thedee-n
thedee-n
Lab Baby🥼🔬
105 posts
a friendly lil potato… loves sunshine and sparkles
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thedee-n · 12 days ago
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thedee-n · 14 days ago
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On 6th August 1881 Sir Alexander Fleming, the Nobel prize-winning bacteriologist, was born at his parents’ farm located near Darvel, Ayrshire.
His parents, Hugh Fleming and Grace Stirling Morton, were both from farming families. His father’s health was fragile; he died when Alexander was just seven years old.
Alexander’s earliest schooling, between the ages of five and eight, was at a tiny moorland school where 12 pupils of all ages were taught in a single classroom.
Darvel School was Alexander’s next school, which involved an eight-mile round trip on foot every school-day. At the age of 11 his academic potential was recognized and he was awarded a scholarship to Kilmarnock Academy, where he boarded for about two years before leaving for London.
Alexander arrived in London early in 1895, age 13 and lived in the home of his elder brother, Tom, who was a doctor of medicine. Most of the Fleming family ended up living with Tom, leaving the eldest brother, Hugh, running the farm.
Alexander attended the Polytechnic School, where he studied business and commerce. He started in a class appropriate to his age, but his teachers soon realized he needed more challenging work. He was moved into a class with boys two years older than him and finished school at the age of 16.
He took up a research position at St Mary's Hospital Medical School at the University of London under Sir Almroth Wright, a pioneer in vaccine therapy. In World War One Fleming served in the Army Medical Corps and was mentioned in dispatches. After the war, he returned to St Mary's.
In 1928, while studying influenza, Fleming noticed that mould had developed accidentally on a set of culture dishes being used to grow the staphylococci germ. The mould had created a bacteria-free circle around itself. Fleming experimented further and named the active substance penicillin. It was two other scientists however, Howard Florey and Ernst Chain, who developed penicillin further so that it could be produced as a drug. At first supplies of penicillin were very limited, but by the 1940s it was being mass-produced by the American drugs industry.
Fleming wrote numerous papers on bacteriology, immunology and chemotherapy. He was elected professor of the medical school in 1928 and emeritus professor of bacteriology at the University of London in 1948. He was elected fellow of the Royal Society in 1943 and knighted in 1944. In 1945 Fleming, Florey and Chain shared the Nobel Prize in Medicine.
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thedee-n · 14 days ago
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thedee-n · 14 days ago
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Nature
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thedee-n · 22 days ago
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I get told I’m only in science because I fit the diversity quota, lmao sometimes I hate it here.
Experiments not going well? Bored in the lab on your own ? Confused by your protocol ? All you gotta do is put a banging playlist on and get in your feels. The lab is my own stage lol.
Dump because it’s my birthday month💃
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thedee-n · 23 days ago
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thedee-n · 24 days ago
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💯
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thedee-n · 30 days ago
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🤣🤣🤣🤣
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thedee-n · 1 month ago
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thedee-n · 1 month ago
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“You are good enough, smart enough, beautiful enough, strong enough. Believe it, and never let insecurity run your life.”
— Unknown
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thedee-n · 1 month ago
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“It’s simple. Don’t start something you know you can’t finish and don’t make promises you can’t keep. Be consistent, mean what you say, and let your actions speak for you. All else will fall into place.”
— R.M. Drake
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thedee-n · 1 month ago
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“‘You’re going to be happy’ said life ‘but first I’ll make you strong.’”
— Unknown
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thedee-n · 1 month ago
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🤣
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thedee-n · 1 month ago
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A research team affiliated with UNIST has made a significant breakthrough in sustainable technology through the development of a method to convert carbon dioxide (CO₂) into methanol—a process that could play a vital role in reducing greenhouse gas emissions and producing environmentally friendly fuels. Led by Professor Jungki Ryu of the School of Energy and Chemical Engineering at UNIST, in collaboration with Professors Jongsoon Kim of Sungkyunkwan University (SKKU) and Aloysius Son of Yonsei University, the team successfully developed a novel copper-based catalyst capable of transforming CO₂ into high-purity methanol. The research is published in Advanced Materials.
Continue Reading.
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thedee-n · 2 months ago
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These are the kids that are still missing ..
Sending prayers for all in Texas .
The KIDS !! 🫶🏼🫶🏼
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thedee-n · 2 months ago
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thedee-n · 2 months ago
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