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Timeline of biology and organic chemistry
- 320 BC - Theophrastus begins the systematic study of botany
- 1658 - Jan Swammerdam observes red blood cells under a microscope
- 1663 - Robert Hooke sees cells in cork using a microscope
- 1668 - Francesco Redi disproves theories of the spontaneous generation of maggots[?] in putrefying matter
- 1676 - Anton van Leeuwenhoek observes protozoa and calls them "animalcules
- 1677 - Anton van Leeuwenhoek observes spermatozoa
- 1683 - Anton van Leeuwenhoek observes bacteria
- 1765 - Lazzaro Spallanzani disproves many theories of the spontaneous generation of cellular life
- 1771 - Joseph Priestley discovers that plants convert carbon dioxide into oxygen
- 1798 - Thomas Malthus discusses human population growth and food production in An Essay on the Principle of Population
- 1801 - Jean Lamarck begins the detailed study of invertebrate taxonomy
- 1809 - Jean Lamarck proposes an inheritance of acquired characteristics theory of evolution
- 1817 - Pierre-Joseph Pelletier[?] and Joseph-Bienaime Caventou[?] isolate chlorophyll
- 1828 - Karl von Baer discovers the eggs of mammals
- 1828 - Friedrich Woehler synthesizes urea; first synthesis of an organic compound
- 1836 - Theodor Schwann discovers pepsin in extracts from the stomach lining; first isolation of an animal enzyme
- 1837 - Theodor Schwann shows that heating air will prevent it from causing putrefaction
- 1838 - Matthias Schleiden discovers that all living plant tissue is composed of cells
- 1839 - Theodor Schwann discovers that all living animal tissue is composed of cells
- 1856 - Louis Pasteur states that microorganisms produce fermentation
- 1858 - Charles R. Darwin and Alfred Wallace independently propose natural selection theories of evolution
- 1858 - Rudolf Virchow proposes that cells can only arise from pre-existing cells
- 1862 - Louis Pasteur convincingly disproves the spontaneous generation of cellular life
- 1865 - Gregor Mendel presents his experiments on the crossbreeding of pea plants and postulates dominant and recessive factors
- 1865 - Friedrich August Kekulé von Stradonitz realizes that benzene is composed of carbon and hydrogen atoms in a hexagonal ring
- 1869 - Friedrich Miescher discovers nucleic acids in the nuclei of cells
- 1874 - Jacobus van 't Hoff and Joseph-Achille Le Bel[?] advance a three-dimensional stereochemical representation of organic molecules and propose a tetrahedral carbon atom
- 1876 - Oskar Hertwig[?] and Hermann Fol[?] show that fertilized eggs possess both male and female nuclei
- 1884 - Emil Fischer[?] begins his detailed analysis of the compositions and structures of sugars
- 1898 - Martinus Beijerinck uses filtering experiments to show that tobacco mosaic disease is caused by something smaller than a bacteria which he names a virus
- 1906 - Mikhail Tsvett[?] discovers the chromatography technique for organic compound separation
- 1907 - Ivan Pavlov demonstrates conditioned responses with salivating dogs
- 1907 - Emil Fischer artificially synthesizes peptide amino acid chains and thereby shows that amino acids in proteins are connected by amino group-acid group bonds
- 1911 - Thomas Morgan proposes that Mendelian factors are arranged in a line on chromosomes
- 1926 - James Sumner[?] shows that the urease enzyme is a protein
- 1928 - Otto Diels[?] and Kurt Alder[?] discover the Diels-Alder cycloaddition reaction[?] for forming ring molecules
- 1929 - Phoebus Levene[?] discovers the sugar deoxyribose in nucleic acids
- 1929 - Edward Doisy[?] and Adolf Butenandt[?] independently discover estrone[?]
- 1930 - John Northrop[?] shows that the pepsin enzyme is a protein
- 1931 - Adolf Butenandt[?] discovers androsterone[?]
