Comparative Anatomy: the Study of Biological Types.

Between 1660 and 1740 the scope of natural history became sensibly enlarged. System had been hitherto predominant, but the systems had been partial, treating the vertebrate animals and the flowering plants with as much detail as the state of knowledge allowed, but almost ignoring the invertebrates and the cryptogams. System was now studied more eagerly than ever by such naturalists as Ray and Linnæus, but new aspects of natural history were considered, new methods practised, new groups of organisms included. Many remarkable vertebrates were anatomically examined for the first time. Claude Perrault and his colleagues of the Académie des Sciences dissected animals which had died in the royal menagerie, and compared the parts and organs of one animal with those of another; Duverney compared the paw of the lion with the human hand; in England Tyson studied the anatomy of the chimpanzee, porpoise, opossum, and rattlesnake, searching everywhere for the transitions which he believed to connect all organisms, and to form "Nature's Clew in this wonderful labyrinth of the Creation." The new microscopes helped to bring the lower and smaller animals into notice. From 1669, when Malpighi described the anatomy and life-history of the silkworm, a succession of what we now call biological types were studied; among these were many invertebrates. Edmund King and John Master contributed to Willis's treatise De Anima Brutorum (1672) the anatomies of the oyster, crayfish, and earthworm, all illustrated by clear and useful plates. Heide (1683) wrote an account of the structure of the edible mussel (Mytilus), in which mention is made of the ciliary motion in the gill; Poupart (1706) and Méry (1710) wrote accounts of the pond-mussel (Anodon). Swammerdam's elaborate studies of insects and their transformations were followed up by a long succession of memoirs by Frisch in Germany, Réaumur in France, and (shortly after the close of the period now under discussion) De Geer in Sweden. The extraordinary diligence and power of Swammerdam and Réaumur give a very prominent place in the biology of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries to the structure and life-histories of insects. The great generalisations of comparative anatomy do not belong to this period; nevertheless, sagacious and luminous remarks are not wanting.