Box 28
Container
Contains 20 Results:
Lea: Other Manuscripts on the Biological Effect of Neutrons, undated
File — Box: 28, Folder: 1
Identifier: X
Scope and Contents Note
From the Collection:
This collection contains correspondence, published articles, manuscripts, and experimental notebooks documenting scientist L. H. Gray's scientific work. Most of this work took place during his tenure as the first Director of the British Empire Cancer Campaign Research Unit in Radiobiology (1954-65), where he was free to choose his own research topics. Gray also corresponded with many notable scientists, including Sir James Chadwick (who discovered the neutron), and Ernest Rutherford (who...
Dates:
undated
Lea: Other Manuscripts on the Biological Effect of Radiation, undated
File — Box: 28, Folder: 2
Identifier: X
Scope and Contents Note
From the Collection:
This collection contains correspondence, published articles, manuscripts, and experimental notebooks documenting scientist L. H. Gray's scientific work. Most of this work took place during his tenure as the first Director of the British Empire Cancer Campaign Research Unit in Radiobiology (1954-65), where he was free to choose his own research topics. Gray also corresponded with many notable scientists, including Sir James Chadwick (who discovered the neutron), and Ernest Rutherford (who...
Dates:
undated
Lea: Correspondence with Gray, undated
File — Box: 28, Folder: 3
Identifier: X
Scope and Contents Note
From the Collection:
This collection contains correspondence, published articles, manuscripts, and experimental notebooks documenting scientist L. H. Gray's scientific work. Most of this work took place during his tenure as the first Director of the British Empire Cancer Campaign Research Unit in Radiobiology (1954-65), where he was free to choose his own research topics. Gray also corresponded with many notable scientists, including Sir James Chadwick (who discovered the neutron), and Ernest Rutherford (who...
Dates:
undated
Lea: Correspondence concerning revision of book by Gray, undated
File — Box: 28, Folder: 4
Identifier: X
Scope and Contents Note
From the Collection:
This collection contains correspondence, published articles, manuscripts, and experimental notebooks documenting scientist L. H. Gray's scientific work. Most of this work took place during his tenure as the first Director of the British Empire Cancer Campaign Research Unit in Radiobiology (1954-65), where he was free to choose his own research topics. Gray also corresponded with many notable scientists, including Sir James Chadwick (who discovered the neutron), and Ernest Rutherford (who...
Dates:
undated
Lea: Papers on Neutron Generators, undated
File — Box: 28, Folder: 5
Identifier: X
Scope and Contents Note
From the Collection:
This collection contains correspondence, published articles, manuscripts, and experimental notebooks documenting scientist L. H. Gray's scientific work. Most of this work took place during his tenure as the first Director of the British Empire Cancer Campaign Research Unit in Radiobiology (1954-65), where he was free to choose his own research topics. Gray also corresponded with many notable scientists, including Sir James Chadwick (who discovered the neutron), and Ernest Rutherford (who...
Dates:
undated
Lea and Catcheside: Chromosome Papers, 1941-1942
File — Box: 28, Folder: 6
Identifier: X
Scope and Contents Note
From the Collection:
This collection contains correspondence, published articles, manuscripts, and experimental notebooks documenting scientist L. H. Gray's scientific work. Most of this work took place during his tenure as the first Director of the British Empire Cancer Campaign Research Unit in Radiobiology (1954-65), where he was free to choose his own research topics. Gray also corresponded with many notable scientists, including Sir James Chadwick (who discovered the neutron), and Ernest Rutherford (who...
Dates:
1941-1942
Lea and Catcheside: Chromosome Papers, 1943-1944
File — Box: 28, Folder: 7
Identifier: X
Scope and Contents Note
From the Collection:
This collection contains correspondence, published articles, manuscripts, and experimental notebooks documenting scientist L. H. Gray's scientific work. Most of this work took place during his tenure as the first Director of the British Empire Cancer Campaign Research Unit in Radiobiology (1954-65), where he was free to choose his own research topics. Gray also corresponded with many notable scientists, including Sir James Chadwick (who discovered the neutron), and Ernest Rutherford (who...
