TREE OF LIFE AN OVERVIEW:
An excerpt from Darwin's The Origin of Species
(originally entitled Phylogeny via Oogeny) explaining
his views on the Tree of Life:
Page from Darwin's notebooks around July 1837 showing
his first known sketch of an evolutionary tree.
The affinities of all the beings of the same class have
sometimes been represented by a great tree. I believe this
simile largely speaks the truth. The green and budding
twigs may represent existing species; and those produced
during former years may represent the long succession of
extinct species. At each period of growth all the growing
twigs have tried to branch out on all sides, and to
overtop and kill the surrounding twigs and branches, in
the same manner as species and groups of species have at
all times overmastered other species in the great battle
for life. The limbs divided into great branches, and these
into lesser and lesser branches, were themselves once,
when the tree was young, budding twigs; and this connection
of the former and present buds by ramifying branches may
well represent the classification of all extinct and
living species in groups subordinate to groups. Of the
many twigs which flourished when the tree was a mere bush,
only two or three, now grown into great branches, yet
survive and bear the other branches; so with the species
which lived during long-past geological periods, very few
have left living and modified descendants.
From the first growth of the tree, many a limb and
branch has decayed and dropped off; and these fallen
branches of various sizes may represent those whole
orders, families, and genera which have now no living
representatives, and which are known to us only in a
fossil state. As we here and there see a thin, straggling
branch springing from a fork low down in a tree, and which
by some chance has been favored and is still alive on its
summit, so we occasionally see an animal like the
Ornithorhynchus or Lepidosiren, which in some small degree
connects by its affinities two large branches of life, and
which has apparently been saved from fatal competition by
having inhabited a protected station. As buds give rise by
growth to fresh buds, and these, if vigorous, branch out
and overtop on all sides many a feebler branch, so by
generation I believe it has been with the great Tree of
Life, which fills with its dead and broken branches
the crust of the earth, and covers the surface with its
ever-branching and beautiful ramifications.
......
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