[{348}] Origin, Ed. i. p. 404, vi. p. 559.
[{349}] Origin, Ed. i. p. 349, vi. p. 496.
[{350}] The case of the ostrich (Rhea) occurs in the Origin, Ed. i. p. 349, vi. p. 496.
[{351}] «Note in original.» There is a hare in S. America,—so bad example.
[{352}] See Origin, Ed. i. p. 349, vi. p. 497.
[{353}] For the general problem of Oceanic Islands, see Origin, Ed. i. p. 388, vi. p. 541.
[{354}] This is an illustration of the general theory of barriers (Origin, Ed. i. p. 347, vi. p. 494). At i. p. 391, vi. p. 544 the question is discussed from the point of view of means of transport. Between the lines, above the words “with that land,” the author wrote “Cause, formerly joined, no one doubts after Lyell.”
[{355}] Origin, Ed. i. p. 390, vi. p. 543.
[{356}] See Origin, Ed. i. p. 397, vi. p. 552.
[{357}] The Cape de Verde and Galapagos Archipelagoes are compared in the Origin, Ed. i. p. 398, vi. p. 553. See also Journal of Researches, 1860, p. 393.