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Barbara McClintock and the Discovery of Jumping Genes ... - Nature

Article History. Close. Share | Cancel. Revoke | Cancel. Keywords. Keywords for ... Applications in Biotechnology (4); Discovery of Genetic Material (4); DNA ...

Barbara McClintock's 1961 conversation with two bacterial geneticists

Barbara McClintock (1902–1992), the renowned American maize geneticist, received the 1983 Nobel Prize “for her discovery of mobile genetic ...

American Philosophical Society - Instagram

Geneticist Barbara McClintock was born #OnthisDay in 1902. She is one of the ... #FellowsFriday: Applications are open for the APS's @mellonfoundation ...

Remarkable Women in Science | Barbara McClintock - HeadStuff

... applications. Women have also had to work at least twice as hard to prove themselves, get access to the same facilities, and get recognised ...

About - McClintock STEM Elementary

Established in August 2015, our institution is proud to carry the name of a remarkable ... Barbara McClintock's legacy is commemorated here at McClintock STEM ...

Barbara McClintock's Final Years as Nobelist and Mentor: A Memoir

... prominent plant scientists—and, of course, Barbara herself—to ... For all open access content, the Creative Commons licensing terms apply.

Barbara McClintock – Facts - NobelPrize.org

Barbara McClintock. The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1983. Born: 16 June 1902, Hartford, CT, USA. Died: 2 September 1992, Huntington, NY, USA.

Distinguished Fellow of the Botanical Society of America

This groundbreaking collaboration is a hallmark of his recent work and opens new doors for the application of botanical knowledge to the public sphere.

10 famous female scientists who wrote history - INTEGRA Biosciences

Applications Open submenu; About Us Open submenu; Support Open ... Barbara McClintock. Barbara McClintock was a woman ahead of her time ...

Maxine Singer, renowned biologist and advocate for STEM inclusion ...

Maxine Singer ... During her tenure as Carnegie Science president, she created several educational and outreach programs in the nation's capital.

Wessler receives McClintock Prize for her study of transposable ...

Open Records · Division of Marketing & Communications · UGA Today ... Barbara McClintock (1902-1992), one of the world's most distinguished ...

Barbara McClintock was an incandescent genius. Why was her work ...

The geneticist relied a lot on a very vivid imagination, supplemented with intensely hard work, and might have been autistic.

Happy Birthday, Barbara McClintock - WIRED

Open Navigation Menu. WIRED. Happy Birthday, Barbara McClintock. Sign ... remarkable scientist. Dr. McClintock won the Nobel Prize in 1983 ...

Barbara McClintock - Assassin's Creed Wiki - Fandom

Barbara McClintock (16 June 1902 – 2 September 1992) was an American scientist, as well as one of the world's most distinguished cytogeneticists.

The Nobel Prize | Women who changed science | Barbara McClintock

GCC Distinguished Cancer Scholar, Professor and Director, Cancer ... Each day our companies are churning out software and apps for all, but all ...

Barbara McClintock | Smithsonian American Women's History Museum

Barbara Mcclintock's experimental corn gardens yielded crucial clues about the plant's genetic material. In 1929, she became the first person to identify all ...

Values in Doing and Writing Science: The Case of Barbara McClintock

are truly remarkable" (McClintock, "Significance" 801).] Keller uses McClintock's experiences to support her argument that science should acknowledge itself ...

ITHACA, NEW YORK - Maize Genetics Cooperation Newsletter

... Barbara McClintock (see MNL 71, p. iv; Kass and Provine 1999a; Kass 1999a) ... McCall, his former supervisor at the USDA, regarding the prospect of an opening for ...

Barbara McClintock - National Academy of Sciences

BARBARA McCLINTOCK'S remarkable life spanned the his- tory of genetics in ... open to women. Finally, in 1936 Lewis Stadler was able to convince the.

Telomeres: The beginnings and ends of eukaryotic chromosomes

They were discovered in the late 1930's first in flies by Herman Muller and then in corn by Barbara McClintock (reviewed in [1]). These investigators ...