of Dinomischus, 149–50

  of echinoderms, 302

  of Emeraldella, 181–84

  excavation and dissection of, 87–91

  of Habelia, 179

  of Hallucigenia, 153–57

  of Leanchoilia, 181–84

  of Marrella, 107–21

  of Molaria, 178–79

  monographs on, 97

  of multicellular animals, 55

  of Naraoia, 164–67

  of Nectocaris, 145–47

  of Odaraia, 173–76

  of Odontogriphus, 147–49

  of Opabinia, 124–36

  orientations of, 91–93

  part and counterpart for, 93–96

  of Pikaia, 321–23

  Precambrian, 57–59

  Precambrian, artifact theory of, 271–75

  preserved in silica, 101

  of Sanctacaris, 186–88

  of Sarotrocercus, 179–80

  of Sidneyia, 176–78

  of soft–bodied animals, 60–64, 225

  of teeth, 60

  three–dimensionality of, 242

  Walcott’s examination of, 244–45

  of Waptia, 138–39

  of Wiwaxia, 189–93

  of Yohoia, 121–24

  Freud, Sigmund, 44, 81

  Frost, Robert, 291

  Galápagos Islands, 286, 301

  Galileo Galilei, 16, 289

  genes, transferred between species, 38n genetic systems, “aging” of, 230–31

  genius, 100

  geographic range, mass extinctions and, 306

  Geological Survey of Canada, 76, 114, 127, 199

  geology, 44–45

  continental drift in, 279

  time scale in, 53–55

  gill branches, 104

  of Opabinia, 133

  Glaessner, Martin, 311

  Glenn, Libby, 17

  gnathobase, 105

  Goddard, Robert H., 248

  Gombos, A. M., Jr., 307

  Grand Canyon, 260n

  Granger, W., 296–97

  Granton Sandstone (Scotland), 149

  Gray, Asa, 290

  Habelia, 179, 219

  Haeckel, Ernst, 263–67

  Hall, James, 243

  Hallucigenia, 14, 25

  Conway Morris on, 153–57 heads: of Actaeus, 180

  of Alalcomenaeus, 180

  of A nomalocaris, 202

  appendages on, 184

  of Odaraia, 173–74

  of Sanctacaris, 186

  helicoplacoids, 302

  Henry, Joseph, 242

  Higgins, A. K., 225

  Hill, R. T., 248

  historical explanation, 283–84

  historical sciences, 278–79

  natural history as, 280–81

  history, contingency in, 284–85

  holothurians, 156, 195–96

  holotype, 287n

  Homo erectus, 29, 319, 320

  homology, 213, 214, 231

  Homo sapiens, see

  humans Hoover, Herbert, 248, 262

  horses, evolution of, 36

  horseshoe crabs, 43n

  Horsey, Anna, 64, 250

  Hou Xian-guang, 226

  Hrdlicka, Ales, 249

  Hughes, Chris, 83, 121, 138–39

  humans:

