Alfred Russel Wallace
...allace, together with another naturalist, Henry Walter Bates (whom he had
met in Leicester ), left for Brazil to collect specimens in the Amazon Rain...omentous paper he would write three years hence.
Wallace had once briefly
met Darwin, and was one of Darwin's numerous correspondents from around the wor...
Anton van Leeuwenhoek
...ork. Their correspondence was translated by Hooke into Latin and published in the proceedings of the Royal Society .
" No more pleasant sight has
met my eye than this of so many thousands of living creatures in one small drop of water... " - Stated after his discovery of the microscopic world over t...
Carolus Linnaeus
... unknown. The result of this was the Flora Laponica published in 1737 .
Thereafter Linnaeus moved to the continent. While in the Netherlands he
met Jan Frederik Gronovius and showed him a draft of his work on taxonomy, the Systema Naturae . In it, the unwieldy descriptions mostly used at the t...
Charles Darwin
...d become civilised in two years. When revisited after a year, the one they
met preferred savagery to a return to civilisation.
Stepped plains of shingle...mund Grant 's offer to catalogue invertebrates.
An eager Charles Lyell
met Darwin on 29 October 1836 and introduced him to Richard Owen , an up a...
Genetic code
...A, GCG
Leu
L
UUA, UUG, CUU, CUC, CUA,
CUG
Arg
R
CGU, CGC, CGA, CGG, AGA, AGG
Lys
K
AAA, AAG
Asn
N
AAU, AAC
met
M
AUG
Asp
D
GAU, GAC
Phe
F
UUU, UUC
Cys
C
UGU, UGC
Pro
P
CCU, CCC, CCA, CCG
Gln
Q
CAA, CAG
...
Genetic code
...A, GCG
Leu
L
UUA, UUG, CUU, CUC, CUA,
CUG
Arg
R
CGU, CGC, CGA, CGG, AGA, AGG
Lys
K
AAA, AAG
Asn
N
AAU, AAC
met
M
AUG
Asp
D
GAU, GAC
Phe
F
UUU, UUC
Cys
C
UGU, UGC
Pro
P
CCU, CCC, CCA, CCG
Gln
Q
CAA, CAG
...
Hardy-Weinberg principle
...:
no selection
no mutation
no migration ( gene flow )
Causes of deviation
When the Hardy–Weinberg assumptions are not
met this can cause deviations from expectation , but depending which assumption is not met, such deviations may or may not be statistically detectable. ...
James D. Watson
...iversity at Bloomington in 1950 before heading to Copenhagen for postdoctoral work.
In 1952 , he started at Cavendish Laboratory , where he
met Francis Crick . Building on the X-ray diffraction research of Rosalind Franklin and Maurice Wilkins , they together deduced the double helix s...
Max Delbr
...rds theoretical physics , at the University of Gttingen . After receiving his Ph.D., he traveled through England , Denmark , and Switzerland . He
met Wolfgang Pauli and Niels Bohr , who got him interested in biology . Delbrck went back to Berlin in 1932 as an assistant to Lise Meitner .
In 19...
Nutrition
...rates and hydrogenated fats, then it has been shown that our needs are best
met through eating a wide variety of fresh, unprocessed and unmanufactured food...tic model of nutrition points out that for example high energy needs can be
met in various ways, some more healthful than others. Food energy can be obtai...
Operator
...s with a specified type of operand as function domain , it is no more than another way of talking of functions of a given type. The most frequently
met usage is a mapping between vector spaces ; this kind of operator is distinguished by taking one vector and returning another. For example, consider a...
Prion
...roduce. Prusiner's idea — that a protein (which, unlike DNA , has no obvious means of replication) could reproduce itself — was initially
met with skepticism. However, evidence has steadily accumulated in support of this hypothesis, and it is now widely accepted. Rather than contradicting th...
Rudolf Steiner
...namic farming , and schools of art. It was within the Society that Steiner
met his wife Marie von Sievers, with whom he developed a new artform known as E... Eero Saarinen 's Kennedy Airport ( 1962 ).
Within the Society, Steiner
met his wife Marie von Sievers, with whom he developed a new artform (that also...
Sociobiology
...iously incorpororate the bias into their interpretation of the results. Therefore, any research which has serious political implications should be
met with rigorous criticism, and not least by the researchers themselves. In other words, in order to make good science , it would be necessary for the ...