The young Charles Darwin was like a young Indiana Jones. For five years
in his mid-twenties, he sailed on the BEAGLE around the world, exploring
jungles, climbing mountains, trekking across deserts. With every new
landfall, he had new adventures: he rode through bandit country, was
thrown into jail by revolutionaries, took part in an armed raid with
marines, survived two earthquakes, hunted and fished. He suffered the
terrible cold and rain of Tierra del Fuego, the merciless heat of the
Australian outback and the inner pangs of heartbreak. He also made the
discoveries that finally led him to formulate his theory of Natural
Selection as the driving force of evolution. The five-year voyage of the
BEAGLE was the basis for all Darwin's later work; but it also turned him
from a friendly idler into the greatest scientist of his century.