Maurice Wilkins, British physicist
Wilkins and Randall, DNA researchers
King's College DNA researchers, 1950s
Renato Dulbecco, Italian virologist
Thomas Hunt Morgan, US geneticist
Chromosomes, light micrograph
William Henry Bragg, British physicist
The Pope and Maurice Wilkins, 1980
Ronald Ross, British physician
Charles Sherrington, British physiologist
Hamilton and Wilkins, DNA researchers
Wilhelm Roentgen, German physicist
Cole and Claude, genetics researchers
Biophysicists Delbruck, Luria and Exner
DNA discovery, 40th anniversary event
James Watson, US molecular biologist
Barbara McClintock.
John Kendrew, British biochemist
Werner Forssmann, German physician
A. Carr-Saunders, British sociologist
Ivan Pavlov, Russian physiologist
Jules Bordet, Belgian bacteriologist
Richard Taylor, Canadian physicist
US physicists and Nobel laureates
Harold Urey, US chemist
General Electric research, 1900s
Erwin Chargaff, Austro-Hungarian biochemist
Alfred Hershey, US geneticist
X-ray diffraction apparatus
Alexis Carrel, French surgeon
Barbara McClintock, US cell geneticist
Carlo Rubbia, Italian physicist
Clifford Shull, US physicist
Rosalyn Yalow, US medical physicist
William Lawrence Bragg, British physicist
Thorndike, Cushing and Sherrington, 1938
Peter Debye, Dutch chemical physicist
Marie Curie and students, 1910s
Antony Hewish, British astronomer
Rudolph Marcus, Canadian-US chemist
Henry Taube, Canadian-US chemist
Paul Ehrlich, German immunologist
Antiproton discovery team
William Henry Bragg, English physicist
Maze genetics research by McClintock, 1978
Maze genetics research by McClintock, 1951
Phoebus Levene, Russian-US biochemist
John Gurdon, British geneticist
Maurice de Broglie, French physicist
Frederick Sanger, British biochemist
Kary Mullis, US biochemist
Max Planck, German physicist
Karl Landsteiner, Austrian-US pathologist
Leo Esaki, Japanese physicist
Dr. H. Gobind Khorana and Dr. T. Mathai Jacob in laboratory
Linus Pauling, US chemist
Oswald Avery, US molecular biologist
Maze genetics research by McClintock, 1971
Maze genetics research by McClintock, 1942
Maze genetics research by McClintock, c.1950
DNA Fingerprinting, X-ray Autoradiograph
Man displaying DNA Nucleobases
Portrait of French physicist A. H. Becquerel
Wilbur Atwater, US chemist
Professor J.Steinberger, German American physicist
Martin Rodbell, US biochemist
Samuel Ting, US physicist
James Clerk Maxwell, Scottish physicist
William Ramsay.
Marshall Nirenberg, American biochemist
Herman Mark, Austrian-US chemist
Sir Ernest Rutherford taking a swim in Dorset
Niels Henrik David Bohr (1885 - 1962)
Hans Bethe, German-US physicist
Marie Curie, Polish-French physicist
Sir Aaron Klug, Nobel Laureate
Henrik Dam, Danish biochemist
Gabriel Lippmann, French physicist
First-ever direct DNA image, TEM
Theodor Boveri, German geneticist
Portrait of Ernest Lawrence in 1939
Edgar, Baron Adrian, neurophysiologist
Carey Foster, British physicist
Leon Lederman, US particle physicist
Selman Waksman, microbiologist
Luria and Stadler, US geneticists
High-contrast direct DNA image, TEM
Delbruck and Stanley, Nobel laureates
US geneticist Barbara McClintock in maize field, 1960s
Florence Seibert, US biochemist
Physicist William B. Shockley
Alexander Gettler, US toxicologist
N. Elizabeth Presho, US pharmacologist
Selma Hayman, US biochemist
Tsai-Ying Cheng, Taiwanese-US biochemist
Portrait of the American physicist Burton Richter
Portrait of Max Planck
DNA molecule, artwork
Portrait of E. Rutherford and W. H. Bragg
Germplasm storage research
William D. 'Bill' Phillips, US physicist
Morgan and Osterhout, US geneticist and botanist
Hershey and McClintock, US geneticists
Barbara McClintock, American geneticist
Wilhelm Ostwald, German physical chemist
Alfred Werner, Swiss inorganic chemist
Hermann Staudinger, German organic chemist
Quasicrystal researchers, 1985
Davisson and Germer, US physicists
Portrait of American biochemist James Watson
William Crookes, British physicist
Alphonse Laveran, French physician
Austrian-US pathologist Karl Landsteiner as a child
Karl von Frisch, Austrian zoologist
Adolf Butenandt, German biochemist
PCR machine
Using PCR machine
DNA genotyping and sequencing
DNA analysis
David Harker, American physicist
Adolf von Baeyer, German chemist
Richard Feynman giving a lecture at CERN
Henri Bergson, French philosopher
Fridtjof Nansen, Norwegian explorer
Model of lysozyme molecule
DNA bundle on silicon nanopillars, SEM
Self-assembled DNA triangle
Fritz Reiche, German physicist
Samuel Milner, British physicist
Lord Kelvin, British physicist
William Eccles, British physicist
Oliver Heaviside, British physicist
Crick & Watson in 1953
Alvarez bubble chamber research, 1959
Avery and the Colgate University band
Clinton Joseph Davisson, US physicist
Melvin Calvin, American biochemist
Barbara McClintock, US geneticist
Joseph Swan, British inventor
Andre Dreyfus, Brazilian geneticist
Raymond Pearl, US biologist
Yuri Filipchenko, Russian entomologist
Mather and Thoday, British geneticists
Charles Stockard, US zoologist
Mathilde Lange, US geneticist
Katherine Pattee Hummel, US geneticist
Cornell University's Department of Plant Breeding, c.1930
Plant geneticists from Cornell University, 1929
Jane Blankenship Gibson, US physicist
HP1 molecule C-terminal domain