From J. D. Hooker 27 January 1877
Royal Gardens Kew
Jay 27/77.
Dear Darwin
Dyer is full of your Cross & Self Fertilization & about to review it for “Nature”—1 he gloats over it—
I do hope that Frank will come & stay with us at Kew— I can promise him quiet:— he shall of course have the run of the Herbarium & get all the flowers that Oliver can give him.2
I am not in the least savage at his sending his “Dipsacus” paper to Royal, where I shall welcome it & where it will cut a figure in the Transactions.—3 What I so much object to is, young authors sending all their papers to the Royal;—solely with a view to entrance, most if not all such papers being far better suited to the Linnean, where they would get better discussion at the meeting & better circulation— This does not apply to a paper of such extreme interest as the Dipsacus “pseudopods”.— Dyer however regrets its going to Royal because, he says, truly enough, it will be buried in the Phil: Transactions, & would not be so in the Linnean.4
Last night we had the last part (at Royal) of Gunthers fine paper on the big Tortoises.5 He speculated wildly on former land connections between the African Islands & Continent of Africa & this with Continent of America, & the Galapagos, to account for the affinity of the Maroccan & Galapagos beasts—which affinity is certainly a crux major.6 Oddly enough it never occurred to him that the said Tortoises all inhabit Volcanic Islands; which when I pointed it out, he demurred to in regard of Rodriguez, which however as we now know from Balfour to be Volcanic.
I am doubtful as to Aldebach, have you any data? it’s neighbour Johanna is Volcanic.7
Huxley went in for a sunk area connecting India & Africa & so on across Pacific, & quoted the gigantic tortoises of the Sivaliks as evidence of a Miocene development of Tortoises of which the modern ones are relics.—8 In so far as the Indian ocean is concerned Plant distribution supports a sunk area joining Madagascar, Seychelles, Ceylon & the Malay Archipelago of which Nepenthes distribution is the most striking support.—9
Ever aff yrs | J D Hooker
Footnotes
Bibliography
Bowler, Peter John. 1996. Life’s splendid drama: evolutionary biology and the reconstruction of life’s ancestry, 1860–1940. Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press.
Columbia gazetteer of the world: The Columbia gazetteer of the world. Edited by Saul B. Cohen. 3 vols. New York: Columbia University Press. 1998.
Cross and self fertilisation: The effects of cross and self fertilisation in the vegetable kingdom. By Charles Darwin. London: John Murray. 1876.
Günther, Albert. 1874. Description of the living and extinct races of gigantic land-tortoises.— Parts I & II. Introduction, and the tortoises of the Galapagos Islands. [Read 18 June 1874.] Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London 165 (1875): 251–84.
Günther, Albert Charles Lewis Gotthilf. 1877. The gigantic land-tortoises (living and extinct) in the collection of the British Museum. London: Trustees of the British Museum.
McPherson, Stewart. 2009. Pitcher plants of the Old World. Edited by Alastair Robinson and Andreas Fleishman. 2 vols. Poole: Redfern Natural History Productions.
McPherson, Stewart. 2011. New Nepenthes. Volume one. Edited by Alastair Robinson. Poole: Redfern Natural History Productions.
ODNB: Oxford dictionary of national biography: from the earliest times to the year 2000. (Revised edition.) Edited by H. C. G. Matthew and Brian Harrison. 60 vols. and index. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 2004.
Thiselton-Dyer, William Turner. 1877. Darwin on fertilisation. Nature, 15 February 1877, pp. 329–32.
Summary
JDH recounts discussion at Royal Society over Günther’s paper on distribution and affinities of gigantic tortoises ["Description of the living and extinct races of gigantic land-tortoises, Parts III and IV", Proc. R. Soc. Lond. 25 (1876–7): 506–7]. Huxley suggests they are Miocene relics.
Royal Society will publish Frank’s Dipsacus paper [but see 10971 and 11073].
Thiselton-Dyer will review Cross and self-fertilisation.
Letter details
- Letter no.
- DCP-LETT-10817
- From
- Joseph Dalton Hooker
- To
- Charles Robert Darwin
- Sent from
- Kew
- Source of text
- DAR 104: 77–9
- Physical description
- ALS 5pp
Please cite as
Darwin Correspondence Project, “Letter no. 10817,” accessed on 26 September 2022, https://www.darwinproject.ac.uk/letter/?docId=letters/DCP-LETT-10817.xml