About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 23. Chapters: Friedrich Loeffler, Erwin Neher, Rudolph Schoenheimer, Bert Sakmann, Feodor Felix Konrad Lynen, Hartmut Michel, Karl Wilhelm von Kupffer, Robert Remak, Johann Baptist von Spix, Carl Neuberg, Carl von Voit, Franz-Ulrich Hartl, Charlotte Auerbach, Oskar Minkowski, Julius Richard Petri, Hermann Stieve, Heinz Christian Pander, Jose-Antonio Campos-Ortega, Regine Hildebrandt, Hans Ernst August Buchner, Heinrich Wullschlagel, Johann Ludwig Wilhelm Thudichum, Karl Bogislaus Reichert, Victor Hensen, Christian Haass, Carl Flugge, Max Bergmann, Ernst Leopold Salkowski, Rodolfo Amando Philippi, Leonor Michaelis, Emil Adolf Rossmassler, Hans Vogel, Thomas Carell, Patrick Cramer, Dietrich Barfurth, Julius Roger, Hugo Kronecker, J. Heinrich Matthaei, Carl Franz Robinow, Georg Theodor August Gaffky, Emmy Klieneberger-Nobel, Johann Samuel Eduard d'Alton, Adalbert Ricken, Julius von Flotow, Peter Gruss, Carl Chun, Martin Rathke, Adolf Mayer, Hermann Munk, David Nachmansohn, August Wilhelm Knoch, Georg Dieck, Otto Renner, Ernst Ehrenbaum, Moritz Schiff, Norbert Pfennig, Karl Rost, Franz Ziehl, Max Furbringer, Karl Spiro, Gerhard Braunitzer, Peter Hirsch. Excerpt: Friedrich August Johannes Loeffler (24 June 1852 - 9 April 1915) was a German bacteriologist at the University of Greifswald. He obtained his MD degree from the University of Berlin in 1874. He worked with Robert Koch from 1879-1884. Among his discoveries was the organism causing diphtheria (Corynebacterium diphtheriae) and the cause of foot and mouth disease (Aphthovirus). He also created Loffler's serum, a coagulated blood serum used for the detection of the bacteria. The Friedrich Loeffler Institute on the Isle of Riems near Greifswald is named in his honor. Erwin Neher (born 20 March 1944 in Landsberg am Lech, Upper Bavaria) is a German biophysicist. Erwin Neher stud...