Razia is researching Lynn Margulis, a cell biologist, for a presentation. She reads at the level of the eleventh grade. Based on this knowledge, I would most likely suggest "Lynn Margulis: A life explained," an article from 2012 in Young Scientist for high school students, and "endosymbiotic theory," a book from 1995 authored by scientists for college students.
<h3>What has Lynn Margulis contributed to biology and who is she?</h3>
An outstanding American evolutionary biologist was Lynn Margulis. Her serial endosymbiotic theory (SET) of eukaryotic cell growth challenged the conventional wisdom regarding the genesis of life on Earth. She made the case that several bacterial species created more complex single creatures through a process known as "symbiogenesis."
<h3>What has Lynn Margulis most importantly contributed?</h3>
She clocked in at 73 years old. She was a unique kind of scientist, which does not happen very frequently. Her greatest talent was making connections—connections that nobody else could. The symbiogenesis theory that Margulis developed, which contradicts key ideas of neo-Darwinism, is what made her most famous.
Learn more about Lynn Margulis: brainly.com/question/13064094
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