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Alec
Jeffreys invented genetic fingerprinting, a powerful technology
that provided new insights for genetic researchers, and resolved
life-or-death questions for law enforcement. It also provided
a simple way to establish family relationships in paternity and
immigration disputes, screen for mutations, identify human remains,
and improve animal breeding.
Human DNA contains long strands of molecules that correlate to
each individual's genetic traits. The amount of information coded
into DNA is so vast that it is difficult to examine DNA samples.
Jeffreys discovered a process that detects extremely variable
DNA regions, proving that each human has its own genetic fingerprint.
Users of genetic fingerprinting were able to pursue and identify
criminals who left behind samples of blood, semen, skin or hair
after a crime. Subjecting these DNA samples to genetic fingerprinting
made it possible to conclusively link suspects to the scene of
a crime. It also exonerated numerous people falsely convicted
before genetic fingerprinting was invented.
Born in Oxford, England in 1950, Jeffreys studied at Merton College
in Oxford. He conducts his research at the University of Leicester,
where he made his well-known discovery. His work has earned him
numerous honors, including knighthood in 1994.

Matthias
Baldwin
C. Donald
Bateman
Clarence
Birdseye
Leopold
Godowsky, Jr.
Robert
Gundlach
Alec
Jeffreys
Dean Kamen
Leopold Mannes
Garrett Augustus
Morgan
Les Paul
Jacob Rabinow
Glenn T.
Seaborg
Leo
Henryk Sternbach
Selman Waksman
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