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         Morgan Thomas Hunt:     more books (100)
  1. Sex-Linked Inheritance In Poultry (1912) by Thomas Hunt Morgan, Hubert Dana Goodale, 2010-05-23
  2. Heredity and Sex, Volume 1 by Thomas Hunt Morgan, 2010-02-04
  3. Evolution and Adaptation [1903 ] by Thomas Hunt Morgan, 2009-09-22
  4. The Gastrulation of Amphioxus by Thomas Hunt Morgan, 2010-07-24
  5. The Physical Basis Of Heredity (1919) by Thomas Hunt Morgan, 2010-09-10
  6. Sex-linked inheritance in Drosophila by Thomas Hunt Morgan, Calvin B. 1889-1938 Bridges, 2010-09-04
  7. Regeneration by Thomas Hunt Morgan, 2010-05-17
  8. Experimental Zoology [ 1907 ] by Thomas Hunt Morgan, 2009-08-10
  9. Embryology And Genetics by Thomas Hunt Morgan, 2002-09-15
  10. Heredity and sex by Thomas Hunt Morgan, 2010-08-26
  11. Evolution and Adaptation [ 1908 ] by Thomas Hunt Morgan, 2009-08-10
  12. Evolution And Genetics by Thomas Hunt Morgan, 2008-10-21
  13. Experimental zoology by Thomas Hunt Morgan, 2010-08-16
  14. The Genetic and the Operative Evidence Relating to Secondary Sexual Characters, Issue 285 by Thomas Hunt Morgan, 2010-02-23

21. Morgan, Thomas Hunt, Cientificos, Famosos, Biografia, Bibliografia, Ciencia Y Te
Translate this page morgan, thomas hunt (1866-1945), biólogo y genetista estadounidense que descubriócómo los genes se En 1933 morgan obtuvo el Premio nobel de Fisiología
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Morgan, Thomas Hunt
Biografía de Morgan, Thomas Hunt Morgan, Thomas Hunt (1866-1945), biólogo y genetista estadounidense que descubrió cómo los genes se transmiten a través de los cromosomas, y confirmó así las leyes de la herencia (véase Leyes de Mendel) del botánico austriaco Gregor Mendel y sentó las bases de la genética experimental moderna. Morgan continuó sus experimentos y demostró en su Teoría de los genes (1926) que los genes se encuentran unidos en diferentes grupos de encadenamiento, y que los alelos (pares de genes que afectan al mismo carácter) se intercambian o entrecruzan dentro del mismo grupo. En 1933 Morgan obtuvo el Premio Nobel de Fisiología y Medicina.
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22. Morgan, Thomas Hunt
morgan, thomas hunt, 1866–1945, American zoologist, b. Lexington, Ky., Ph.D. JohnsHopkins, 1890. morgan received the 1933 nobel Prize in Physiology or
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Encyclopedia

Morgan, Thomas Hunt Morgan, Thomas Hunt, Drosophila. He described the phenomena of linkage and crossing over , which he and his students utilized to map the linear arrangement of genes along the chromosome. Morgan received the 1933 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine. His books, classics in the literature of genetics, include The Physical Basis of Heredity Mechanism of Mendelian Heredity (rev. ed. 1923), Evolution and Genetics The Theory of the Gene (rev. ed. 1928), and Embryology and Genetics
Morgan, Lewis Henry
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23. Thomas Hunt Morgan
would know. nobel Prize wining scientist thomas hunt morgan was bornon September 25,1866, in Lexington, Kentucky. He graduated
http://www.kytales.com/tmorgan/tmorgan.html
Moran Flies for the Prize Do all fruit flies look identical? Perhaps some have larger wings, darker color, white or red eyes? True, fruit flies are tiny, but if you ask Thomas Hunt Morgan, he would know. Nobel Prize wining scientist Thomas Hunt Morgan was born on September 25,1866, in Lexington, Kentucky. He graduated from State College ( now the University of Kentucky) and received a doctorate from John Hopkins University in Baltimore. In 1904, as a professor of Experimental Zoology at Columbia University, Dr. Morgan began the research into heredity that would later earn him worldwide acclaim. In 1933, he was awarded the Nobel Prize in medicine, the first one ever given to a non-physician. Fascinated by Gregor Mendel's studies in pea heredity, Morgan wanted to know more about how traits of the parent are passed to their offspring. Since the common fruit fly produces over thirty generations per year it was ideal for Morgan's studies. By crossbreeding, inbreeding,and backbreeding thousands of flies and carefully observing the traits passed from generation to generation, Morgan and his colleagues formed the Chromosome Theory of Heredity. This theory is the basis for a branch of biology called Genetics. Genetics

