This unparalleled collection documents the race to identify DNA’s double-helix structure and other significant developments that formed the foundation of molecular biology.| Science History Institute
If you want to know what it takes to succeed in science, head to the Nobel Prize ceremony.| Nautilus
A new history of the race to decipher DNA reveals Shakespearean plots of scheming.| Nautilus
Rosalind Franklin (1920-1958) and Raymond G. Gosling (1926-2015) wrote a satirical "death notice" announcing the death of DNA's helical structure. The notecard was intended as a prank for their colleague Maurice Wilkins (1916-2004), who argued that both the A and B forms of DNA were helical despite the lack of evidence to support this claim.| Science History Institute Digital Collections
Welcome to The Porthole| Nautilus