A. H. Sturtevant Biography

This Biography consists of approximately 6 pages of information about the life of A. H. Sturtevant.

A. H. Sturtevant Biography

This Biography consists of approximately 6 pages of information about the life of A. H. Sturtevant.
This section contains 1,703 words
(approx. 6 pages at 300 words per page)
Buy the A. H. Sturtevant Biography

Encyclopedia of World Biography on A. H. Sturtevant

Alfred Henry Sturtevant (1891-1970) was a geneticist and National Medal of Science winner whose principles of gene mapping greatly affected the field of genetics.

A. H. Sturtevant, an influential geneticist and winner of the National Medal of Science in 1968, is best known for his demonstrations of the principles of gene mapping. This discovery had a profound effect on the field of genetics and led to projects to map both animal and human chromosomes. He is the unacknowledged father of the Human Genome Project, which is attempting to map all of man's 100,000 chromosomes by the year 2000. Sturtevant's later work in the field of genetics led to discovery of the first reparable gene defect as well as the position effect, which showed that the effect of a gene is dependent on its position relative to other genes. He was a member of Columbia University's "Drosophila Group," whose studies of the...

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This section contains 1,703 words
(approx. 6 pages at 300 words per page)
Buy the A. H. Sturtevant Biography
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