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Calvin Blackman Bridges studied chromosomes and heredity in the US throughout the early twentieth century. Bridges performed research with Thomas Hunt Morgan at Columbia University in New York City, New York, and at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, California. Bridges and Morgan studied heredity in Drosophila, the common fruit fly. Throughout the early twentieth century, researchers were gathering evidence that genes, or what Gregor Mendel had called the factors that control heredity, are located on chromosomes. At Columbia, Morgan disputed the theory, but in 1916, Calvin Bridges published evidence that, according to Morgan, did much to convince skeptics of that theory. Bridges also established that specific chromosomes function in determining sex in Drosophila.
- Drosophila
- Heredity
- Inheritance of acquired characters
- Columbia University--Graduate students
- Mutation
- Mutation breeding
- Animal mutation breeding
- Y Chromosome
- X chromosome
- Gene mapping
- Chromosomes
- Chromosome replication
- Bridges, Calvin B. (Calvin Blackman), 1889-1938
- Genetics
- Morgan, Thomas Hunt, 1866-1945
- People
- Thomas Hunt Morgan
- 2023-01-25 06:29:29
- 2023-04-20 05:31:32
- 1 year 7 months ago