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| Wednesday, 1 December, 1999, 20:26 GMT Long road to inheritance
The science of modern genetics can be traced back to the Moravian monk Gregor Mendel in the 1860s. His experiments on peas pioneered the study of inheritance. He cultivated nearly 30,000 plants, carefully analysing seed and plant characteristics. By following certain traits through the generations, he realised that some traits appeared to be dominant while others would be recessive and fail to show when certain pea plants where crossed. Mendel's work was extraordinary but it was many decades before his research received the recognition it deserved. In 1953, James Watson and Francis Crick famously described the structure of DNA, the molecule that carries the genetic code. Theirs was undoubtedly a landmark achievement, but it could not have happened without the help of others like Rosalind Franklin who obtained sharp X-ray diffraction photographs of the molecule. Now, the first human chromosome has been sequenced - we know precisely how its DNA is ordered. But this is but one more step on a much longer road that will revolutionise medicine and transform the way we think about ourselves. A genetics timeline
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