To Gaston de Saporta 31 January 1878
Down, | Beckenham, Kent | Railway Station | Orpington. S.E.R.
Jan 31. 1878
Dear Sir,
I sent the drawing according to your request to Sir J. Hooker and he has asked his various assistants including Prof. Oliver (who has a wonderful knowledge of plants) and Mr. Thiselton Dyer to consider the case well.1 They all think the form a most curious and interesting one. They do not think it is a dicotyledon; but more probably some extinct type of vascular cryptogam. Hooker suggested Botrychium;2 but on careful examination the venation was found fundamentally different. The Aroideae3 was then suggested and the Herbarium was searched. Mr. Dyer remarks in a letter to me “that dichotomy in leaves is almost unknown in phanerogams. In some of the large compound-leaved Aroids however the ultimate divisions of the leaf have a distribution of veins like Saporta’s sketch and I send a fragment (enclosed) of a remarkable plant which we have from West Africa which, size apart, has some similarity to the sketch”.4 I fear that these remarks will not be of the least use to you; but I have thought it better to send them (to) you, as showing how your sketch has perplexed the botanists at Kew.
You will probably have heard from Lesquereux of his remarkable discovery of several plants in the Cincinatti Lower Silurians. Prof. Williamson wrote to me a week ago informing me of this discovery. He says that Lesquereux has found Lepidodrenoid stems (of) Sphenopsylla annulariae and the Devonian genus Psilophyton. Prof. Williamson then says “add all this to Saporta’s Silurian fern” and he than asks “are we going to have an unchanged flora from the base of the Silurians to the summit of the Carboniferous beds? It looks like it!”5
My dear Sir | Yours very faithfully | Ch. Darwin
Footnotes
Bibliography
Correspondence: The correspondence of Charles Darwin. Edited by Frederick Burkhardt et al. 29 vols to date. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 1985–.
Lesquereux, Leo. 1877. Land plants, recently discovered in the Silurian rocks of the United States. [Read 19 October 1877.] Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 17 (1877–8): 163–73.
Summary
Has sent GdeS’s drawing to Hooker. He, Oliver, and Thiselton-Dyer have been perplexed by it.
L. Lesquereux’s discoveries in the Cincinnati Lower Silurian beds.
Letter details
- Letter no.
- DCP-LETT-11341
- From
- Charles Robert Darwin
- To
- Louis Charles Joseph Gaston (Gaston) de Saporta, comte de Saporta
- Sent from
- Down
- Source of text
- Petit and Théodoridès 1959, pp. 210–11
Please cite as
Darwin Correspondence Project, “Letter no. 11341,” accessed on 19 March 2024, https://www.darwinproject.ac.uk/letter/?docId=letters/DCP-LETT-11341.xml