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B1 Intermedio Inglés 10:18 Educational

Heredity: Crash Course Biology #9

CrashCourse · 5,455,697 vistas · Añadido hace 3 semanas

Estadísticas de aprendizaje

B1

Nivel MCER

5/10

Dificultad

Subtítulos (182 segmentos)

00:00

So, I have this brother, John. You may have heard of him.

00:02

JOHN: Hi there!

00:03

HANK: As it happens, John and I have the exact same parents.

00:06

JOHN: Yes, Mom and Dad Green.

00:08

HANK: And since we have the same parents, it's to be expected

00:11

that John and I would have similar physical characteristics

00:14

because the source of our DNA is exactly the same.

00:17

JOHN: Hank and I share some genes, but nobody knew anything about chromosomes or DNA until

00:21

the middle of the 20th century. And people have been noticing that brothers tend to look

00:25

alike since like, people started noticing stuff or whatever.

00:29

HANK: That was very scientific, John.

00:30

JOHN: I will remind you that I am doing you a favor.

00:43

Heredity: it's basically just the passing on of genetic traits from parents to offspring.

00:47

Like John said, the study of heredity is ancient, although the first ideas about how the goods

00:51

are passed on from parents to kids were really really really really really really

00:55

wrong.

00:55

For instance, the concept that people were working with for nearly 2,000 years came from

00:59

Aristotle, who suggested that: We're each a mixture of our parents' traits,

01:03

with the father kind of supplying the life force to the new human and the mother

01:07

supplying the building blocks to put it all together.

01:10

Aristotle also thought that semen was like highly-purified

01:13

menstrual blood, which is why we still refer to "bloodlines" when

01:17

we're talking about heredity.

01:18

Anyway, since nobody had a better idea, and since nobody

01:21

really wanted to tangle with Aristotle, for hundreds of years

01:23

everybody just assumed that our parents' traits just sort of

01:26

blended together in us:

01:27

like if a black squirrel and a white squirrel fell in love and decided to start a family

01:31

together, their offspring would be gray.

01:33

The first person to really start studying and thinking about

01:35

heredity in a modern way was this Austrian monk named Gregor Mendel

01:38

and Mendel demonstrated that inheritance followed particular patterns.

01:42

In the mid-1800s, Mendel spent sort of an unhealthy amount of time grubbing around

01:46

in his garden with a bunch of pea plants, and through a series of experiments, crossing

01:49

the pea plants and seeing which traits got passed on and which didn't--he came up with

01:53

a framework for understanding how traits actually get passed from one generation to another.

01:57

So, to talk about Classical Genetics, which includes Mendel's

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