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  2. So much stuff, so little space | For staff

    https://www.staff.admin.cam.ac.uk/features/so-much-stuff-so-little-space
    Thumbnail for So much stuff, so little space | For staff 1 Feb 2013: And although they failed to find the iconic double helix model used by James Watson and Francis Crick (see box), Wilson and Jardine discovered something less tangible but perhaps more important. ... There are all sorts of horror stories of things being
  3. HPS: Part IB exam papers 2010

    https://www.hps.cam.ac.uk/files/past-ib-2010.pdf
    24 Jul 2023: twentieth‐century physics? 11. Why did James Watson and Francis Crick hope to solve the problems of . biology using the “sharp, non‐emotional thinking” of physics and chemistry? (Watson). ... and three questions chosen fro
  4. petermr's blog | A Scientist and the Web | Page 8

    https://blogs.ch.cam.ac.uk/pmr/page/8/
    17 Jan 2022: Must be brief – airport. Search for OpenCon2014 for reports and tweets and pictures. ... Here’s an example () :. In 1953, the following sentence appeared near the end of a neat little paper by James Watson and Francis Crick proposing the double
  5. https://www2.mrc-lmb.cam.ac.uk/wp-json/wp/v2/posts/15484

    https://www2.mrc-lmb.cam.ac.uk/wp-json/wp/v2/posts/15484
    This was the LMBu2019s second Nobel for 1962, Francis Crick and James Watson had already been awarded the Physiology and Medicine Prize for their work on the structure of DNA. ... n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":". On day 278 of #LMB365 we
  6. Cambridge Evolutionary Genetics Symposium | Department of Zoology

    https://www.zoo.cam.ac.uk/news/cambridge-evolutionary-genetics-symposium
    26 Jun 2024: thousand. Evolution is slow, and this mismatch underlies many of our health problems.”. ... Cambridge academics Sir Ronald Fisher and JBS Haldane, together with Sewall Wright, produced ground-breaking work in population genetics in the early 1900s, and
  7. https://www2.mrc-lmb.cam.ac.uk/wp-json/wp/v2/posts/35191

    https://www2.mrc-lmb.cam.ac.uk/wp-json/wp/v2/posts/35191
    of DNA by James Watson and Francis Crick. ... Venki shares how the team solved this puzzle by combining data from various sources, including X-Ray diffraction data produced by Rosalind Franklin, and building physical models to visualise the possible
  8. Biographies – Newnham College

    https://newn.cam.ac.uk/about/history/biographies/
    7 Jun 2024: Her colleague Wilkins showed the photo (without Rosalind’s knowledge) to James Watson from Cambridge: this enabled Watson and his colleague Crick to take the speculative leap to the famous double ... Her portrait, painted in his typical Sargent style
  9. The DNA Age | Darwin

    https://darwin200.christs.cam.ac.uk/dna-age
    Rosalind Franklin had taken X-ray images of DNA molecules which were seen by two Cambridge scientists, James Watson and Francis Crick, allowing them to realise that DNA consisted of two ... Within two decades of Watson and Crick’s discovery, methods
  10. DNA unravelled | Lines of thought

    https://exhibitions.lib.cam.ac.uk/linesofthought/artifacts/watson-crick/
    DNA unravelled. James Watson (left) and Francis Crick with their famous ‘double helix’ model of the structure of DNA. ... Reproduced by permission of the Master and Fellows.
  11. Structural Mechanics in Molecular Biology

    www-g.eng.cam.ac.uk/125/now/dna2.html
    Crick and James Watson in 1953: the base-pairs whose sequence spells out the genetic code are arranged like the treads of a staircase, held between the two spiral "backbones". ... changes seen on the next page (a shortening, a thickening and a tilting of

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