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Francis Crick Francis Crick
Francis Crick and James Watson Francis Crick and James Watson
 

Francis Crick and James Watson

Francis Crick and James Watson
The deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) molecule is the genetic blueprint for each cell and ultimately the blueprint that determines every characteristic of a living organism. In 1953 American biochemist James Watson, left, and British biophysicist Francis Crick, right, described the structure of the DNA molecule as a double helix, somewhat like a spiral staircase with many individual steps. Their work was aided by X-ray diffraction pictures of the DNA molecule taken by British biophysicist Maurice Wilkins and British physical chemist Rosalind Franklin. In 1962 Crick, Watson, and Wilkins received the Nobel Prize for their pioneering work on the structure of the DNA molecule.
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Appears in these articles:
Crick, Francis Harry Compton; Genetics; Watson, James Dewey; Evolution; Science; Heredity; Deoxyribonucleic Acid; Medicine; Cell (biology); Biotechnology
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