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  1. Dec 15, 2016 · Maurice Wilkins is the third man in the DNA double helix discovery. He is also a Nobel laureate and a controversial colleague of the famous Rosalin Franklin.

  2. Maurice Wilkins was born in Pongaroa, New Zealand, on December 15, 1916, to Irish parents. His family moved to England when Wilkins was six years-old and he began a British education, complete ...

  3. The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1962 was awarded jointly to Francis Harry Compton Crick, James Dewey Watson and Maurice Hugh Frederick Wilkins "for their discoveries concerning the molecular structure of nucleic acids and its significance for information transfer in living material"

  4. The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1962 was awarded jointly to Francis Harry Compton Crick, James Dewey Watson and Maurice Hugh Frederick Wilkins "for their discoveries concerning the molecular structure of nucleic acids and its significance for information transfer in living material"

  5. Lived 1916 – 2004. Maurice Wilkins initiated the experimental research into DNA that culminated in Watson and Crick's discovery of its structure in 1953. Wilkins crystallized DNA in a form suitable for quantitative X-ray diffraction work and obtained the best quality X-ray images seen at that time.

  6. Awarded the Nobel Prize in 1962, Maurice Wilkins (1916–2004) played an important role in the discovery of the double helix structure of DNA whilst working at King’s. Maurice was hard at work completing his PhD at the outbreak of World War II.

  7. www.nature.com › articles › d41586/019/02554-zThe structure of DNA

    Oct 9, 2019 · However, DNA was the project of Maurice Wilkins at King’s College London. Crick was a friend of Wilkins’s, and it wasn’t the done thing for labs to compete over the same molecule.