90th Anniversary Issue: 1930s

Germ warfare, tracking Pluto's rise and fall and other highlights, 1930–39

IMAGE CREDIT: G. Wanner/ScienceFoto/Getty Images

Germ warfare
Alexander Fleming’s Nobel Prize–winning discovery of a germ-fighting constituent from mold — penicillin (5/17/30, p. 314) — launched a renaissance in the control of infectious disease. The drug became so pivotal in fighting battlefield infections that civilian supplies had all but dried up by 1943.