24. Thomas Hunt Morgan - Wikipedia
thomas hunt morgan.jpg. thomas hunt morgan was born in Lexington, Kentucky, in 1866,and died in 1945. morgan won the nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Hunt_Morgan
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Thomas Hunt Morgan
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Thomas Hunt Morgan was born in Lexington Kentucky , in , and died in . He worked in Natural history Zoology Experimental zoology , and macromutation in Drosophila . Morgan won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in and proved chromosomes to be the carriers of genes
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25. Nobel Prize In Physiology Or Medicine - Wikipedia
Source http//www.nobel.se/medicine/laureates/index.html. Warburg 1932 Sir CharlesScott Sherrington, Edgar Douglas Adrian 1933 thomas hunt morgan 1934 George
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Emil Adolf von Behring Ronald Ross Niels Ryberg Finsen ... Christiaan Eijkman , Sir Frederick Gowland Hopkins Karl Landsteiner Otto Heinrich Warburg Sir Charles Scott Sherrington Edgar Douglas Adrian Thomas Hunt Morgan George Hoyt Whipple ... Hans Spemann Sir Henry Hallett Dale Otto Loewi Albert von Szent-Györgyi Nagyrapolt Corneille Jean François Heymans ... Herbert Spencer Gasser Sir Alexander Fleming Ernst Boris Chain , Sir Howard Walter Florey Hermann Joseph Muller Carl Ferdinand Cori Gerty Theresa , née Radnitz Cori, Bernardo Alberto Houssay Paul Hermann Müller Walter Rudolf Hess Antonio Caetano De Abreu Freire Egas Moniz ... Dickinson W. Richards

26. Morgan, Thomas Hunt. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001. morgan, thomas hunt. morganreceived the 1933 nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.
http://www.bartleby.com/65/mo/Morgan-T.html
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27. Morgan, Thomas Hunt
Category Science Biology Genetics History People morgan, thomas hunthttp//www.nobel.se/medicine/laureates/1933/index.html. 2, thomas hunt morgan.
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Thomas Hunt Morgan
Features details of the Nobel prize awarded in 1933 for his discoveries concerning the role played by the chromosome in heredity. Includes lecture and biography.
Category: Science > Biology > Genetics > History > People > Morgan, Thomas Hunt
http://www.nobel.se/medicine/laureates/1933/index.html
Thomas Hunt Morgan
Features vita, synopsis of work, and references.
Category: Science > Biology > Genetics > History > People > Morgan, Thomas Hunt
http://www.cshl.org/public/History/scientists/morgan.html#vita
Thomas Hunt Morgan at Columbia University
Essay by Eric R. Kandel which explores Hunt's work and achievements, and his relationship with the University. Includes a bibliography.
Category: Science > Biology > Genetics > History > People > Morgan, Thomas Hunt
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/alumni/Magazine/Legacies/Morgan/
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28. Search-Info.Com - Directory Science Biology Genetics History People Morgan, Thom
thomas hunt morgan Features details of the nobel prize awarded in 1933 for hisdiscoveries concerning the role played by the chromosome in heredity.
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Directory The Web Top Science Biology Genetics ... People : Morgan, Thomas Hunt Directory Search Web Site Matches: Thomas Hunt Morgan
Features details of the Nobel prize awarded in 1933 for his discoveries concerning the role played by the chromosome in heredity. Includes lecture and biography.
url: www.nobel.se/medicine/laureates/1933/index.html Thomas Hunt Morgan
Features vita, synopsis of work, and references.
url: www.cshl.org/public/History/scientists/morgan.html.... Thomas Hunt Morgan at Columbia University
Essay by Eric R. Kandel which explores Hunt's work and achievements, and his relationship with the University. Includes a bibliography.
url: www.columbia.edu/cu/alumni/Magazine/Legacies/Morga.... Search Engine Home Link To Us Bonus About Search Info Submit URL ... Advertise Here Help build the largest human-edited directory on the web. Submit a Site Open Directory Project Become an Editor Powered by ODP++
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29. Search-Info.Com - Directory Science Biology Genetics History People
Day 3 McClintock, Barbara 4, Mendel, Gregor 5 morgan, thomas hunt 3 Nirenberg Beadle,Tatum, and Lederberg Provides details of the nobel prize awarded in
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Directory The Web Top Science Biology Genetics ... History : People Description Directory Search Categories: Avery, Oswald Theodore
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Web Site Matches: Arthur Kornberg
Interview with an introduction by Joshua Lederberg. Features his early life and research programs
url: sunsite.berkeley.edu:2020/dynaweb/teiproj/oh/scien.... Beadle, Tatum, and Lederberg
Provides details of the Nobel prize awarded in 1958 for their discovery that genes act by regulating definite chemical events. Includes lectures and biography.
url: www.nobel.se/medicine/laureates/1958/index.html Chargaff's Legacy
Article discusses the four rules on DNA base composition now shown to be fundamental to the understanding of the structure and function of DNA. url: post.queensu.ca/~forsdyke/bioinfo2.htm Colin Munroe MacLeod Full text facsimile of Biographical Memoirs by Walsh McDermott. Requires Adobe Acrobat to view. url: www.profiles.nlm.nih.gov/CC/A/A/P/I/_/ccaapi.pdf Crick, Watson, and Wilson Provides biographies and transcripts of the Nobel lectures given when awarded the prize for their discoveries concerning the molecular structure of nucleic acids. url: www.nobel.se/medicine/laureates/1962/

