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Robert KochRobert Koch was born in Klausthal-Zellerfield, Germany on December 11, 1843. He studied at the University of Guttingen. After graduation be worked at Hamburg General Hospital before beginning a private practice. Later in his career he was appointed as an advisor to the Imperial Department of Health in Berlin, Germany.

In 1870 Koch demonstrated that Bacillus anthrax spores cause the infection in mice. He was the first to isolate the bacteria that cause disease. In addition to his work with anthrax, he also studied tuberculosis. He isolate the bacillus that causes tuberculosis in 1881.During the remainder of his career, Koch studied tuberculosis and cholera. He found that cholera was transmitted from one person to another through contaminated water. Late in his career he also studied diseases caused by insect vectors. For his contributions to the germ theory of disease, Koch is often thought of as being the "father of bacteriology".

For his work, Koch was awarded the Nobel Prize in medicine in 1905. He died at Baden-Baden, Germany on May 27, 1910.


References

Asimov, I. (1964). Asimov's Biographical Encyclopedia of Science and Technology: The Living Stores of More than 1000 Great Scientists from the Age of Greece to the Space Age Chronologically Arranged. Garden City, NJ: Doubleday.

Daintith, J. Mitchell, S., Tootill, E. (1981). A Biographical Encyclopedia of Scientists. New York: Facts on File.

Debus, A.G. (1968). World Who's Who in Science: A Biographical Dictionary of Notable Scientists from Antiquity to the Present. Chicago: Marquis.

Howard, A.V. (1951). Chamber's Dictionary of Scientists. London: Chambers.

McGraw-Hill (1966). McGraw-Hill Modern Men of Science. New York: McGraw Hill.

Taton, R. (Ed.) (1963). History of Science: Ancient and Medieval Science from the Beginnings to 1450. New York: Basic Books.

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