[On the Origin of Species by Charles Darwin]@TWC D-Link book
On the Origin of Species

CHAPTER X
10/41

This tenth of an inch will represent one hundred years, and the entire strip a million years.

But let it be borne in mind, in relation to the subject of this work, what a hundred years implies, represented as it is by a measure utterly insignificant in a hall of the above dimensions.

Several eminent breeders, during a single lifetime, have so largely modified some of the higher animals, which propagate their kind much more slowly than most of the lower animals, that they have formed what well deserves to be called a new sub-breed.
Few men have attended with due care to any one strain for more than half a century, so that a hundred years represents the work of two breeders in succession.

It is not to be supposed that species in a state of nature ever change so quickly as domestic animals under the guidance of methodical selection.

The comparison would be in every way fairer with the effects which follow from unconscious selection, that is, the preservation of the most useful or beautiful animals, with no intention of modifying the breed; but by this process of unconscious selection, various breeds have been sensibly changed in the course of two or three centuries.
Species, however, probably change much more slowly, and within the same country only a few change at the same time.


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