About US

LifeScienceHistory.com (LSH), “Where history is made daily” is a comprehensive compendium of life science. Simply put, we dig history and we mine data. LSH grew from frustration with the difficulty in finding historical information about life science, and the industry in general. Most seemed to be the same old duped lists of facts, rarely with images, nor links for more information, and almost never sourced.

To resolve that problem, we draw upon our own database created through thirty-five years of life science related data collection at the national, state and province levels, largely from an economic and technology development perspective. We try to present information in a concise, easily readable format with images, all sourced – with never ending link checking – and content up-dated where possible. ‘History is made daily.’ This means that we bring you the history making events from last week, as well as from last year and beyond.

LifeScienceHistory.com is a resource for daily updated life science news, history, company information with our one-of-a-kind Genealogy on Demand, all searchable by state, Canadian province, or country, original cartoons, original “Earth is a Rock, Let the DNA Mold Me” song, and music video celebrating science and scientists everywhere, and more…

LifeScienceHistory.com is owned and published by Info.Resource, Inc., a Seattle-based company established in 1997, that previously published a nationwide network of state- and Canadian province-based life science sites.

If you have questions, corrections or suggestions related to information presented by LifeScienceHistory.com, please email: info@LifeScienceHistory.com.

About Quotes Background (see below)

The ‘Quotes’ Background image is our own creation combining the worlds of the binary with biology, specifically that of DNA nucleotides.

Binary (base-2) is a numbering system using only 0 and 1, known as bits, to represent data, forming the foundation of the digital world.

DNA nucleotides are the fundamental building blocks of DNA, consisting of a deoxyribose sugar, a phosphate group, and one of four nitrogenous bases: Adenine (A), Thymine (T), Guanine (G), or Cytosine (C). These monomers form long chains linked by phosphodiester bonds, encoding genetic information through specific base pairing (A-T and G-C).

Source: National Human Genome Research Institute



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"Religion is a culture of faith; science is a culture of doubt."

~ Richard Feynman, Physicist
(1918-1988)