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The origin story of antibiotics is well-known, almost mythic: Returning to his lab at St. Mary’s Hospital in London in 1928 after a holiday, Dr. Alexander Fleming noticed that a fungus had corrupted one of his staphylococci culture petri dishes and that the staph colonies surrounding the fungus had been destroyed. This was every bit the equal of the observation that English milkmaids didn’t get smallpox.
Deadliest Enemy: Our War Against Killer Germs
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