Charles Darwin’s Galápagos Finches: The Small Birds That Sparked a Big Evolution Idea

When Charles Darwin stepped onto the Galápagos Islands in 1835, he did not feel like he was about to rewrite biology. He was tired. Seasick. Overloaded with specimens. His notebooks were already thick with observations about rocks, fossils, tortoises, and plants. The small brown birds hopping around his boots barely registered as special. And yet, those birds—ordinary, quiet, easy to miss—would eventually help crack open one of the most powerful ideas in science. Not instantly. Not dramatically. But slowly, through confusion. A Naturalist, Not a Prophet :contentReference[oaicite:0] did not arrive in the Galápagos hunting for evidence of evolution. In fact, at the time, he did not yet believe species could change into entirely new ones. Darwin was a collector. He…
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