Hill Collection

From Embryology
Embryology - 19 Mar 2024    Facebook link Pinterest link Twitter link  Expand to Translate  
Google Translate - select your language from the list shown below (this will open a new external page)

العربية | català | 中文 | 中國傳統的 | français | Deutsche | עִברִית | हिंदी | bahasa Indonesia | italiano | 日本語 | 한국어 | မြန်မာ | Pilipino | Polskie | português | ਪੰਜਾਬੀ ਦੇ | Română | русский | Español | Swahili | Svensk | ไทย | Türkçe | اردو | ייִדיש | Tiếng Việt    These external translations are automated and may not be accurate. (More? About Translations)

Introduction

James Peter Hill (1873 - 1954)
Embryo Collections: Human Embryo Collections | Embryo Collections | Blechschmidt Collection | Carnegie Collection | Domenech-Mateu Collection | Harvard Collection | Hill Collection | Hinrichsen Collection | Hubrecht Collection | Kyoto Collection | Madrid Collection | Embryology Models | DEC Information | DEC

| Ambrosius Hubrecht

Dr Peter Giere (curator of the embryological collection)

James Peter Hill (1873 - 1954) University of Edinburgh, Royal College of Science in London, and demonstrator in Sydney, Australia. His extensive embryo collection was transferred and added to the Hubrecht Collection in 1966 from the University College London by his daughter Catherine Kirkham Jones. Both collections have subsequently been transferred to Embryological Collection, Museum für Naturkunde, Leibniz Institute for Research on Evolution and Biodiversity.


"By far the largest addition to the Hubrecht Collection was the material collected by James Peter Hill (1873-1954). This consists of about 3,000 bottles of material in alcohol 28,000 microscope slides specimens blocked out in wax; detailed field and laboratory notebooks, and other documentation; and photographs, including pairs of stereomicrographs of platypus and other embryos, to be viewed with the special pair of viewing glasses which survive in the collection."[1]


Links: "Dobbin" Embryo (stage 8) | James Hill | Echidna Development | Platypus Development


Image source: The images from the Hill Collection (part of the Embryological Collection) are reproduced with the permission of the Museum für Naturkunde, Leibniz Institute for Research on Evolution and Biodiversity. Images are for educational purposes only and must not be reproduced electronically or in writing without permission from the Museum für Naturkunde Berlin.

Stage 8 Embryo

"Dobbin" Embryo  
Further descriptions of the "Dobbin" Embryo characterised as (Carnegie Stage 8) can be found in the following papers:

Hill JP. and Florian J. The development of head-process and prochordal plate in man (1931) J Anat. 65(2): 242-6. PMID 17104317

Hill JP. and Florian J. A young human embryo (embryo dobbin) with head-process and prochordal plate. (1931) Phil. Tran. Roy. Soc. London B, 219: 443-486.

Hill JP. and Florian J. Further note on the pro-chordal plate in man. (1931) J. Anat., 46: 46-47. PMID 17104356

Note the rostral end of notochordal process was at first mistaken for prechordal plate, see published correction.

See page - Carnegie Stage 8 - "Dobbin" Embryo


Stage 8 Links: Week 3 | Gastrulation | Lecture | Lecture | Somitogenesis | Lecture - Mesoderm | Lecture - Ectoderm | Lecture - Early Vascular | Science Practical | Carnegie Embryos | Category:Carnegie Stage 8 | Next Stage 9
  Historic Papers: 1920 Mateer Embryo | 1931 Head-Process | 1931 Prochordal Plate | 1931 neurenteric canal
HillH159 Stage 8 bf01.jpg HillH159 Stage 8 bf02.jpg
chorionic vesicle stereo view 1 chorionic vesicle stereo view 2
HillH159 Stage 8 bf03.jpg HillH159 Stage 8 bf04.jpg
embryo stereo view 1 embryo stereo view 2
Links: "Dobbin" Embryo | Carnegie stage 8

Stage 12 Embryo

HillH4 Stage 12 bf01.jpg HillH4 Stage 12 bf02.jpg
right view left view
Links: Carnegie stage 12

Stage 13 Embryo

Hill HH145
HillH145 Stage 13 bf01.jpg HillH145 Stage 13 bf02.jpg
HillH145 Stage 13 bf03.jpg HillH145 Stage 13 bf04.jpg
HillH145 Stage 13 bf05.jpg HillH145 Stage 13 bf06.jpg
HillH145 Stage 13 bf07.jpg HillH145 Stage 13 bf08.jpg
Links: Carnegie stage 13

