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Darwin Correspondence Project

From Charles Lyell1   18 September 1860

Sept 18 1860

I found yr letter here & thank you for intending to send me Asa Gray’s last article which I will return without delay as also the M.S. on dogs.2 Agassiz in some one of his Essays leans to Pallas’ views,3 which always struck me as being rash in him who is for the sanctity of species, whereas if any thing could show Nature’s entire indifference in regard to the violation of such supposed sanctity it would be that those now existing should be of multiple origin.

You need not be afraid of my starting any theory of successive creation of types. I have never had any leaning towards a compromise and thought Carpenter very inconsistent in going so very far with you, & then concluding that there was probably in the case of Man, an exception, whereas there would be no end of all the morpholl. & embryological arguments if such a concession was made.4

But what I asked or intended to ask in my last letter was different—perhaps you meant to reply that you had no fixed opinion on the subject—but I wish to be sure.— Can we assume as at all probable that all mammalia came from one original Stock instead of several distinct mammalian-types each developed by small & successive modifications out of lower ornithic reptilian or perhaps monotrematous prototypes. It would greatly simplify matters if single & exclusive areas could be assigned or even speculated upon, on some even slight data, or if single periods could be proposed as those of the first coming in of mammalia. But as I understand your views this is not very probable. If for example we found before the triassic microlestes, some monotremes in Permian or Carbonifs. beds & fixed on them as the probable starting point of mammalia, what influence would the development of a mammal in Asia or Africa have in preventing some other line of monotremes from improving into a totally different genus of mammal in Australia or America & supposing the mammal first formed, say in Asia, to be extinguished, what is there in your system to cause us to despair of the higher or placental grade from ever being evolved because after a geological period, the earlier formed mammalia died out.

I have always expected to find mammals intermediate between Stonesfield & Eocene, but I also looked for them before Stonesfield. When therefore they turned up both in Trias & in Purbeck, it agreed with my anticipations.5 The Triassic surprised some people more than the Purbeck, for they held the doctrine, propounded by you in p. 316, once begun the group is continued till it dies out.

I wish you could give the slightest reason why it should not begin more than once in more than one place. I incline to think it has not, but why? according to the principle of selection why when once in any one quarter of the globe at any one period the step in advance has been taken are the inferior types elsewhere to be checked, & not to presume to work up into any genus of corresponding grade & class? A frog has a vast deal of one type in him even the double occipital condyle, to say nothing of his limbs & digits & the absence of a tail, tho‘ he is low in the reptilian scale, (but it is true, he does not as yet go far back in time) but take some triassic reptile or bird I cannot see why they are never to be modified into something higher because a microlestes has entered on the stage.6 Two independent chains of development would not be discordant with your machinery of selection?

I am not aware of any fossil bats or rodents in Australian caves, so the small antiquity of rodentia may be a reason for their not having given origin as yet to Gyrencephala & does there not seem some connection between the low grade of Lyssencephala as the only occupants of that vast Australian continent?7

Can you not refer me to some book or paper where I can find how many plants may have been extirpated in St Helena & may I not presume that as many or more endemic insects have been annihilated there besides some land-shells?

As to Australia, I cannot help thinking that the Marsupials must in the long run (if Man were away) be best fitted for that continent & that after European or Asiatic Gyrencephala had been introduced & then left to themselves, they wd. during some 4 years drought, after a century or much more, have all perished & given way before their pouched rivals, who as Owen has somewhere suggested, wd have migrated with their young in the pouch, wholly indifferent to the long leaps of the mother.8 This wd not apply to bats, but perhaps you may be able to object that some of the native placental rodents wd be no better off than a lion or an Elephant in a 4 years drought?

In yr chapter on grafting you might, it struck me, have alluded to those wonderful cases of natl. grafting recorded in the fir-woods of Germany. I think I could find a reference to it, where a totally leafless stump keeps alive by its roots, borrowing from the roots of adjoining fir-trees till the bark closes over.9 It answers the question why Nature has given such a power & was it for the mere sake of human gardeners.

