A reprint of a classical work in the Cambridge Library Collection.
Richard Owen, F.R.S. (1804-92) was a controversial and influential palaeontologist and anatomist. Originally from Lancaster, he studied medicine at the University of Edinburgh and at London's St Bartholomew's Hospital. He grew interested in anatomical research and, after qualifying as a surgeon, became assistant conservator in the museum of the Royal College of Surgeons, and then superintendent of natural history in the British Museum. He became an authority on comparative anatomy and palaeontology, coining the term 'dinosaur' and founding the Natural History Museum. He was also a fierce critic of Darwin's theory of evolution by natural selection, and engaged in a long and bitter argument with Thomas Huxley, known as 'Darwin's bulldog' for his belligerent support of the theory. Published in 1894, this two-volume biography draws on Owen's diaries and a wealth of correspondence. Volume 1 covers Owen's life up to 1854, just before his appointment to the British Museum.
Preface
1. 1804-24. Parentage
2. 1824-33. Edinburgh University
3. 1833-6. Eton in 1833
4. 1837-8. Hunterian Professor and Professor of Anatomy and Physiology in the College of Surgeons, 1837
5. 1839-40. Foundation of the Microscopical Society
6. 1841-2. Hunterian Lectures
7. 1843-4. Further evidence of the existence of the 'Dinoris'
8. Owen's opinion of the 'Vestiges of Creation'
9. 1846-7. Owen's proposal of a national collection of fossil and recent comparative anatomy
10. 1848-9. 'The Archetype and Homologies of the Vertebrate Skeleton', 1848
11. 1850-1. The Megatherium
12. 1852-3. Delight in country life