[tears................]

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (Reuters) - Ernst Mayr, a Harvard University
evolutionary biologist called "the Darwin of the 20th century," has
died, the school said Friday. He was 100.

A member of the Harvard faculty for more than half a century, Mayr was
considered the world's most eminent evolutionary biologist. He almost
single-handedly made the origin of species diversity the central
question of evolutionary biology that it is today, Harvard said.

In an interview with The Boston Globe before his 100th birthday last
year, Mayr said he always had "tremendous curiosity" and balked at
suggestions he stop working.

"People say to me, Why don't you retire?' I say, 'My God, why should I
retire? I enjoy what I'm doing,"' he told the Globe.

Through his travels in New Guinea and the Solomon Islands, Mayr showed
what Darwin had never quite established: that new species arise from
isolated populations.

Mayr's death came amid renewed debate in the United States over the
teaching of evolution...

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