In the mid [blank_start]nineteenth[blank_end] century, a [blank_start]priest[blank_end] named Gregor Mendel tended a [blank_start]garden[blank_end] in a central [blank_start]European[blank_end] monastery. Mendel's [blank_start]experiments[blank_end] in that peaceful garden would one day revolutionize the study of [blank_start]heredity[blank_end].
Mendel wondered why different [blank_start]pea plants[blank_end] had different [blank_start]characteristics[blank_end]. Some pea plants grew tall, while others were [blank_start]short[blank_end]. Some plants produced green seeds, while others had [blank_start]yellow[blank_end] seeds. Mendel observed that the pea plants' [blank_start]traits[blank_end] were often similar to those of their [blank_start]parents[blank_end]. Sometimes, however, the plants had [blank_start]different[blank_end] traits from their parents.
Mendel experimented with [blank_start]thousands[blank_end] of pea plants to understand the process of heredity. Today, Mendel's experiments form the foundation of [blank_start]genetics,[blank_end] the scientific study of heredity.
Responda
nineteenth
eighteenth
priest
painter
garden
shed
European
Asian
experiments
accidents
heredity
pea plants
tulips
characteristics
short
fat
yellow
red
traits
parents
uncles
different
thousands
hundreds
genetics,
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