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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Wilhelm_RouxWilhelm Roux - Wikipedia

    Jena, Strasbourg, Berlin. Known for. Mosaic theory of ontogeny. Scientific career. Fields. Zoology, anatomy. embryology, cell biology. Wilhelm Roux (9 June 1850 – 15 September 1924) was a German zoologist and pioneer of experimental embryology .

    • Jena, Strasbourg, Berlin
    • German
  2. Jul 22, 2009 · Learn about Wilhelm Roux, a nineteenth-century experimental embryologist who pioneered developmental mechanics. Find out his biography, contributions, and legacy in the field of embryology.

  3. Apr 4, 2024 · Wilhelm Roux (born June 9, 1850, Jena, Saxony [Germany]—died Sept. 15, 1924, Halle, Ger.) was a German zoologist whose attempts to discover how organs and tissues are assigned their structural form and functions at the time of fertilization made him a founder of experimental embryology.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
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  5. May 23, 2018 · ROUX, WILHELM (b. Jena, Germany, 9 June 1850; d. Halle, Germany, 15 September 1924) embryology, developmental mechanics, anatomy.Roux single-mindedly devoted his life to science. Even in his autobiography he gave only the scantiest details about his family and extrascientific activities.

  6. A biographical sketch of Wilhelm Roux, the founder of experimental embryology and editor of Archives for Developmental Biology. Learn about his philosophy, editorial policies, and contributions to the field of developmental mechanics.

    • S. J. Counce
    • 1994
  7. Wilhelm Roux. 1850-1924. German Biologist and Embryologist. Wilhelm Roux, the founder of experimental embryology, was primarily interested in the factors that governed the development of the embryo. Convinced that descriptive and comparative studies of embryonic development were inadequate, Roux demanded a new approach and saw himself as the ...

  8. This last essay in the series commemorating Wilhelm Roux (1850–1924) is devoted to speculative developmental theories (or models as they would be called today) proposed in the decade following Roux’s manifesto on Entwickelungsmechanik (see Sander 1991a).

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