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Recent Progress in the Study of Variation, Heredity, and Evolution

Part of the Cambridge Library Collection - Darwin, Evolution and Genetics series
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In the nineteenth century and beyond, scientists at Cambridge produced some of the most significant developments in the study of biological variation and inheritance.

The work of William Bateson (several of whose books are also reissued in this series) was especially important in this regard.

This book, first published in 1906 by the botanist Robert Heath Lock (1879–1915), lucidly traces these and other milestones in modern biological understanding.

A readable account is given of the evolution of the discipline since the publication of Darwin's On the Origins of Species in 1859, taking in the biometrical contributions of Francis Galton and the research into mutation conducted by Hugo de Vries.

The pioneering experiments of Gregor Mendel, and the more recent rediscovery of his laws of inheritance, are clearly contextualised so that non-specialist readers can appreciate the scientific progress that had been made in the half-century prior to the book's first publication.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1108059627 / 9781108059626
Paperback / softback
576
06/06/2013
United Kingdom
336 pages, 9 Plates, black and white; 47 Line drawings, unspecified
140 x 216 mm, 430 grams