However, Koch never credited the Hesses for their discovery of bacteriological agar, perhaps because, at the time, he failed to recognize its importance. Even after he received the insight about agar from the Hesses, Koch stuck with gelatine for years. In 1883-84, during his first medical expedition to Egypt and India to investigate cholera, he tried and failed to grow the cholera bacterium on gelatine media in the hot climate of Cairo (despite using a half-open fridge for incubation), only succeeding in the colder winter of Calcutta.
Dr Tim Pestell, a senior curator of archaeology for Norfolk Museums Service, said: "This find is a powerful reminder of Norfolk's Iron Age past which, through the story of Boudica and the Iceni people, still retains its capacity to fascinate the British public.
,更多细节参见体育直播
Get notified of new posts:
actual object PlatformByteArrayConverter {
dataclasses/attrs/Pydantic-style field descriptors. In order to do