  contingency in origin of, 291

  linear theories of evolution of, 28–31

  “march of progress” illustrations of evolution of, 31–35

  origin of, 319–21

  Pikaia as ancestor of, 322–23

  Hunsrückschiefer, 61, 63, 112, 302

  Hurdia, 109

  Hutchinson, G. Evelyn, 18, 77–78, 129

  on Aysheaia, 168–69, 172

  Huxley, Thomas Henry, 16

  Hyatt, Alpheus, 257

  hybridization of plants, 38n Hymenocaris (Canadaspis), 109

  Hyracotherium, 36

  Ichncumonidae, 290

  invertebrates, 38n

  Isua rocks, 57, 58

  Jablonski, D., 306

  jaws, 171

  of Anomalocaris, 236–37

  of polychaetes, 295

  of Wiwaxia, 192, 193

  jellyfish, 26

  Johnson, Larry, 32

  Jordan, David Starr, 252

  Jurassic period, 63–64

  Kauffman, Stu, 232–33

  Kelvin, William Thomson, Baron, 45n, 279

  Khayyám, Omar, 43–44

  King, Clarence, 246–47

  King, Stephen, 285–86

  kingdoms (in taxonomy), 98–99

  Kitchell, J. A., 307, 308

  Knight, Charles R., 23, 298

  illustration of Burgess Shale life by, 25–26, 194

  Kummel, Bernie, 141–42

  laboratory research, myth of, 80

  lace crabs, see Marrella splendens Laertes, 27

  Lagerstätten, 61–63, 112, 149, 322

  Laggania cambria, 196–99, 201

  Leakey, Meave, 101

  Leakey, Richard, 101

  Leanchoilia, 109, 181–84, 220–21, 238, 292

  Lendzion, K., 227

  Limulus polyphemus (horseshoe crab), 43n Linnaeus, Carolus, 98, 142

  Lipalian interval, 269, 273–76

  Littorina littorea, 68

  lophophores, 147–48

  Lovejoy, A. O., 28

  Lower Cambrian period, 225–26

  Mackenzia, 195

  McLaren, Digby, 77

  malacostracans, 109

  Canadaspis as, 162

  mammals, 296

  bird as rivals to, 297

  in Cretaceous mass extinction, 307

  evolution of, 318

  Manton, Sidnie, 162n

  “march of progress” illustrations, 31–35

  Marr, 72

  Marrella splendens, 25, 69, 72, 74–75, 137, 238, 292

  ecology of, 219, 222, 223

  outside of Burgess Shale, 224

  Walcott’s classification of, 107–13

  Whittington’s first monograph on, 81, 82, 113–21

  marsupials, 298

  Marx, Karl, 79

  mass extinctions, 48, 54–55, 234, 305–8

  Cretaceous, 278

  extraterrestrial-impact theory of, 280

  natural selection and, 300n Permian, 229

  Matthew, W. D., 296–97

  Mazon Creek fossils, 61, 63, 65, 136

  Mendel, Gregor, 241

  merostomes, 109

  Merostomoidea, 112, 181–82

  “merostomoids,” 137–38, 176–78, 215n discrediting of, 181–83

  in Walcott’s classification, 268

  Mesozoic era, 54

  Meszoly, Laszlo, 17

  metamerism, 103

  Millikan, R. A., 262

  Milton, John, 127

  Mimetaster, 63, 302n Molaria, 178–79, 219

  mollusks, Wiwaxia and, 193

  molting, 238

  monographs, 97, 100

  monophyly, 38

  Mount Stephen (British Columbia), 68, 71–72

  mouths:

  of Anomalocaris, 203

  of Anomalocaris, Peytoia as, 200–201

  of Aysheaia, 169

  of Branchiocaris, 160

  names for parts of, 159n of Opabinia, 132–133

  multicellular animals:

  evolution of, 311–14

  first appearance of, 55

  Murchison, Sir Roderick Impey, 56, 57

  Museum of Comparative Zoology (Harvard), 213

  Naraoia, 72, 110, 164–67, 208, 226

  Nathorstia (Olenoides serratus), 109

  National Academy of Sciences, 242

  National Museum of Natural History, 75

  National Research Council, 242

  natural history, 280–81

  natural selection, 228, 257, 258, 290

  mass extinctions and, 300n Neanderthal people, 29–31, 319–20

  Nectocaris, 145–47

  nektobenthonic organisms, 219–20

 
Neopilina, 206

  Newell, Norman, 140

  nuclear winter, 308

  Odaraia, 173–76, 238

  ecology of, 221

  origin of name for, 69

  tail of, 213

  Odbody, Clarence, 14

  Odontogriphus, 143, 217

  Conway Morris on, 147–49

  ecology of, 222

  rarity of, 152

  Ogygopsis, 68, 194

  Olenellus, 272

  Olenoides serratus, 109

  Onychophora 103, 168, 188n Aysheaia and, 171–72

  Opabinia regalis, 14, 24, 25, 52, 239

  origin of name for, 69

  reclassification of, 109

  reinterpretation of, 124–36, 144n, 145

  Orwell George, 130

  Osborn Henry Fairfield, 29, 262

  Ottoia prolifica, 96, 222, 225, 294

  oxygen, in decay of fossils, 62

  Palaeontological Association (Great Britain), 124, 126

  paleontology 84

  discoveries in, 280

  doctoral research in, 139–40

  as “stamp collecting,” 281

  Paleozoic era, 54–55

  pandas, 300–301

  Paramecium, 58

  Parker, Sybil P., 293

  Pasteur, Louis, 142

  Peel, J. S., 225

  Peripatus, 168

  Permian mass extinction, 55, 229, 306

  Perspicaris, 161, 221

  Peters, Mike, 32

  Peytoia nathorsti, 196–203

  Pharkidonotus percarinatus, 68

  Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, London, 79–80, 97, 280

  phororhacids 298–99

  phyla, 99–100

  arthropods, 102–6

  “phyllopod bed,” 69

  Pikaia gracilens, 321–23

  Piltdown man, 29

  Pithecanthropus (Homo erectus), 29

  Pius IX (pope), 130n

  plants:

