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Thomas Hunt Morgan’s discoveries won him the Nobel Prize and forever altered American Laboratories.
One hundred and fifty years ago, Florence Nightingale opened a school that would revolutionize nursing.
When Paul Ehrlich developed the first clinically tested syphilis treatment in 1910, he sparked hope and controversy.
A century ago, chemist Søren Sørensen invented what would become a crucial diagnostic tool: the pH scale.
Medicina Curiosa, the first English-language medical journal, mixed the technical with the practical.
How an electrified, 660-pound behemoth became a common diagnostic tool: the ECG.
In 1849 Elizabeth Blackwell became the first woman to graduate from medical school.
The level of dental care we now enjoy dates back to the arrival of plug-in electric drills.
From hand-drawn illustrations to CD-ROM technology, Gray’s Anatomy has advanced with medicine throughout its 150-year existence.
The most popular drug in the world—aspirin—would never have won FDA approval. Fortunately, the active ingredient was isolated in 1828.
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