Perhaps our first association with the word "Galapagos" is the name "Darwin." Darwin's visit to the Galapagos Islands had a resounding impact on the formation of his Theory of Natural Selection.
A rather unmotivated and failing medical scholar, Charles Darwin accompanied Captain Robert Fitzroy as a travel companion and naturalist on the HMS Beagle. His book the Voyage of the Beagle is an account of his worldwide journey.
When setting off from England in 1831 for a five-year voyage, Darwin had little ambitions for groundbreaking scientific research. After surveying the coasts of South America, the ship stopped over in the Galapagos Islands.
During his visit to the islands, Darwin noted that the unique creatures were similar from island to island, but perfectly adapted to their environments which led him to ponder the origin of the islands' inhabitants.
Among those that struck Darwin so greatly were the finches that are now named in his honor. Darwin would later base some of his thought from the supposing that these finches were all descendents of the same lineage.
Years later in 1859, Darwin finally consolidated all of his observations into his famous book On The Origin of Species, drastically and controversially altering the scientific view on the biological origins of life. Hope this helps! Mark brainly please!
Answer:A mutation is a change in a DNA sequence. Mutations can result from DNA copying mistakes made during cell division, exposure to ionizing radiation, exposure to chemicals called mutagens, or infection by viruses.
Explanation:
Finding the reactions in the equation 2KCIO3(s)-2KCI (s)+ 3O2 (g) A 2KCIO3 B 2KCI and 3O2 C 2KCI D.....well first look for the synthesis reactions which are if two different elements are one one side and a compound on the other side where the elements form....the next reaction you would look for would be the decomposition reaction.....and I still don't see this because if I did it would be the same as the synthesis reaction except it would be the other way around...sooo the compound of the elements would be on the right and when you add the elements it would be on the left side....the next reaction is the single displacement which I don't see in this example...the single displace me is when you are adding the elements not the left and on the right it's the same thing BUT the elements are in different order....and the last one is the combustion reaction which I do see....this is when there is adding element on both side.......so the reactions I see in this example is the combustion reaction.....hope it helps....:)
They are related because a modern bird has scales on its feet..