Stage 16 Embryo

Hill HH5
HillH5 Stage 16 bf01.jpg HillH5 Stage 16 bf02.jpg
HillH5 Stage 16 bf03.jpg HillH5 Stage 16 bf04.jpg
HillH5 Stage 16 bf05.jpg HillH5 Stage 16 bf06.jpg
HillH5 Stage 16 bf07.jpg HillH5 Stage 16 bf08.jpg
HillH5 Stage 16 bf09.jpg HillH5 Stage 16 bf10.jpg
HillH5 Stage 16 bf11.jpg HillH5 Stage 16 bf12.jpg
Hill HH8
HillH8 Stage 16 bf01.jpg HillH8 Stage 16 bf02.jpg
HillH8 Stage 16 bf03.jpg HillH8 Stage 16 bf04.jpg
HillH8 Stage 16 bf05.jpg HillH8 Stage 16 bf06.jpg

Stereo pair animation: right lateral animation | right lateral animation | left lateral animation

Links: Carnegie stage 16

Stage 17 Embryo

HillH202 Stage 17 500.gif

HillH202 Stage 17 bf02.jpg HillH202 Stage 17 bf01.jpg

Embryo Virtual Slide

Stage 17 - Left Lateral

HillH202 Stage 17 bf01.jpg

 ‎‎Mobile | Desktop | Original

Stage 17 | Embryo Slides
Stage 17 - Ventral View

HillH202 Stage 17 bf02.jpg

 ‎‎Mobile | Desktop | Original

Stage 17 | Embryo Slides
Links: Carnegie stage 17

Stage 18 Embryo

HillH6 Stage 18 bf05.jpg HillH6 Stage 18 bf04.jpg HillH6 Stage 18 bf03.jpg HillH6 Stage 18 bf02.jpg
right ventral right ventrolateral right ventrolateral right lateral
HillH6 Stage 18 bf51.jpg HillH6 Stage 18 bf06.jpg HillH6 Stage 18 bf01.jpg
right ventral (smaller) left lateral (smaller) right dorsolateral (smaller)
Links: Carnegie stage 18

Stage 19 Embryo

Links: Carnegie stage 19


Fetal

HillH13 Fetus bf01.jpg HillH13 Fetus bf02.jpg

Fetus week 9


Links: Week 9
HillH13 Fetus.gif

Human Placental Villi (4-5 weeks)

Links: Placenta Development

Embryologists

Embryologists: William Hunter | Wilhelm Roux | Caspar Wolff | Wilhelm His | Oscar Hertwig | Julius Kollmann | Hans Spemann | Francis Balfour | Charles Minot | Ambrosius Hubrecht | Charles Bardeen | Franz Keibel | Franklin Mall | Florence Sabin | George Streeter | George Corner | James Hill | Jan Florian | Thomas Bryce | Thomas Morgan | Ernest Frazer | Francisco Orts-Llorca | José Doménech Mateu | Frederic Lewis | Arthur Meyer | Robert Meyer | Erich Blechschmidt | Klaus Hinrichsen | Hideo Nishimura | Arthur Hertig | John Rock | Viktor Hamburger | Mary Lyon | Nicole Le Douarin | Robert Winston | Fabiola Müller | Ronan O'Rahilly | Robert Edwards | John Gurdon | Shinya Yamanaka | Embryology History | Category:People
Related Histology Researchers  
Santiago Ramón y Cajal | Camillo Golgi

References

  1. Richardson MK & Narraway J. (1999). A treasure house of comparative embryology. Int. J. Dev. Biol. , 43, 591-602. PMID: 10668968


External Links

External Links Notice - The dynamic nature of the internet may mean that some of these listed links may no longer function. If the link no longer works search the web with the link text or name. Links to any external commercial sites are provided for information purposes only and should never be considered an endorsement. UNSW Embryology is provided as an educational resource with no clinical information or commercial affiliation.


Image source: The images from the Hill Collection (part of the Embryological Collection) are reproduced with the permission of the Museum für Naturkunde, Leibniz Institute for Research on Evolution and Biodiversity. Images are for educational purposes only and must not be reproduced electronically or in writing without permission from the Museum für Naturkunde Berlin.


Glossary Links

Glossary: A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z | Numbers | Symbols | Term Link



Cite this page: Hill, M.A. (2024, March 19) Embryology Hill Collection. Retrieved from https://embryology.med.unsw.edu.au/embryology/index.php/Hill_Collection

What Links Here?
© Dr Mark Hill 2024, UNSW Embryology ISBN: 978 0 7334 2609 4 - UNSW CRICOS Provider Code No. 00098G