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  1. 1864-1933. German Geneticist and Botanist. C arl Correns was one of three scientists who simultaneously rediscovered the work of Gregor Mendel (1822-1884). Correns investigated and confirmed the validity of many Mendelian laws and showed a deep understanding of Mendelian genetics. Correns's research was the first to correlate Mendelian ...

  2. Carl Correns was born in Münich, Germany, and was orphaned at an early age. He was raised by his aunt in Switzerland. In 1885, he entered the University of Münich to study botany. Carl Nägeli, the botanist to whom Mendel wrote to about his pea plant experiments, was no longer lecturing at Münich. Nägeli, however, knew Correns' parents and ...

  3. Carl Correns. Carl Franz Joseph Erich Correns ou simplesmente Carl Correns ( Munique, 10 de setembro de 1864 – Berlim, 14 de fevereiro de 1933) foi um botânico alemão, que se destaca principalmente por sua descoberta independente dos princípios da hereditariedade, que ele alcançou simultaneamente, mas independentemente do botânico Hugo ...

  4. Carl Correns. Carl Erich Correns (tiếng Anh: /kɑːl ˈɛrɪk kəʊrɛn/, tiếng Việt: /cac êric côren/) là nhà thực vật học và nhà di truyền học người Đức. Tên đầy đủ của ông là Carl Franz Joseph Erich Correns (1864-1933), nhưng thường gọi tắt là Correns.

  5. Robert Olby. Correns, Carl Franz Joseph Erich (b. Munich, Germany, 19 September 1864; d. Berlin, Germany, 14 February 1933),botany, plant genetics.Correns was the only child of Erich Correns, a painter and member of the Bavarian Academy of Art. His mother was of Swiss extraction.

  6. Carl Erich Correns (10 September 1864 – 14 February 1933) was a German botanist and geneticist. His research into heredity led to his rediscovery of Gregor Mendel 's earlier work. Hugo de Vries also – independently – rediscovered Gregor Mendel 's work on genetics. Erich von Tschermak 's status as a third rediscoverer is now less convincing.

  7. Although it is textbook knowledge that the German botanist Carl Correns counts among the re-discoverers of Mendel’s laws, his work has not received much attention in the historiography of genetics. Together with Theodor Boveri (1862–1915), Erwin Baur (1875–1933), and Richard Goldschmidt (1878–1958), he belonged to the founding figures

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