[Lamarck, the Founder of Evolution by Alpheus Spring Packard]@TWC D-Link book
Lamarck, the Founder of Evolution

CHAPTER IX
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He did, however, see clearly that, taking plant and animal life as a whole, it underwent a slow modification, the later forms being the descendants of the earlier; and this truth is the central one of modern palaeontology.
Lamarck's first memoir on fossil shells, in which he described many new species, was published in 1802, after the appearance of his _Hydrogeologie_, to which he refers.

It was the first of a series of descriptive papers, which appeared at intervals from 1802 to 1806.

He does not fail to open the series of memoirs with some general remarks, which prove his broad, philosophic spirit, that characterizing the founder of a new science.

He begins by saying that the fossil forms have their analogues in the tropical seas.

He claims that there was evident proof that these molluscs could not have lived in a climate like that of places in which they now occur, instancing _Nautilius pompilius_, which now lives in the seas of warm countries; also the presence of exotic ferns, palms, fossil amber, fossil gum elastic, besides the occurrence of fossil crocodiles and elephants both in France and Germany.[83] Hence there have been changes of climate since these forms flourished, and, he adds, the intervals between these changes of climate were stationary periods, whose duration was practically without limit.


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