The Lack of Proportionality between Mutation Rate and Ultraviolet Dose in Drosophila

The Lack of Proportionality between Mutation Rate and Ultraviolet Dose in Drosophila

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Title The Lack of Proportionality between Mutation Rate and Ultraviolet Dose in Drosophila Author Muller, H.J.; Altenburg, Luolin S.; Meyer, Helen Unger; Edmonson, Margaret; Altenburg, Edgar Binding PAPERBACK Publisher Heredity, Vol. 8, part 2, pp. 158-185, August Publisher Year 1954 Condition Very Good Description Very good condition.*Very good condition.* Minor foxing to cover. Offprint. First edition. "In 1946 Muller was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, "for the discovery that mutations can be induced by x-rays". Genetics, and especially the physical and physiological nature of the gene, was becoming a central topic in biology, and x-ray mutagenesis was a key to many recent advances, among them George Beadle and Edward Tatum's work on Neurospora that established the one gene-one enzyme hypothesis." Wikipedia

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