Just two weeks before he died, Charles Darwin wrote a short paper about a tiny clam found clamped to the leg of a water beetle in a pond in the English Midlands. It was his last publication. The man who sent him the beetle was a young shoemaker and amateur naturalist named Walter Drawbridge Crick. The shoemaker eventually married and had a son named Harry, who himself had a son named Francis. In 1953, Francis Crick, together with a young American named James Watson, would make a discovery that has led inexorably to the triumphant vindication of almost everything Darwin deduced about evolution.
Published: February 2009
Darwin's Legacy

Modern Darwins
The father of evolution would be thrilled to see the science his theory has inspired.
Photograph by Lynn Johnson


Desktop Wallpaper
Buy NG Photos
Special Issues