Zoology
Branch of biology concerned with members of the animal
kingdom and with animal life in general.
The science originated in the works of Hippocrates,
Aristotle, and Pliny. The contributions of individuals such as William Harvey
(the circulation of blood), Carolus Linnaeus (system of nomenclature),
Georges-Louis de Buffon (natural history), Georges Cuvier (comparative
anatomy), and Claude Bernard (homeostasis) greatly advanced the field. The 1859
publication of Charles Darwin's On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural
Selection was a major turning point. Since that time, the study of genetics has
become essential in zoological studies.
Source: Britanica encyclopidia