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Tuatara: Volume 12, Issue 2, July 1964

Fig. 4: The four mitotic chromosomes of the horse roundworm Ascaris. — Fig. 5: The 46 chromosomes of man (From Ford et al in Nature, 181: 1565, 1958). — Fig. 6: Chromosome spirals in Tradescantia virginiana pollen mother-cell, pretreated with nitric acid. (Courtesy Dr. C. Darlington). — Fig. 7: Chromosomes from a root tip of Allium triquetrum pretreated with colchicine to accentuate the centromeres. The right arrow marks the centromeres of two sister chromatids, each bridged by the chromonema. …

Fig. 4: The four mitotic chromosomes of the horse roundworm Ascaris.Fig. 5: The 46 chromosomes of man (From Ford et al in Nature, 181: 1565, 1958).Fig. 6: Chromosome spirals in Tradescantia virginiana pollen mother-cell, pretreated with nitric acid. (Courtesy Dr. C. Darlington).Fig. 7: Chromosomes from a root tip of Allium triquetrum pretreated with colchicine to accentuate the centromeres. The right arrow marks the centromeres of two sister chromatids, each bridged by the chromonema. The left arrow marks two satellites of sister chromatids.

Fig. 4: The four mitotic chromosomes of the horse roundworm Ascaris.
Fig. 5: The 46 chromosomes of man (From Ford et al in Nature, 181: 1565, 1958).
Fig. 6: Chromosome spirals in Tradescantia virginiana pollen mother-cell, pretreated with nitric acid. (Courtesy Dr. C. Darlington).
Fig. 7: Chromosomes from a root tip of Allium triquetrum pretreated with colchicine to accentuate the centromeres. The right arrow marks the centromeres of two sister chromatids, each bridged by the chromonema. The left arrow marks two satellites of sister chromatids.