30. Lefalophodon Thomas Hunt Morgan
thomas hunt morgan (18661945). Along with Bateson, the co-founder of moderngenetics. morgan was awarded the nobel Prize in medicine in 1933.
http://www.nceas.ucsb.edu/~alroy/lefa/Morgan.html
Thomas Hunt Morgan (1866-1945)
Along with Bateson , the co-founder of modern genetics. An experimentalist and originally a mutationist, opposed to natural selection, Lamarckism, orthogenesis, and the chromosomal theory of inheritance. He converted to the latter and to Darwinism after 1910, discovered linkage and recombination with his "fly room" students and colleagues, and was the first to show that variation derives from numerous small mutations. Most of the "fly room" research during its glory years in the 1910s and 20s was focused on using linkage data to map genes onto the chromosomes of Drosophila melanogaster, a completely novel research agenda that replaced the earlier, neo-Mendelian emphasis on creating quasi-chemical genetic formulas. In 1928 Morgan moved his team of drosophilists (including most prominently Sturtevant and Bridges) to Cal Tech. This program soon recruited Dobzhansky , continuing its leadership in the field until Bridges' death, Morgan's retirement, and Dobzhansky's departure in the late 1930's. Foe of Osborn , who had gotten him hired at Columbia; Morgan did flirt with the eugenics movement in the 1910s, but he opposed it during its ascendancy in the 1920s. Friendly with

