On the mode of communication of cholera.--2nd ed.--Originally published London : John Churchill, 1855.--On continuous molecular changes.--Originally published London : John Churchill, 1853.
Britain was struck by four cholera epidemics between 1831 and 1867 ... the filthiest parts of towns seemed to be most vulnerable to the disease. This book is about the nineteenth-century doctor who ...
This repository contains a selection of georeferenced files that can be used to re-create and analyse John Snow's iconic map of the 1854 cholera outbreak in Soho, London. These files were developed to ...
who was the first to find evidence that cholera spreads through tainted water. John Snow started mapping incidences of the disease in Soho, and noticed clusters around the Broad Street water pump.
In the 19th Century, A cholera outbreak happened in london, Scientist had different speculations about what caused it, many assumed that cholera was spread to the air, but Dr John Snow suspected ti ...
John Snow was born into a labourer's ... At the time, it was assumed that cholera was airborne. However, Snow did not accept this 'miasma' (bad air) theory, arguing that in fact entered the ...
A map (p106-107) taken from a report by Dr. John Snow: p. [97]-120 of the "Report on the cholera outbreak in the Parish of St. James, Westminster, during the autumn of 1854", presented to the vestry ...
John Snow is often called ... Snow had published a book in 1848 in which he proposed that the disease was spread by a self-replicating agent in faeces. When cholera struck London again, Snow ...
In 1854, a serious outbreak of cholera near Broad Street (now Broadwick Street) in Soho, London, killed 616 people. Physician John Snow’s investigation of the outbreak critically changed our ...
John Snow decided to investigate. His surgery was near Broad Street in central London, and hundreds of people around the area had died from cholera within ten days.