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#OnThisDay in 1839, a 29-year-old scientist named Charles Darwin was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society. Learn more about the man himself as part of#PeopleOfScience series one: http://bit.ly/35gDzwU pic.twitter.com/qcwBjLYxW4
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Benjamin Franklin, one of the founding fathers of the US, a revered scientist and inventor, was born
#OnThisDay in 1706: http://bit.ly/2IMOgOH#PeopleOfScience pic.twitter.com/2h1yEIvKRB
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Hear our past president, Richard Fortey, discuss pioneering geologist, Charles Lyell, whose work on extending geological time heavily influenced Charles Darwin. A new series from
@royalsociety - watch#PeopleOfScience now on@BBCiPlayer or@YouTube
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“I think the war was a continuation of his academic work…it was just applied in a way that shortened the war.” The incredible impact of Alan Turing explored by
@ProfBrianCox and@DameWendyDBE in the@RoyalSociety’s#PeopleofScience.
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#PeopleOfScience series 2 | Martin Rees talks about one of his heroes, Joseph Rotblat, a physicist on the Manhattan Project, who later became a leading advocate of peace and disarmament: http://bit.ly/2DKUCLu pic.twitter.com/wH0lKUdrO4 -
Series two of
#PeopleOfScience will be available on our YouTube channel from 6 January. In the meantime, catch up on series one (featuring Sir David Attenborough discussing Charles Darwin and Dame Julia Higgins discussing Michael Faraday): http://bit.ly/2pyKOQV#PeopleOfScience -
#PeopleOfScience series 2 | Joanna Haigh@imperialcollege@Grantham_IC discusses mathematician and physicist, Lewis Fry Richardson, including his ground-breaking concept of a ‘weather forecasting factory’: http://bit.ly/2DKUCLu pic.twitter.com/zdbCK2EP9c -
#PeopleOfScience series 2 |@OttolineLeyser@TheSainsburyLab talks to Brian Cox about her admiration for Nobel Prize winning geneticist, Barbara McClintock and explains the two great principles she uncovered: http://bit.ly/2DKUCLu pic.twitter.com/4AzonimmBF -
#PeopleOfScience series 2 | Join our President, Venki Ramakrishnan, as he talks about Max Perutz, whose work mapping molecules such as haemoglobin laid the foundations for the field of molecular biology: http://bit.ly/2DKUCLu pic.twitter.com/m7Bn7EHD48 -
#PeopleOfScience series 2 | Computer scientist@DameWendyDBE talks about one of her personal heroes, Alan Turing, and discusses how his discoveries influenced so much in the modern world: http://bit.ly/2DKUCLu pic.twitter.com/aerjA6OS8E -
Enjoyed our
#PeopleOfScience series? Pick up where you left off with our brand new second series with@ProfBrianCox and guests, now on@BBCiPlayer: http://bit.ly/2DKUCLu
Coming to our YouTube channel 6 January 2020pic.twitter.com/qARuUnq3TE
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#PeopleOfScience series 2 | Join Richard Fortey as he discusses pioneering geologist, Charles Lyell, whose work on extending geological time heavily influenced Charles Darwin. His theories provided an acceptable timeframe for Darwin’s concept of evolution: http://bit.ly/2DKUCLu pic.twitter.com/S54ITicXhl -
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@ProfBrianCox discusses our new#PeopleOfScience series, and explains some of the stories and contributions of the extraordinary scientists featured in the project: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-50681661 … -
Ideas that changed the world. The people that made it happen. New series of
#PeopleOfScience with@ProfBrianCox features#Cambridge’s Dame Ottoline Leyser@slcuplants, Sir Venki Ramakrishnan@MRC_LMB, & Sir Martin Rees@cambridge_astro:https://bit.ly/2RgzEN6 -
Not only did Barbara McClintock provide proof that genes were on chromosomes, but she also developed evidence that showed genes could move around the chromosome. ‘She decided that the way it works is very, very different from the way others were thinking.’
#PeopleOfScience pic.twitter.com/Jkp9NYEjZN
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Out now — the
@royalsociety's new series of#PeopleOfScience highlighting people who have shaped science. Features@OttolineLeyser talking with@ProfBrianCox about one of her personal heroes Nobel prize winning#geneticist Barbara McClintock on@BBCiPlayerhttps://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/p07qfs6h/people-of-science-with-professor-brian-cox-series-2-5-dame-ottoline-leyser-discusses-barbara-mcclintock …Prikaži ovu nit -
‘Max Perutz founded the field of structural biology, and also founded one of the most successful institutes for molecular biology in the world.’
@MRC_LMB ~ Venki Ramakrishnan, President of the Royal Society.#PeopleOfScience pic.twitter.com/XyNp1eIdaO
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It’s here!
#PeopleOfScience 2 is now available to watch on@BBCiPlayer. Journey through the history of science and the people that shaped it in our brand new six-part series with@ProfBrianCox and guests: https://bbc.in/2s0BMx6 pic.twitter.com/4ibI8Jc3H8
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Dame Sally Davies talks to Brian Cox about her interest in antibiotic resistance and admiration of Alexander Fleming and Howard Florey for their development of penicillin: http://bit.ly/2OujGfO
#PeopleOfScience pic.twitter.com/BNI1HpW3lu
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President of the Institute of Physics, Professor Julia Higgins, explores the life and work of Michael Faraday and how his curiosity and passion for communicating science inspires her: http://bit.ly/2qLNifJ
#PeopleOfScience pic.twitter.com/Yb8VA7QQlD
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