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  1. Lieutenant-Colonel Thomas Malcolm Harvey Kincaid-Smith (6 July 1874 – 31 December 1938), known as Malcolm Kincaid-Smith was a British Liberal politician and soldier. Commissioned a second lieutenant into the 9th Lancers on 10 October 1894, he was promoted to lieutenant on 25 September 1895. [1]

  2. 18 lug 2015 · Priscilla Sheath Kincaid-Smith was a leading nephrologist, the first female professor at the University of Melbourne and the first female president of the Royal Australasian College of Physicians and the World Medical Association. She was born in Johannesburg, South Africa.

  3. 15 set 2015 · Article. Related content. Metrics. Responses. Ned Stafford, Hamburg. ns@europefn.net. Kidney specialist who overcame gender barriers in Australia to become a national and global leader in medicine. In late 1958, Priscilla Kincaid-Smith arrived in Melbourne, newly married to her Australian husband and eager to resume her medical career.

    • Ned Stafford
    • 2015
  4. Filters. Year. Show. Explore music from Kincaid Smith. Shop for vinyl, CDs, and more from Kincaid Smith on Discogs.

  5. 4 mag 2021 · Using an integrated approach this work aims to quantify the relative importance of pre-zygotic barriers in Schistosoma haematobium x S. bovis crosses. These two co-endemic species cause schistosomiasis, one of the major debilitating parasitic diseases worldwide, and can hybridize naturally.

    • Julien Kincaid-Smith, Julien Kincaid-Smith, Eglantine Mathieu-Bégné, Cristian Chaparro, Marta Reguer...
    • 2021
  6. 21 lug 2015 · Priscilla Kincaid-Smith was a world-renowned nephrologist and trailblazer for Australian female scientists, taking on breakthrough roles with the University of Melbourne and World Medical Association, and discovering the link between headache powders and kidney disease.

  7. Our results show that this Schistosoma hybrid is strongly introgressed genetically, composed of 77% S. haematobium and 23% S. bovis origin. This genomic admixture suggests an ancient hybridization event and subsequent backcrosses with the human-specific species, S. haematobium, before its introduction in Corsica.