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  1. Theodor Heinrich Boveri (12 October 1862 – 15 October 1915) was a German zoologist, comparative anatomist and co-founder of modern cytology. He was notable for the first hypothesis regarding cellular processes that cause cancer, and for describing chromatin diminution in nematodes. His brother was industrialist Walter Boveri.

  2. Theodor Heinrich Boveri (born October 12, 1862, Bamberg, Bavaria [Germany]—died October 15, 1915, Würzburg) was a German cytologist whose work with roundworm eggs proved that chromosomes are separate, continuous entities within the nucleus of a cell.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Mar 3, 2011 · Learn about Theodor Boveri, a German biologist who developed the chromosomal theory of inheritance and the idea of chromosomal individuality. Explore his life, work, and discoveries on egg maturation, fertilization, and embryogenesis using Ascaris and sea urchin as models.

  4. Theodor Boveri is best remembered for his chromosome theory of heredity. However, the contributions that he and his wife, Marcella O'Grady Boveri, made to the early days of genetics are greater...

    • Helga Satzinger
    • 2008
  5. Learn about Theodor Boveri, a German zoologist who studied the maturation of egg cells and the process of meiosis. He also recognized the correlation between Mendel's factors and chromosomes.

  6. Theodor Boveri was a German embryologist who observed the fragmentation and elimination of chromosomes in somatic cells of Ascaris embryos. He also traced the fate of chromosomes in germ cells and eggs, and linked chromosomes to heredity.

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  8. May 17, 2018 · During his scientific career in Germany in the late 1800s and early 1900s, Theodor Boveri (1862–1915) worked in fields that then had no names. He was a professor of zoology at the universities of Munich and later Würzburg, but in modern terminology he would not be called a zoologist.