Georges Coutagne
Georges Coutagne (20 September 1854, in Lyon – 18 August 1928, in Saint-Genis-Laval) was a French biologist, botanist, engineer, malacologist and naturalist.
From 1871 to 1913 he was a member of the Société linnéenne de Lyon; in 1912 he was named vice-president of the Société d'agriculture de Lyon.[1]
Partial list of works
- De l'influence de la temperature sur le développement des végétaux, 1882 - The influence of temperature on the development of plants.
- Recherches sur le polymorphisme des mollusques de France, 1894 - Research of polymorphism involving mollusks of France.
- Recherches experimentales sur l'hérédité chez les vers à soie, 1901 - Experimental research on heredity in silkworms.[2][3]
gollark: Us foolish meatbags need oxygen and stable ~300K temperatures and food and water and stuff.
gollark: But what if the AIs colonize outer space? They can beat humans at it.
gollark: See, any game can be made more fun if you implement human-level intelligences which can create stuff like pyramid schemes.
gollark: Presumably if food is magically non-perishable, lots of people will just store it, and the price won't vary *that* much because the only extra cost is some storage.
gollark: But then they can't do fun stuff like run scams.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.