Updated On: 16 June, 2024 08:09 AM IST | Mumbai | A Correspondent
This includes rare photographs of the scientist on field visits, as well as handwritten notes and botanical drawings.

M S Swaminathan (back row, extreme right) at a Hunger Project meeting
The archives at the National Centre for Biological Sciences offer a unique window into the work of Professor M S Swaminathan, the father of India’s Green Revolution, who is credited with taking the country from hunger to self-sufficiency in foodgrain production. Around 48,000 archival papers from his prolific career are now accessible to the public. This includes rare photographs of the scientist on field visits, as well as handwritten notes and botanical drawings.
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WHERE: Bengaluru
Association of Parents of Disappeared Persons