About This Book
The author mounts a systematic defence of Mendel’s experimental findings, reproducing translations of the original hybridisation papers and summarising their methods and results. The text explains the consistent patterns of hereditary transmission observed in controlled crosses, articulates the concept of discrete heritable factors and their predictable segregation and combination in progeny, addresses contemporary criticisms point by point, and comments on experimental technique. The volume concludes with notes, references, and suggestions for further experiments, emphasising the practical and theoretical implications for the scientific study of heredity and evolution.
About the Author
More Books by This Author
2 picks
You May Also Like
6 picks
A bacteriological study of ham souring
by Charles Neil McBryde
A Bilateral Division of the Parietal Bone in a Chimpanzee; with a Special Reference to the Oblique Sutures in the Parietal
by Aleš Hrdlička
A Check-List of the Birds of Idaho
by M. Dale Arvey
A Civic Biology, Presented in Problems
by George W. Hunter
A conchological manual
by G. B. Sowerby
A Critical Examination of the Position of Mr. Darwin's Work, "On the Origin of Species," in Relation to the Complete Theory of the Causes of the Phenomena of Organic Nature / Lecture VI. (of VI.), "Lectures to Working Men", at the Museum of Practical Geology, 1863, on Darwin's Work: "Origin of Species"
by Thomas Henry Huxley

