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  1. Learn about Thomas Hunt Morgan, the first person to definitively link trait inheritance to a specific chromosome and his white-eyed flies. Aa Aa Aa. One day in 1910, American geneticist...

  2. That became possible in the laboratory of a Columbia University biologist, Thomas Hunt Morgan (left). Morgans experiments involved red- and white-eyed fruit flies like these. Image courtesy of University of Massachusetts Amherst Biology Department.

  3. In 1911, while studying the chromosome theory of heredity, biologist Thomas Hunt Morgan had a major breakthrough. Morgan occasionally noticed that "linked" traits would separate. Meanwhile,...

  4. Thomas Hunt Morgan's groundbreaking work with fruit flies in the early 1900s provided substantial evidence for the chromosome theory of inheritance. Morgan discovered a mutant white-eyed male fly and traced its inheritance pattern, revealing a connection between the X sex chromosome and the gene for eye color.

  5. Sep 25, 2007 · Although best known for his work with the fruit fly, for which he earned a Nobel Prize and the title “The Father of Genetics,” Thomas Hunt Morgans contributions to biology reach far beyond genetics.

  6. May 18, 2018 · Thomas Hunt Morgan. Morgan, Thomas Hunt. views 1,427,369 updated May 18 2018. MORGAN, THOMAS HUNT. ( b. Lexington, Ken-tucky, 25 September 1866; d. Pasadena, California, 4 December 1945) embryology, genetics.

  7. Thomas Hunt Morgan was an American biologist and zoologist. He believed in the eugenic's crusade and joined the board of the Eugenics Record Office when it was founded in 1904.

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