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Arey-Dapena Pediatric Pathology
Collection
A set of lantern slides representing a wide variety of pathologies.
Carnegie Collection of Embryology
This collection's primary focus is on normal development in the first eight
weeks. Collateral materials include photographs, plaster and acetate models,
reprints and
curatorial information.
Elizabeth Mapelsden Ramsey Collection
Papers, documents, and artifacts from Elizabeth Ramsey relating to
her research and publications on placental development.
George Sedgewick Minot Embryological Collection
Embryos from the Harvard School of Medicine. There are drawings
and photographs of the embryos, as well as a large number of
reprints on embryology and related topics collected by Charles S.
Minot.
Gaenssler Pulmonary Pathology Collection
A collection of radiographic images and case histories of lung
diseases, primarily asbestoses. A computerized database
searchable by case or disease is available.
Hooker-Humphrey Collection
Originally from the University of Chicago, this collection came to the
Anatomy Center via the University of Alabama. This collection of
human and comparative material is stained to highlight nervous
system development. Sizes of specimens range from 50mm to
250mm.
Cornell Human and Comparative Embryology
Collection
Embryos from the Cornell School of Veterinary Medicine
Embryological Collection. Includes human, rat, mouse and guinea
pig.
Davis Orthopedic Development Collection
A large collection of glass slides charting bone growth and
development in the human. Slides are grouped by structure starting
with the head and moving down through the torso and out the
extremities.
Burdi-Patten Michigan Embryology Collection
The Embryology Research Collection at Michigan was established by embryologists George Streeter and G. Carl Huber in the early 1900s with a mission to collect and describe the morphogenesis of human embryos at critical stages in prenatal life. For about twenty years up to 1957, the Collection grew in numbers under the leadership of Professor Bradley M. Patten whose primary interests were in heart and cardiovascular development.
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