Geoffrey Beale
Geoffrey Herbert Beale MBE, FRS[1] (11 June 1913 – 16 October 2009) was a British geneticist.[2] He founded the Protozoan Genetics Unit, at University of Edinburgh.[3]
Life
He grew up in Wandsworth, London, and attended Sutton Grammar School. Influenced by The Science of Life edited by H. G. Wells, he took life sciences as a direction.[1] He earned a first-class honours degree, from Imperial College London, in 1935, and PhD in 1938. He worked at the John Innes Institute, with J. B. S. Haldane.
In World War II, he served in the Intelligence Corps, at the British mission to Murmansk. He worked at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory.
Family
He married Betty; they had three sons.
gollark: So, you're hoping people will use NC instead of spamming cheap EIO solar panels.
gollark: Also, people will just use Actually Additions, probably, for power.
gollark: If they make a giant NC reactor, what will they spend power on?
gollark: Gollark's Law: Without encouragement to do otherwise, people will initially go for the easy thing.
gollark: Realistically everyone will use Ender IO.
References
- Preer, John R.; Tait, Andrew (2011). "Geoffrey Herbert Beale MBE. 11 June 1913 -- 16 October 2009". Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society. doi:10.1098/rsbm.2010.0025.
- Andrew Tait (1 February 2010). "Geoffrey Beale obituary". The Guardian.
- http://jwa.org/encyclopedia/author/beale-geoffrey
External links
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