Lord Florey: Story of historic research |
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Title : | Lord Florey: Story of historic research |
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Source : | Advertiser, 23 February 1968, p. 2 | ||
Date of creation : | 1968 | ||
Format : | Newspaper | ||
Contributor : | State Library catalogue | ||
Catalogue record | |||
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Copyright : | This item is reproduced courtesy of Advertiser Newspapers Pty Ltd. It may be printed or saved for research or study. Use for any other purpose requires written permission from Advertiser Newspapers Pty Ltd and the State Library of South Australia. To request approval, complete the Permission to publish form. |
Description : |
Description of the life and work of Sir Howard Florey. Howard Florey was born in Adelaide in 1898. He studied medicine at Adelaide, Oxford and Cambridge Universities. He is best known for his workisolating and purifying penicillin for human use with Ernst Chain. Florey was knighted in 1944 and Florey, Chain and Alexander Fleming (who discovered penicillin in 1928) jointly won the Nobel Prize for Medicine in 1945. |
Subjects | |
Related names : | Florey, Howard, Lord, 1898-1968 |
Further reading : | Bickel, Lennard. Florey: the man who made penicillin, Carlton, Vic.: Melbourne University Press, 1995, c1972 'Nobel prizes presented by King Gustav', The Advertiser, 12 December 1945, p. 8 McPhee, Margaret. The dictionary of Australian inventors and discoveries, St. Leonards, NSW: Allen & Unwin, 1993 Wainwright, Milton. Miracle cure: the story of penicillin and the golden age of antibiotics, Oxford, UK; Cambridge, Mass., USA: Blackwell, 1990 |
Internet links : |