DC Relation:
Reminiscences of Dr. Edwin Grant Conklin (1863-1952), Biologist [1 of 2]
DC Publisher:
American Philosophical Society
DC Rights:
Copyright American Philosophical Society. For reproduction and permission information, see http://www.amphilsoc.org/library/rights.htm
DC Description Tableofcontents:
Tells of his studies using Crepidula (a limpet, mollusk) which a re classical because this work traced the fates of cells from early cleavage into their final destinations in later germ layers -- Together with EB Wilson's work with embryos of Nereis (a marine worm) Conklin's studies led to the concept of cell lineage and the early determination of the fates of various regions of the egg. -- Conklin had graduated from Ohio-Wesleyan University before going to Johns Hopkins for his PhD. He returned to Ohio-Wesleyan and set up a laboratory "from scratch" -- Conklin kept his research alive by coming summers to the Woods Hole (1891, 1892 et seq) and with encouragement from EB Wilson and Whitman (for whom one of the MBL's buildings is named) got his paper, literally a book, published in the Journal of Morphology. The was about 1893. -- Introduction to tape by Dr. Elsa Keil Sichel
DC Source:
American Philosophical Society, Mss.Rec.82
DC Contributor:
Frankhauser, Gerhard
Parpart, Arthur Kemble, 1903-
DC Creator:
Conklin, Edwin Grant, 1863-1952