The Project Gutenberg eBook of Index of the Project Gutenberg Works of Charles Darwin

This ebook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this ebook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this eBook.

Title: Index of the Project Gutenberg Works of Charles Darwin

Author: Charles Darwin

Editor: David Widger

Release date: January 20, 2019 [eBook #58737]
Most recently updated: February 25, 2021

Language: English

Credits: Produced by David Widger

*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK INDEX OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG WORKS OF CHARLES DARWIN ***



INDEX OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG

WORKS OF

CHARLES DARWIN



Compiled by David Widger



DARWIN



CONTENTS

Click on the ## before many of the titles to view a linked
table of contents for that volume.

Click on the title itself to open the original online file.

##  THE VOYAGE OF THE BEAGLE, Edition 2

##  THE VOYAGE OF THE BEAGLE, Edition 11

##  THE FOUNDATIONS OF THE ORIGIN OF SPECIES

##  ON THE ORIGIN OF SPECIES, Edition 1

##  ON THE ORIGIN OF SPECIES, Edition 2

##  ON THE ORIGIN OF SPECIES, Edition 6

##  DESCENT OF MAN AND SELECTION IN RELATION TO SEX, Ed. 1, v1

##  DESCENT OF MAN AND SELECTION IN RELATION TO SEX, Ed. 1, v2

##  DESCENT OF MAN AND SELECTION IN RELATION TO SEX, Edition 2

##  VARIATION OF ANIMALS AND PLANTS UNDER DOMESTICATION, Vol. 1

##  VARIATION OF ANIMALS AND PLANTS UNDER DOMESTICATION, Vol. 2

##  LIFE AND LETTERS OF DARWIN, Vol. 1

##  LIFE AND LETTERS OF DARWIN, Vol. 2

##  MORE LETTERS OF CHARLES DARWIN, Vol. 1

##  MORE LETTERS OF CHARLES DARWIN, Vol. 2

##  THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF DARWIN

##  HIS LIFE IN AN AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL CHAPTER

##  THE CORAL REEFS

##  VOLCANIC ISLANDS

##  MONOGRAPH ON CIRRIPEDIA, Vol. 1

##  MONOGRAPH ON THE SUB-CLASS CIRRIPEDIA, Vol. 2

##  SOUTH AMERICAN GEOLOGY

##  THE DIFFERENT FORMS OF FLOWERS

##  CROSS & SELF-FERTILISATION IN VEGETABLES

##  THE EXPRESSION OF EMOTION IN MAN AND ANIMALS

##  THE FORMATION OF VEGETABLE MOULD

##  THE INSECTIVOROUS PLANTS

##  POWER OF MOVEMENT IN PLANTS

THE MOVEMENT AND HABITS OF CLIMBING PLANTS








TABLES OF CONTENTS OF VOLUMES






THE VOYAGE OF THE BEAGLE

By Charles Darwin



CONTENTS

PREFACE
THE VOYAGE OF THE BEAGLE
CHAPTER I ST. JAGO--CAPE DE VERD ISLANDS
CHAPTER II RIO DE JANEIRO
CHAPTER III MALDONADO
CHAPTER IV RIO NEGRO TO BAHIA BLANCA
CHAPTER V BAHIA BLANCA
CHAPTER VI BAHIA BLANCA TO BUENOS AYRES
CHAPTER VII BUENOS AYRES AND ST. FE
CHAPTER VIII BANDA ORIENTAL AND PATAGONIA
CHAPTER IX SANTA CRUZ, PATAGONIA, AND THE FALKLAND ISLANDS
CHAPTER X TIERRA DEL FUEGO
CHAPTER XI STRAIT OF MAGELLAN.--CLIMATE OF THE SOUTHERN COASTS
CHAPTER XII CENTRAL CHILE
CHAPTER XIII CHILOE AND CHONOS ISLANDS
CHAPTER XIV CHILOE AND CONCEPCION: GREAT EARTHQUAKE
CHAPTER XV PASSAGE OF THE CORDILLERA
CHAPTER XVI NORTHERN CHILE AND PERU
CHAPTER XVII GALAPAGOS ARCHIPELAGO
CHAPTER XVIII TAHITI AND NEW ZEALAND
CHAPTER XIX AUSTRALIA
CHAPTER XX KEELING ISLAND: CORAL FORMATIONS
CHAPTER XXI MAURITIUS TO ENGLAND
FOOTNOTES:






A NATURALIST'S VOYAGE ROUND THE WORLD

By Charles Darwin, M.A., F.R.S.



