Humboldt as a Traveller and a Biologist.
The career of Alexander von Humboldt (b. 1769, d. 1859), nearly coinciding with the period on which we are now engaged, was devoted to a gigantic task—nothing less than the scientific exploration of the globe. His great natural powers were first cultivated by wide and thorough training, not only in astronomy, botany, geology, mineralogy, and mining, which had an obvious bearing on his future enterprise, but also in anatomy, physiology, commerce, finance, diplomacy, and languages. Thus equipped, he sailed in 1799 with the botanist Bonpland to South America, and spent the next five years in exploring the Orinoco and Amazon, the Andes, Cuba, and Mexico. The expedition marks an epoch in scientific geography. It is enough to mention the collection of data for the more accurate mapping of little-known countries, the exploration of the river-systems of equatorial America and the discovery of a water-connection between the Orinoco and the Amazon, the ascent of lofty mountains, the study of volcanoes, the description of remarkable animals such as the howler-monkey and the gymnotus (electric eel), and of remarkable plants, such as the bull's-horn acacia, whose enlarged and hollow spines are occupied by ants.[41] After his return to Europe Humboldt published many important treatises on terrestrial magnetism, geology, meteorology, and plant-distribution. His new graphical method of isothermal lines did much for the study of climate in all its bearings. His Personal Narrative not only disseminated much interesting information, but inspired a new generation of explorers. Darwin agreed with Hooker that Humboldt was the greatest of scientific travellers.
In 1829 Humboldt traversed the Russian Empire from west to east, but the time allowed (half a year) was altogether insufficient for the examination of so vast a territory; a few notable results were, nevertheless, secured.
After some fifteen or twenty years spent in European society, the inspiration drawn from long and arduous journeys in South America began to fail. The conversation of the salons, the troublesome flattery of the King of Prussia, and the propensity to write copiously, stimulated, of course, by the eagerness of the public to buy whatever so eminent an investigator chose to put forth, sterilised the last half of a career which had opened with such magnificent promise.
The best of Humboldt's work became absorbed long ago into the confused mass of general knowledge. This is the common fate (not by any means an unhappy one) of those who refuse to concentrate upon a single study. Among biologists he is chiefly remembered by his numerous discussions of plant-distribution, which are now considered less remarkable for what they contain than for what they leave out. While his travels were fresh in his mind, Humboldt was impressed by facts of distribution which could not be explained by present physical conditions,[42] but the influence of climate as the more intelligible factor gradually assumed larger and larger proportions in his mind. The writers of text-books, founding their teaching upon Humboldt, often overlooked altogether qualifications which he had shown to be necessary. When Darwin and Wallace pointed out how immensely important is the bearing upon present distribution, not only of the physical history of the great continents, but also of their biological history, and in particular of the interminable conflicts of races of which they have been the scene, naturalists began to perceive how inadequate are horizontal and vertical isothermal zones to explain all the striking facts of distribution, whether of plants or animals (see infra, p 129.)