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Maurice Wilkins and Rosalind Franklin's
Galileo took credit for inventing the telescope
She and Maurice Wilkins worked together and took some x-rays of DNA. The DNA crystallography allowed Watson and Crick to look at the picture to determine it was a double helix and not a triple helix as Linus Pauling had thought. he said omg i look like my dad!! _i_
Lomonosov
I believe so, because I think she took the picture that showed that DNA had a double helix pattern.
No she did not. Four years after she died in 1958 three other chemists took credit for her work and won a Nobel Prize.
SHe took it
Maurice Wilkins and Rosalind Franklin's
If you are looking for the name of the person who actually discovered, and photographed, the double helix configuration of the DNA molecule, for which Mr. Watson and Mr. Crick took total credit, it was Rosalind Franklin who received no credit whatsoever.She was shunned once again when the Nobel Foundation, in 1962, handed awards to the two "discoverers" as well as British colleague, Maurice Wilkins, but omitted her because, according to them, they do not bestow awards posthumously - this despite the fact that her discovery was, by that time, universally known within the scientific community.Experimental proof of the discovery was later provided by American biochemist, Arthur Kornberg.
She and Maurice Wilkins worked together and took some x-rays of DNA. The DNA crystallography allowed Watson and Crick to look at the picture to determine it was a double helix and not a triple helix as Linus Pauling had thought.
Galileo took credit for inventing the telescope
Columbus found America because he was looking for a short route to India or Asia he found it by accident yet took credit for it
Raccons took a lot of credit during this time.
She and Maurice Wilkins worked together and took some x-rays of DNA. The DNA crystallography allowed Watson and Crick to look at the picture to determine it was a double helix and not a triple helix as Linus Pauling had thought. he said omg i look like my dad!! _i_
A helix
she took an active role in public policy issues
Rosalind Franklin.Photo 51 is the nickname given to an X-ray diffraction image of DNA taken by Rosalind Franklin in 1952 that was critical evidence in identifying the structure of DNA. The photo was taken by Franklin while working at King's College London in Sir John Randall's group.Source: answers.com