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Heredity: Crash Course Biology #9
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CEFR Level
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So, I have this brother, John. You may have heard of him.
JOHN: Hi there!
HANK: As it happens, John and I have the exact same parents.
JOHN: Yes, Mom and Dad Green.
HANK: And since we have the same parents, it's to be expected
that John and I would have similar physical characteristics
because the source of our DNA is exactly the same.
JOHN: Hank and I share some genes, but nobody knew anything about chromosomes or DNA until
the middle of the 20th century. And people have been noticing that brothers tend to look
alike since like, people started noticing stuff or whatever.
HANK: That was very scientific, John.
JOHN: I will remind you that I am doing you a favor.
Heredity: it's basically just the passing on of genetic traits from parents to offspring.
Like John said, the study of heredity is ancient, although the first ideas about how the goods
are passed on from parents to kids were really really really really really really
wrong.
For instance, the concept that people were working with for nearly 2,000 years came from
Aristotle, who suggested that: We're each a mixture of our parents' traits,
with the father kind of supplying the life force to the new human and the mother
supplying the building blocks to put it all together.
Aristotle also thought that semen was like highly-purified
menstrual blood, which is why we still refer to "bloodlines" when
we're talking about heredity.
Anyway, since nobody had a better idea, and since nobody
really wanted to tangle with Aristotle, for hundreds of years
everybody just assumed that our parents' traits just sort of
blended together in us:
like if a black squirrel and a white squirrel fell in love and decided to start a family
together, their offspring would be gray.
The first person to really start studying and thinking about
heredity in a modern way was this Austrian monk named Gregor Mendel
and Mendel demonstrated that inheritance followed particular patterns.
In the mid-1800s, Mendel spent sort of an unhealthy amount of time grubbing around
in his garden with a bunch of pea plants, and through a series of experiments, crossing
the pea plants and seeing which traits got passed on and which didn't--he came up with
a framework for understanding how traits actually get passed from one generation to another.
So, to talk about Classical Genetics, which includes Mendel's
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