as we have access to proper medicine. But will advances in health lead to even more severe overpopulation? What climate changes are in store for us and how will we adapt? In the future, will we genetically engineer ourselves?
   So many questions, so many intriguing topics to explore and debate. Were he still here, Darwin would be astonished, but he’d adapt—and he’d be furiously taking notes.
   SOURCES
   (*especially for young readers)
   BOOKS
   Berra, Tim M. Charles Darwin: The Concise Story of an Extraordinary Man. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2009.
   Browne, Janet. Charles Darwin, Volume 1: Voyaging. New York: Knopf, 1995.
   Browne, Janet. Charles Darwin, Volume 2: The Power of Place. New York: Knopf, 2002.
   Browne, Janet. Darwin’s Origin of Species: A Biography. New York: Atlantic Monthly Press, 2006.
   Darwin, Charles. On the Origin of Species: The Illustrated Edition, edited by David Quammen. New York: Sterling, 2008.
   *Heiligman, Deborah. Charles and Emma: The Darwins’ Leap of Faith. New York: Holt, 2009.
   *Jenkins, Steve. Life on Earth: The Story of Evolution. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 2002.
   Keynes, Randal. Darwin, His Daughter, and Human Evolution. New York: Riverhead Books, 2002.
   *Lasky, Kathryn. One Beetle Too Many: The Extraordinary Adventures of Charles Darwin. Somerville, Mass.: Candlewick, 2009.
   *Lawson, Kristan. Darwin and Evolution for Kids: His Life and Ideas with 21 Activities. Chicago: Chicago Review Press, 2003.
   Milner, Richard. Darwin’s Universe: Evolution from A to Z. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2009.
   *Patent, Dorothy Hinshaw. Charles Darwin: The Life of a Revolutionary Thinker. New York: Holiday House, 2001.
   Quammen, David. The Reluctant Mr. Darwin: An Intimate Portrait of Charles Darwin and the Making of His Theory of Evolution. New York: Norton, 2006.
   *Sis, Peter, The Tree of Life: A Book Depicting the Life of Charles Darwin, Naturalist, Geologist, and Thinker. New York: Farrar Straus, 2003.
   *Strathern, Paul. Darwin and Evolution. London: Arrow Books, 1998.
   WEB SITES
   American Museum of Natural History, Darwin: http://www.amnh.org/exhibitions/darwin/
   CARTA, The Center for Academic Research and Training in Anthropogeny: http://carta.anthropogeny.org/
   The Complete Works of Charles Darwin Online: http://darwin-online.org.uk
   International Darwin Day Foundation, Celebrating Darwin, Science and Humanity: http://www.darwinday.org/darwin
   Linnean Society of London: http://www.linnean.org/
   National Center for Science Education: Defending the Teaching of Evolution in Public Schools: http://ncse.com
   National Science Teachers Association, Evolution Resources: http://www.nsta.org/publications/evolution.aspx?lid=tnav
   The Natural History Museum, London, Darwin 200: www.darwin200.org
   PBS, Evolution, Darwin’s Dangerous Idea: http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/evolution/darwin/index.html
   INDEX
   Note: Page numbers in italics indicate illustrations.
   abolitionism
   adaptation
   age of the earth
   agnosticism
   agriculture. See also botany
   American scientific community
   Andes Mountains
   Anglican church
   anthropology
   archaeological evidence
   archipelagoes
   arsenic poisoning
   Athenaeum Club
   Austen, Jane
   Babbage, Charles
   Bahia Blanca Bay
   barnacles
   Bates, Henry Walter
   Beagle. See HMS Beagle
   beak shapes
   beetle collecting
   Bible. See also Christianity
   and age of the earth
   and Catastrophism
   and creation story
   and Emma Darwin
   and fixed species concept
   literal and metaphorical interpretations
   and natural selection
   and opposition to Darwin’s work
   “A Biographical Sketch of an Infant” 
(Darwin)
   biology
   biotechnology
   birds
   and adaptation theory
   and beak shapes
   of Cape Verde
   and Darwin’s collections
   Darwin’s Rhea
   of Galápagos Islands
   and the Glutton Club
   and hunting
   pigeon breeding
   botany
   Boyle, Robert
   Brazil
   breeding practices
   British Association for the Advancement of Science
   British Empire
   British Museum Library
   Buenos Aires, Argentina
   burial place of Darwin
   Cambridge University
   Canary Islands
   Cape Verde Islands
   carbon dating
   A Catalog of British Plants (Henslow)
   Catastrophism
   Chambers, Robert
   chemistry
   childhood of Darwin
   childhood development
   children of Darwin
   children’s books
   Chile
   chimpanzees
   Chopin, Frédéric
   Christianity
   and agnosticism
   and Catastrophism
   Church of England
   and the clergy
   and creationism
   and Darwin’s marriage
   Darwin’s religious beliefs
   Darwin’s theology education
   and English education
   and evolutionary theory
   and FitzRoy
   and fixation of species concept
   and naturalism
   and natural selection
   and opposition to Darwin’s work
   and population theory
   and the X Club
   chronometers
   Church of England
   classification systems
   cleanliness of Darwin
   clergy
   Cocos Islands
   common descent
   competition
   Concepción, Chile
   Copernicus, Nicolaus
