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Media representatives are invited to the European launch of the 19th International Congress of Genetics at Australia House, Strand
January 19, 2003
"We've got this model" said Francis Crick to photographer Antony Barrington Brown. It was the double helix structure of DNA - the discovery that kick-started the genetics revolution 50 years ago.
Meet the photographer who caught the moment, with Watson and Crick standing by an array of stands, rods and balls. And get prepared for the inside story on the future of the genetics revolution.
Media representatives are invited to the European launch of the 19th International Congress of Genetics at Australia House, Strand, London at 6 pm Monday 20 January.
The first Congress was held in 1899 in London - before the term genetics had even been coined. The XIX Congress will be held in Melbourne Australia from 6 to 11 July 2003.
"The genetics revolution hasn't even got going yet, it is just on the starting line," says Dr Phil Batterham, Secretary General of the Congress. "In the next fifty years we are going to see a true revolution that will change everything from a visit to the GP, to industry, agriculture, conservation, and our very understanding of what it is to be human."
"In medicine for example we still largely rely on doctors asking how we feel, and inferring what might be wrong from our description of symptoms. Soon your doctor will be able to review your personal genetic code, quickly identifying genetic disease or genetically encoded pre-disposition to diseases.
Prescriptions will be selected on the basis of our genetics. Soon we will understand how genes control our development, behaviour, and death."
"Genomics confirms that we are one species and one race - we make too much of the differences. Rather we should be trying to understand what makes us so different to our cousins, the chimpanzees, says Philip Batterham.
"Computer development within the giants of industry, such as Hewlett Packard, is already driven by the demand to store and analyse the massive stockpile of genetic data that grows daily."
With seven Nobel Laureates and 280 other distinguished speakers, the XIX Congress will be a unique opportunity for researchers and the media to explore the scientific, ethical and social implications of the genetics revolution.
More about the photo
Barrington Brown received a tip-off that someone at the Cavendish Laboratory had made an important discovery, and went to take a picture to go with a freelancer's story for Time magazine.
Barrington Brown recalls: "I knocked at the door of one of dozens of similar rooms where research students worked and was affably greeted by a couple of chaps lounging at a desk by the window, drinking coffee. " What's all this about?" I asked.
With an airy wave of the hand one of them, Crick I think, said 'we've got this model' indicating an array of retort stands holding think brass rods and balls.
It meant absolutely nothing to me, so I set up my lights and camera and said 'you'd better stand by it and look portentous' which they manifestly failed to do, treating my efforts as a bit of a joke."
In due course, Watson and Crick were awarded the Nobel Prize and Barrington Brown's photograph now hangs in the National Portrait Gallery in London.
To celebrate the 50th anniversary of the discovery of the DNA double helix, Science Photo Gallery have released limited edition prints
For further information about the Congress or to RSVP please contact Adelaide Boon, tel: 020 7632 0011, email: adelaide.boon@investaustralia.gov.au. Also visit www.geneticscongress2003.com
To access print quality versions of the image contact maria.storey@sciencephoto.com. Please acknowledge www.sciencephotogallery.com
Science in Public
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Why Evolution Is True
by Jerry A. Coyne (Author)
Why evolution is more than just a theory: it is a fact
In all the current highly publicized debates about creationism and its descendant “intelligent design,” there is an element of the controversy that is rarely mentioned—the evidence, the empirical truth of evolution by natural selection. Even Richard Dawkins and Stephen Jay Gould, while extolling the beauty of evolution and examining case studies, have not focused on the evidence itself. Yet the proof is vast, varied, and magnificent, drawn from many different fields of science. Scientists are observing species splitting into two and are finding more and more fossils capturing change in the past—dinosaurs that have sprouted feathers, fish that have grown limbs.
Why Evolution Is True weaves together the many...
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Evolution
Starring: David Duchovny, Orlando Jones, Julianne Moore, Seann William Scott, Ted Levine Directed By: Ivan Reitman Also With: Ivan Reitman (Producer), Daniel Goldberg (Producer), David Rodgers (Producer), Jeff Apple (Producer), David Diamond (Writer), David Weissman (Writer), Don Jakoby (Writer)
OUTRAGEOUS AND HILARIOUS. YOU'LL LAUGH OUT LOUD AND ENJOY THE FUN ACTION AND OUT-OF-THIS-WORLD SPECIAL EFFECTS AS THESE UNLIKELY HEROES BATTLE THE MOST UNECPECTED GROUP OF ALIENS YOU'LL EVER SEE.
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Spanning evolutionary science from its inception to its latest findings, from discoveries and data to philosophy and history, this book is the most complete, authoritative, and inviting one-volume introduction to evolutionary biology available. Clear, informative, and comprehensive in scope, Evolution opens with a series of major essays dealing with the history and philosophy of evolutionary biology, with major empirical and theoretical questions in the science, from speciation to adaptation, from paleontology to evolutionary development (evo devo), and concluding with essays on the social and political significance of evolutionary biology today. A second encyclopedic section travels the spectrum of topics in evolution with concise, informative, and accessible entries on...
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Darwin s Dangerous Idea: Interweaving key moments of drama in Darwin's life with current research, Darwin s Dangerous Idea explores why his theory of evolution might matter even more today than it did in his own time.
Great Transformations: From the development of the four-limbed body plan, the journey of animal life from water to land, and the...
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Science, Evolution, and Creationism
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Just The Facts: Prehistoric Man - Human Evolution
Starring: Just the Facts Directed By: Cerebellum Corporation
Beginning in the late nineteenth century and throughout the twentieth century, geologists, archaeologists and paleoanthropologists have given the world evidence of the physical and cultural development of humans. Amazing discoveries continue into the twenty-first century, broadening our knowledge of our earliest ancestors and pushing the date of the first appearance of humans to millions of years before recorded history. In Part 1 of "Prehistoric Man," viewers come face to face with fascinating ancient creatures who looked something like apes but walked upright. We learn how they lived in their foraging societies; what their life may have been like; how they fashioned tools out of stone, wood and bone; and how scientists determine the age of the fossils that give us windows to their...
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Our Family Tree: An Evolution Story
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