Verse:Hmøøh/Germ theory: Difference between revisions
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Rith Ătsa's advice spread during an epidemic of cholera during his lifetime. | Rith Ătsa's advice spread during an epidemic of cholera during his lifetime. | ||
Trician historians recognize rith Ătsa as a pivotal figure, both medically and socially. In particular, his insights helped greatly reduce infant mortality in ancient Talma. Combined with the availability of silphium on Talma, this contributed to premodern Talman society being relatively gender-egalitarian for an agricultural society: women needed to spend less time being pregnant even though they had to raise many children. | Trician historians recognize rith Ătsa as a pivotal figure, both medically and socially. In particular, his insights helped greatly reduce infant mortality in ancient Talma. Combined with the ready availability of silphium on Talma, this contributed to premodern Talman society being relatively gender-egalitarian for an agricultural society: women needed to spend less time being pregnant even though they had to raise many children. |
Revision as of 11:43, 12 March 2018
Germ theory (ca. fT -1060 - fT -990) was an ancient Talman (Windermere? Tamil? Thensarian?) physician who originated and verified germ theory.
Life
Contributions
Rith Ătsa proposed that transmissible diseases were caused by pests that were too small to see. His insight came from observing an aphid infestation. In order to test his theory, rith Ătsa used an experiment on mice: [experiment design here]
Rith Ătsa's advice spread during an epidemic of cholera during his lifetime.
Trician historians recognize rith Ătsa as a pivotal figure, both medically and socially. In particular, his insights helped greatly reduce infant mortality in ancient Talma. Combined with the ready availability of silphium on Talma, this contributed to premodern Talman society being relatively gender-egalitarian for an agricultural society: women needed to spend less time being pregnant even though they had to raise many children.