The Double Helix: A Personal Account of the Discovery of the Structure of DNASince its publication in 1968, The Double Helix has given countless readers a rare and exciting look at one highly significant piece of scientific research-Watson and Crick's race to discover the molecular structure of DNA. |
From inside the book
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Page 4
... quickly recognized one of the climbers . He was Willy Seeds , a scientist who several years before had worked at King's College , London , with Maurice Wilkins on the optical properties of DNA fibers . Willy soon spotted me , slowed ...
... quickly recognized one of the climbers . He was Willy Seeds , a scientist who several years before had worked at King's College , London , with Maurice Wilkins on the optical properties of DNA fibers . Willy soon spotted me , slowed ...
Page 96
... quickly lost heart when it became apparent that I was the only one joining the conversation . Moreover , by this time neither of us really wanted to look at our model . All its glamor had vanished , and the crudely improvised phosphorus ...
... quickly lost heart when it became apparent that I was the only one joining the conversation . Moreover , by this time neither of us really wanted to look at our model . All its glamor had vanished , and the crudely improvised phosphorus ...
Page 197
... quickly pushing the bases together in a number of different ways did not reveal any other way to satisfy Chargaff's rules . A few min- utes later he spotted the fact that the two glycosidic bonds ( joining base and sugar ) of each base ...
... quickly pushing the bases together in a number of different ways did not reveal any other way to satisfy Chargaff's rules . A few min- utes later he spotted the fact that the two glycosidic bonds ( joining base and sugar ) of each base ...
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Common terms and phrases
a-helix adenine answer argument arrival atoms bacterial base pairs base sugar biochemistry biological Cal Tech Cambridge Cavendish Chargaff chemical chemistry chemists College conversation Copenhagen crystallographic crystals cytosine Delbrück dinner DNA molecule DNA structure double helix Elizabeth existed experiments fact fellowship Francis Crick genes genetic geneticists Griffith guanine Herman hope Hugh Huxley hydrogen bonds idea immediately important interest ions John Kendrew keto King's knew large number letter like-with-like Linus Pauling London look lunch Luria manuscript Maurice Wilkins Maurice's Max and John Max Delbrück Max Perutz ment model building Moreover morning never Nonetheless nucleic acids nucleotides Odile Pauling's Perutz Peter phage phosphate groups Pop's possibility problem protein purine purine and pyrimidine pyrimidine quickly realized reason Rosalind Franklin Rosy Rosy's scientific solve soon sugar-phosphate backbone talk tautomeric forms tell thought thymine tion told walked wanted Watson week X-ray diffraction X-ray pictures