Cape of Good Hope
Found in 27 Collections and/or Records:
Cape Oxalis - one form which did set any seed in any case, 1809-01-01 - 1882-04-30
Note; by Charles Robert Darwin
(Note)
Invertebrates-15 Note & Abstract, 1867-12-27
Mr Trimen says at Cape an Orthopteron - Pneumora in male alone whole body wonderfully distended with air
Note; by Charles Robert Darwin
(Note)
Kew - Littoral Plants [annotated list], 1809-01-01 - 1882-04-30
Note; by Charles Robert Darwin
(Note)
Letter from Charles Robert Darwin to (Emily) Catherine Langton née Darwin; written at Cape of Good Hope, 1836-06-03
Letter from Charles Robert Darwin to (Emily) Catherine Langton née Darwin; written at Cape of Good Hope
(Letter)
Letter from Charles Robert Darwin to (Emily) Catherine Langton née Darwin; written at Cape of Good Hope, 1836-06-03
Letter from Charles Robert Darwin to (Emily) Catherine Langton née Darwin; written at Cape of Good Hope
(Letter)
Mammals-8 Note, 1869-02-19
At meeting of [Zoological] Soc[iety] horns of Cape Buffalo were exhibited by Tegetmeier & it was maintained that they would be useless in battle
Note; by [amanuensis] pp Charles Robert Darwin; written at Z[oological] G[ardens]
(Note)
Mammals-19 Note, 1867-12-27
Mr Trimen says certainly male Cape[?] Baboon Chacma has much larger canines & mane
Note; by Charles Robert Darwin
(Note)
Molluscs common to Cape of Good Hope & Europe, 1809-01-01 - 1882-04-30
Note; by Charles Robert Darwin in together with See next 3 items
(Note)
My idea that isolation plays part, 1809-01-01 - 1882-04-30
Note; by Charles Robert Darwin
(Note)
NS I Continental Extensions-8 Note, 1809-01-01 - 1882-04-30
The fact of extraordinary few peculiar plants in intertropical Africa / so wonderfully contrasted with S Africa
Note; by Charles Robert Darwin
(Note)
NS I Glacial Period-45 Note, 1862-04-20
Brazil 6000-7000ft / Sandwich Is / Jamaica / Cape of Good Hope / Australian Alps [lists of species found there]
Note; by Charles Robert Darwin
(Note)
NS I Glacial Period-46 Note, 1809-01-01 - 1882-04-30
There are 84 genera common to Europe & marked X = extra-tropical or chiefly so
Note; by [Charles Robert Darwin?]; annotated (by Sir Joseph Dalton Hooker?)
(Note)
NS I Glen Roy Notes-5 Note, 1809-01-01 - 1882-04-30
[annotated geological drawing]
Note; by Charles Robert Darwin
(Note)
NS II Distribution of animals-85 Note, 1844-02-22
Note; by Charles Robert Darwin
(Note)
NS II Distribution of animals-115 Note, 1852-01-16
Note; by Charles Robert Darwin
(Note)
NS II Distribution of animals-148 Note, 1840-01-01 - 1882-04-30
Note; by Charles Robert Darwin
(Note)
NS II Distribution of animals-175 Note, 1861-07-31
Note; by Charles Robert Darwin
(Note)
NS II Geographical distribution and species-22 Note, 1840-01-01 - 1882-04-30
Note; by Charles Robert Darwin
(Note)
NS II Means of distribution-104 Note, 1840-01-01 - 1882-04-30
Can amount of peculiarity in S[outhern] Headlands as C[ape] of G[ood] Hope & S[outh] Australia
Note; by Charles Robert Darwin
(Note)
NS II Means of distribution-179 Note, 1840-01-01 - 1882-04-30
I think one wastes some astonishment at species being distinct on E & W Australia
Note; by Charles Robert Darwin
(Note)
NS II Palaeontology, geology-256 Note, 1856-02-01 - 1856-02-29
Note; by Charles Robert Darwin
(Note)
NS II Palaeontology, geology-311 Note, 1861-03-23
We must not suppose every country as rich as Europe in successive fossils
Note; by Charles Robert Darwin
(Note)
NS II Variation, varieties-31 Note, 1841-12-23
Note; by Charles Robert Darwin
(Note)
NS II Variation, varieties-71 Note, 1846-05-01 - 1846-05-31
Note; by Charles Robert Darwin
(Note)
Owen showing me the head of new African ourang remarked that it was conceivable that use might make the great crests for muscles & general increase in size, 1848-04-01 - 1848-04-30
Note; by Charles Robert Darwin
(Note)