• Thumbnail for Thomas Hunt Morgan
    Thomas Hunt Morgan (September 25, 1866 – December 4, 1945) was an American evolutionary biologist, geneticist, embryologist, and science author who won...
    37 KB (4,300 words) - 09:40, 26 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for John Hunt Morgan
    Calvin and Henrietta (Hunt) Morgan. He was an uncle of geneticist Thomas Hunt Morgan and a maternal grandson of John Wesley Hunt, an early founder of Lexington...
    32 KB (3,903 words) - 13:10, 1 May 2024
  • The Thomas Hunt Morgan Medal is awarded by the Genetics Society of America (GSA) for lifetime contributions to the field of genetics. The medal is named...
    8 KB (763 words) - 18:28, 29 October 2023
  • Thumbnail for Hunt–Morgan House
    notable people who resided at Hopemont include John Wesley Hunt's great-grandson, Thomas Hunt Morgan. Born in the house in 1866, he became the first Kentuckian...
    4 KB (299 words) - 20:31, 20 December 2023
  • Thumbnail for Mendelian inheritance
    integrated with the Boveri–Sutton chromosome theory of inheritance by Thomas Hunt Morgan in 1915, they became the core of classical genetics. Ronald Fisher...
    38 KB (4,037 words) - 03:26, 13 April 2024
  • geneticist Thomas Hunt Morgan. Morgan produced 22 books on embryology, genetics and evolution. Books are in order by date. Three of Morgan's co-authors...
    4 KB (395 words) - 14:08, 20 June 2023
  • Thumbnail for White (mutation)
    found in the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster. In 1910 Thomas Hunt Morgan and Lilian Vaughan Morgan collected a single male white-eyed mutant from a population...
    6 KB (678 words) - 02:56, 24 September 2021
  • Thumbnail for Chromosomal crossover
    over was described, in theory, by Thomas Hunt Morgan; the term crossover was coined by Morgan and Eleth Cattell. Hunt relied on the discovery of Frans...
    32 KB (3,708 words) - 13:34, 2 March 2024
  • Thumbnail for Drosophila melanogaster
    January 1910, Thomas Hunt Morgan first discovered the white gene and denoted it as w. The discovery of the white-eye mutation by Morgan brought about...
    143 KB (16,558 words) - 06:12, 28 April 2024
  • obscured by the attention given her husband, Nobel laureate Thomas Hunt Morgan. Lilian Morgan published sixteen single-author papers between 1894 and 1947...
    11 KB (1,396 words) - 19:01, 28 September 2023