Milton Wainwright

Milton Wainwright
Born (1950-02-23) 23 February 1950
Residence Sheffield, South Yorkshire
Citizenship British
Nationality English
Fields Microbiology, Astrobiology
Institutions
Alma mater University of Nottingham
Known for "Alien Bugs", Neopanspermia

Milton Wainwright (born 23 February 1950) is a British microbiologist who is known for his research into what he claims could be extraterrestrial life found in the stratosphere.[1][2][3]

Education

Wainwright graduated from the University of Nottingham in the field of botany. He obtained a PhD from the same university in the field of mycology. After he went to the National Research Council of Canada as postdoctoral fellow, where he obtained a qualification in environmental microbiology. After his postdoctoral fellowship, he went to work at the University of Sheffield.[4]

Research

Wainwright's interests are in astrobiology and the history of science.[4] He claimed that the idea of natural selection is not original to Darwin's or Wallace's theory.[5] Also, he has claimed that the red rain in Kerala is a biological entity.[6] Wainwright has also written widely about the history of the discovery penicillin (including that Hitler’s life was saved by the drug) and streptomycin[7] and on the hypothesis that bacteria and other non-virus microbes cause cancer.[8]

Wainwright identifies as an agnostic.[9]

Books

Milton Wainwright is author of the books Miracle Cure: The Story of Penicillin and the Golden Age of Antibiotics (1990) and An introduction to environmental biotechnology (2011).[10][11]

Honours and awards

Articles


https://scholar.google.co.uk/citations?user=3n-G_T0AAAAJ&hl=en

See also

References


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