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Donnely Dome

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Donnely Dome

military training area fort greely the top is about 2,400 feet above actual ground level. The 3,910-foot dome

View North to Donnely Dome from a point over the Delta River inside the Alaska Range in August, 1973
Donnely Dome. The isolated peak stands at the entrance to the Alaska Range. (August, 1973)

http://www.alaska-highway.org/delta/donnelly.htm http://www.yelp.com/biz/donnelly-dome-fort-greely http://www.newsminer.com/features/tim_mowry_column/hiking-donnelly-dome-grants-tremendous-views-of-interior/article_1c3ad41e-3bcb-5175-add3-3617d989e78c.html


References

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Category:Alaska Range


Brenda Andrews

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Brenda J. Andrews is the founding editor-in-chief for the scientific journal G3: Genes, Genomes, Genetics. [1] [2]

University of Toronto

[3]

References

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  1. ^ http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3176113/pdf/1.pdf Editorial G3, GENETICS, and the GSA: Two Journals, One Mission
  2. ^ http://www.g3journal.org/content/3/1/local/ed-board.pdf G3 Editorial Board
  3. ^ http://thedonnellycentre.utoronto.ca/members/brenda_andrews.html Donnely Centre Principal Investigators


DEFAULTSORT:Andrews, Brenda Category:Year of birth missing (living people) Category:Living people Category:Women biologists


Scott Pletcher

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[1] [2]

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Yousin Suh

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need to collect references

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Ana Maria Cuervo

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need to collect references go to David Sulzer and add link to her

  • With Ana Maria Cuervo of Albert Einstein College of Medicine they showed that a cause of Parkinson's disease could be due to an interference with a chaperone-mediated autophagy caused by the protein alpha-synuclein.[22][23]

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Mark Tarnopolsky

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need to collect references Adenosine Monophosphate Deaminase Deficiency type 1

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Marcia Haigis

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need to collect references go to Leonard_P._Guarente and add link to her

References

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Judith Campisi

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Judith (Judi) Campisi need to collect references

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Angelina Fanny Hesse

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Angelina Fanny Hesse
File:(request an upload to wikimedia commons)
Angelina Fanny Hesse
Born
Fanny Angelina Eilshemius

(1850-06-22)22 June 1850
Died1 December 1934(1934-12-01) (aged 84)
NationalityAmerican
Known forIntroducing the use of agar-agar to the microbiology laboratory
Scientific career
FieldsMicrobiology

Angelina (Lina) Fanny Hesse née Eilshemius (22 June 1850 - 1 December 1934) was an American-German laboratory technician and medical illustrator best known for her role in initiating the use of agar-agar in microbiology.

Fanny Anglelina was born in New York to Henry (Hinrich) Gottfried Eilsheimus, a Dutch immigrant and successful merchant, and Cecil Elise née Robert. One of 10 children, five of whom died young, Fanny Angelina grew up at her father's 70 acre Laurel Hill Manor in New Jersey near the Passaic River. Her younger brother Louis Eilshemius later became an academically trained painter of ladscapes and nudes. At the age of 15 she attended a finishing school in Switzerland to study French and home economics. In 1872, she met her later husband, Walther Hesse, in New York. On a family trip to ....


..... Married Walther Hesse on 16 May 1874. [1] [2]

In New York, Hesse met his later wife Angelina Fannie Eilshemius. The Eilshemius family were immigrants of Dutch-German origin – Angelina's brother Louis Eilshemius is known as an important painter, Swiss painter Louis Léopold Robert was their common grandfather. Walther and Angelina married 1874 in Geneva, together with Angelina's sister and a nephew of Louis Agassiz. Legend has it that Hesse went on a picnic with his wife Angelina Fannie and noticed that the jellies and puddings that she had brought along did not melt in the hot summer weather. When asked why this was so, Lina (as she was called) replied that they contained Agar, and that she had been shown the trick by a Dutch neighbor (recently emigrated from the island of Java, in the Dutch East Indies(Indonesia)) when she was growing up. Further development of agar showed that it would not easily melt (though would remain molten at lower temperatures once it did), was not easily degraded by microorganisms and was a flexible medium. Koch was soon using the new medium to grow tuberculosis bacteria. all this is from: internal link to https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walther_Hesse

References

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  1. ^ Hesse, Wolfgang, "Walther and Angelina Hesse - Early Contributors to Bacteriology", ASM News, 58: 425-428, 1992 http://www.asm.org/ccLibraryFiles/FILENAME/0000000227/580892p425.pdf
  2. ^ International Women in Science: A Biographical Dictionary to 1950 By Catharine M. C. Haines pp 130-131

Uri Wilenski

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[1] NetLogo [2]

References

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  1. ^ http://ccl.northwestern.edu/uri/
  2. ^ Seth Tisue; Uri Wilensky. NetLogo: Design and Implementation of a Multi-Agent Modeling Environment (PDF). Agent2004. Chicago, IL. Retrieved October 4, 2012 ! date = October 2004. {{cite conference}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Missing pipe in: |accessdate= (help); line feed character in |accessdate= at position 16 (help)