They predicted that the DNA double helix would unzip and replicate semiconservatively.
yes but they used rosalind franklins research without her knowing :(
"Mr. Watson -- come here -- I want to see you"
Alexander Graham Bell, its is a famous line spoken by Bell to Thomas Watson as associated with the invention of the telephone. Alexander Graham Bell's notebook entry of March 10, 1876, describes his successful experiment with the telephone. Speaking through the instrument to his assistant, Thomas A. Watson, in the next room, Bell utters these famous first words, "Mr. Watson -- come here -- I want to see you." Manuscript Division, Alexander Graham Bell Family Papers, Box 271, "Subject File: Scientific Notebooks, 1876." Reproduction information: Contact Manuscript Division at (202) 707-5387.
They come from Spain. They come from Spain.
it is come and gone
Asparagus come from where ever i want it to come from
no
ME!!! It would be nice if people would be serious about answering questions. Children of all ages come here to get help with homework and could use the CORRECT ANSWER which is: James Watson and Francis Crick in 1953. Sorry but your wrong. The real answer is not Wotson and Crick but is really Rosalind Franklin back in 1898. If I were you I would look in the textbook because this is confusing children who look for the correct answer but get stuck in a situation where there are two different answers, I wouldn't turn to the internet for help if I were you. You're smart. All you need to do is think. Now I sound like a motivational speaker.. :/ ~Soon to be motivational speaker :P
They were famous for discovering the structure of DNA. The discovery of DNA did not come about by chance or luck. Crick and Watson, like all good scientists kept their eyes open, asked questions and made sure that nothing that could be potentially informative was allowed to slip by.
Well Watson and Crick helped by creating the double helix model based off of a picture taken by Rosalind Frankilin using x-ray diffraction. Erwin Chargaff (1950) discovered that the numbers of bases (A, T, G, C) vary in DNA Molecules. He said the amounts of thymine-adenine, and guanine-cytosine were usually equal. He didn't come up with the correct explanation, but he told Watson and Crick his findings. Oswald Avery discovered that bacterial genes were made of DNA. Walther Fleming discovers chromosomes in 1882.
They figured out it was a double helix in a formation consisting of molecules made up of Nitrogen Bases, Adenine(A) Thymine(T) Guanine(G), and Cytosine(C).They got information from Rosalind Franklin's research on DNA. The data gave Watson and Francis clues they needed for the double helix thing.
There is no special hypothesis that you can come up with. You could, of course, hypothesize that they are special numbers. It is a hypothesis even if a rubbish one.
England
Watson and Crick using Rosalind Franklin's x-ray of a double helix of DNA which she had not yet realized was a double helix Rosalind Franklin made an x-ray that showed the nucleotide structure of DNA. Watson and Crick used her x-ray to make their 3-D model of DNA's structure.
"Mr. Watson, come here. I want to see you."
"Come, Watson, come! The game is afoot. Not a word! Into your clothes and come!" "Ah, me! it's a wicked world, and when a clever man turns his brain to crime it is the worst of all." "Cut out the poetry, Watson." "Elementary, my dear Watson." Sherlock Holmes never actually said "Elementary, my dear Watson." in any of the short stories or novels.
"Mr. Watson. Come over here. I need to see you."
Chester, united kingdom