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Huckle may refer to: * Huckle (surname) * Mount Huckle, a mainly ice-covered mountain * Thomas Huckle Weller (born 1915), American virologist * Huckle Cat Busytown is a fictional town depicted in several books by American children's author Richard Scarry. Busytown is inhabited by an assortment of anthropomorphic animals, including Huckle Cat, Lowly Worm, Mr. Frumble, police Sergeant Murphy, Mr. Fix ...
a children's fictional character from Richard Scarry Books. People with the surname Huckle: {{disambig ...
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Huckle (surname)
Huckle is an English language, English and German language, German surname. Notable people with the surname include: *Adam Huckle (born 1971), Zimbabwean cricketer *Alan Huckle (born 1948), British colonial administrator *James Huckle (born 1990), English sport shooter *Patrick Huckle (born 1983), German footballer *Richard Huckle (1986–2019), convicted English sex offender, "Britain's worst paedophile" *Theodore Huckle, Welsh barrister *Wilbur Huckle (born 1941), American professional baseball player {{surname, Huckle ...
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Mount Huckle
Mount Huckle is a mainly ice-covered mountain, high, near the northern end of the Douglas Range in eastern Alexander Island, Antarctica Antarctica () is Earth's southernmost and least-populated continent. Situated almost entirely south of the Antarctic Circle and surrounded by the Southern Ocean, it contains the geographic South Pole. Antarctica is the fifth-largest contine .... It rises south-southeast of Mount Spivey on the west side of Toynbee Glacier and is inland from George VI Sound. Mount Huckle is the fourth highest mountain of Alexander Island, proceeded by Mount Cupola and succeeded by Mount Paris in the nearby Rouen Mountains. The mountain was possibly first seen in 1909 by the French Antarctic Expedition, 1908–10, French Antarctic Expedition under Jean-Baptiste Charcot, but not recognized as part of Alexander Island. It was photographed from the air in 1936–37 by the British Graham Land Expedition under John Riddoch Rymill, and surveyed from the ground ...
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Thomas Huckle Weller
Thomas Huckle Weller (June 15, 1915 – August 23, 2008) was an American virologist. He, John Franklin Enders and Frederick Chapman Robbins were awarded a Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1954 for showing how to cultivate poliomyelitis viruses in a test tube, using a combination of human embryonic skin and muscle tissue. Weller was born and grew up in Ann Arbor, Michigan, and then went to the University of Michigan, where his father Carl Vernon Weller was a professor in the Department of Pathology. At Michigan, he studied medical zoology and received a B.S. and an M.S., with his masters thesis on fish parasites. In 1936, Weller entered Harvard Medical School, and in 1939 began working under John Franklin Enders, with whom he would later (along with Frederick Chapman Robbins) share the Nobel Prize. It was Enders who got Weller involved in researching viruses and tissue-culture techniques for determining infectious disease causes. Weller received his MD in 1940, and we ...
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