George Alfred Baitsell
George Alfred Baitsell (1885 – September 24, 1971)[2] was an American biologist. He was Professor of biology at Yale University. He was an official of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and published several science books.
George Alfred Baitsell | |
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Officers and senior officials of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in 1947. Left to right, standing: Sinnott, Baitsell, Payne, Lark-Horovitz, Miles, Stakman, sitting: Carlson, Mather, Moulton, Shapley. | |
Born | 1885 |
Died | |
Education | B.S. Central University of Iowa 1908, M.A. Yale University 1909[1] |
Alma mater | Yale University |
Spouse(s) | Dorothy Morton Horning (1885-1967) |
Children | John Morton, a daughter of unknown name |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Biology |
Institutions | Yale University |
Thesis | Experiments on the reproduction of the Hypotrichous Infusoria[1] (1914) |
Publications
- The evolution of man, New Haven, Yale University Press, 1922
- Manual of animal biology, New York, Macmillan, 1932
- Human biology, New York, McGraw-Hill, 1940
- Science in progress, New Haven, Yale University Press, 1949 (editor)
- The Centennial of the Sheffield Scientific School, Yale University Press, 1950 (editor)
Family
George Alfred Baitsell was the first son of John Albert Baitsell (1847-1929) and Amanda Clammer (1859-1936); he had a sister, Bessie (died in 1887 three weeks after her birth), and two brothers, John Merrill (1889-1905), and Carl Merrill (born 1891).[3] He and his wife Dorothy Morton Horning (1885-1967) had a son, John Morton, and a daughter.[2]
gollark: They actually build models, look at how it could work, see how it interacts with things, and if possible find ways to test it against what actually happens.
gollark: Physicists do not sit around armchairishly going "hmm, what if stuff gets mass because of a 'field'?" and then getting it named after them.
gollark: If you are to actually make bold claims about theoretical physics instead of just paraphrasing random quantum things it would be beneficial to learn the relevant maths so you can understand the models.
gollark: I'm glad you are adding topic labels to this. This is very useful and I'd never have known this without you mentioning it.
gollark: Fascinating.
References
- Doctors of philosophy of Yale University, with the titles of their dissertations, 1861-1915, p.121 (=p.127 in the pdf file)
- George Alfred Baitsell at ancestry.com.au
- John Albert Baitsell at ancestry.com.au
External links
- Baitsell, George Alfred at WorldCat
- Baitsell, George Alfred at HathiTrust
- Baitsell, George Alfred at Smithsonian Institution
- Portraits at hpsrepository.asu.edu: 1925, undated
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