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unusual facts about bacteriologist



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9964 Hideyonoguchi

It was later renamed "Hideyonoguchi" after Hideyo Noguchi, a bacteriologist who made important advances in medicine working at the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research.

Alexander Yersin

Alexandre Yersin (1863–1943), Swiss and French physician and bacteriologist

Avery–MacLeod–McCarty experiment

Fred Neufeld, a German bacteriologist, had discovered the pneumococcal types and serological typing; until Frederick Griffith's studies bacteriologists believed that the types were fixed and unchangeable from one generation to the next.

Cape Roux

Discovered by the French Antarctic Expedition, 1903–05, and named by Charcot for Emile Roux, noted French physician and bacteriologist, then Director of the Pasteur Institute, Paris.

Ernst Pringsheim

Ernst Pringsheim, Jr. or Ernst Georg Pringsheim (1881–1970), German scientist, botanist, bacteriologist

Franz Hellens

His father, Émile van Ermengem, was the bacteriologist who discovered the cause of botulism.

George Dick

George Frederick Dick (1881–1967), American physician and bacteriologist

George Sternberg

George Miller Sternberg (1838–1915), U.S. Army physician and bacteriologist

Gladys Dick

She also served as a bacteriologist for the United States Public Health Service and worked at St. Luke's Hospital.

Griffith's experiment

A German bacteriologist, Fred Neufeld, had discovered the three pneumococcal types (Types I, II, and III) and discovered the Quellung reaction to identify them in vitro.

John A. Gilruth

In 1896, on returning to New Zealand, he was appointed chief veterinarian and government bacteriologist.

John Forssman

Magnus John Karl August Forssman (22 November 1868 – 12 March 1947) was a Swedish pathologist and bacteriologist born in Kalmar.

Koch Glacier

It was named by the UK Antarctic Place-Names Committee for Robert Koch, the pioneer German bacteriologist who discovered Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the bacterium responsible for most cases of tuberculosis.

Lou Rogers

Brother Lore Rogers became a well-known government bacteriologist and was awarded two honorary doctorates.

Mark Frederick Boyd

Mark Frederick Boyd (May 21, 1889-Michigan, USA-1968) was an American bacteriologist who discovered a shigella species known as shigella boydii.

Rajchman

Ludwik Rajchman Polish bacteriologist and one of the founders of UNICEF

Shigella boydii

The species is named after the American bacteriologist Mark Frederick Boyd.

Trevor Stamp, 3rd Baron Stamp

Trevor Charles Stamp, 3rd Baron Stamp MA MD FRCPath (13 February 1907 - 16 November 1987) was a British medical doctor and bacteriologist.

Voges–Proskauer test

The reaction was developed by Daniel Wilhelm Otto Voges and Bernhard Proskauer—German bacteriologists in 1898 at the Institute for Infectious Diseases.

Walther Kruse

These eponyms are shared with Japanese bacteriologist Kiyoshi Shiga (1871-1957).

Werner Kollath

Werner Georg Kollath (11 June 1892 in Gollnow, now Goleniów - 19 November 1970 in Porza) was a German bacteriologist, hygienist and food scientist.

William Augustus Hinton

William Augustus Hinton (15 December 1883, Chicago, Illinois – 1959, Canton, Massachusetts) was an American bacteriologist, pathologist and educator.

William Hinton

William Augustus Hinton (1883–1959), American bacteriologist, pathologist, and educator

William John Macleay

Macleay realized that a lot could be done to prevent diseases like typhoid fever and strongly urged the appointment of a government bacteriologist.

Yersinia

Yersinia pestis, the first described species, was identified in 1894 by A.E.J. Yersin, a Swiss bacteriologist, and Kitasato Shibasaburō, a Japanese bacteriologist.

Ziehl–Neelsen stain

The Ziehl–Neelsen stain, also known as the acid-fast stain, was first described by two German doctors: the bacteriologist Franz Ziehl (1859–1926) and the pathologist Friedrich Neelsen (1854–1898).


see also