Biology Discoveries
7 discoveries
Ancient DNA and Neanderthal Genome
2010 — Svante Pääbo
First complete sequencing of the Neanderthal genome, revealing that modern non-African humans carry 1-4% Neanderthal DNA from ancient interbreeding.
Discovery of Hox Genes
1984 — Edward B. Lewis, Christiane Nüsslein-Volhard, Eric Wieschaus
Identification of homeotic selector genes (Hox genes) that control body plan development across virtually all animal phyla.
Punctuated Equilibrium
1972 — Niles Eldredge, Stephen Jay Gould
The hypothesis that evolution proceeds in rapid bursts of speciation interspersed with long periods of stasis, rather than gradual continuous change.
Endosymbiotic Theory
1967 — Lynn Margulis
The proposal that mitochondria and chloroplasts originated as free-living prokaryotes engulfed by ancestral eukaryotic cells, forming a symbiotic relationship.
Molecular Clock Hypothesis
1962 — Emile Zuckerkandl, Linus Pauling
The observation that protein and DNA sequences accumulate mutations at roughly constant rates, allowing estimation of divergence times between species.
Discovery of Horizontal Gene Transfer
1959 — Tsutomu Watanabe
Demonstration that genes can transfer between unrelated organisms, particularly among bacteria, rather than only being inherited vertically from parent to offspring.
Theory of Evolution by Natural Selection
1859 — Charles Darwin, Alfred Russel Wallace
The theory that species evolve over time through natural selection, where organisms better adapted to their environment survive and reproduce more successfully.