Albert Schatz Scientist

Albert Israel Schatz (2 February 1920 – 17 January 2005) was an American microbiologist and science educator, best known as the discoverer of the antibiotic, streptomycin. Schatz graduated from Rutgers University in 1942 with a bachelor's degree in soil microbiology, and received his doctorate from Rutgers in 1945.In 1943, as a 23-year-old postgraduate research assistant working in the university's soil microbiology laboratory under the direction of Selman Waksman, Schatz volunteered to search for soil-born microorganisms that would kill or inhibit the growth of penicillin-resistant bacteria including tubercle bacillus, the bacterium that causes tuberculosis (TB). In three and a half months he had isolated two strains of bacterium that stopped the growth of tubercle bacillus and several other penicillin-resistant bacteria in a petri dish.

Personal facts

Birth dateFebruary 02, 1920
Birth nameAlbert Israel Schatz
Birth place
Norwich Connecticut
Date of deathJanuary 17, 2005
Place of death
Philadelphia
Education
Rutgers University
Known for
Streptomycin

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Scientist

Field of study
Science education
Microbiology

Albert Schatz on Wikipedia