-
drawings of the
studied organs. This
series of illustrations,
Tabulae Anatomicae Clariviri, was
published in 1714.
Eustachio extended knowledge of the...
- PMID 28614587. C****eri GC (1627).
Tabulae anatomicae, lxxiix. Venetis.
Stensen N (1662).
Observationes anatomicae,
quibus varia oris,
oculorum &
narium vas...
-
published only one
major work
during his lifetime, the
Observationes anatomicae,
which first came out in 1561. Here he
presented his
numerous new anatomical...
-
Gabriele (1561).
Gabrielis Falloppii medici Mutinensis Observationes anatomicae ad
Petrum Mannam medi****
Cremonensem . U.S.
National Library of Medicine...
-
illustrated in Habicot's
Question Chirurgicale and C****eri's
posthumous Tabulae anatomicae in 1627.
Thomas Fienus (1567–1631),
Professor of
Medicine at the University...
-
title Tabulae anatomicae ****. He
followed this in 1539 with an
updated version of Winter's
anatomical handbook,
Institutiones anatomicae. In 1539 he also...
- the
Sylvian fissure in the 1641
edition of the
textbook Institutiones anatomicae. The
Bursa Fabricii (the site of
hematopoiesis in birds) is
named after...
-
Cordis et
Aneurismatibus (1728) and in the
first edition of the
Tabulae Anatomicae (1714)
collected by
Bartolomeo Eustachio (1500-1574). In 1700, Pacchioni...
-
Discussion of the History,
Sources and Cir****stances of the 'Tabulae
Anatomicae ****' of Vesalius,
Cambridge University Press, 1946 (reprinted 2012), p...
-
Anatomy (1918) synd/3088 at Who
Named It? G. D. Santorini.
Observationes anatomicae. Venetiis, apus J. B. Recurti, 1724; Leiden, 1939. "Farlex free dictionary:Corniculate"...