The story of the monk who experimented with peas in his monastery has all the highs and lows of great fiction. Mendel was a man of nervous constitution (whenever he had to visit the sick and dying he was so overcome physically that he had to take to bed) who was determined to work out how traits are inherited. He spent seven years in the monastery garden experimenting on over 300,000 strains of plants. Determined to discover how species change, adapt and arise anew but essentially remain the same from generation to generation, he worked out that traits are inherited independently, that they come in pairs, one from each parent. Mendel presented a paper outlining his findings in 1865, just 6 years after Darwin's The Origins of Species came out. While Darwin's work provoked agitated debate, Mendel continued to labour away in silence in his garden and his work was completely ignored. Mendel sent his paper to fellow scientist Carl von Nageli who told Mendel that his work was incomplete and unconvincing. He encouraged Mendel to create hybrids from hawkweed which Naegeli knew was incredibly difficult to achieve as he had himself spent years working on them. Was he furious that a younger man had struck on something far more original than he could ever produce? Did he deliberately divert the monk After Mendel's death all his papers were burnt in a bonfire in the monastery. Was this routine housekeeping or the result of a fit of jealousy by a monk who succeeded him as abbot? Finally, in 1900, 35 years after it first appeared, Mendel's paper was found by the Cambridge scientist William Bateson. It became immediately apparent that Mendel was onto something extremely significant. Had Darwin known about his work many of the debates about the details of natural selection might have been resolved. This is a captivating book about a remarkable and neglected man who played an enormous role in our understanding of the mechanisms of life itself.
However, Morgan became curious about the process of mutation, and he looked around for a good species to study, just as Mendel had found the garden pea. He settled finally on the Drosophila, a small fruit fly that breeds with great ...
A biography of the Nobel Prize-winning scientist explains her work in genetics and traces her long unheralded career as a research scientist
John Harry Williams: July 7, 1908-April 18, 1966
Danks carried out much of his initial research work at the Children's Hospital in the Gastroenterological Research Unit led by Dr Charlotte Anderson until 1968 when she was appointed Professor of Paediatrics and Child Health at ...
A Guide to the Genetics Collections of the American Philosophical Society
Learn about this pioneering scientist in the field of genetics.
This book profiles the life of Gregor Johann Mendel who is responsible for originating the science of genetics.