The
Challenger expedition was deemed a great success, and on his return Thomson received a number of academic honours, as well as a
knighthood. In 1877 he published in two volumes
The Voyage of the ChallengerThe Atlantic, a preliminary account of the results of the voyage. He spent the next two years working on administrative duties connected with the publication of the full
monograph of the voyage. Thomson had a highly strung mentality, and his health was generally poor throughout his life. He found dealing with publishers in the course of completing the full reports of the voyage to be enormously stressful. In 1879 he ceased to perform his university duties, gave up overseeing the reports of the expedition in 1881 (after publishing the introduction to the zoological series in 1880), then took to his bed and died a broken man at Bonsyde on 10 March 1882. Thomson's friend and colleague
Sir John Murray took over the publication of the reports; they eventually spanned 50 volumes, the last of which was issued in 1895. Thomson is commemorated in the stained glass window above the altar in
St. Michael's Parish Church, Linlithgow and his headstone is in the churchyard. In addition the
Wyville Thomson Ridge in the
North Atlantic Ocean is named after him. ==Evolution==