Dates:
1943-1944
Lea, Catcheside and Thoday: Chromosomes, 1944-1945
File — Box: 28, Folder: 8
Identifier: X
Scope and Contents Note
From the Collection:
This collection contains correspondence, published articles, manuscripts, and experimental notebooks documenting scientist L. H. Gray's scientific work. Most of this work took place during his tenure as the first Director of the British Empire Cancer Campaign Research Unit in Radiobiology (1954-65), where he was free to choose his own research topics. Gray also corresponded with many notable scientists, including Sir James Chadwick (who discovered the neutron), and Ernest Rutherford (who...
Dates:
1944-1945
Lea and Catcheside: Chromosome Papers, 1945
File — Box: 28, Folder: 9
Identifier: X
Scope and Contents Note
From the Collection:
This collection contains correspondence, published articles, manuscripts, and experimental notebooks documenting scientist L. H. Gray's scientific work. Most of this work took place during his tenure as the first Director of the British Empire Cancer Campaign Research Unit in Radiobiology (1954-65), where he was free to choose his own research topics. Gray also corresponded with many notable scientists, including Sir James Chadwick (who discovered the neutron), and Ernest Rutherford (who...
Dates:
1945
Lea and Haldane: Chromosome Rearrangement Theory, undated
File — Box: 28, Folder: 10
Identifier: X
Scope and Contents Note
From the Collection:
This collection contains correspondence, published articles, manuscripts, and experimental notebooks documenting scientist L. H. Gray's scientific work. Most of this work took place during his tenure as the first Director of the British Empire Cancer Campaign Research Unit in Radiobiology (1954-65), where he was free to choose his own research topics. Gray also corresponded with many notable scientists, including Sir James Chadwick (who discovered the neutron), and Ernest Rutherford (who...
Dates:
undated
Lea and Catcheside: Mutation Paper and others, 1944
File — Box: 28, Folder: 11
Identifier: X
Scope and Contents Note
From the Collection:
This collection contains correspondence, published articles, manuscripts, and experimental notebooks documenting scientist L. H. Gray's scientific work. Most of this work took place during his tenure as the first Director of the British Empire Cancer Campaign Research Unit in Radiobiology (1954-65), where he was free to choose his own research topics. Gray also corresponded with many notable scientists, including Sir James Chadwick (who discovered the neutron), and Ernest Rutherford (who...
Dates:
1944
Lea and Catcheside: Genetic Effects of Radiation, undated
File — Box: 28, Folder: 12
Identifier: X
Scope and Contents Note
From the Collection:
This collection contains correspondence, published articles, manuscripts, and experimental notebooks documenting scientist L. H. Gray's scientific work. Most of this work took place during his tenure as the first Director of the British Empire Cancer Campaign Research Unit in Radiobiology (1954-65), where he was free to choose his own research topics. Gray also corresponded with many notable scientists, including Sir James Chadwick (who discovered the neutron), and Ernest Rutherford (who...
Dates:
undated
Lea and Catcheside: Effects of Radiation Exposure on Size of Gene, undated
File — Box: 28, Folder: 13
Identifier: X
Scope and Contents Note
From the Collection:
This collection contains correspondence, published articles, manuscripts, and experimental notebooks documenting scientist L. H. Gray's scientific work. Most of this work took place during his tenure as the first Director of the British Empire Cancer Campaign Research Unit in Radiobiology (1954-65), where he was free to choose his own research topics. Gray also corresponded with many notable scientists, including Sir James Chadwick (who discovered the neutron), and Ernest Rutherford (who...
