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  1. Selman Abraham Waksman nació el 22 de julio de 1888 en Novaya Priluka (Ucrania) en el seno de una familia judía. Su padre se llamaba Jacob Waksman y su madre Fradia London. Recibió su primera educación de manos de profesores particulares y en las escuelas de Zhitomir, la capital de Volhynia, y de Odessa.

  2. Selman Abraham Waksman 1 ( Nova Pryluka, 2 22 de julio de 1888- Woods Hole, 16 de agosto de 1973) fue un bioquímico y microbiólogo estadounidense, que en 1952 obtuvo el premio Nobel en Fisiología o Medicina . Biografía. Nació en la aldea Nova Pryluka, 3 35 km al noroeste de Vínnitsa y 220 km al suroeste de Kiev.

  3. Selman Abraham Waksman was born in Priluka, near Kiev, Russia, on July 22nd, 1888, as the son of Jacob Waksman and Fradia London. He received his early education primarily from private tutors, and completed his school training in Odessa in an evening school and with private tutors. He obtained his matriculation diploma in 1910 from the Fifth ...

  4. Selman Abraham Waksman (July 22, 1888 – August 16, 1973) was a Jewish Ukrainian inventor, Nobel Prize laureate, biochemist and microbiologist whose research into the decomposition of organisms that live in soil enabled the discovery of streptomycin and several other antibiotics.

  5. 1 de ene. de 2003 · Dr. Selman Waksman. The son of a poor coppersmith, 1 Waksman was born in Priluka, the Ukraine on July 22, 1888. Today, little remains of the small town, located 200 km from Kiev, the capital of Russian Ukraine. As a young man, Waksman emigrated to the United States, where he later became a renowned scientist.

  6. (Priluka, 1888 - Hyannis, Massachusetts, 1973) Investigador estadounidense de origen soviético especializado en microbiología. En 1910 emigró a Estados Unidos y se nacionalizó norteamericano en 1916. Estudió en la Universidad de Rutgers en New Brunswick (Nueva Jersey), y se doctoró en 1918 en la Universidad de California. Selman Abraham Waksman.

  7. 15 de abr. de 2024 · Selman Abraham Waksman (born July 22, 1888, Priluka, Ukraine, Russian Empire [now Pryluky, Ukraine]—died August 16, 1973, Hyannis, Massachusetts, U.S.) was a Ukrainian-born American biochemist who was one of the world’s foremost authorities on soil microbiology.