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ID 16661
Roy J. Britten, clip 1
Description:
Roy Britten is a Distinguished Carnegie Senior Research Associate, Emeritus, at the California Institute of Technology.
Keywords:
satellite dna, roy britten, kinetics of reassociation, spectrophotometer, repetitive dna
Downloads:
MPEG 4 Video
This work by
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
is licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License
.
Related content:
16657. Animation 31: Some DNA does not encode protein.
Roy Britten presents his work with David Kohne on repetitive DNA and its evolutionary origins.
SOURCE: DNAFTB
16027. Roy Britten, 1960
Some DNA does not encode protein.
SOURCE: DNAi
16665. Biography 31: Roy John Britten (1919 - )
Roy Britten did seminal research on repetitive DNA and its evolutionary origins.
SOURCE: DNAFTB
16663. Video 31: Roy J. Britten, clip 3
Composition of repeated DNA in the genome.
SOURCE: DNAFTB
16664. Video 31: Roy J. Britten, clip 4
Are repeated DNA species specific?
SOURCE: DNAFTB
16658. Gallery 31: Roy Britten, 1970s
Roy Britten, 1970s.
SOURCE: DNAFTB
16659. Gallery 31: Roy Britten with his family, 1970s
Roy Britten with his two sons and his aunt, 1970s.
SOURCE: DNAFTB
16666. Problem 31: Some DNA does not encode protein.
Explore Britten's DNA reassociation rates for different organisms.
SOURCE: DNAFTB
16662. Video 31: Roy J. Britten, clip 2
Biologists and the stress of math.
SOURCE: DNAFTB
16381. Gallery 17: Oswald Avery's letter to his brother, 1943
A page from the May 15, 1943 letter from Oswald Avery to his brother Roy. In the letter Avery speculated on how transformation could happen. Avery never publicly connected genes with DNA and his transformation experiments.
SOURCE: DNAFTB
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