First Edition May 1860
Second Edition May 1870
Third Edition February 1872
Fourth Edition July 1874
Fifth Edition March 1876
Sixth Edition January 1879
Seventh Edition May 1882
Eighth Edition February 1884
Ninth Edition August 1886
Tenth Edition January 1888
Eleventh Edition January 1890
Reprinted June 1913


INDEX

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS


CONTENTS

Chapter I

Porto Praya — Ribeira Grande — Atmospheric Dust with Infusoria — Habits of a Sea-slug and Cuttle-fish — St. Paul's Rocks, non-volcanic — Singular Incrustations — Insects the first Colonists of Islands — Fernando Noronha — Bahia — Burnished Rocks — Habits of a Diodon — Pelagic Confervæ and Infusoria — Causes of discoloured Sea.

Chapter II

Rio de Janeiro — Excursion north of Cape Frio — Great Evaporation — Slavery — Botofogo Bay — Terrestrial Planariae — Clouds on the Corcovado — Heavy Rain — Musical Frogs — Phosphorescent insects — Elater, springing powers of — Blue Haze — Noise made by a Butterfly — Entomology — Ants — Wasp killing a Spider — Parasitical Spider — Artifices of an Epeira — Gregarious Spider — Spider with an unsymmetrical web.

Chapter III

Monte Video — Maldonado — Excursion to R. Polanco — Lazo and Bolas — Partridges — Absence of trees — Deer — Capybara, or River Hog — Tucutuco — Molothrus, cuckoo-like habits — Tyrant-flycatcher — Mocking-bird — Carrion Hawks — Tubes formed by lightning — House struck.

Chapter IV

Rio Negro — Estancias attacked by the Indians — Salt-Lakes — Flamingoes — R. Negro to R. Colorado — Sacred Tree — Patagonian Hare — Indian Families — General Rosas — Proceed to Bahia Blanca — Sand Dunes — Negro Lieutenant — Bahia Blanca — Saline incrustations — Punta Alta — Zorillo.

Chapter V

Bahia Blanca — Geology — Numerous gigantic extinct Quadrupeds — Recent Extinction — Longevity of Species — Large Animals do not require a luxuriant vegetation — Southern Africa — Siberian Fossils — Two Species of Ostrich — Habits of Oven-bird — Armadilloes — Venomous Snake, Toad, Lizard — Hybernation of Animals — Habits of Sea-Pen — Indian Wars and Massacres — Arrowhead — Antiquarian Relic.

Chapter VI

Set out for Buenos Ayres — Rio Sauce — Sierra Ventana — Third Posta — Driving Horses — Bolas — Partridges and Foxes — Features of the country — Long-legged Plover — Teru-tero — Hail-storm — Natural enclosures in the Sierra Tapalguen — Flesh of Puma — Meat Diet — Guardia del Monte — Effects of cattle on the Vegetation — Cardoon — Buenos Ayres — Corral where cattle are slaughtered.

Chapter VII

Excursion to St. Fé — Thistle Beds — Habits of the Bizcacha — Little Owl — Saline streams — Level plains — Mastodon — St. Fé — Change in landscape — Geology — Tooth of extinct Horse — Relation of the Fossil and recent Quadrupeds of North and South America — Effects of a great drought — Parana — Habits of the Jaguar — Scissor-beak — Kingfisher, Parrot, and Scissor-tail — Revolution — Buenos Ayres — State of Government.

Chapter VIII

Excursion to Colonia del Sacramiento — Value of an Estancia — Cattle, how counted — Singular breed of Oxen — Perforated pebbles — Shepherd-dogs — Horses broken-in, Gauchos riding — Character of Inhabitants — Rio Plata — Flocks of Butterflies — Aeronaut Spiders — Phosphorescence of the Sea — Port Desire — Guanaco — Port St. Julian — Geology of Patagonia — Fossil gigantic Animal — Types of Organisation constant — Change in the Zoology of America — Causes of Extinction.