  diatoms, 307–8

  hybridization of, 38n Plenocaris, 122n, 221

  Pollingeria, 212

  Polonius, 27

  polychaetes (Polychaeta), 25, 142, 154

  alternative evolution of, 293

  in Burgess Shale, 163–64, 171

  survival of, 295

  polyphyly 38n

  Pope, Alexander, 28, 44

  Portalia, 212

  Precambrian fauna, 231

  Precambrian period, 55

  Ediacara fauna in, 311–14

  fossils of, 57–59

  in Walcott–s chronology, 269–75

  predators 223–24

  predictability, contingency and, 289–90

  priapulids (Priapulida), 25, 142, 163, 293–94

  near extinction of, 294–96

  primates 265

  progress:

  Darwin on, 257–58, 305

  “march of progress” illustrations of, 31–35

  in science, myths of, 80

  Walcott on, 259–61

  prokaryotic cells, 58, 60, 309, 310

  Protocaris pretiosa, 159

  Pseudonotostraca 112, 121

  punctuated-equilibrium theory, 81n Pupin, Michael, 256, 262

  rami, 104

  randomness, in extinctions, 47n, 306

  Rattus rattus rattus, 68

  Raup, David M., 306

  Raymond Percy, 76–78, 94

  Branchiocaris fossil found by, 159

  Marrella fossils collected by, 108

  on Opabinia, 133

  Walcott disliked by, 111n religion, 261–62

  Rendell, Ruth (Barbara Vine), 285

  Resser, Charles E., 76, 159, 245

  Ripley, S. Dillon, 242

  Robison, Richard, 171, 198, 225

  Rockefeller, John D., 253, 254

  rodents, 265

  Romer, A. S., 111n, 297

  Roosevelt Quentin, 249

  Roosevelt Theodore, 242n, 249

  Rowe, L. S., 252

  Royal Society of London, 79–80, 97, 280

  Rozanov A. Yu., 315

  Rutter, 74

  Sage, Mrs. Russell, 254

  Sanctacaris, 77, 186–88, 208, 224–25, 238, 292

  monograph on, 82

  Sarotrocercus, 179–80, 221

  Schevill Bill, 18, 77

  Schidlowski M., 57–58

  Schopf, T. J. M., 61

  Schuchert Charles, 71, 108, 251

  science.

  biases and objectivity in, 244

  Freud on, 44

  genius in, 100

  “hard” and “soft,” 278–79

  myths of progress in, 80

  natural history as, 280–81

  “popular” writing on, 16

  religion and, 261–62

  spying and, Boas–Walcott letters on, 255–56

  testability in, 282

  scientific method, 277–78, 283

  sclerites of Wiwaxia, 189–91, 225

  Scopes trial, 261

  Seilacher Dolf, 312–14

  Sepkoski Jack, 61

  sexual reproduction, 309–10

  shared derived traits, 177, 214

  shared primitive (symplesiomorphic) traits, 176–77, 214–15

  Sidneyia inexpectans, 25, 85–96, 176–78, 184, 238, 292

  Anomalocaris and, 195

  ecology of, 219

  Signor Phil, 226

  silica fossils preserved in, 101

  Simonetta, A. M., 129

  Simpson, G. G., 299

  single-celled life, 58

  diatoms, 307–8

  Smithsonian Institution, 75

  Boas fired from, 256

  Walcott as head of, 241–42

  Snodgrass 123

  soft-bodied animals, fossils of, 60–64

  at Burgess Shale, 69–70, 72–74, 208

  flattening of, 84

  near site of Burgess Shale, 77

  outside of Burgess Shale, 225

  Solnhofen limestone, 63–64

  Soper, N. J., 225

  South American fauna, 297–99

  Spearman Charles, 279

  species:

  diversity of and disparity in, 49

  genes transferred between, 38n holotypes of, 287n

  increasing number of, 47

  in phyla, 99–100

  spines:

  on Alalcomenaeus, 180, 221–22

  of Hallucigenia, 155, 156

  on Wiwaxia, 189–93

  sponges 38n, 75–76

  Aysheaia and, 169–71

  Burgess Shale fossils of, 74

  sterotypy, 49

  Stevenson, Robert Louis, 98

  Størmer, Leif, 111–13, 116–18, 120–22, 124

  Merostomoidea class of, 181

  Trilobitoidea class of, 168

  stromatolites 58, 309

  Suddes Steven, 17

  Sweden, Upper Cambrian fossils from, 63

  symplesiomorphic (shared primitive) traits, 176–77

  Szep 32

  Taft, William Howard, 245n tagma, 104

  tagmosis, 104, 146, 209n tails:

  of Odaraia, 175, 213

  on Sidneyia, 177–78

  tautology argument, 236

  taxonomy 98–100

  of arthropods, 102–3, 106

  as expression of evolutionary arrangement, 97

  of worms, 142

  teeth 60

  of Anomalocaris, 203

  conodonts and, 148–49

  of Wiwaxia, 192

  Tegopelte gigas, 167, 176, 226

  tentacles:

  in Amiskwia, 151

  in Hallucigenia, 155–57

  in Odontogriphus, 147–48

  Thylacosmilus, 298

  time, geological, 44–45, 53–55

  Tolstoy, Leo, 285

  Tommotian fauna, 59–61, 226, 314, 315

  Tontoia, 109

  Triassic period, 318

  trilobites (Trilobita), 25, 103, 106

  in Burgess Shal
e, 208

  ecology of, 219

  first appearance of, 226

  Marrella as, 108–9, 116–20

  Naraoia and, 165–67

  Olenellus, 272

  origin of, 316

  Walcott’s correspondence on, 251

  Trilobitoidea 112–14, 117

  eliminated as class, 167–68

  Marrella as, 120–21

  Yohoia as, 122, 124

  Trilobitomorpha 112, 117

  “tripod” fish, 156

  Tullimonstrum (Tully Monster), 63, 136

  Tuzoia, 109, 194

  Twain Mark, 45

  uniramians (Uniramia), 25, 103, 106

  uniramous limbs, 105

  Valentine, James W., 231

  ventral side, 105

  Vermes (“worms”), 142

  vertebrates:

  as coelomates, 38n

  Pikaia as ancestor of, 322

  terrestrial, origin of, 317–18

  Vine Barbara (Ruth Rendell), 285

  Vonnegut Kurt, 286

  Walcott, Charles Doolittle, 13–14

  as administrator, 245–51

  on Amiskwia, 150

  analogy and homology not distinguished by, 214n Anomalocaris and, 194–96

  archives of, 243–44

  on Aysheaia, 168

  on bivalved arthropods, 158

  Burgess Shale discovered by, 24, 56, 71–75

  Burgess Shale fossils classified by, 109–13, 137

  Burgess Shale fossils interpreted by, 85

  on Canadia sparsa (Hallucigenia), 154

  cone of diversity in interpretations of Burgess Shale by, 45–47

  conservative personality of, 253–57

  counterparts of fossils not studied by, 93

  death of wife of, 64

  determinism of, 288

  on evolution and natural history, 257–63

  fossils in odd orientations not studied by, 91–92

  fossils named by, 68–69

  Knight’s illustration of life in Burgess Shale based on, 25–26

  landscape photography by, 65

  life of, 240–43

  Marrella classified as Trilobita by, 108–9, 117–18

  on Naraoia, 164

  on Opabinia, 125–29, 133

  on Pikaia, 321

  on Pollingeria, 212

  on Polychaeta, 164

  on Protocaris, 159

  published articles by, 75–76

  reexamination of specimens collected by, 80, 142–57

  shoehorn error of, 244–45, 266–77

  on Sidneyia, 85–87, 176

  on Yohoia, 121, 122n Walcott, Charles Doolittle, Jr., 249

  Walcott Helen, 64–65, 74, 249–50

  Walcott, Helena, 68, 72, 74, 75

  death of, 64, 243, 249

  Raymond disliked by, 111n Walcott, Sidney, 68, 71, 74

  Walcott Stuart, 64, 68, 72, 74, 249

  Walker Alan, 101

  walking legs, 104, 105

  of Marrella, 117

  on Sidneyia, 93, 177

  Waptia, 25, 72, 121, 138, 219

  Weiner Jonathan, 42–43

  whales 300

  Whewell, William, 282