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  1. Há 6 dias · Thomas Henry Huxley PC FRS HonFRSE FLS (4 May 1825 – 29 June 1895) was an English biologist and anthropologist who specialized in comparative anatomy. He has become known as "Darwin's Bulldog" for his advocacy of Charles Darwin 's theory of evolution .

  2. Há 4 dias · Huxley, Archaeopteryx and early research Thomas Henry Huxley (1825–1895) Scientific investigation into the origin of birds began shortly after the 1859 publication of Charles Darwin's On the Origin of Species. In 1860, a fossilized feather was discovered in Germany's Late Jurassic Solnhofen limestone.

  3. Há 2 dias · In the 1970s, John Ostrom, following Thomas Henry Huxley's lead in 1868, argued that birds evolved within theropod dinosaurs and Archaeopteryx was a critical piece of evidence for this argument; it had several avian features, such as a wishbone, flight feathers, wings, and a partially reversed first toe along with dinosaur and ...

  4. 9 de mai. de 2024 · Aldous Huxley was a grandson of the prominent biologist Thomas Henry Huxley and was the third child of the biographer and man of letters Leonard Huxley; his brothers included physiologist Andrew Fielding Huxley and biologist Julian Huxley. He was educated at Eton, during which time he became partially blind because of keratitis.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. 6 de mai. de 2024 · Thomas Henry Huxley, an enthusiastic Darwinian, viewed the fossils as proof that “we must extend by long epochs the most liberal estimate that has yet been made of the antiquity of Man.” That...

  6. 14 de mai. de 2024 · English biologist Thomas Henry Huxley first suggested in the 1870s that birds may have been related to carnivorous dinosaurs, but his arguments were not universally accepted; other scientists, most notably English paleontologist Harry Govier Seeley, suggested that the resemblances may have been convergently evolved.

  7. 11 de mai. de 2024 · Huxley Thomas Henry Huxley (1825-1895) was one Victorian writer who was especially affected by Darwin’s Origin of the Species. It was in 1859 when that work was published and the theories of science seemed for once to become comprehensible to the great mass of people. The idea of evolution, until then little known by the