Dates:
undated
Lea and Catcheside: Biological Effects Book and Mutation File, undated
File — Box: 28, Folder: 14
Identifier: X
Scope and Contents Note
From the Collection:
This collection contains correspondence, published articles, manuscripts, and experimental notebooks documenting scientist L. H. Gray's scientific work. Most of this work took place during his tenure as the first Director of the British Empire Cancer Campaign Research Unit in Radiobiology (1954-65), where he was free to choose his own research topics. Gray also corresponded with many notable scientists, including Sir James Chadwick (who discovered the neutron), and Ernest Rutherford (who...
Dates:
undated
Lea: Biological Assay of Carcinogens, 1945
File — Box: 28, Folder: 15
Identifier: X
Scope and Contents Note
From the Collection:
This collection contains correspondence, published articles, manuscripts, and experimental notebooks documenting scientist L. H. Gray's scientific work. Most of this work took place during his tenure as the first Director of the British Empire Cancer Campaign Research Unit in Radiobiology (1954-65), where he was free to choose his own research topics. Gray also corresponded with many notable scientists, including Sir James Chadwick (who discovered the neutron), and Ernest Rutherford (who...
Dates:
1945
Lea and Catcheside: Pollen Tube Papers, undated
File — Box: 28, Folder: 16
Identifier: X
Scope and Contents Note
From the Collection:
This collection contains correspondence, published articles, manuscripts, and experimental notebooks documenting scientist L. H. Gray's scientific work. Most of this work took place during his tenure as the first Director of the British Empire Cancer Campaign Research Unit in Radiobiology (1954-65), where he was free to choose his own research topics. Gray also corresponded with many notable scientists, including Sir James Chadwick (who discovered the neutron), and Ernest Rutherford (who...
Dates:
undated
Lea: Other Manuscripts on Ionization, undated
File — Box: 28, Folder: 17
Identifier: X
Scope and Contents Note
From the Collection:
This collection contains correspondence, published articles, manuscripts, and experimental notebooks documenting scientist L. H. Gray's scientific work. Most of this work took place during his tenure as the first Director of the British Empire Cancer Campaign Research Unit in Radiobiology (1954-65), where he was free to choose his own research topics. Gray also corresponded with many notable scientists, including Sir James Chadwick (who discovered the neutron), and Ernest Rutherford (who...
Dates:
undated
Lea: Candidature for Prophit Studentship of the Royal College of Physicians, 1941
File — Box: 28, Folder: 18
Identifier: X
Scope and Contents Note
From the Collection:
This collection contains correspondence, published articles, manuscripts, and experimental notebooks documenting scientist L. H. Gray's scientific work. Most of this work took place during his tenure as the first Director of the British Empire Cancer Campaign Research Unit in Radiobiology (1954-65), where he was free to choose his own research topics. Gray also corresponded with many notable scientists, including Sir James Chadwick (who discovered the neutron), and Ernest Rutherford (who...
Dates:
1941
Lea: The Passage of Neutrons though Matter (Part I of Fellowship Thesis, Trinity College), 1934
File — Box: 28, Folder: 19
Identifier: X
Scope and Contents Note
From the Collection:
This collection contains correspondence, published articles, manuscripts, and experimental notebooks documenting scientist L. H. Gray's scientific work. Most of this work took place during his tenure as the first Director of the British Empire Cancer Campaign Research Unit in Radiobiology (1954-65), where he was free to choose his own research topics. Gray also corresponded with many notable scientists, including Sir James Chadwick (who discovered the neutron), and Ernest Rutherford (who...
Dates:
1934
Lea: Correspondence with Gray, 1934-1941
File — Box: 28, Folder: 20
Identifier: X
Scope and Contents Note
From the Collection:
This collection contains correspondence, published articles, manuscripts, and experimental notebooks documenting scientist L. H. Gray's scientific work. Most of this work took place during his tenure as the first Director of the British Empire Cancer Campaign Research Unit in Radiobiology (1954-65), where he was free to choose his own research topics. Gray also corresponded with many notable scientists, including Sir James Chadwick (who discovered the neutron), and Ernest Rutherford (who...
Dates:
1934-1941