Robert Almer Harper
#136,476
Most Influential Person Across History
American botanist
Robert Almer Harper's AcademicInfluence.com Rankings
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Biology
Robert Almer Harper's Degrees
- Bachelors Botany University of California, Berkeley
- Masters Botany University of California, Berkeley
- PhD Botany University of California, Berkeley
Why Is Robert Almer Harper Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Robert Almer Harper was an American botanist. The younger brother of Edward Thompson Harper, Robert was born in Le Claire, Iowa to Congressional Minister Almer Harper and Eunice Thompson. The family moved to Port Byron, Illinois in 1863, where Robert attended local schools. He matriculated to Oberlin College, his father's alma mater, where he graduated with a A. B. in 1886. During the Fall of 1886 he performed graduate studies at Johns Hopkins University, then he was professor of Greek and Latin at Gates College in Neligh, Nebraska during 1886–88.
Robert Almer Harper's Published Works
Published Works
- Sexual Reproduction in Pyronema confluens and the Morphology of the Ascocarp (1900) (49)
- Cell and Nuclear Division in Fuligo varians (1900) (28)
- The Formation of the Capillitium in Certain Myxomycetes (27)
- Morphogenesis in Dictyostelium (1926) (27)
- Binucleate Cells in Certain Hymenomycetes (1902) (22)
- Organization and Light Relations in Polysphondylium (1932) (21)
- Cell-Division in Sporangia and Asci (1899) (20)
- CLEAVAGE IN DIDYMIUM MELANOSPERMUM (PERS) MACBR. (1914) (20)
- The Structure and Development of the Colony in Gonium (1912) (20)
- Morphogenesis in Polysphondylium (1929) (19)
- THE STRUCTURE OF PROTOPLASM (1919) (8)
- Sexual reproduction and the organization of the nucleus in certain mildews. By R.A. Harper. (5)
- THE EVOLUTION OF CELL TYPES AND CONTACT AND PRESSURE RESPONSES IN PEDIASTRUM (4)
- THE SPECIES CONCEPT FROM THE POINT OF VIEW OF A MORPHOLOGIST (1923) (4)
- Inheritance of Sugar and Starch Characters in Corn (1920) (3)
- Nuclear Phenomena of Sexual Reproduction in Fungi (1910) (2)
- Cell-Division in Sporangia and Asci With Plate XVIV–XXVI (1899) (1)
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What Schools Are Affiliated With Robert Almer Harper?
Robert Almer Harper is affiliated with the following schools: