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Brian Keith Hall FRSC (born 1941) is the George S. Campbell Professor of Biology and University Research Professor Emeritus at Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova Scotia. Hall has researched and extensively written on bone and cartilage formation in developing vertebrate embryos. He is an active participant in the evolutionary developmental biology (EVO-DEVO) debate on the nature and mechanisms of animal body plan formation. Hall has proposed that the neural crest tissue of vertebrates may be viewed as a fourth embryonic germ layer. As such, the neural crest - in Hall's view - plays a role equivalent to that of the endoderm, mesoderm, and ectoderm of bilaterian development and is a definitive feature of vertebrates (as hypothesized by [1983]). As such, vertebrates are the only , rather t

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  • Brian K. Hall (en)
  • Brian K. Hall (de)
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  • Brian Keith Hall (* 28. Oktober 1941 in Port Kembla, New South Wales) ist ein australisch-kanadischer Entwicklungsbiologe und Hochschullehrer an der Dalhousie University in Halifax (Nova Scotia). Hall studierte Zoologie an der University of New England in Armidale mit dem Bachelor-Abschluss 1963 und 1965 und der Promotion (Ph.D.) 1968. Die Dissertation bei war über die Differenzierung von Knochen und Knorpel in Hühner-Embryos. Zusätzlich erhielt er 1978 einen D.Sc. in Biologie. Von 1968 bis zur Emeritierung 2007 forschte und lehrte er an der Dalhousie University. (de)
  • Brian Keith Hall FRSC (born 1941) is the George S. Campbell Professor of Biology and University Research Professor Emeritus at Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova Scotia. Hall has researched and extensively written on bone and cartilage formation in developing vertebrate embryos. He is an active participant in the evolutionary developmental biology (EVO-DEVO) debate on the nature and mechanisms of animal body plan formation. Hall has proposed that the neural crest tissue of vertebrates may be viewed as a fourth embryonic germ layer. As such, the neural crest - in Hall's view - plays a role equivalent to that of the endoderm, mesoderm, and ectoderm of bilaterian development and is a definitive feature of vertebrates (as hypothesized by [1983]). As such, vertebrates are the only , rather t (en)
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  • Brian K. Hall (en)
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  • Brian K. Hall (en)
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  • Dalhousie University (en)
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