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  1. Zelltheilung (“About cell formation and cell division”) in which he defended free cell for-mation.However,he had abandoned this idea by the time the third edition of his book was published in ...

    • Neidhard Paweletz
    • 2001
  2. Feb 1, 2001 · Based on his observations of cell division in various stages, German biologist and a founder of cytogenetics Walther Flemming identified the sequence of chromosome movements in mitosis. Flemming's ...

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  4. TLDR. Walther Flemming introduced the concept of “mitosis”, which he studied on stained microscopic preparations, using salamander epithelial cells as a source of biological material and contributed to the development of cell biology and its branches. Expand. PDF.

  5. Dec 1, 2001 · Download Citation | Walther Flemming: pioneer of mitosis research (Reprinted from Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology, vol 2, pg 72-75, 2001) | The German anatomist Walther Flemming began his ...

  6. German. Flemming, Walther (1843-1905) German anatomist who used dyes to study the structure of cells. He found a structure which strongly absorbed dye, and named it chromatin. He observed that, during cell division, the chromatin separated into stringy objects, which became known as chromosomes.

  7. Cell Theory Timeline - Free download as PDF File (.pdf), Text File (.txt) or read online for free. Scribd is the world's largest social reading and publishing site.

  8. Flemming, Walther. ( b. Sachsenberg, Mecklenburg, Germany, 21 April 1843; d. Kiel, Germany, 4 August 1905) anatomy, cytology. Flemming’s family was Flemish; his father, C. F. Flemming, had moved from Jüterbog to Mecklenburg to become director of a lunatic asylum there. In this region of Germany, Walther was born and brought up.

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