I am not going to press the objection about the non-variation, adaptation & advance of bats & rodents, so as to destroy the weight of yr. argument respecting absence of other mammalia in islands, as I cannot conceive such absence not being due to the want of migratory powers of mammalia, & that alone wd not do, unless the coming in of new mammals was by inheritance from pre-existing types. But it is better to show that one does not overlook objections.

I think I asked you once before whether the admission of the multiple origin of dogs wd. not impair one’s faith in the single origin of the human race, & as you did not reply, you perhaps meant that you had nothing to hazard in the way of speculation. You remember a passage in Agassiz about negros being black where the Chimpanzee is black, & yellow in Borneo? where the orang is yellow, or something to that effect.10 I could hunt out the passage if you do not remember it. As he does not connect Man genealogically with any anthropomorph, he says this without any hesitation.

To shorten correspondence I will imagine the best answer I can for you & beg you to try & strengthen it.

It is so many millions to one against the right variation offering itself in the right place & time that many geoll periods must pass away before the first mammal is formed & as an equal lapse of ages wd occur before a 2d. offered, the first will in the meantime have spread over the globe & branched out into many genera, wh. being of high grade wd. keep down any incipient mammals, just as homo sapiens when once evolved wd. take good care that no other anthropomorph shd improve into rationalism & compete with him for the good things of this world. No island has existed for so long a time as that which separates the Lower Miocene from the human epoch, therefore the chances have been far too many against transmutation of any creature of an inferior class into one of a higher class on an island, more especially as bats & rodents wd help to check any signs of an invasion of the prerogatives of the dominant class, they being already there to represent the vertebrate aristocracy.

Footnotes

The text of the letter has been taken from a copy in Lyell’s scientific journal. It is also printed in Wilson ed. 1970, pp. 474–7. The entry is headed: ‘Copy of letter to C. Darwin    Bonn Sept 18 1860’.
See the letter to Charles Lyell, 11 August [1860], in which CD offered to send Lyell his manuscript on the origin of domestic dogs. A further letter, in which he mentioned sending the second part of [Gray] 1860b, has not been found. It is not discussed in the letter to Charles Lyell, 12 September [1860].
Louis Agassiz discussed the possible origin of dogs in the first volume of the Contributions to the natural history of the United States of America, where he stated (Agassiz 1857–62, 1: 164): where is the unprejudiced naturalist who in our days would dare to maintain: 1st, that it is proved that all the domesticated varieties of sheep, of goats, of bulls, of llamas, of horses, of dogs, of fowls, etc., are respectively derived from one common stock; 2d, that the supposition that these varieties have originated from the complete amalgamation of several primitively distinct species is out of the question. Moreover, Agassiz asserted that such proof, were it ever obtained, was not relevant to the problem of defining species. Pyotr Simon Pallas believed that domestic animals such as dogs were derived from several different species (Pallas 1780, pp. 84, 100). See Correspondence vol. 7, letters to Charles Lyell, 25 October [1859] and 31 [October 1859], and letters from Charles Lyell, 28 October 1859 and 25 [November 1859].
[Carpenter] 1860b, pp. 403–4. In his review of Origin, William Benjamin Carpenter stated that he was ‘strongly convinced’ of the truth of natural selection, but that it seemed to him probable that ‘each of the great types’ owed their origin to creative forces. ‘So, too, there seems to us so much in the psychical capacity of Man, however degraded, to separate him from the nearest of the Mammalian class, that we can far more easily believe him to have originated by a distinct creation, than suppose him to have had a common ancestry with the Chimpanzee, and to have been separated from it by a series of progressive modifications.’ ([Carpenter] 1860b, p. 404). CD’s annotated copy of the review is in the Darwin Pamphlet Collection–CUL.
Lyell described the mammalian remains from the Upper Trias and Purbeck shale beds in a Supplement to his Manual of elementary geology (C. Lyell 1857, pp. 17–24). These new fossils were even older than those of the Stonesfield slate formations.
Microlestes remains in Triassic deposits in Germany were the earliest mammalian fossils to have been found. The discovery of Microlestes remains in England had also recently been reported (see C. Moore 1858 and 1860).
In Richard Owen’s classification of the Mammalia, the Gyrencephala included all the higher mammals except for man; the Lissencephala comprised the lower placental mammals, including rodents, bats, edentates, and insectivores. Lyell apparently refers to Owen’s lowest division, the Lyencephala, which included the monotremes and marsupials predominantly found in Australia. See R. Owen 1859a, pp. 24–6, 33.
R. Owen 1846a, p. 197.
Lyell refers to Göppert 1842. See the letter to Charles Lyell, 23 [September 1860], in which CD asks Lyell for further information on this point, and Lyell’s response in the letter from Charles Lyell, 25 September 1860.
Lyell probably refers to a remark made by Agassiz in a letter prefixed to Nott and Gliddon eds. 1857, p. xiv: ‘I have already alluded, on another occasion, to the identity of color of the Malays and orangs: may we not now remember, also, a similar resemblance between some of the species of Hylobates with the Negrillos and Telingans?’ In the same letter, Agassiz referred to his earlier essay on ‘The natural provinces of the animal world and their relation to the different types of man’ (in Nott and Gliddon 1854), but that work does not contain the allusion mentioned.

