Thomas Hunt Morgan, 1945
Morgan, 1945. Morgan has graduated to using the binocular microscope.
thomas hunt morgan, binocular microscope, 1945, gallery 10
- ID: 16273
- Source: DNALC.DNAFTB
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16271. Gallery 10: Thomas Hunt Morgan at the microscope
Morgan at microscope.
16270. Gallery 10: Thomas Hunt Morgan at Columbia, 1920
Morgan at his desk at Columbia, 1920.
16266. Gallery 10: Thomas Hunt Morgan portrait, 1920
Photo of Thomas Hunt Morgan, signed and dated May 30, 1920.
16277. Biography 10: Thomas Hunt Morgan (1866-1945)
Thomas Hunt Morgan was one of the first true geneticists.
16268. Gallery 10: Thomas Hunt Morgan at Columbia (2), 1917
Thomas Hunt Morgan in the Fly Room at Columbia (2), 1917.
16267. Gallery 10: Thomas Hunt Morgan at Columbia, 1917
Thomas Hunt Morgan in the Fly Room at Columbia, 1917.
16265. Gallery 10: Thomas Hunt Morgan family portrait, ca 1874
Family portrait of the Morgans. Thomas Hunt Morgan is standing next to his father on the right (around 1874).
16212. Gallery 6: Hugo de Vries and Thomas Hunt Morgan
A meeting between Hugo de Vries and Thomas Hunt Morgan.
16298. Biography 11: Calvin Blackman Bridges (1889-1938)
Calvin Bridges was a student of Thomas Hunt Morgan. Bridges advanced the theory of chromosomal non-disjunction, and did a lot of work on chromosomal banding patterns.
16146. Gallery 1: Thomas Hunt Morgan and daughters, 1920
Thomas Hunt Morgan (1933 winner of the Nobel Prize for Medicine for his work on the chromosomal theory of inheritance), with his daughters, Isabel (left) and Lilian (right), 1920.