• Twitter
  • Facebook
Theme
Currency
Log-in | Register | My Basket : arrow
Item   Qty Price
Ponds, Pools and Puddles (New Naturalist 148) Ponds, Pools and Puddles (New Naturalist 148)
Type : Hardback
Author : Biggs, J.; Williams, P.
1 £46.50

Goods Total £46.50

View Your Basket Checkout My Order
1 item - £46.50
Our Publications

The Pemberley Bookshop

Our Shop

Why not come and peruse our comprehensive range of natural history titles at our well stocked bookshop, where you can also receive our expert advice. Click here for details of our shop.

Unnatural Selection

by van Grouw, K.

Special Offer
  • Hardback £32.00
  • £42.00 (Save £10.00)
  • New Book Availability : Usually available within 5 day(s)
  • Add to wishlist
  • Catalogue No : 54430
  • ISBN : 9780691254050
  • Published : 2023
  • Cover : Hardback
  • Pages : 304

Our customers have not yet submitted a review for this title - click here to be the first to write a review

Description:

A lavishly illustrated look at how evolution plays out in selective breeding.

A stunningly illustrated book about selective breeding - the ongoing transformation of animals at the hand of man. More important, it's a book about selective breeding on a far, far grander scale - a scale that encompasses all life on Earth. We'd call it evolution.

A unique fusion of art, science, and history, this book is intended as a tribute to what Charles Darwin might have achieved had he possessed that elusive missing piece to the evolutionary puzzle - the knowledge of how individual traits are passed from one generation to the next. With the benefit of a century and a half of hindsight, Katrina van Grouw explains evolution by building on the analogy that Darwin himself used - comparing the selective breeding process with natural selection in the wild, and, like Darwin, featuring a multitude of fascinating examples.

This is more than just a book about pets and livestock, however. The revelation of Unnatural Selection is that identical traits can occur in all animals, wild and domesticated, and both are governed by the same evolutionary principles. As van Grouw shows, animals are plastic things, constantly changing. In wild animals, the changes are usually too slow to see - species appear to stay the same. When it comes to domesticated animals, however, change happens fast, making them the perfect model of evolution in action.

Featuring more than four hundred breathtaking illustrations of living animals, skeletons, and historical specimens, Unnatural Selection will be enjoyed by anyone with an interest in natural history and the history of evolutionary thinking.

Subscribe to our mailing list More details about our mailing list arrow