George Minot
Encyclopedia : G : GE : GEO : George Minot
George Richards Minot (December 2, 1885 in Boston, Massachusetts – February 25, 1950) won the 1934 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine with William P. Murphy and George H. Whipple for their work in the study of anemia.
External links
- [Nobel e-Museum: George R. Minot – Biography]
- ["Red-Blooded Doctors Cure Anemia"]
- [Pernicious Anemia, a Victory for Science]
Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine: Laureates (1926-1950)
|
1926: Fibiger |
1927: Wagner-Jauregg |
1928: Nicolle |
1929: Eijkman, Hopkins |
1930: Landsteiner |
1931: Warburg |
1932: Sherrington, Adrian |
1933: Morgan |
1934: Whipple, Minot, Murphy |
1935: Spemann |
1936: Dale, Loewi |
1937: Szent-Györgyi |
1938: Heymans |
1939: Domagk |
1943: Dam, Doisy |
1944: Erlanger, Gasser |
1945: Fleming, Chain, Florey |
1946: Muller |
1947: C.Cori, G.Cori, Houssay |
1948: Müller |
1949: Hess, Moniz |
1950: Kendall, Reichstein, Hench
|
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
