Charles Darwin and the fossil mammals of the Beagle trip

Some characteristics of the understanding that, on the concept of “constructivism”, obtains a set of students of the sciences It has been stated that the fossil remains found by Darwin in South America were decisive in the building of his theory. However, the author of On the Origin of Species modif...

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Autor principal: Salgado, Leonardo Laura
Formato: Artículo revista
Lenguaje:Español
Publicado: Asociación de Docentes de Ciencias Biológicas de la Argentina 2009
Acceso en línea:https://revistas.unc.edu.ar/index.php/revistaadbia/article/view/22273
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spelling I10-R313-article-222732021-11-12T18:41:50Z Charles Darwin and the fossil mammals of the Beagle trip Charles Darwin y los mamíferos fósiles del viaje del Beagle Salgado, Leonardo Laura Some characteristics of the understanding that, on the concept of “constructivism”, obtains a set of students of the sciences It has been stated that the fossil remains found by Darwin in South America were decisive in the building of his theory. However, the author of On the Origin of Species modified his interpretation on those remains at the same time as his knowledge did, or simply according to his interests or needs. In this sense, the case of the Toxodon is very illustrative: this is interpreted as an example of a form belonging to a type identical to another living one (the capybara or carpincho), in the same area (in the Journal of Researches, of 1845), like a link among pachyderms, rodents, ungulates and whales (also in the Journal of Researches), or simply a extinct form, that coexisted with living species (in all editions of On The Origin of Species). Se ha afirmado que los restos fósiles hallados por Darwin en América del Sur fueron decisivos en la edificación de su teoría. Sin embargo, el autor de On the Origin of Species modificó su interpretación sobre esos restos en la medida que lo hacía su conocimiento, o simplemente en función de sus intereses o necesidades. En este sentido, el caso del notoungulado Toxodon es muy ilustrativo: éste es interpretado como un ejemplo de una forma perteneciente a un tipo idéntico a otra viviente (el capybara o carpincho), en una misma área (en el Journal of Researches, de 1845), como un link entre paquidermos, roedores, ungulados y cetáceos (también en el Journal of Researches), o simplemente una forma extinguida, que coexistió con especies vivientes (en todas las ediciones de On the Origin of Species). Asociación de Docentes de Ciencias Biológicas de la Argentina 2009-10-01 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion application/pdf https://revistas.unc.edu.ar/index.php/revistaadbia/article/view/22273 10.59524/2344-9225.v12.n2.22273 Journal of Biology Education; Vol. 12 No. 2 (2009): Revista de Educación en Biología; (pp. 44-48) Revista de Educación en Biología; Vol. 12 Núm. 2 (2009): Revista de Educación en Biología; (pp. 44-48) 2344-9225 0329-5192 10.59524/2344.9225.v12.n2 spa https://revistas.unc.edu.ar/index.php/revistaadbia/article/view/22273/21873 Derechos de autor 2009 Leonardo Laura Salgado https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0
institution Universidad Nacional de Córdoba
institution_str I-10
repository_str R-313
container_title_str Revista de Educación en Biología
language Español
format Artículo revista
author Salgado, Leonardo Laura
spellingShingle Salgado, Leonardo Laura
Charles Darwin and the fossil mammals of the Beagle trip
author_facet Salgado, Leonardo Laura
author_sort Salgado, Leonardo Laura
title Charles Darwin and the fossil mammals of the Beagle trip
title_short Charles Darwin and the fossil mammals of the Beagle trip
title_full Charles Darwin and the fossil mammals of the Beagle trip
title_fullStr Charles Darwin and the fossil mammals of the Beagle trip
title_full_unstemmed Charles Darwin and the fossil mammals of the Beagle trip
title_sort charles darwin and the fossil mammals of the beagle trip
description Some characteristics of the understanding that, on the concept of “constructivism”, obtains a set of students of the sciences It has been stated that the fossil remains found by Darwin in South America were decisive in the building of his theory. However, the author of On the Origin of Species modified his interpretation on those remains at the same time as his knowledge did, or simply according to his interests or needs. In this sense, the case of the Toxodon is very illustrative: this is interpreted as an example of a form belonging to a type identical to another living one (the capybara or carpincho), in the same area (in the Journal of Researches, of 1845), like a link among pachyderms, rodents, ungulates and whales (also in the Journal of Researches), or simply a extinct form, that coexisted with living species (in all editions of On The Origin of Species).
publisher Asociación de Docentes de Ciencias Biológicas de la Argentina
publishDate 2009
url https://revistas.unc.edu.ar/index.php/revistaadbia/article/view/22273
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