31. Hunt-Morgan Photograph Collection
The huntmorgan family of central Kentucky produced both Brigadier General Johnhunt morgan and the nobel Prize-winning geneticist thomas hunt morgan.
http://digilib.kyvl.org/dynaweb/kyvldigs/pa96m3/@Generic__BookTextView/152
Hunt-Morgan Photograph Collection
Biographical Sketch
Biographical Sketch
The Hunt-Morgan family of central Kentucky produced both Brigadier General John Hunt Morgan and the Nobel Prize-winning geneticist Thomas Hunt Morgan. Both the Hunt and the Morgan families were heavily involved in agriculture and mercantile businesses along the Allegheny frontier in the early history of the nation, expanding into central Kentucky in the mid-nineteenth century and becoming major producers of hemp, tobacco, and horses. John Wesley Hunt, grandfather of John Hunt Morgan, became one of the wealthiest men in the western part of the country, involved in banking, mercantile interests, manufacturing and agriculture. By 1801 Hunt had become a leading landowner and businessman in Fayette County, Kentucky, founding a hemp factory in 1803 and expanding his business empire to include commissioned merchandising of hemp fiber, salt peter and tobacco in 1810. Hunt’s banking interests included the Bank of the United States, where he served as director of the Lexington branch in 1817 and president of the Farmers and Mechanics Bank of Lexington in 1818. His philanthropic concerns led him to serve on the Board of Trustees of Transylvania University for sixteen years and to aid in the establishment of the Lunatic Asylum in Lexington, Kentucky in 1820, serving as Chairman of the Board of that institution for twenty years. John Wesley Hunt died in 1849, a suspected victim of cholera. The Morgan family was noted for their military service, its members serving with distinction in the Revolution and the War of 1812 and as intrepid frontiersmen, loving the outdoors and living close to the land. John Hunt Morgan excelled as a horseman from a childhood spent on a Bluegrass farm along Tates Creek Pike, Fayette County, Kentucky and served in the First Kentucky Cavalry with his brother Calvin and his uncle Alexander Morgan in the Mexican War. On his return, John Hunt Morgan exhibited the talents of his Hunt relations and engaged in a profitable hemp factory and woolen mill.

32. Morgan (Thomas Hunt) Symposium Collection
morgan (thomas hunt) Symposium Collection. until morgan's death. morganwon the 1933 nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.
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Morgan (Thomas Hunt) Symposium Collection
Biographical Sketch
Biographical Sketch
Morgan's early career was spent in natural history. He got his Ph.D. at Johns Hopkins. In 1891, Morgan began teaching at Bryn Mawr, where he met Jacques Loeb, and stayed until 1904. From morphology, his research interests shifted to experimental embryology (1891-94). Morgan became a devotee of Entwicklungsmechanik, or developmental mechanics. After 1900 he was also critical of Mendelism and the chromosomal theory of heredity. In about 1908, Morgan began working with Drosophila . It was probably Frank Lutz, a geneticist at the Carnegie Institution of Washington's Station for Experimental Evolution at Cold Spring Harbor, who introduced Morgan to the fruitfly Drosophila . He began using what was still basically a wild-type fly in experimental evolutionary studies. Morgan selected for specific phontypic mutants in an effort to determine their selective value. The goal was to determine how heredity influenced evolution. In 1915, Morgan, Bridges, and Sturtevant published The Mechanism of Mendelian Heredity , a defining tome that established Drosophila as a key model system in genetics and set the standard for Mendelian gene mapping efforts. In 1928, Morgan moved his group to Caltech, where they remained until Morgan's death. Morgan won the 1933 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.

33. Thomas Hunt Morgan
Translate this page thomas hunt morgan thomas hunt morgan wurde am 25. Für seine Entdeckungen erhieltmorgan 1933 den nobel Preis für Physiologie und Medizin.
http://home.tiscalinet.ch/biografien/biografien/morgan.htm
Thomas Hunt Morgan (1866-1945)
Nobelpreis der Medizin im Jahre 1933
Der »Vater« der Genforschung lieferte den Beweis, daß die Erbmerkmale in den Chromosomen sitzen. Es gelang ihm, die Träger der geschlechtsgebundenen Erbanlagen, die Gene, an bestimmten Stellen der Chromosomen zu lokalisieren. 1911 veröffentlichte er die erste Chromosomenkarte.
Thomas Hunt Morgan Thomas Hunt Morgan wurde am 25. August 1866 in Lexington (Kentucky) geboren. Er schloss sein Studium ab über die evolutiven Beziehungen von Pycogniden (1890).
1891 ersetzte Morgan Wilson in Bryn Mawr (Wilson arbeitete nun in Columbia) und blieb dort bis 1904. Dort traf er Jacques Loeb.
Von der Morphologie wechselte Morgan - wie viele seiner Zeitgenossen - langsam zu embryologischen Fragestellungen. Er studierte die Regeneration von Regenwürmern und die Entwicklung von Seeigeln. Stark beeinflusst wurde Morgan von seinem Freund Hans Driesch , den er in Neapel an der Zoologischen Station kennengelernt hatte. Morgan wurde ein Bewunderer der Entwicklungsmechanik von Driesch. Zwar lehnte er dessen Gedanken über Vitalismus ab, aber er übernahm seine Betonung der Wichtigkeit von experimentellen Methoden. Morgan interessierte sich für Fragen im Umkreis der Evolution, für ihn waren aber die Erklärungen von

