Lyell, Sir Charles; The Geological Evidences of the Antiquity of Man With Remarks on Theories of the Origin of Species by Variation. 1st edition, London 1863

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Lyell, Sir Charles; The Geological Evidences of the Antiquity of Man With Remarks on Theories of the Origin of Species by Variation. 1st edition, London, John Murray, 1863. Octavo, pp. xii, 520, frontispiece and second plate at page 252, 58 woodcut illustrations and maps.

The work is complete and in the original binder’s half calf over marbled boards with gilt spine titles and panels, marbled end sheets and text block edges. The binding is tight and clean with minor rubbing, the text is exceptionally clean with owner’s name penned on end sheet and his blind stamp on upper margin of title page. In very good condition. Three editions were printed in 1863 with the second and third editions so noted on the title page. This is the true first edition.

Sir Charles Lyell (1797-1875) was a prominent British geologist and is best remembered for his three volume treatise Principles of Geology. His second most important work is “Antiquity of Man” first published in February  1863. A second and third edition with title pages noting the edition were published the same year.
Lyell had been reluctant to accept Darwin’s theory of evolution, as well as the existence of fossil man. But he eventually became convinced in the late 1850s of the antiquity of man by the increasing number of discoveries of man-made flint tools found alongside the fossil remains of extinct animals.
After personally studying sites and collecting and analyzing the evidence, Lyell made the case for human antiquity in his 1863 work “Geological Evidences of the Antiquity of Man”. Within the work he also announced his acceptance of Darwin’s theory of evolution as “the best explanation yet offered of the connection between man and those animals which have flourished successively on the earth.”
Lyell’s included in his work the argument for evolution by natural selection, as well as evidence supporting the relationship between man and the primates.He took the topics and discussions found only in scientific journals and laid them in an understandable language before the much larger lay audience.  His section of the book about early man sums up the evidence for human antiquity and integrates it with archeological evidence from the Paleolithic, Neolithic and Bronze Age.
The section about glaciation brings together continental ice ages into a larger picture of the Quaternary Period that Lyell had previously discussed in his Principles of Geology.
The section about evolution summarizes and reluctantly endorses Darwin's arguments. Lyell acknowledged that human bodies may have evolved, but left open the possibility of divine intervention in the origins of human intellect and moral sense.