- 1932 - Hans Krebs discovers the urea cycle
- 1933 - Tadeus Reichstein[?] artificially synthesizes vitamin C; first vitamin synthesis
- 1935 - Rudolf Schoenheimer[?] uses deuterium as a tracer to examine the fat storage system of rats
- 1935 - Wendell Stanley[?] crystallizes the tobacco mosaic virus
- 1935 - Konrad Lorenz describes the imprinting behavior of young birds
- 1937 - Theodosius Dobzhansky links evolution and genetic mutation in Genetics and the Origin of Species
- 1938 - A living coelacanth is found off the coast of southern Africa
- 1940 - Donald Griffin[?] and Robert Galambos[?] announce their discovery of sonar echolocation by bats
- 1942 - Max Delbruck and Salvador Luria demonstrate that bacterial resistance to virus infection is caused by random mutation and not adaptive change
- 1944 - Oswald Avery shows that DNA carries the genetic code in pneumococci[?] bacteria
- 1944 - Robert Woodward[?] and William von Eggers Doering[?] synthesize quinine
- 1948 - Erwin Chargaff shows that in DNA the number of guanine units equals the number of cytosine units and the number of adenine units equals the number of thymine units
- 1951 - Robert Woodward[?] synthesizes cholesterol and cortisone
- 1952 - Alfred Hershey[?] and Martha Chase[?] use radioactive tracers to show that DNA is the genetic material in bacteriophage viruses
- 1952 - Fred Sanger[?], Hans Tuppy[?], and Ted Thompson[?] complete their chromatographic analysis of the insulin amino acid sequence
- 1952 - Rosalind Franklin uses X-ray diffraction to study the structure of DNA and suggests that its sugar-phosphate backbone is on its outside
- 1953 - James Watson and Francis Crick propose a double helix structure for DNA
- 1953 - Max Perutz and John Kendrew[?] determine the structure of hemoglobin using X-ray diffraction studies
- 1953 - Stanley Miller shows that amino acids can be formed when simulated lightning is passed through vessels containing water, methane, ammonia, and hydrogen
- 1955 - Severo Ochoa discovers RNA polymerase enzymes
- 1955 - Arthur Kornberg[?] discovers DNA polymerase enzymes
- 1960 - Juan Oro[?] finds that concentrated solutions of ammonium cyanide in water can produce the nucleotide organic base adenine
- 1960 - Robert Woodward[?] synthesizes chlorophyll
- 1967 - John Gurden[?] uses nuclear transplantation to clone a clawed frog[?]; first cloning of a vertebrate
- 1968 - Fred Sanger uses radioactive phosphorus as a tracer to chromatographically decipher a 120 base long RNA sequence
- 1970 - Hamilton Smith[?] and Daniel Nathans[?] discover DNA restriction enzymes
- 1970 - Howard Temin[?] and David Baltimore independently discover reverse transcriptase enzymes
- 1972 - Robert Woodward[?] synthesizes vitamin B-12
- 1972 - Stephen Jay Gould and Niles Eldredge[?] propose punctuated equilibrium effects in evolution
- 1974 - Manfred Eigen[?] and Manfred Sumper[?] show that mixtures of nucleotide monomers and RNA replicase[?] will give rise to RNA molecules which replicate, mutate, and evolve
- 1974 - Leslie Orgel[?] shows that RNA can replicate without RNA-replicase and that zinc aids this replication
- 1977 - John Corliss[?], Jack Dymond[?], Louis Gordon[?], John Edmond[?], Richard von Herzen[?], Robert Ballard, Kenneth Green[?], David Williams[?], Arnold Bainbridge[?], Kathy Crane[?], and Tjeerd van Andel[?] discover chemosynthetically based animal communities located around submarine hydrothermal vents[?] on the Galapagos Rift[?]
- 1977 - Walter Gilbert and Allan Maxam[?] present a rapid gene sequencing technique which uses cloning, base destroying chemicals, and gel electrophoresis
- 1977 - Fred Sanger and Alan Coulson[?] present a rapid gene sequencing technique which uses dideoxynucleotides[?] and gel electrophoresis
- 1978 - Fred Sanger presents the 5,386 base sequence for the virus PhiX174; first sequencing of an entire genome
- 1983 - Kary Mullis invents the polymerase chain reaction
- 1984 - Alec Jeffreys devises a genetic fingerprinting method
- 1985 - Harry Kroto[?], J.R. Heath[?], S.C. O'Brien[?], R.F. Curl[?], and Richard Smalley discover the unusual stability of the carbon-60 Buckminsterfullerene molecule and deduce its structure
- 1990 - Wolfgang Kratschmer[?], Lowell Lamb[?], Konstantinos Fostiropoulos[?], and Donald Huffman[?] discover that Buckminsterfullerene can be separated from soot[?] because it is soluble in benzene
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