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| occupation = | years_active = | employer = | organization = | known_for = | notable_works = | title = | boards = | spouse = Betty Clark〔 | children = Sally Moore Gall〔 | parents = | relatives = | awards = | module = | module2 = | module3 = | module4 = | module5 = | module6 = | signature = John Alexander Moore signature.tif | signature_alt = | signature_size = | footnotes = | box_width = }} John Alexander Moore (June 27, 1915 – May 26, 2002) was an American zoology professor emeritus. ==Early life and education== Moore was born to Louise Hammond Blume and George Douglas Moore, a lawyer, in Charles Town, West Virginia in 1915. Four years later his parents divorced and Moore traveled with his mother first to Carson City, Nevada and Oakland, California until she remarried and moved the family to Markham, Virginia two years after her divorce. Although the schools he attended at the time were not the best, Moore's location in the Blue Ridge Mountains kindled his interest in birds from a young age; Moore published his first academic article in Auk at age 15.〔 In the early 1930s Moore's mother divorced again and took the family to Washington D.C. and then to New York City. Moore finished his last two years of high school at Haaren High School. He also volunteered at the American Museum of Natural History.〔 Despite his humble background he was accepted to Columbia College as an undergraduate after a strong interview. While there, he married fellow embryology graduate student Betty Clark in 1938. Both had studied under Lester Barth. It was likely Moore's suggestion in the 1930s that influenced Lester Sharp and Franz Shrader to coin the term kinetochore, which refers to a genetic structure key to chromosome congression during metazoan mitosis. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「John Alexander Moore」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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