Petri dish, and Richard Julius Petri the scientist
At some point, you may have heard about a Petri dish and have the image that it is some sort of lab tool to grow things, usually bacteria. If you haven't, that's about the simplest description that can be given. By "dish", the term actually means a flat circular container that has a cover which rests on it to keep out airborne contaminants.
The man credited with its design, Richard Julius Petri, was born in Germany on May 31, 1852. Both his father and grandfather were professors of various subjects. After high school, he studied at Kaiser Wilhelm Academy for Military Physicians from 1871 to 1875, did some work as a military physician, then finished his doctoral degree in 1876 in Berlin. The title of his dissertation was "The Chemistry of Protein Urine Tests". At some point in his life, he joined the Freemasons.
He continued his military physician work until 1882. During 1877-1879, Petri was assigned to a research facility called the Kaiserliches Gesundheitsamt (Imperial Health Office) in Berlin, where he became a laboratory assistant to the famous bacteriologist and physician Robert Koch. Koch's research team was producing great results in developing revolutionary laboratory methods to study the causes of infectious diseases and find their causes.
As an example of their research, they studied such things as tuberculosis, anthrax, and cholera, all devastating diseases at the time. To grow samples from humans, animals, or the environment in order to detect bacteria in them or to measure their growth properties, researchers like Koch's team would put them in rich nutrient solutions like beef broth. It had been only 17 years earlier when Louis Pasteur created the first actual broth recipe to grow bacteria, using a mixture of yeast, ash, sugar, and ammonium salts in 1860. Other recipes were soon developed to grow bacteria or to identify them based on color changes or production of gas as the germs grew.
These broths were commonly sterilized by boiling then put into glass test tubes with cotton plugs after they had been inoculated with test samples. If certain dyes were in the broth, bacteria that made acid would change the pH and color of the broth. If they also made gas as they ate nutrients, the tiny bubbles could be trapped inside a Durham tube flipped upside down in the tube.
Some bacteria need oxygen in different concentrations or not at all. Growing bacteria in a tube of broth was sometimes convenient to identify this property and add to the list of characteristics of what a scientist was examining. A non-inoculated tube would be clear, but based on the location of bacteria growing in it, the scientist could tell if the bacteria required atmospheric levels of oxygen (growth only at the top), a little oxygen (near the top), or no oxygen at all (growth only at the bottom). Some bacteria were able to grow with or without oxygen, so a tube would show cloudiness through its length.
Pigments made by the bacteria were also an important tool to distinguish between some bacteria grown on solid or semi-solid surfaces. Before looking at them under a microscope, if a scientist could see their color in large colonies growing on potato slices, bread, coagulated egg whites, etc., it would help identify them more quickly. For example, Bartolomeo Bizio studied "blood spots" on communion wafers in 1832, and the distinctive red was one trademark of the bacteria Serratia marcescens, later grown in the lab on bread chunks. Molds have also been commonly seen in prominent colors from snow white to blue-green to jet black.
- Incubating them at body temperature melted the gelatin and made it fall off the slides.
- Some bacteria digested gelatin, and the result was changing it to a cloudy liquid that ran off slides.
From 1882 to 1885, Petri oversaw the Brehmerschen Göbersdorf tuberculosis sanatorium in what is now Poland. He was considered quite strict to everyone around him, perhaps as a result of working for an equally strict Koch or his own military training. He enjoyed wearing his military uniform of chief army doctor whenever he could, including a sash that accentuated his large belly in later years.
For a short time, he was director of a Berlin museum of hygiene, and then he returned to the Imperial Health Office until he retired in 1900. During his lifetime, Petri published 150 papers. One of the most interesting titles (and topics?) was "The microscope from its beginnings up to the present perfection for all lovers of this instrument", published in 1896. Petri was married twice and died on December 20, 1921.