A Petri Dish (alternatively known as a Petri plate or cell-culture dish) is a shallow transparent lidded dish that biologists use to culture cells[1][2], such as bacteria, or small mosses.[3] It is the most common type of culture plate.
The container is named after the German bacteriologist Julius Richard Petri.[4][5]
Penicillin, the first antibiotic, was discovered in 1929 when Alexander Fleming noticed that mold that had contamined a bacterial culture in a Petri dish had killed the bacteria all around it.
The Petri dish is one of the most common items in biology laboratories, and has entered popular culture. The term is often written in lower case, especially in non-technical literature
Petri Dish
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