   coral reefs
   creationism
   crossbreeding
   Curie, Marie
   cuttlefish
   Cuvier, Georges
   Darwin, Anne Elizabeth (daughter)
   Darwin, Bernard (grandson)
   Darwin, Caroline (sister)
   Darwin, Charles (son)
   Darwin, Emma (wife)
   and children’s health
   and Darwin’s death
   and Darwin’s health
   and Darwin’s worm collections
   and daughter’s death
   and publication of Darwin’s works
   and religion issues
   and selection of home
   and Victorian society
   Darwin, Erasmus (grandfather)
   Darwin, Erasmus “Ras” (brother)
   and Darwin’s education
   and Darwin’s family life
   and Darwin’s social life
   death
   and education
   health issues
   home in London
   and medical education
   and publication of Darwin’s works
   Darwin, Francis (son)
   Darwin, Robert (father)
   Darwin, Susannah (mother)
   Darwin, William Erasmus (son)
   “Darwin’s Delay,”
   Darwin Sound
   Darwin’s Rhea
   Davy, Humphry
   death of Darwin
   debate on Darwin’s work
   The Descent of Man and Selection in Relation to Sex (Darwin)
   descent with modification. See also common descent
   Dickens, Charles
   diet
   dinosaurs
   diseases
   domestication
   Down House
   earthquakes
   Edinburgh University
   Edmonstone, John
   education of Darwin
   electricity
   elements
   Elements of Experimental Chemistry (Henry)
   Eliot, George
   Emerson, Ralph Waldo
   Encyclopedia Britannica
   enthusiasm of Darwin
   Essay on the Principle of Population (Malthus)
   evidence supporting Darwin
   evolution
   The Expression of Emotions in Man and Animals (Darwin)
   extinction
   family of Darwin. See also specic individuals
   fertilization
   finches
   FitzRoy, Robert
   and the Beagle trip
   and Darwin’s personality
   and journey publications
   opposition to Darwin’s work
   and publication of Darwin’s work
   and slavery
   surveying work
   fixation of species concept
   flatworms
   Flustra
   The Formation of Vegetable Mold Through the Action of Worms (Darwin)
   fossils
   Fox, William Darwin
   Freud, Sigmund
   funeral of Darwin
   Galápagos Islands
   Galileo
   gauchos
   genetics
   geology
   and age of the earth
   and Darwin’s education
   and Darwin’s notebooks
   and Darwin’s writings
   and earthquakes
   and Galápagos Islands
   influence on Darwin’s work
   and Lyell
   and the Plinian Society
   and Transmutation Notebooks
   germ theory
   Glutton Club
   Gould, John
   Grant, Robert
   Graves, George
   Gray, Asa
   health of Darwin
   digestion problems
   illnesses during voyage
   possible causes of illness
   and presentation of his work
   and publication of book
   and seasickness
   and water cures
   Henry, William
   Henslow, John
   heredity. See also genetics
   hermaphroditism
   Herschel, John
   HMS Beagle
   Hooker, Joseph
   Hope, Thomas Charles
   Humboldt, Alexander von
   hunting
   Huxley, Thomas
   iguanas
   Illustrations of British Entomology
   improvement of species
   industrial society
   inherited traits
   Insectivorous Plants (Darwin)
   Intelligent Design
   intermediate forms
   Jameson, Robert
   journals. See also notebooks; The Voyage of the Beagle (Darwin)
   Kew Gardens
   Kingsley, Charles
   Lamarck, Jean-Baptiste
   Lamarckism
   laws of nature
   Leonardo da Vinci
   Lincoln, Abraham
   Linnaeus, Carl
   Linnean Society
   London Zoo
   Lucy
   Lunar Society
   Lyell, Charles
   Darwin’s introduction to
   geology texts
   gifts to Darwin
   influence on Darwin’s work
   support for Darwin’s work
   and Wallace
   mail service
   Malthus, Thomas
   “Man book.” See The Descent of Man and Selection in Relation to Sex (Darwin)
   marine iguanas
   marine zoology
   marriage
   Martineau, Harriet
   mass media
   Matthew, Arnold
   medicine. See also health of Darwin
   and botany
   and Darwin’s father
   education for
   and germ 
theory
   influence of Darwin’s work
   and the Plinian Society
   Megatherium
   Mendel, Gregor
   missing links
   modern synthesis
   “Monkey Trial,”
   Mount Darwin
   The Mount (Darwin family estate)
   native peoples
   “The Natural History of Babies” (Darwin)
   natural selection
   Natural Theology (Paley)
   naturalism and natural philosophy
   and the Beagle trip
   and Darwin’s collections
   and Darwin’s education
   and observation
   and religion
   and Victorian society
   A Naturalist’s Companion (Graves)
   nature vs. nurture
   Newton, Isaac
   nickname of Darwin
   Nightingale, Florence
   notebooks. See also journals
   observation
   Oliver Twist (Dickens)
   On the Origin of Species (Darwin)
   On the Various Contrivances by Which British and Foreign Orchids Are Fertilized by Insects and on the Good Effects of Intercrossing (Darwin)
   opposition to Darwin’s work
   orangutans
   orchids
   overpopulation
   Owen, Fanny
   Oxford University
   Paley, William
   Paradise Lost (Milton)
   Patagonia
   peas
   perfectionism of Darwin
   perseverance of Darwin
   Personal Narrative of a Journey to the Equinoctial Regions of the New Continent (Humboldt)
   photographs
   phrenology
   pigeons
   Plinian Natural History Society
   
 
 Charles Darwin* Page 8