The Man in the Monkeynut Coat : William Astbury and How Wool Wove a Forgotten Road to the Double-Helix
Revised
Book Details
Format
Paperback / Softback
ISBN-10
0198766963
ISBN-13
9780198766964
Edition
Revised
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Imprint
Oxford University Press
Country of Manufacture
GB
Country of Publication
GB
Publication Date
Aug 2nd, 2022
Print length
272 Pages
Weight
372 grams
Dimensions
13.60 x 21.60 x 2.20 cms
Product Classification:
Biography: science, technology & medicineHistory of scienceCrystallographyMolecular biology
Ksh 4,050.00
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Tells the story of the English physicist and molecular biologist William T. Astbury and how his work forms a previously untold chapter in the story of the discovery of the structure of DNA.
Sir Isaac Newton once declared that his momentous discoveries were only made thanks to having ''stood on the shoulders of giants''. The same might also be said of the scientists James Watson and Francis Crick. Their discovery of the structure of DNA was, without doubt, one of the biggest scientific landmarks in history and, thanks largely to the success of Watson''s best-selling memoir ''The Double Helix'', there might seem to be little new to say about this story. But much remains to be said about the particular ''giants'' on whose shoulders Watson and Crick stood. Of these, the crystallographer Rosalind Franklin, whose famous X-ray diffraction photograph known as ''Photo 51'' provided Watson and Crick with a vital clue, is now well recognised. Far less well known is the physicist William T. Astbury who, working at Leeds in the 1930s on the structure of wool for the local textile industry, pioneered the use of X-ray crystallography to study biological fibres. In so doing, he not only made the very first studies of the structure of DNA culminating in a photo almost identical to Franklin''s ''Photo 51'', but also founded the new science of ''molecular biology''. Yet whilst Watson and Crick won the Nobel Prize, Astbury has largely been forgotten. The Man in the Monkeynut Coat tells the story of this neglected pioneer, showing not only how it was thanks to him that Watson and Crick were not left empty-handed, but also how his ideas transformed biology leaving a legacy which is still felt today.
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