Chapter IX

Santa Cruz — Expedition up the River — Indians — Immense streams of basaltic lava — Fragments not transported by the river — Excavation of the valley — Condor, habits of — Cordillera — Erratic boulders of great size — Indian relics — Return to the ship — Falkland Islands — Wild horses, cattle, rabbits — Wolf-like fox — Fire made of bones — Manner of hunting wild cattle — Geology — Streams of stones — Scenes of violence — Penguin — Geese — Eggs of Doris — Compound animals.

Chapter X

Tierra del Fuego, first arrival — Good Success Bay — An account of the Fuegians on board — Interview with the savages — Scenery of the forests — Cape Horn — Wigwam Cove — Miserable condition of the savages — Famines — Cannibals — Matricide — Religious feelings — Great Gale — Beagle Channel — Ponsonby Sound — Build wigwams and settle the Fuegians — Bifurcation of the Beagle Channel — Glaciers — Return to the Ship — Second visit in the Ship to the Settlement — Equality of condition amongst the natives.

Chapter XI

Strait of Magellan — Port Famine — Ascent of Mount Tarn — Forests — Edible fungus — Zoology — Great Seaweed — Leave Tierra del Fuego — Climate — Fruit-trees and productions of the southern coasts — Height of snow-line on the Cordillera — Descent of glaciers to the sea — Icebergs formed — Transportal of boulders — Climate and productions of the Antarctic Islands — Preservation of frozen carcasses — Recapitulation.

Chapter XII

Valparaiso — Excursion to the foot of the Andes — Structure of the land — Ascend the Bell of Quillota — Shattered masses of greenstone — Immense valleys — Mines — State of miners — Santiago — Hot-baths of Cauquenes — Gold-mines — Grinding-mills — Perforated stones — Habits of the Puma — El Turco and Tapacolo — Humming-birds.

Chapter XIII

Chiloe — General aspect — Boat excursion — Native Indians — Castro — Tame fox — Ascend San Pedro — Chonos Archipelago — Peninsula of Tres Montes — Granitic range — Boat-wrecked sailors — Low's Harbour — Wild potato — Formation of peat — Myopotamus, otter and mice — Cheucau and Barking-bird — Opetiorhynchus — Singular character of ornithology — Petrels.

Chapter XIV

San Carlos, Chiloe — Osorno in eruption, contemporaneously with Aconcagua and Coseguina — Ride to Cucao — Impenetrable forests — Valdivia — Indians — Earthquake — Concepcion — Great earthquake — Rocks fissured — Appearance of the former towns — The sea black and boiling — Direction of the vibrations — Stones twisted round — Great Wave — Permanent Elevation of the land — Area of volcanic phenomena — The connection between the elevatory and eruptive forces — Cause of earthquakes — Slow elevation of mountain-chains.

Chapter XV

Valparaiso — Portillo Pass — Sagacity of mules — Mountain-torrents — Mines, how discovered — Proofs of the gradual elevation of the Cordillera — Effect of snow on rocks — Geological structure of the two main ranges, their distinct origin and upheaval — Great subsidence — Red snow — Winds — Pinnacles of snow — Dry and clear atmosphere — Electricity — Pampas — Zoology of the opposite sides of the Andes — Locusts — Great Bugs — Mendoza — Uspallata Pass — Silicified trees buried as they grew — Incas Bridge — Badness of the passes exaggerated — Cumbre — Casuchas — Valparaiso.

Chapter XVI

Coast-road to Coquimbo — Great loads carried by the miners — Coquimbo — Earthquake — Step-formed terraces — Absence of recent deposits — Contemporaneousness of the Tertiary formations — Excursion up the valley — Road to Guasco — Deserts — Valley of Copiapó — Rain and Earthquakes — Hydrophobia — The Despoblado — Indian ruins — Probable change of climate — River-bed arched by an earthquake — Cold gales of wind — Noises from a hill — Iquique — Salt alluvium — Nitrate of soda — Lima — Unhealthy country — Ruins of Callao, overthrown by an earthquake — Recent subsidence — Elevated shells on San Lorenzo, their decomposition — Plain with embedded shells and fragments of pottery — Antiquity of the Indian Race.

