温馨夜读II PART4 4.The Father of Genetics(在线收听) |
[00:00.63]4.The Father of Genetics [00:04.55]His name is introduced to biology students, but often forgotten after the final exam. [00:10.76]His pioneering discoveries went unnoticed by the world until years after his death. [00:15.88]But now, in the era of genetic engineering and cloning debates, [00:20.45]scientists are elevating Johann Gregor Mendel to his rightful place in history alongside better-known, [00:28.40]19th century contemporaries such as Charles Darwin. [00:32.21]Experts and scientists have collected artwork and artifacts inside the partially restored Abbey of St. Thomas in Brno, [00:41.14]a Czech city where Mendel lived, experimented with pea plants and published his historic findings in 1866, [00:49.52]becoming the “father of genetics”. [00:52.57]The abbey, which dates from the 14th century, was seized from the Augustinian monks by communists in 1950 [01:00.85]and returned to the religious order after the Velvet Revolution in 1989. [01:06.30]A restoration project began in 1996. Yet much of the stone complex remains unused. [01:14.24]Mendel was born to a farming family in what’s today the eastern Czech Republic. [01:20.01]He became a priest in 1847 and later studied science at the University of Vienna. [01:26.00]Fascinated, by plant hybridization, he began experimenting in the abbey garden with pea plants. [01:32.54]During the 1850s Mendel carefully and systematically crossbred the plants [01:38.96]until reaching conclusions that form the basis for the laws of heredity. [01:43.64]He presented his landmark paper in 1865 and had it published the next year. But no one noticed. [01:51.70]According to scholars, Mendel’s contemporaries failed to grasp the significance of his discoveries. [01:58.56]But around 1900 — long after his death in 1884 — a British zoologist re-introduced the Czech scientist and his work, [02:07.93]sparking an era of medical, agricultural and scientific progress that continues today. [02:14.03]Indeed, thanks to Mendel and his peas, modern man understands why children inherit their parents’ traits, [02:20.92]what roles are played by chromosomes and DNA in living things and how genetics can be used to improve human health. [02:28.80]Around 1996, his findings led to the famous cloning of Dolly the sheep, [02:34.82]as well as ethical debates over human cloning and farming with genetically modified crops. |
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