34. Thomas Hunt Morgan
The Swedish stamps above offer insights into the nobel prize winning work doneby the scientists listed below thomas hunt morgan (18661945) was aware of
http://www.cartage.org.lb/en/themes/Arts/scistamp/hered/03.html
Themes Arts Sci-Philately Heredity and the Genetic Code Thomas Hunt Morgan
Used with permission of Maiken Naylor, University at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY, USA,
http://ublib.buffalo.edu/libraries/units/sel/exhibits/stamps
The Swedish stamps above offer insights into the Nobel prize winning work done by the scientists listed below:
Thomas Hunt Morgan
(1866-1945) was aware of Mendel's work, which had just been rediscovered, and performed his own genetic experiments, not with peas, but with fruit flies, which could reproduce rapidly and in great numbers and had only four pairs of chromosomes. He found that Mendel's Law of the independent assortment of characters was true, but that in some cases a linkage existed between characters. The extent of linkage between characters was a measure of their position, or nearness to each other, on the same chromosome. Mapping the genes and their positions in the chromosomes explained the range of Mendelian results. Morgan won the 1933 Nobel prize in physiology or medicine. Francis Crick, James D. Watson, and Maurice Wilkins determined the molecular structure of DNA as a double helix or two intertwined spirals of phosphate and sugar molecules linked by pairs of organic bases. The sequences of the paired organic bases form the genetic code of an organism. The double helix structure is an eye-catching symbol that appears on many stamps, including the Czech Mendel stamp above, and examples from Liechtenstein and Israel below.

35. Morgan, Thomas Hunt
morgan, thomas hunt (18661945). nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine 1933. morganwas born in Lexington, Kentucky, and studied at Johns Hopkins University.
http://www.cartage.org.lb/en/themes/Biographies/MainBiographies/M/MorganT/1.html
Morgan, Thomas Hunt
US geneticist who helped establish that the genes are located on the chromosomes, discovered sex chromosomes, and invented the techniques of genetic mapping. He was the first to work on the fruit fly Drosophila, which has since become a major subject of genetic studies. Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine 1933.
Morgan was born in Lexington, Kentucky, and studied at Johns Hopkins University. He was professor of experimental zoology at Columbia University 1904-28, when he was appointed director of the Laboratory of Biological Sciences at the California Institute of Technology.
Following the rediscovery of Austrian scientist Gregor Mendel's work), Morgan's interest turned from embryology to the mechanisms involved in heredity, and in 1908 he began his research on the genetics of Drosophila. From his findings he postulated that certain characteristics are sex-linked, that the X-chromosome carries several discrete hereditary units (genes), and that the genes are linearly arranged on chromosomes. He also demonstrated that sex-linked characters are not invariably inherited together, from which he developed the concept of crossing-over and the associated idea that the extent of crossing-over is a measure of the spatial separation of genes on chromosomes.
Morgan published a summary of his work in The Mechanism of Mendelian Heredity 1915.

36. [GENETICS]. MORGAN, Thomas Hunt, A Collection Of Eighty-seven (87) Of Morgan's P
morgan, thomas hunt A collection of eightyseven (87) of morgan's morgan (1866-1945),best-known for his discovery of He was awarded the 1933 nobel Prize in
http://www.polybiblio.com/blroot/4255.html
[GENETICS]. MORGAN, Thomas Hunt A collection of eighty-seven (87) of Morgan's papers on evolution, biology and genetics, especially heredity and cytology in relation to sex determination as well as embryology and its relations to heredity. Morgan (1866-1945), best-known for his discovery of the mechanism by which sex is determined at the instant of the egg's fertilization (XX or XY chromosomes), was a celebrated embryologist, zoologist and geneticist. He was awarded the 1933 Nobel Prize in Medicine for establishing the chromosome theory of heredity. All of the offprints are from the libraries of L.C. Dunn, Edmund B. Wilson, Karl Sax and E.M. East. This item is listed on Bibliopoly by ; click here for further details.

