History

Biology at The University of Texas at Austin traces back to the very beginnings of the University. The first PhD ever awarded at Texas was given to Carl G. Hartman, a student in the School of Zoology, on June 8, 1915. In the 1916 edition of the Cactus Yearbook, we can read of Hartman's graduation that "as he mounted the steps to the platform, the entire body of graduates rose and gave him an ovation." In the century since Hartman's graduation, there has been tremendous growth and change in biology at The University of Texas. 

Writer Nicole Elmer laid out this history in detail in a series of researched articles for the department captured here.

History of Biology at UT


Features

A Detailed History of the Department of Integrative Biology

The University of Texas at Austin has a storied and long history of leadership in biology.

A historic old pic shows Old Main on The University of Texas at Austin campus is surrounded by only two small buildings and wide open spaces.

The Old Main Building, original home of the School of Biology, and later of the Schools of Botany and of Zoology, was torn down in 1934. 

Features

Reclaiming a Lost Piece of UT Science History Linked to a Nobel Prize

The Nobel Prize-Winning Geneticist Hermann J. Muller did his research on the UT campus.

A strange contraption has a sign that reads: "In 1927, Professor Hermann Joseph Muller first demonstrated that X-rays caused inherited genetic changes. He used this X-ray machine for his early investigations. For this work he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine in 1946."

Hermann Joseph Muller's Nobel Prize display in Moffett Building 2016. In 1927, he used this X-ray machine to show that x-rays cause inherited genetic changes. For this work, he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine in 1946.

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