Charles Darwin's evolution notes released by Cambridge University Published duration 24 November 2014

image copyright Cambridge University image caption Charles Darwin's On the Origin of Species was published in 1859

Charles Darwin's notebooks in which he first jotted down his theory of evolution have been put online in one of the most significant worldwide releases of the naturalist's material.

They chart Darwin's journey from him first coining the term "natural selection" to the release of On the Origin of Species 155 years ago.

It is hoped the material will aid academic research throughout the world.

Cambridge University Library holds almost the entire collection of Darwin's working scientific papers.

Letters showing the Christ's College graduate's emotional side were released last year. The latest releases are said to be the most important for understanding the development of Darwin's evolutionary theory.

They include documents such as the "Transmutation" and "Metaphysical" notebooks of the 1830s, and the 1842 "Pencil Sketch" which sees Darwin's first use of the term "natural selection".

image copyright Cambridge University image caption The birth of "natural selection" as a scientific term - a heading in Darwin's 1842 Pencil Sketch

Charles Darwin 1809-1882

Born in Shrewsbury on 12 February 1809

A statue of him stands outside Shrewsbury library - a building that was once his school.

Famed for his theory of evolution by natural selection

On the Origin of Species explained how new species evolved. Darwin argued that tiny variations between individuals could give one or the other a competitive advantage. He said generation after generation those tiny advantages were then passed down, or selected, until the species eventually changed

Travelled extensively, most famously as the naturalist on the Beagle on an expedition to South America and the Galapagos Islands

After voyage he approached Joseph Hooker to work on classifying his collection of plants

Married Emma Wedgwood in 1839 after comparing two lists he had written, one entitled Marry, the other entitled Not Marry

The couple had 10 children, three of whom died in infancy

Professor David Kohn, director of the Darwin Manuscripts Project, which collaborated with the university, said: "These documents truly constitute the surviving seedbed of 'the Origin'.

"In them, Darwin hammered out natural selection and the structure of concepts he used to support natural selection. It was here also that he developed his evolutionary narrative and where he experimented privately with arguments and strategies of presentation that he either rejected or that eventually saw the light of day with the Origin's publication."