37. Thomas Hunt Morgan
thomas hunt morgan (18661945) received the nobel Prize in Medicine or Physiologyin 1933 for his discoveries concerning the role chromosomes play in heredity.
http://planaria.neuro.utah.edu/sanchezsite/Morgan.htm
Thomas Hunt Morgan (1866-1945) received the Nobel Prize in Medicine or Physiology in 1933 for his discoveries concerning the role chromosomes play in heredity.
At the beginning of his career, however, Morgan spent considerable time and effort on the study of embryogenesis and regeneration, and published several important articles and books on these subjects. Of relevance to us is his 1901 book appropriately entitled "Regeneration". The work and ideas presented in this book remain relevant to the modern study of regeneration, and many of the incisive questions postulated in this work remain unanswered to this day.
However, Morgan eventually abandoned the study of regeneration since, in his own words, he felt that "we will never understand the phenomena of development and regeneration" (Berrill, N. J. "The pleasure and practice of biology" Can. J. Zool
Below is an illustration made by Morgan for his book on regeneration showing the variety of ways planarians go about regenerating themselves. The original caption reads: "Fig. 4.-

38. Morgan, Thomas Hunt
morgan, thomas hunt. 18661945, American along the chromosome. morgan receivedthe 1933 nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine. His books, classics
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    Morgan, Thomas Hunt 1866-1945, American zoologist, b. Lexington, Ky., Ph.D. Johns Hopkins, 1890. He was professor of experimental zoology at Columbia (1904-28) and from 1928 was director of the laboratory of biological sciences at the California Institute of Technology. He is noted for his ingenious demonstration of the physical basis of heredity and the importance of the gene, using in his research the fruit fly, Drosophila. He described the phenomena of linkage and crossing over , which he and his students utilized to map the linear arrangement of genes along the chromosome. Morgan received the 1933 Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine. His books, classics in the literature of genetics, include The Physical Basis of Heredity Mechanism of Mendelian Heredity (rev. ed. 1923), Evolution and Genetics The Theory of the Gene (rev. ed. 1928), and Embryology and Genetics
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  • 39. 1910 - Thomas Hunt Morgan
    thomas hunt morgan ©Copyright California Institute of Technology All morgan himselfexplored aspects of these developments in He received the nobel Prize in
    http://www.laskerfoundation.org/news/gnn/timeline/1910.html
    Thomas Hunt Morgan (1866-1945) establishes the chromosomal theory of heredity. Thomas Hunt Morgan, an embryologist who had turned to research in heredity, in 1907 began to extensively breed the common fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster. He hoped to discover large-scale mutations that would represent the emergence of new species. As it turned out, Morgan confirmed Mendelian laws of inheritance and the hypothesis that genes are located on chromosomes. He thereby inaugurated classical experimental genetics.
    After breeding millions of Drosophila in his laboratory at Columbia University, in 1910 Morgan noticed one fruit fly with a distinctive characteristic: white eyes instead of red. He isolated this specimen and mated it to an ordinary red-eyed fly. Although the first generation of 1,237 offspring was all red-eyed but for three, white-eyed flies appeared in larger numbers in the second generation. Surprisingly, all white-eyed flies were male.
    Thomas Hunt Morgan
    These results were suggestive for hypotheses of which Morgan himself was skeptical. He was at the time critical of the Mendelian theory of inheritance, mistrusted aspects of chromosomal theory, and did not believe that Darwin's concept of natural selection could account for the emergence of new species. But Morgan's discoveries with white- and red-eyed flies led him to reconsider each of these hypotheses.

    40. More Information On Thomas Hunt Morgan
    thomas hunt morgan nobel prize for medicine, 1933; pioneer in genetics. Americanof Welsh descent. Posted by Mizoguchi. Add your comment or a link
    http://www.famouswelsh.com/cgibin/getmoreinf.cgi?pers_id=808

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