The Cell in Development and Inheritance (1900), by Edmund Beecher Wilson
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The Cell in Development and Inheritance [3], by Edmund Beecher Wilson [4], provided a textbook introduction to cell biology for generations of biologists in the twentieth century. In his book, Wilson integrated information about development, inheritance, chromosomes, organelles, and the structure and functions of cells. First published in 1896, the book started with 371 pages, grew to 483 pages in the second edition that appeared in 1900, and expanded to 1,231 pages by the third and final edition in 1925. Wilson dedicated the book to the cell biologist Theodor Boveri [5], whose work established the roles of chromosomes in cell division. With its explanations and many illustrations and diagrams, The Cell in Development and Inheritance [3] enabled embryologists to better understand development in terms of cell structure and function.
[1] J. B. Farmer. The Cell in Development and Inheritance , 1901, Nature.
[2] E. Schäfer,et al. The Cell in Development and Inheritance , 1897, Nature.
[3] E. Wilson. An Atlas of Fertilization and Karyokinesis of the Ovum , 1896, Edinburgh Medical Journal.
[4] Th. Boveri. An Organism Produced Sexually without Characteristics of the Mother , 1893, The American Naturalist.
[5] Boveri. Ein geschlechtlich erzeugter Organismus ohne mutterliche Eigenschaften , 1890 .