RARE “Mammalian Genetics Pioneer" Elizabeth S Russell Signed TLS Dated 1958 For Sale
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RARE “Mammalian Genetics Pioneer" Elizabeth S Russell Signed TLS Dated 1958:
$199.99
Up for sale "Mammalian Genetics" Elizabeth S. Russell Hand Signed TLS Dated 1958. There is some paper loss on the right side not affecting the document. The price has been adjusted to reflect this.
May 28, 2001), also known as American biologist in the field of mammalian developmental genetics, spending most of her career at the Jackson Laboratory in
Bar Harbor, Maine. Russell is most recognized for her ground breaking cells, and germ cells. She also
raised awareness of the benefits of genetically-defined laboratory animals in
biomedical research. Russell was born Elizabeth Buckley Shull born in Ann Arbor, Michigan. She was the eldest child of Margaret Jeffrey
Buckley and Aaron Franklin Shull Ph.D., both of whom were zoologists, and the
niece of George H. Shull, a
prominent geneticist. Elizabeth was fascinated by science and the
scientific approach from an early age, leading her to study zoology at
the University of Michigan,
from which she graduated in 1933. After receiving a scholarship from Columbia University and
completing her master's degree in 1934, she went to work at the University of Chicago,
obtaining her Ph.D. in zoology in 1937, and marrying fellow student William L.
Russell the same year. The couple moved to work at Jackson Memorial
Laboratory, however, her position was unpaid. Russell began studying tumorogenesis in fruitflies (Drosophila melanogaster).
She had two publications and four children between the years 1940 and 1946
(three boys, Richard, John, and James and a girl, from her husband, because they worked in a
laboratory with several other women named Elizabeth. In 1947 Russell's marriage
ended in divorce, but she maintained a good relationship with her ex-husband.
Later that year the Jackson Memorial Laboratory burnt down, killing the
majority of the research animals. Elizabeth was in charge of obtaining new mice
from laboratories around the world.
Russell went on to genetically characterize many laboratory animals
for phenotypes such as physical attributes and disease
susceptibilities, completing a monumental histological study on the effect that the major coat
color mutations of the mouse have on the physical attributes and distribution
of pigment granules in the hair. This analysis is the first attempt to define
each phenotype of the mouse in terms of genetic factors, setting the stage for
virtually all coat-color studies.
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