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Oswald Theodore Avery (1877-1955) was a distinguished bacteriologist and research physician and one of the founders of immunochemistry. He is best known for his discovery that deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) serves as genetic material.
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Oswald Theodore Avery was born on 21 October 1877 in Halifax, Nova Scotia, the second of three sons of Elizabeth Crowdy and Joseph Francis Avery. Several months later, Reverend Avery also passed away. Following their deaths, the then fifteen-year old Oswald assumed the paternal role for his youngest brother, Roy,
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profiles.nlm.nih.gov/CC/Views/Exhibit/narrative/biograp...
profiles.nlm.nih.gov/CC/Views/Exhibit/narrative/biographical.html
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In 1944, Oswald Avery and his colleagues, Colin MacLeod and Maclyn McCarty published their landmark paper on the transforming ability of DNA. ...
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www.dnaftb.org/dnaftb/concept_17/con17bio.html
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Oswald Theodore Avery Oswald Theodore Avery Library of Congress [b. Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada, October 21, 1877, d ... 5min Related Video: Oswald Avery...
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www.answers.com/topic/oswald-avery
www.answers.com/topic/oswald-avery
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Oswald Theodore Avery (1877-1955) was a physician, medical researcher and early molecular biologist. He was born in Halifax, Nova Scotia, but the major part of his career was spent in the United States at the Rockefeller Institute Hospital, New York City.
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www.bio-medicine.org/biology-definition/Oswald_Avery/
www.bio-medicine.org/biology-definition/Oswald_Avery/
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Oswald Avery, Canadian physician and bacteriologist, found that the agent responsible for genetic transferring is the nucleic acid DNA and not protein as most biochemists theorized at the time. In 1944 Avery and his coworkers, McCarty and MacLeod, discovered the "transforming principle."
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library.thinkquest.org/20465/avery.html
library.thinkquest.org/20465/avery.html
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Avery, born in Halifax, Nova Scotia, attended and earned a medical degree at Columbia University's College of Physicians and Surgeons. In 1913, ... Oswald Avery; Francis Crick; James Watson; Paul Berg; Stanley Cohen; Herbert Boyer; Kary B. Mullis; Steen Willadsen; Ian Wilmut; Keith Campbell; Richard Seed...
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library.thinkquest.org/24355/data/details/profiles/aver...
library.thinkquest.org/24355/data/details/profiles/avery.html
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Oswald Theodore Avery (1877-1955) ... Avery and his coworkers extracted a substance from a bacterium with a smooth surface and introduced it into a rough-surfaced bacterium. When the rough-surfaced bacteria transformed into the smooth-surfaced type, he knew the substance he had extracted contained the gene that coded for...
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particle.physics.ucdavis.edu/bios/Avery.html
particle.physics.ucdavis.edu/bios/Avery.html
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