Sunday, December 6, 2020

The world's first Anti-Toxin



                                                                  

Alexander Fleming was one of those peculiar researchers who coincidentally made a logical advancement. In 1928, the bacteriologist left a petri dish in his lab while he was an extended get-away just to return and locate that some fluid around the form had executed the microorganisms in the dish. This turned into the world's first anti-toxin. Yet, prior to naming it penicillin, he called it "mold juice."