Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Dr Ernst Chain undertakes an experiment in his laboratory at the School of Pathology at Oxford University in 1944 Ernst Chain in his laboratory. Chain was born in Berlin, the son of Margarete (née Eisner) and Michael Chain, a chemist and industrialist dealing in chemical products. [12] [13] His family was of both Sephardic and Ashkenazi Jewish ...
Howard Walter Florey was born in Malvern, a southern suburb of Adelaide, South Australia, on 24 September 1898. [2] His surname rhymes with "sorry". [3] He was the only son of Joseph Florey, a bootmaker from Oxfordshire in England, who as a boy moved to London where Florey's grandfather established a bootmaking business.
Florey, Ernst Boris Chain and Norman Heatley, at the Sir William Dunn School of Pathology, University of Oxford were working on the medical applications of penicillin, as produced by the mould Penicillium notatum, and attempting to isolate quantities of penicillin from the mould large enough for a human trial.
%PDF-1.4 %âãÏÓ 89 0 obj > endobj xref 89 21 0000000016 00000 n 0000001169 00000 n 0000001250 00000 n 0000001443 00000 n 0000001585 00000 n 0000002189 00000 n 0000002755 00000 n 0000002791 00000 n 0000003366 00000 n 0000003771 00000 n 0000003848 00000 n 0000005357 00000 n 0000005768 00000 n 0000006160 00000 n 0000006445 00000 n 0000006749 00000 n 0000009443 00000 n 0000019883 00000 n ...
The secretary of the Nobel committee, Göran Liljestrand, made an assessment of Fleming and Florey in the same year, but little was known about penicillin in Sweden at the time, and he concluded that more information was required. The following year, there was one nomination for Fleming alone and one for Fleming, Florey and Chain.
Enjoy a classic game of Hearts and watch out for the Queen of Spades!
Learn how to download and install or uninstall the Desktop Gold software and if your computer meets the system requirements.
Production of antibiotics is a naturally occurring event, that thanks to advances in science can now be replicated and improved upon in laboratory settings. Due to the discovery of penicillin by Alexander Fleming, and the efforts of Florey and Chain in 1938, large-scale, pharmaceutical production of antibiotics has been made possible.