IIIF provides researchers rich metadata and media viewing options for comparison of works across cultural heritage collections. Visit the IIIF page to learn more. In September 1928, British ...
This is a preview. Log in through your library . Abstract The present investigation concerned itself with the relation between pH of the nutrient medium and time of incubation, particularly as this ...
IN the absence of supplies of penicillin in Hungary during the War, Dr. E. Rosenthal, of St. Roch's Hospital, Budapest, isolated two strains of what appeared to be Penicillium notatum Westling from ...
A SUSPENSION of Penicillium notatum (Fleming) hyphæ in a fluid medium, obtained from below the mycelium of the mould at the stage of its highest rate of penicillin production and freed from pyrogens ...
Alexander Fleming returned to his research laboratory at St. Mary's Hospital in London after World War I. His battlefront experience had shown him how serious a killer bacteria could be, much worse ...
A marvelous mold that saves lives when sulfa drugs fail was described in the British Lancet last month by Professor Howard Walter Florey and colleagues of Oxford.+ The healing principle, called ...
Penicillin was still making news last week. In Britain, its discoverer and chief developer, Professors Alexander Fleming and Howard W. Florey (TIME, May 15), were knighted by King George VI. Sir ...
Current Science is a fortnightly journal published since 1932 by the Current Science Association, Bangalore (India) in collaboration with the Indian Academy of Sciences. The journal covers all ...
The discovery of penicillin. In 1928, Sir Alexander Fleming observed that some bacteria were destroyed by the mould Penicillium notatum. When put to medical use, penicillin proved to be a miracle in ...
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