Bibliography

Agassiz, Louis. 1857–62. Contributions to the natural history of the United States of America. 4 vols. Boston, Mass.: Little, Brown & Company. London: Trübner.

Correspondence: The correspondence of Charles Darwin. Edited by Frederick Burkhardt et al. 29 vols to date. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 1985–.

Göppert, Heinrich Robert. 1842. Beobachtungen über das sogenannte Ueberwallen der Tannenstöcke, für Botaniker und Forstmänner. Bonn.

Moore, Charles. 1858. On Triassic beds near Frome, and their organic remains. Report of the 28th meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science held at Leeds, Transactions of the sections, pp. 93–4. [Vols. 7,8]

Origin: On the origin of species by means of natural selection, or the preservation of favoured races in the struggle for life. By Charles Darwin. London: John Murray. 1859.

Pallas, Pyotr Simon. 1780. Mémoire sur la variation des animaux; première partie. Acta Academiæ Scientiarum Imperialis Petropolitanæ (1780 pt 2): 69–102.

Summary

It is strange that Agassiz, who is for the "sanctity of species", should favour Pallas’s view of hybrid origin of domestic dog.

CL has not meant to advocate successive creation of types but to question assumption that all mammals descended from single stock. Why should a Triassic reptile or bird not move towards mammalian form because an ancestral marsupial has appeared? Believes recent appearance of rodents and bats in Australia explains their lack of development.

Can CD supply a reference on plant extinction on St Helena?

Believes marsupials better adapted for surviving drought in Australia than higher mammals.

Will not press argument about lack of development of mammalian forms on islands, but CD should note objection.

Does CD’s belief in multiple origin of dogs affect faith in single primates in different regions?

Does time lapse between putative independently descended mammalian forms mean first form will "keep down" later incipient one? Thus Homo sapiens has prevented improvement of other anthropomorphs; bats and rodents on islands would prevent improvement of lower forms into mammalian.

Letter details

Letter no.
DCP-LETT-2920C
From
Charles Lyell, 1st baronet
To
Charles Robert Darwin
Sent from
Bonn
Source of text
The University of Edinburgh Centre for Research Collections (Lyell collection Coll-203/A3/6: 187–95d)
Physical description
CC 12pp inc

Please cite as

Darwin Correspondence Project, “Letter no. 2920C,” accessed on 18 April 2024, https://www.darwinproject.ac.uk/letter/?docId=letters/DCP-LETT-2920C.xml

Also published in The Correspondence of Charles Darwin, vol. 8

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