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  2. DNA at the Botanic Garden | University of Cambridge

    https://www.cam.ac.uk/news/dna-at-the-botanic-garden
    25 Apr 2005: Watson and Crick's famous discovery of the structure of DNA in 1953. ... Group visits are welcome and must be pre-booked by calling 01223 336265.
  3. Location and Venue | Geotechnical and Environmental Research Group

    https://www-geo.eng.cam.ac.uk/events/yges2024/location-and-venue
    27 Jun 2024: the Old Cavendish Laboratory, where Crick and Watson discovered DNA; the Parker Library at Corpus Christi College, containing the Canterbury Gospels and the Bury Bible; King’s College and St ... For information on things to do and see in Cambridge, go
  4. Cambridge | IS-Cambridge

    https://www.is-cambridge2020.eng.cam.ac.uk/venue
    27 Jun 2024: with numerous scientific manuscripts including Newton’s Principia), the Old Cavendish Laboratory where Crick and Watson discovered DNA, the Parker Library at Corpus Christi College, containing the Canterbury Gospels and the ... And no visit to
  5. Self-assembly and nanotechnology | The Reinhardt group

    https://www.ch.cam.ac.uk/group/reinhardt/research/self-assembly-and-nanotechnology
    27 Jun 2024: We develop simple models to try to understand complex self-assembly. In particular, DNA offers a very exciting possibility in nanotechnology: because of the specificity of its (WatsonCrick) pairings, bonding ... DOI:Lattice models and Monte Carlo
  6. Review of the year 2003 | University of Cambridge

    https://www.cam.ac.uk/news/review-of-the-year-2003
    23 Dec 2003: Scientists from across the world came to Cambridge to celebrate the 50th anniversary of Crick and Watson's discovery of the structure of DNA. ... Engineering students were offered a new course in 'Biological and medical engineering' this term.
  7. History | University of Cambridge

    https://www.cam.ac.uk/about-the-university/history
    9 Jan 2013: 1953. Francis Crick and James Watson discover the structure of DNA, unlocking the secret of how coded information is contained in living cells and passed from one generation to the next - ... establishments. Crick and Watson share the Nobel Prize for
  8. Lise Boursinhac | Hollfelder Group

    https://hollfelder.bioc.cam.ac.uk/lise-boursinhac
    27 Jun 2024: My second internship involved cloning and expression of antibodies fragment (scFv) from a phage display library. ... Cas9 is an RNA-guided endonuclease. It binds specifically to a DNA sequence through interactions with a PAM motif located on the DNA
  9. Video & Audio: "Cambridge…

    https://sms.cam.ac.uk/collection/1081044
    Created: Wed 6 May 2009. 8,905 views. Less than 60 years after Cambridge scientists Watson and Crick first discovered the 3D structure of DNA, Professor Shankar Balasubramanian and his team ... In this Cambridge podcast Catherine Carr looks at how
  10. Lines of Thought: From Darwin to DNA

    Duration: 00:04:34
    Published Date: 2016/07/28
    The idea that characteristics could be passed from one generation to another was crucial to Charles Darwin’s theory of how new forms of life develop. In the 1950s the structure of DNA, the compound that encodes genetic information, was finally deciphered by Francis Crick, James Watson, Rosalind Franklin and Maurice Wilkins, all of whom were working in or trained in Cambridge. Cambridge
  11. LMB 365 - Day 278 - MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology

    https://www2.mrc-lmb.cam.ac.uk/lmb-365-day-278/
    Thumbnail for LMB 365 - Day 278 - MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology 5 Oct 2019: This was the LMB’s 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. ... Francis Crick Avenue, Cambridge Biomedical Campus, Cambridge CB2 0QH, UK.

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