If you're not the Truck Day type, you might care that today is Darwin Day, the celebration of Charles Darwin's birthday. On February 12, 1809, Charles Darwin was born. He would go on to study science, sail on a boat with the same name as a dog, and notice some cool stuff about how species changed over time.
Results tagged “darwinday”
Londonist followed in the footsteps of ambitious Victorian tourist James Patterson by completing the epic Patterson Challenge in 8 hours (and near-blizzard conditions).
While Bostonist already passed on 200th birthday wishes to Charles Darwin, it didn’t seem quite right to end it there. So we decided to peruse some of the Darwin Day fare offered up by this uniquely scientific city. We think ol’ Chuck would’ve been pleased with the diversity of the events we managed to find. After all, if there is no variety within a population, natural selection can’t really lead to speciation
oh, never mind.
On February 12, 1809, Charles Robert Darwin was born in Shrewsbury, England. Fifty years later, he published On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, a book that was met with immediate popularity and controversy for its well-supported assertion that humans are apes who share a common ancestor with other living things. Despite the controversy, rigorous scientific inquiry supported and refined Darwin's work, and even many theologians accepted the idea as a fact that would be compatible with the idea of a Universe created by God.



