Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Principles of Biology is a college level biology electronic textbook published by Nature Publishing in 2011. The book is not a digitally reformatted version of a paper book. [1] The book, the first in a projected series, is Nature Publishing's first foray into textbook publishing. [2] [3]
One of the school's fields. The School of Environmental and Biological Sciences (SEBS) is a constituent school of Rutgers University's New Brunswick-Piscataway campus. . Formerly known as Cook College [1] —which was named for George Hammell Cook, a professor at Rutgers in the 19th Century—it was founded as the Rutgers Scientific School and later College of Agriculture after Rutgers was ...
In 1985 Rutgers made him a University Professor, the highest honour it can give a faculty member. He wrote The Search for Society (1989) his "equal time response" to the interpretive anthropology of Clifford Geertz , and The Violent Imagination (1989), a book of essays, verse, satire, drama, and dialogue.
Shiny new hardcovers can run you about $30, but you don't need to spend that to be well-read. Here are five tips to get digital books for free.
Ebright received a Bachelor of Arts degree, summa cum laude, in biology from Harvard University in 1981 and a Doctor of Philosophy degree in microbiology and molecular genetics from Harvard University in 1987. [1] [2] He was a junior fellow of the Harvard Society of Fellows from 1984 to 1987. [2]
Helen Miriam Berman is a Board of Governors Professor of Chemistry and Chemical Biology at Rutgers University and a former director of the RCSB Protein Data Bank (one of the member organizations of the Worldwide Protein Data Bank). A structural biologist, her work includes structural analysis of protein-nucleic acid complexes, and the role of ...
Mendelian inheritance (also known as Mendelism) is a type of biological inheritance following the principles originally proposed by Gregor Mendel in 1865 and 1866, re-discovered in 1900 by Hugo de Vries and Carl Correns, and later popularized by William Bateson. [1] These principles were initially controversial.
Her husband, David Ehrenfeld, was a professor of biology at Rutgers University. In 2010, she was diagnosed with leukemia. She was an examiner for Swarthmore College. [12] She was a member of the Jewish community, and dedicated her weekends to music and the choir. [11] Ehrenfeld died on June 25, 2011. [13]