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“Darwin’s Finches”: the finches that Darwin found across the different Galapagos Islands which all had specific adaptations to their own island conditions.

Adaptive Radiation: The concept of a species having different ecological niches which leads to speciation.

Giant fossils of ancient sloths which are similar to those of modern-day varieties.

Changes through evolution: all animals evolved from previous ancestors.

Embryos look similar between vastly different species, biogeography in terms of adaptive radiation, etc.

Common ancestry: multiple pieces of evidence Darwin gathered support that all species--in the world and in concentrated areas--descend from common ancestors.

Humans have been breeding other organisms for thousands of years. Darwin believed that humans could not be the only ones breeding.

Natural Selection: this can be applied to nature, because nature is the breeder which decides on whether an organism survives, creating a species with higher fitness.

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Sources · Credits

Darwin had a friend as a little boy (Leighton) who later became a botanist and lichenologist