Marcus Hartog
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Most Influential Person Across History
British scientist
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Physics
Why Is Marcus Hartog Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Marcus Manuel Hartog was an English educator, natural historian, philosopher of biology and zoologist in Cork, Ireland. He contributed to multiple volumes of the Cambridge Natural History. Life Hartog was born in London 1851, the second son of the Professor Alphonse Hartog and Marion , younger brother of Numa Edward Hartog and elder brother of Sir Philip Joseph Hartog, Academic Registrar of London University and Vice-Chancellor of the University of Dacca. His two younger sisters were the pianist and composer Cécile Hartog and the portrait painter Héléna Arsène Darmesteter,
Marcus Hartog's Published Works
Number of citations in a given year to any of this author's works
Total number of citations to an author for the works they published in a given year. This highlights publication of the most important work(s) by the author
Published Works
- The Natural History of Plants (27)
- I. The Morphology of Cyclops and the Relations of the Copepoda. (1888) (24)
- The dual force of the dividing cell. Part I: The achromatic spindle figure illustrated by magnetic chains of force (1905) (14)
- Recent Researches on the Saprolegnieae; a Critical Abstract of Rothert's results (1888) (12)
- XLII.—The true nature of the “madreporic system” of Echinodermata, with remarks on nephridia (1887) (9)
- On the Floral Organogeny and Anatomy of Brownea and Saraca (1888) (8)
- Unconscious Memory (7)
- Preliminary note on the functions and homologies of the contractile vacuole in plants and animals (7)
- ADAPTATION AND DISEASE (1918) (7)
- Memoirs: On the Formation and Liberation of the Zoospores in the Saprolegnieæ (6)
- Dynamic Interpretation of Cell-Division (1902) (5)
- On the Lichen Gonidia Question (1878) (4)
- On the Nature of Lichens (1885) (4)
- LXIII.—The mechanism of the protrusion of the tongue of the Anura.—Preliminary note (1901) (4)
- On Adelphotaxy, an undescribed form of irritability (3)
- The true mechanism of mitosis (1914) (2)
- The strain-figures of »like« poles, and Rhumbler's »gummiring-modell« in relation to the cytoplasmic spindle (1905) (2)
- Additional Note on the Organ of Bojanus. (1879) (2)
- Catkins of the Hazel (1870) (2)
- Some Morphological Notes on certain Species of Thunbergia. (1878) (2)
- THE CYTOLOGY OP SAPROLEGNIA (1896) (1)
- On the unpaired eye of the Crustacea (1882) (1)
- A Difficulty in Weismannism Resolved (1893) (1)
- The Alleged Fertilization in the Saprolegnieae (1899) (1)
- A Monadine parasitic on Saprolegnieae1 (1890) (1)
- ON CERTAIN HABITS AND INSTINCTS OF SOCIAL INSECTS. (1895) (1)
- ALTERNATION OF GENERATIONS (1898) (1)
- Dogs and Fire (1889) (1)
- The mechanism of the protrusion of the tongue of the anura (0)
- A Difficulty in Weismannism (0)
- The Morphology of Cyclops and the Relations of the Copepoda. (Abstract.) (1885) (0)
- ON CORTICAL FIBRO-VASCULAR BUNDLES IN SOME SPECIES OF LECYTHIDEAE AND BARRINGTONIEAE (1890) (0)
- Notes and Memoranda: The Origin of the Red Corpuscles of Mammalian blood (1880) (0)
- The discession of the chromosomes and mitokinetism (1916) (0)
- The Inheritance of Acquired Characters (1889) (0)
- Flatworms and Mesozoa . Nemertines . Thread-worms and Sagitta . Rotifers . Polychaet worms . Earthworms and leeches . Gephyrea and Phoronis . Polyzoa (0)
- Memoirs: Abstract of Maupas's Researches on Multiplication and Fertilisation in Ciliate Infusorians (1891) (0)
- “Optical Glass” and Fluorite: an Ethical Note (1916) (0)
- Are Seedlings of Hemerocallis Fulva Specially Variable? (1891) (0)
- On an Undescribed Rudimentary Organ in Human Attire (1893) (0)
- Protozoa / by Marcus Hartog. Porifera (sponges) / by Igerna B.J. Sollas. Coelenterata & Ctenophona / by S.J. Hickson. Echinodermata / by E.W. MacBride. (0)
- THE ORIGIN OF LIFE (1912) (0)
- 104. Interpolation in Memory (0)
- Protozoa . Porifera (sponges) . Coelenterata and Ctenophora . Echinodermata (0)
- The natural history of plants. By H. Baillon. Tr. by Marcus M. Hartog. (0)
- A Difficulty in Weismannism (1891) (0)
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