A young member of the department's rhesus monkey colony.
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By the time Streeter retired and the new director,
George Corner, had arrived, this new
direction was firmly in place. Corner, a former Johns Hopkins researcher who
had discovered the ovarian hormone
progesterone, came to the department from the University of Rochester. Under
his leadership, many advances in the understanding of human reproductive
physiology were made. Still, the work in human
embryology continued.
It wasn't until Corner's successor was in place
that the human embryology work was terminated. James Ebert, an expert on
tissue transplantation and heart development, arrived as director in 1956.
Ebert was well aware of the new revolutionary discoveries that had begun to
redefine biology. He began to transform the work of the department
accordingly. Under his leadership, new investigations initiated the
molecular and genetic study of development. In 1973, the Human Embryo
Collection was sent to the University of California at Davis, where the
Carnegie Laboratories of Embryology, under the directorship of Ronan O'Rahilly,
opened in 1976. In 1991, following O'Rahilly's retirement, the collection was donated to the National
Museum of Health and Medicine.
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