Published by The Biological Laboratory, 1951
Seller: Redux Books, Grand Rapids, MI, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. Hardcover. No DJ. Pages clean and unmarked. Covers show minor shelf wear. Binding tight, hinges strong.; 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed! Ships same or next business day!
Published by The Biological Laboratory, 1952
Language: English
Seller: GuthrieBooks, Spring Branch, TX, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condition: Good. Hardcover. Good, no dust jacket. Name stamped inside else Interior clean and unmarked. Tight binding.
Published by The Biological Laboratory, 1952
Seller: Midtown Scholar Bookstore, Harrisburg, PA, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condition: Good. volume 16 No dust jacket. Good hardcover with some shelfwear; may have previous owner's name inside. Standard-sized.
Published by The Biological Laboratory; Cold Spring Harbor, L.I., New York; 1951, 1951
Language: English
Condition: Very Good. Prompt Shipment, shipped in Boxes, Tracking PROVIDEDSpine sunned, short tears to spine else good. Tips bumped, front hinge starting. Name in ink front free end paper, some marginalia in pencil. Barbara McClintock. E.B. Lewis. M. Demerec. Norman Giles. S.E. Luria. *.
Published by Cold Spring Harbor: Biological Laboratory, 1951., 1951
Seller: Ted Kottler, Bookseller, Redondo Beach, CA, U.S.A.
First Edition
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. No Jacket. 1st Edition. 521 pp. Original cloth, 4to. Some discoloration to covers (see photos), else Very Good. Copy of Symposium participant Seymour Pomper, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Tennessee, with his signature and printed name in the list of participants. 'Pomper . . . took his doctorate in microbiology and genetics from Yale University and became a Director of the American food manufacturer, Nabisco.' 'For the 1951 Symposium, Demerec chose to revisit the theme of the first Symposium he had organized, a decade earlier. According to Demerec, between 1941 and 1951, geneticists had in some respects become 'less certain than ever about the physical properties of genes'. The model of genes as objects'strung along chromosomes like beads on a thread' had served geneticists well in the decade preceding 1951, but now several genetic and cytogenetic studies of spontaneous and induced mutations had begun to demand that researchers rethink this model. Genes and chromosomes were both stable elements of inheritance as well as highly dynamic entities capable of undergoing (and withstanding) a great deal of change. The 1951 Symposium featured several talks which touched on this theme. Ed Lewis elaborated on the position effect, that a gene has different effects depending on its neighboring genes. Barbara McClintock gave a further example of the dynamic genome in her talk on the Ac-Ds system in maize. It was Richard Goldschmidt who took up these issues in his remarkable opening presentation for the Symposium. Goldschmidt rejected the conclusion that a mutation at a particular point necessarily meant that there was gene there, and he offered a simile: 'If the A-string on a violin is stopped an inch from the end the tone C is produced. Something has been done to a locus in the stringÉBut nobody would conclude that there is a C-body at that point.' Goldschmidt suggested that in some way gene action was integrated over the whole chromosome. On the other hand, papers by Harriet Ephrussi-Taylor and Rollin Hotchkiss did support the gene as a physical entity-they presented results in confirming Avery's transformation studies of 1944. Their audience did not seem impressed. There were other contentious topics; cytoplasmic inheritance received much attention, especially in a long paper by Sonneborn reviewing the controversial work of Fritz Moewus who had published extensively on cytoplasmic inheritance in Chlamydomonas. His work had been savaged by Philip and Haldane who showed that his results showed far less variation than would have been expected by chance. There were determined efforts to reproduce Moewus's work-including by Moewus himself under careful supervision-but with no success. Moewus is now regarded as '. . . one of the most ambitious cases of fraud in the history of science' (Sapp, 1989). Demerec made an interesting comparison between the 1941 and 1951 Symposia. In 1941, 30% of papers dealt with Drosophila and only 3% with microorganisms; in 1951, 9% used Drosophila and 70% microorganisms. Five years later at the Genetic Mechanisms Symposium, none of the papers on genetic analysis used Drosophila' (CSHL Web site).
Published by The Biological Laboratory; Cold Spring Harbor, L.I.; New York; 1951, 1951
Condition: Very Good. Prompt Shipment, shipped in Boxes, Tracking PROVIDEDSpine sunned, tips bumped, ownership signature from R. Demerec front free end paper else very good. Barbara McClintock. E.B. Lewis. M. Demerec. Norman Giles. S.E. Luria *.