File:Tyndalls setup for broths in optically pure air.jpg

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Description
English: The above illustration originally appeared in year 1876 in "The optical deportment of the atmosphere in relation to the phenomena of putrefaction and infection" by John Tyndall in Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, Vol. 166, page 30. It depicts John Tyndall's mid-1870s scientific setup for the longterm preservation of fresh food broths inside a semi-sealed wooden box. Intentionally, outside air is allowed to enter the box, but there is blockage of micro-organisms from entering the box. The two wavy objects labelled a and b at the top of the box are glass pipes. They are filled with densely packed cottonwool. These pipes connect the outside air to the air inside the box. Floating micro-organisms and other air particulates in the outside air are blocked by the cottonwool from entering inside. Tyndall said in 1871: "The inability of air which had been filtered through cotton-wool to generate microscopic life had been demonstrated by [Heinrich] Schroeder [in the 1850s] and Pasteur." (Dust and Disease, 1871). For the box to be able to preserve fresh broths or other foods, the box cannot have micro-organisms inside it to begin with. For that objective, Tyndall came up with the idea of coating the inside walls and floor of the box with glycerin, which is a sticky syrup. After closing the box and waiting for a few days, he found the air inside the box becomes entirely particulate-free because the various floating-matter particulates all end up getting stuck to the walls or settling on the sticky floor. The glass vials at the bottom of the box are not coated with the glycerin. To sterilize the glass vials, Tyndall immersed them in boiling water from underneath the box, for half an hour, after the air had cleared. The two windows on the sides of the box are there to enable verification that the air inside the box does not contain floating micro-organisms or other particulates. Finally, newly boiled meat and vegetable broth is dropped into the glass vials via the long pipette at the top center of the box. At the spot where the pipette enters the box, the box material is rubber, and the rubber is pierced with just a pinhole to let the pipette enter. This system worked for Tyndall in 1875. But it failed in 1876. Tyndall traced the failure to bacterial endospores which are not killed by boiling. He then originated a way to destroy the endospores, called Tyndallization, which historically was the earliest known effective way to destroy endospores.
Date
Source The illustration is taken from John Tyndall's book Essays on the Floating-matter of the Air in relation to Putrefaction and Infection, first published in year 1881. The illustration has been taken from page 50 of the 1882 edition of the book at Archive.org.
Author John Tyndall's commissioned drawer (anon)
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Public domain on account of its age

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Date/Time Dimensions User Comment
2013-08-20 00:19 551×651× (72604 bytes) Seanwal111111 {{Information |Description=The illustration is taken from [[John Tyndall]]'s book ''Essays on the Floating-matter of the Air in relation to Putrefaction and Infection'', first published in year 1881. The illustration originally appeared in "The optical...

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current08:10, 2 April 2017Thumbnail for version as of 08:10, 2 April 2017551 × 651 (71 KB)commons>FrankemannTransferred from en.wikipedia

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