- Hampton Carson
Hampton Lawrence Carson (
November 5 ,1914 –December 19 ,2004 ) was an eminent American biologist best known for his work on thechromosomes of new species of the fruit flyDrosophila and his contributions to our understanding of theirevolution .Carson was born in
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and studiedzoology there at theUniversity of Pennsylvania , receiving his A.B. degree in 1936 and his Ph.D. degree in 1943. His doctoral thesis on the cytogenetics of dark-wingedfungus gnat s was considered "definitive" by Dobzhansky.Carson spent virtually all of his career at two universities —
Washington University in St. Louis (1943-1963) and theUniversity of Hawaii (1963-1985) — except for sabbatical leaves toBrazil andAustralia .Carson studied the population genetics of eight species of Drosophila in the Hawaiian islands and proposed that
speciation of the flies in the island chain was tied to the formation of new islands. New species were slightly different from those in the nearest island, and progressively more different than those in more distant islands.Although Hampton Carson retired from the University of Hawaii faculty in 1985, he remained active in research and continued living in Hawaii with his wife and colleague Meredith. He died in Hawaii.
External links
* [http://starbulletin.com/2005/01/08/news/story7.html Hampton L. Carson/ 1914-2004: Geneticist earned praise for studies of isle fruit fly] , obituary in the Honolulu Star-Bulletin, January 8, 2005
* [http://www.amphilsoc.org/library/mole/c/carson.xml#bioghist The Hampton L. Carson papers] at theAmerican Philosophical Society
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