Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Eduard Adolf Strasburger (1 February 1844 – 18 May 1912) was a Polish-German [1] professor and one of the most famous botanists of the 19th century. He discovered mitosis in plants. Life
36 (1): 9–15. PMID 1627480. Hamoir, Gabriel (October 1986). "[Edouard Van Beneden, biologist and stoic]". Revue médicale de Liège. 41 (20): 779–85. PMID 3541105. Hamoir, Gabriel. "La révolution évolutionniste en Belgique: du fixiste Pierre-Joseph Van Beneden à son fils darwiniste Édouard", Presses Universitaires de Liège, 2001.
Symplastic transport was first realized by Eduard Tangl in 1879, who also discovered plasmodesmata, [2] a term coined by Eduard Strasburger, 1901. [3] [4] In 1880, Hanstein coined the term symplast. [5] The contrasting terms apoplast and symplast were used together in 1930 by Münch. [6] [7]
The AOL.com video experience serves up the best video content from AOL and around the web, curating informative and entertaining snackable videos.
Eduard Strasburger, Walther Flemming, Heinrich von Waldeyer and the Belgian Edouard Van Beneden laid the basis for the cytology and cytogenetics of the 20th century. Strasburger, the outstanding botanical physiologist of that century, coined the terms nucleoplasm and cytoplasm. He said "new cell nuclei can only arise from the division of other ...
The name gamete was introduced by the German cytologist Eduard Strasburger in 1878. [3] Gametes of both mating individuals can be the same size and shape, a condition known as isogamy. By contrast, in the majority of species, the gametes are of different sizes, a condition known as anisogamy or heterogamy that applies to humans and other ...
[1] 1880–1890: Walther Flemming, Eduard Strasburger, and Edouard Van Beneden elucidate chromosome distribution during cell division. 1889: Richard Altmann purified protein free DNA. However, the nucleic acid was not as pure as he had assumed. It was determined later to contain a large amount of protein.
A full synthesis of ancient Greek pharmacology was compiled in De Materia Medica c. 60 AD by Pedanius Dioscorides (c. 40-90 AD) who was a Greek physician with the Roman army. This work proved to be the definitive text on medicinal herbs, both oriental and occidental, for fifteen hundred years until the dawn of the European Renaissance being ...