Dictionary
crick
noun
A painful muscular cramp or spasm of some part of the body, as of the neck or back, making it difficult to move the part affected. (Compare catch.)
Exact(32)
For example, we have the ensemble conclusion that "almost all" speciation occurs via geographical isolation (Mayr 1963) or that the genetic code is "nearly" universal (Crick 1968).
Conversely, the usage in cognitive neuroscience, with its talk of "representations" (e.g., Crick 1988) may be said to be too rich, since the coded sequences in the DNA are also not said to have within them a representation of the structure of the protein (Darden 2006b).
In Cornwall, Crick is overseeing several ingenious developments: 40 1,200-watt 1,200-watternstagee been replanterns 600-watt ones, whave are actually beenhtereplaced to bytter optics, while the theatre will be the first in the world to trial LED house lights that will not flicker at low levels.
But Dr Crick, as he now was (though for the protein work, rather than for discovering the structure of DNA), stayed in research.
Franklin had had the photos for months without being able to work out what Drs Crick and Watson saw in them immediately that DNA is a double-stranded helix.
Unless you are American, in which case the inseparable pair is Watson and Crick.
Similar(28)
Counting every moment Taking the long view ReprintsAt the heart of such circuits is Watson-Crick base pairing, the chemical Velcro that binds together the two strands of DNA's double helix.
But there was no great leap forward of the sort that followed the Watson-Crick paper.
In a now classical paper, Kenneth Schaffner argued that molecular biology the Watson-Crick model of DNA in particular effected a reduction of the laws of (classical) genetics to physical and chemical laws (Schaffner 1969, 342).
This is exactly what is predicted by the Watson-Crick semiconservative mechanism.
ELON MUSK is not, to paraphrase James Watson's bon mot about Francis Crick, a man given to modest moods.
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