Product details:

ISBN13:9781108065573
ISBN10:11080655711
Binding:Paperback
No. of pages:764 pages
Size:216x140 mm
Weight:250 g
Language:English
Illustrations: 15 b/w illus. 1 colour illus. 2 tables
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Category:

An Introduction to Entomology: Volume 3

Or, Elements of the Natural History of Insects
 
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Date of Publication:
 
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GBP 40.00
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Short description:

Keenly read by Darwin, this four-volume work, published 1815-26, is considered a founding text of entomological science in English.

Long description:
A Cambridge-educated clergyman, William Kirby (1759-1850) published his first entomological work on the bees in his Suffolk parish. By contrast, the early writings of William Spence (c.1782-1860) were concerned with political economy. Having developed an interest in insects, Spence became acquainted with Kirby in 1805 and the pair collaborated on this influential four-volume illustrated work, originally published between 1815 and 1826. Spence researched for several months in the library of Sir Joseph Banks, to whom the work is dedicated, but illness later forced Kirby to complete the project. Significantly, he distanced himself from Spence's secular treatment of insect behaviour. Charles Darwin, who had the work with him aboard the Beagle, deemed this 'the best discussion on instincts ever published'. Volume 3 is reissued here its first edition of 1826, which was in the Beagle's library. The prefatory material acknowledges the co-authors' differences.
Table of Contents:
28. Definition of the term 'insect'; 29. States of insects (egg state); 30. The same subject continued (larva state); 31. The same subject continued (pupa state); 32. The same subject continued (imago state); 33. External anatomy of insects (terms and their definition); 34. The same subject continued (the head and its parts); 35. The same subject continued (the trunk and its parts and organs); 36. The same subject continued (the abdomen and its parts).