Chapter XVII

Galapagos Archipelago — The whole group volcanic — Number of craters — Leafless bushes — Colony at Charles Island — James Island — Salt-lake in crater — Natural history of the group — Ornithology, curious finches — Reptiles — Great tortoises, habits of — Marine lizard, feeds on seaweed — Terrestrial lizard, burrowing habits, herbivorous — Importance of reptiles in the Archipelago — Fish, shells, insects — Botany — American type of organisation — Differences in the species or races on different islands — Tameness of the birds — Fear of man an acquired instinct.

Chapter XVIII

Pass through the Low Archipelago — Tahiti — Aspect — Vegetation on the mountains — View of Eimeo — Excursion into the interior — Profound ravines — Succession of waterfalls — Number of wild useful plants — Temperance of the inhabitants — Their moral state — Parliament convened — New Zealand — Bay of Islands — Hippahs — Excursion to Waimate — Missionary establishment — English weeds now run wild — Waiomio — Funeral of a New Zealand woman — Sail for Australia.

Chapter XIX

Sydney — Excursion to Bathurst — Aspect of the woods — Party of natives — Gradual extinction of the aborigines — Infection generated by associated men in health — Blue Mountains — View of the grand gulf-like valleys — Their origin and formation — Bathurst, general civility of the lower orders — State of Society — Van Diemen's Land — Hobart Town — Aborigines all banished — Mount Wellington — King George's Sound — Cheerless aspect of the country — Bald Head, calcareous casts of branches of trees — Party of natives — Leave Australia.

Chapter XX

Keeling Island — Singular appearance — Scanty Flora — Transport of seeds — Birds and insects — Ebbing and flowing springs — Fields of dead coral — Stones transported in the roots of trees — Great crab — Stinging corals — Coral-eating fish — Coral formations — Lagoon islands or atolls — Depth at which reef-building corals can live — Vast areas interspersed with low coral islands — Subsidence of their foundations — Barrier-reefs — Fringing-reefs — Conversion of fringing-reefs into barrier-reefs, and into atolls — Evidence of changes in level — Breaches in barrier-reefs — Maldiva atolls, their peculiar structure — Dead and submerged reefs — Areas of subsidence and elevation — Distribution of volcanoes — Subsidence slow and vast in amount.

Chapter XXI

Mauritius, beautiful appearance of — Great crateriform ring of mountains — Hindoos — St. Helena — History of the changes in the vegetation — Cause of the extinction of land-shells — Ascension — Variation in the imported rats — Volcanic bombs — Beds of infusoria — Bahia, Brazil — Splendour of tropical scenery — Pernambuco — Singular reefs — Slavery — Return to England — Retrospect on our voyage.


INDEX

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS






THE FOUNDATIONS OF THE ORIGIN OF SPECIES

TWO ESSAYS WRITTEN IN 1842 AND 1844

By Charles Darwin

Edited By His Son Francis Darwin

1909

CONTENTS

ESSAY OF 1842

PART I

  • § i. On variation under domestication, and on the principles of selection 1
  • § ii. On variation in a state of nature and on the natural means of selection 4
  • § iii. On variation in instincts and other mental attributes 17

PART II

  • §§ iv. and v. On the evidence from Geology. (The reasons for combining the two sections are given in the Introduction) 22
  • § vi. Geographical distribution 29
  • § vii. Affinities and classification 35
  • § viii. Unity of type in the great classes 38
  • § ix. Abortive organs 45
  • § x. Recapitulation and conclusion 48

ESSAY OF 1844

PART I

CHAPTER I
ON THE VARIATION OF ORGANIC BEINGS UNDER DOMESTICATION; AND ON THE PRINCIPLES OF SELECTION.

