Hi everyone,
Here is an article about Alfred Wallace who was a contemporary of Charles Darwin and probably contributed almost as much but is often forgotten.
http://www.bbc.com/earth/story/20161104-the-other-person-that-discovered-evolution-besides-darwin**********
Born in 1823 in Wales, Wallace was a man of modest means, but he had a passion for nature and he chose to follow it. He started out collecting insects as a hobby, but eventually his yearning for adventure led him to explore the world.
In 1854, aged 31, Wallace set off on another adventure, this time to the Malay Archipelago. This part of the world was so far from Wallace's home, many Europeans at the time did not even know it existed.
He made his base in Singapore, and from there he spent eight years travelling to different groups of islands in the region.
Being a free-thinking, spirited person, he was not afraid of telling people what he had found and adopting controversial ideas, so he happily promoted Lyell's ideas. But he also took the argument a step further and suggested that life also changed over time. A species like an orangutan, Wallace argued, is not fixed, but can gradually transform from generation to generation.
In 1858, Wallace was on the island of Ternate in Indonesia. There he wrote what became known as the "Ternate essay": a piece of writing that was to change our understanding of life forever.
Wallace sent his ideas to the English naturalist Charles Darwin, with whom he often exchanged letters. As it happened, Darwin had been working for 20 years on his own theory of natural selection, partly inspired by his 1835 visit to the Galápagos Islands.
Darwin had not published his ideas, because he was afraid of a backlash. He quickly realised that Wallace's discoveries matched up with his own, and resolved to take the plunge. He decided to present both their papers at the same time...
In the immediate aftermath, they both became famous. But after Darwin published his book On the origin of species by means of natural selection in 1859, he became known as the man who discovered evolution. Most people forgot about Wallace.
Wallace had collected over 125,000 species, 5,000 of them new to science. They still sit in museums all over the world today.
But today this jungle paradise is often disturbed by an eerie sound: chainsaws reverberating through the trees. Even though the region is a biodiversity hotspot, habitat destruction is putting many species at risk.
Wallace foresaw the problem over 100 years ago.
Wallace warned his readers that the world was not created for the benefit of humanity. "Trees and fruits, no less the varied productions of the animal kingdom, do not appear to be organised with exclusive reference to the use and convenience of man," he wrote in The Malay Archipelago.
Given how much else Wallace was right about, perhaps we should all take this message to heart.
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For information.
Cheers.
Sriram