Reading the natural world
Transcription
Reading the natural world
Enquire with Darwin KS2 Module 2: Understanding the Environment Reading the natural world 01 Charles Darwin 1809-1882 02 Reading the natural world Darwin’s sense of place This website shows a satellite view of the area where Darwin worked. Notice the number of woodlands there are in this area. http://www.darwinslandscape.co.uk/theme.asp?navid=60 Magnify the area along the Luxted Road leading south west from Downe village to find Down House – Darwin’s home for 40 years – with the long line of trees starting at the meeting of 2 footpaths and ending in a wider southern section. This is the site of Darwin’s Sandwalk. 03 Reading the natural world Darwin’s Sandwalk and Thinking path 04 Reading the natural world Darwin’s Sandwalk and Thinking path 05 Reading the natural world 06 Reading the natural world 07 Reading the natural world The equipment Darwin used to read the natural world This website shows the equipment Darwin took with him on the Beagle voyage. His magnifying lens and notebook are included in the tools he took on his travels. http://www.sedgwickmuseum.org/exhibits/darwin.html Scroll down, click on Tools of the trade and Go collecting 08 Reading the natural world A page from one of Darwin’s notebooks (12) Take Bag of soil from centre of woods especially if date of wood be known & other odd places & see what plants will spring up which will show how seeds are transported, or how long they remain dormant, if kinds come up, not found in wood. ‘But seeds continually dropping in woods, by birds.’ 09 Acknowledgements This resource has been produced by The Charles Darwin Trust ©The Charles Darwin Trust 2012 Series editor Dr Susan Johnson Author Dr Carolyn Boulter Editor Karen Goldie-Morrison Design SPY Studio Photographs taken at Down House are with thanks to English Heritage which owns and opens the House to the public. Thank you to our current funders who are supporting Darwin Inspired learning and have made Enquire with Darwin possible: the Evolution Education Trust, the Foyle Foundation, the Garfield Weston Foundation, the JJ Charitable Trust and the Mark Leonard Trust, The Mercers’ Company, and a number of individual donors. Picture credits Slides 1,6,7 Dr Susan Johnson Slide 2 Darwin Heirlooms Trust, English Heritage Photo Library Slide 4, 5 The Charles Darwin Trust Slide 9 Reproduced by kind permission of the Syndics of Cambridge University Library MS DAR 206.1 10