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Author Topic:   Was Lamarck right?
extremophile
Member (Idle past 5622 days)
Posts: 53
Joined: 08-23-2003


Message 33 of 35 (121629)
07-03-2004 2:52 PM


epigenetics
a excerpt from Science:
The environmental lability of epigenetic inheritance may not necessarily bring to mind Lamarckian images of giraffes stretching their necks to reach the treetops (and then giving birth to progeny with similarly stretched necks), but it does give researchers reason to reconsider long-refuted notions about the inheritance of acquired characteristics. Eighteenth-century French naturalist Jean Baptiste de Lamarck proposed that environmental cues could cause phenotypic changes transmittable to offspring. "He had a basically good idea but a bad example," says Rohl Oflsson, Uppsala University, Sweden.
Epigenetics: Genome, Meet Your Environment - As the evidence accumulates for epigenetics, researchers reacquire a taste for Lamarckism

Replies to this message:
 Message 34 by Wounded King, posted 07-04-2004 7:17 AM extremophile has replied

  
extremophile
Member (Idle past 5622 days)
Posts: 53
Joined: 08-23-2003


Message 35 of 35 (132575)
08-10-2004 10:48 PM
Reply to: Message 34 by Wounded King
07-04-2004 7:17 AM


Re: epigenetics
Thanks. Blame on the lack of originality of the names of these scientific magazines! (not in my lapses)

This message is a reply to:
 Message 34 by Wounded King, posted 07-04-2004 7:17 AM Wounded King has not replied

  
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