![]() ![]() A bronze statue of Wallace has been commissioned and is due to be placed in Twyn Square Spring/ Summer 2018. ![]() The life and work of Alfred Russel Wallace are commemorated with a small memorial adjacent to St Madoc's Church at Llanbadoc. Most importantly he campaigned for land nationalisation and became a socialist and anti-imperialist. He was awarded the Gold Medal of the Linnean Society and the Order of Merit.Īlthough principally known as an evolutionary biologist Wallace became a vigorous campaigner about the issues he believed in, including spiritualism (pro) and compulsory-vaccination (anti). Wallace continued to publish scientific work and, living to the age of ninety, became a “grand old man” of science. However, they came to differ on the need for separate explanations of colouration or of the higher stages of human evolution. Indeed Wallace called his big book on evolution Darwinism (1869). Wallace and Darwin maintained friendly scientific contact in defence of their joint theory. For Wallace the processes of natural selection and of the geographical distribution of species were inseparable. He noticed a sharp divide between Asian and Australasian species along what is still known as the Wallace Line. When Wallace died, many wanted him buried in Westminster Abbey, however his family followed his wishes and buried him in a small cemetery in Broadstone, Dorset. The other, less well-known, discovery arose from Wallace’s interest in biogeography. The new and controversial explanation of evolution became known as the Darwin-Wallace theory. Contributions from each were read to the Linnean Society in 1858 and Wallace’s letter stimulated Darwin into writing The Origin of Species. As is well-known, he sent an account of his discovery to Darwin to the latter’s great discomfiture. The first and most well-known achievement was his discovery, independently of Darwin, of the principle of natural selection. Along with this literary success there were two important scientific ones. He described his journeys from island to island in his highly successful and readable book The Malay Archipelago (1869). Wallace turned eastwards to the Malay Archipelago in search of, among other things, the Bird of Paradise and the Orang-utan. With typical resilience Wallace embarked on a second expedition in 1854 which was to turn out to be the most important event of his life. His account of this voyage A Narrative of Travels on the Amazon was published in 1853. His four years in the Amazon Basin were very productive but, tragically, his ship sank on the way home and all his specimens and most of his notebooks were lost. Wallace’s younger brother Herbert joined him but unfortunately die of a fever. Bates concentrated on the Amazon, Wallace on the Rio Negro. The first expedition, at the age of twenty-five, was to the Amazon with his friend Bates. Wallace embarked on two major expeditions as a collector, sending specimens to museums and private collectors back home. ![]()
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