  • Variation
  • On the hereditary tendency
  • Causes of Variation
  • On Selection
  • Crossing Breeds
  • Whether our domestic races have descended from one or more wild stocks
  • Limits to Variation in degree and kind
  • In what consists Domestication
  • Summary 57-80

CHAPTER II
ON THE VARIATION OF ORGANIC BEINGS IN A WILD STATE; ON THE NATURAL MEANS OF SELECTION; AND ON THE COMPARISON OF DOMESTIC RACES AND TRUE SPECIES.

  • Variation
  • Natural means of Selection
  • Differences between “Races” and “Species”:—first, in their trueness or variability
  • Difference between “Races” and “Species” in fertility when crossed
  • Causes of Sterility in Hybrids
  • Infertility from causes distinct from hybridisation
  • Points of Resemblance between “Races” and “Species”
  • External characters of Hybrids and Mongrels
  • Summary
  • Limits of Variation 81-111

CHAPTER III
ON THE VARIATION OF INSTINCTS AND OTHER MENTAL ATTRIBUTES UNDER DOMESTICATION AND IN A STATE OF NATURE; ON THE DIFFICULTIES IN THIS SUBJECT; AND ON ANALOGOUS DIFFICULTIES WITH RESPECT TO CORPOREAL STRUCTURES.

  • Variation of mental attributes under domestication
  • Hereditary habits compared with instincts
  • Variation in the mental attributes of wild animals
  • Principles of Selection applicable to instincts
  • Difficulties in the acquirement of complex instincts by Selection
  • Difficulties in the acquirement by Selection of complex corporeal structures 112-132

PART II
ON THE EVIDENCE FAVOURABLE AND OPPOSED TO THE VIEW THAT SPECIES ARE NATURALLY FORMED RACES, DESCENDED FROM COMMON STOCKS.

CHAPTER IV
ON THE NUMBER OF INTERMEDIATE FORMS REQUIRED ON THE THEORY OF COMMON DESCENT; AND ON THEIR ABSENCE IN A FOSSIL STATE 133-143

CHAPTER V
GRADUAL APPEARANCE AND DISAPPEARANCE OF SPECIES. 144-150

  • Gradual appearance of species
  • Extinction of species

CHAPTER VI
ON THE GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION OF ORGANIC BEINGS IN PAST AND PRESENT TIMES.

SECTION FIRST 151-174

  • Distribution of the inhabitants in the different continents
  • Relation of range in genera and species
  • Distribution of the inhabitants in the same continent
  • Insular Faunas
  • Alpine Floras
  • Cause of the similarity in the floras of some distant mountains
  • Whether the same species has been created more than once
  • On the number of species, and of the classes to which they belong in different regions

SECOND SECTION 174-182

  • Geographical distribution of extinct organisms
  • Changes in geographical distribution
  • Summary on the distribution of living and extinct organic beings

SECTION THIRD 183-197

  • An attempt to explain the foregoing laws of geographical distribution, on the theory of allied species having a common descent
  • Improbability of finding fossil forms intermediate between existing species

CHAPTER VII
ON THE NATURE OF THE AFFINITIES AND CLASSIFICATION
OF ORGANIC BEINGS. 198-213

  • Gradual appearance and disappearance of groups
  • What is the Natural System?
  • On the kind of relation between distinct groups
  • Classification of Races or Varieties
  • Classification of Races and Species similar
  • Origin of genera and families

CHAPTER VIII
UNITY OF TYPE IN THE GREAT CLASSES; AND MORPHOLOGICAL STRUCTURES.

  • Unity of Type
  • Morphology
  • Embryology
  • Attempt to explain the facts of embryology
  • On the graduated complexity in each great class
  • Modification by selection of the forms of immature animals
  • Importance of embryology in classification
  • Order in time in which the great classes have first appeared 214-230

CHAPTER IX
ABORTIVE OR RUDIMENTARY ORGANS.

  • The abortive organs of Naturalists
  • The abortive organs of Physiologists
  • Abortion from gradual disuse 231-238

CHAPTER X
RECAPITULATION AND CONCLUSION.

  • Recapitulation
  • Why do we wish to reject the Theory of Common Descent?
  • Conclusion 239-255
  • Index 257
  • Portrait frontispiece
  • Facsimile to face p. 50