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Annotated Bibliography

Primary Sources:
1. "About Charles Darwin." Available from AboutDarwin.com. Internet;
accessed 25 January 2011.
This site has everything about Charles Darwin, and provided me with a lot of
his background information. This is a primary source because I got a picture
from here.

2. "A vulnerable Orang-outang,"The Hornet magazine, 1871, "Whereabouts are


unknown."
This is a political cartoon making fun of Darwin and his theory. It is a
primary source because the cartoon has been left unchanged.

3. "Charles Darwin,” George Richmond, 1840 "Whereabouts unknown"


This is another political cartoon about Darwin; it is one of the most
famous ones of Darwin.

4. "Charles Darwin Facts." Available from http://charlesdarwinfacts.com/.


Internet; accessed 27 January 2011.

This website gave a picture on Darwin; it is a primary source because it is


unchanged.
5. "Darwin Day Celebration." Available from
http://www.darwinday.org/englishL/life/parents.html. Internet; accessed
25 January 2011. ‘

I also got another picture on this site, it was celebrating Darwin.

6. "Galapagos Archipelagos." Available from


http://www.kellscraft.com/VoyageOfBeagle/VoyageOfBeagleCh17.html.
Internet; accessed 23 January 2011.

I got several pictures from this website, the map has not been changed, the
sketch has not changed either.
7. "Halloween Special: Graves of Famous Scientists." Jacks of Science.
Available from http://www.jacksofscience.com/general/halloween-special-
graves-of-famous-scientists/. Internet; accessed 20 January 2011.

I got the picture of Charles Darwin’s tomb here. It was celebrating Darwin
as well.
8. "The 1925 Scopes Trial." Available from
http://www.authentichistory.com/1921-1929/04-resistance/3- n
scopes/Photo-John_T_Scopes.html. Internet; accessed 23 January 2011.
This is a picture of John Scopes before the trial. This is primary because it has
been left unchanged.
9. Andre Gill, "Caricature of Charles Darwin and Emile Littre," Ca. 1867,
Bibliotheque national de France.

This is another political cartoon of Darwin, making fun of his theory. He is


portrayed as a monkey as well since he says that humans derive from the
descendents of apes.

10. Cambridge County Council. "Letter from Charles Darwin's father found in
Cambridgeshire Archives." Available from
11. Cartoons Attacking Creationism. Available from
http://www.care2.com/c2c/groups/disc.html?gpp=2192&pst=712905.
Internet; accessed 27 January 2011.

There were several cartoons on creationism here, defending creationism. It is


primary because it has one goal to defend the creationism beliefs, they have
been unchanged.

12. Guardian News and Media. Notes and Theories. Available from
http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/blog/2008/nov/13/evolution-creation-
creationism. Internet; accessed 22 January 2011.
Another picture depicting creationism was painted hundreds of years ago, left
unchanged.
13. Julia Margaret Cameron, Photo, 1868 ("Whereabouts unknown")

A photo of Darwin taken at an old age, the picture has been left unchanged.
14. The Soldier's Bible. Nashville: Holman Bible Publishers, 2004.

Every bible is different but every one has the central ideas stored in them. The
Bible is one of the most important things to creationists; the bible’s
information has been left unchanged.

15. University of Glasglow. "Charles Darwin's Beetle." Available from


http://www.hunterian.gla.ac.uk/whatson/whatsOnItem.php?item=333.
Internet; accessed 24 January 2011.

Darwin liked to study beetles; this is an actual beetle he collected.

16. Wikimedia. "Edinburgh University." Wikipedia. Available from


http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Edinburgh_University_1827.jpg.
Internet; accessed 24 January 2011.

A picture of Darwin’s college, he attended the University of Edinburgh with his


older brother. The school is still standing today and has been left unchanged.
17. Wikimedia. "HMS Beagle." Available from
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:HMS_Beagle_by_Conrad_Martens.j
pg. Internet; accessed 27 January 2011.
This is a painting of The Beagle, it has been left unchanged.

18. Wired Science. "How Charles Darwin got married." Available from
http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2009/04/darwinmarried/. Internet;
accessed 25 January 2011.

This is a picture of Darwin’s wife, Emma. The painting has been left unchanged
and untouched.
19. http://wutcana.wordpress.com/2010/07/14/a-fresh-perspective-on-the-
scopes-trial/

The scopes trial: the two different sides are talking to one another.

20. http://www.cambridgeshire.gov.uk/leisure/archives/online/drdarwinslette
r.htm. Internet; accessed 22 January 2011.
Letters exchanged by Darwin’s father and Darwin himself. They have not been
changed or touched.

Secondary Sources:
1. Allaby, Michael and Derek Gjertson. Makers of Science. New York:
Andromeda Oxford Limited, 2002.

This secondary source helped me a lot because it talks


about Darwin’s past, present, future and his different voyages and ideas.
2. Fitzgerald, Stephanie. “The Scopes Trial.” Minneapolis, MN: Compass

This source helped me really understand the Scopes Trial better because it was
very detailed and descriptive.

3. Gamlin, Linda, and Charles A. Wills. Evolution. New York: Dorling Kindersley
Limited and Editions Gallimard, 1993.

This talks about Darwin, and his different experiments. It is a secondary source
because information has been filtered out.
4. Jonathon, Jones. "Charles Darwin, “The Telegraph,” September, 2008.

This was a newspaper article about the Church of England forgiving Darwin.

5. Kim, Dennis B., and James Moore. Encyclopedia of Life Sciences. U.K. Tarry-
town, New York, 1996.
This talks mostly about Darwin’s Beagle Voyage. It is secondary because
information has been filtered out, or added.

6. Lambert, David. Dinosaur Encyclopedia. New York: DK Publishing, Inc, Point


Books, 2007

This talks about Darwin’s theory and about how dinosaurs might have died out.
It is a secondary source because information has been filtered out.

7. "The Theory of Evolution in Two minutes.." Youtube. Available from


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FnzmxeZJeho&feature=related. Internet;
accessed 27 January 2011.
This is a video about Charles Darwin’s theory and an example of it’s proof.

8. "Who was Charles Darwin?." Youtube. Available from


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vmphlbRhLu8. Internet; accessed 27 January
2011.

A video about how Charles Darwin got interested in Science, and why he thought
science was so precious. It is a secondary source because it is an reenactment.

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