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From Embryology
  • {{Carnegie Collection stage 22 table}} ...Category:Carnegie Embryo 6832|No. 6832]]. Bottom row, [[:Category:Carnegie Embryo 8394|No. 8394]]. All views are at the same magnification.
    4 KB (653 words) - 15:34, 26 June 2019
  • | [[File:Kyoto Embryo Collection - cover.jpg|150px|link=http://itunes.apple.com/us/book/id1143922 ...n development during this key period. This atlas of the Kyoto embryos from Carnegie Stage 7 to 23 provides a brief description of each stage, surface views, in
    8 KB (1,222 words) - 10:09, 31 March 2019
  • ...ryo femur CS18 to CS23.png|thumb|alt=Human embryo femur CS18 to CS23|Human embryo femur CS18 to CS23{{#pmid:31442281|PMID31442281}}]] ...magnetic resonance imaging. The cartilaginous femur was first observed at Carnegie stage 18. Major anatomical landmarks were formed prior to the initiation of
    27 KB (3,913 words) - 14:35, 21 November 2019
  • ...c 1957 paper by O'Rahilly is a description of the development of the human embryo limb cartilage. ...4; Hagen, 1900; Lewis, 1902; Griifenberg, I905; Hesser, 1926). In a 27—mm. embryo, Schulin (1879) found that all the skeletal elements of the hand were ehond
    43 KB (6,197 words) - 07:54, 29 April 2017
  • ...les of the development of the systemic Jymphatic vessels in the manmialian embryo. Anat. Rec, vol. 4, no. 2, pp. 399-423. ...r communication on the venous system of marsupials, Anat. Rec, vol. 2, pp. 196-203.
    10 KB (1,402 words) - 10:33, 6 December 2019
  • ...}</ref> Later in 1921 along with Mall published a review of abnormal human embryo development.<ref>{{Ref-Mall1921}}</ref> ...lips of the blastopore (in the late gastrula stage) to other parts of the embryo and found that as expected they differentiated into structures characterist
    26 KB (3,787 words) - 12:53, 12 September 2017
  • ...e free to use our judgment in methods of fixation and preservation. If the embryo is perfectly fresh or possibly living, we use, of course, the most refined ...straight and other measurements and weights also are taken. The age of the embryo is estimated on the basis of weight, crown-rump, and foot length, and the e
    56 KB (7,365 words) - 04:08, 19 February 2020
  • ...Mall describes the human embryos in the collection that would become the [[Carnegie Collection]]. There is also a [[:File:1904 - Catalogue of the collection of [[Carnegie Collection]] | [[Carnegie Embryos]]
    21 KB (2,470 words) - 23:39, 9 August 2018
  • Limb development has been studied in the embryo extensively as a model for how limb pattern formation, {{limb axis}}, is es ...limb bud. We will focus on how mesoderm cells in precise locations in the embryo become determined to form a limb and express the key transcription factors
    49 KB (7,059 words) - 10:08, 18 December 2021
  • ...the opinion of Veit that "ova" may continue to grow after the death of the embryo, but added that the existence of bare areas and the bunching of villi in so ...abortuses, not only believed that cellular proliferation can occur in the embryo after its death, but that either the lateral or the dorsal or ventral halve
    76 KB (11,853 words) - 09:31, 13 December 2012
  • ...d in a majority of gilts in which all of the uterus was removed except one embryo and its corresponding portion of uterine horn on the 12th day of pregnancy. ...ion of SterilityIntroduction of Spring Pessaries. Jour. Reprod. Fertil. Z: 196. (Abstr.).
    64 KB (9,621 words) - 08:36, 10 May 2018
  • ...e, in which it opened in the naso-pharynx. In the development of the human embryo we see these three stages reproduced.<ref> See Professor J. E. Frazer, Lanc ...rmation of the Face by the Nasal, Maxillary and Mandibular Processes in an Embryo of the 6th week]]
    53 KB (8,863 words) - 23:33, 30 December 2014
  • ...rog's egg coincided with the median plane of the adult body (Cole, '30, p. 196). ...and blastulation appear normal. However, gastrulation is abortive, and the embryo soon dies (Moore, '41, '46, '47).
    121 KB (19,141 words) - 09:02, 8 September 2018
  • ...s thesis by Stewart describes development of the blood supply to the human embryo basal ganglia. =The Development of the Blood Supply to the Human Embryo Basal Ganglia=
    205 KB (32,873 words) - 16:51, 21 August 2018
  • | [[File:Mark_Hill.jpg|90px|left]] Possibly [[Carnegie stage 6]]. See an additional description of the Herzog embryo in {{Ref-Lewis1917}}
    90 KB (14,775 words) - 17:29, 4 June 2017
  • ...[[Carnegie stage 22|Streeter’s Horizon XXII]]), and EH 377, 31.5 mm C-R ([[Carnegie stage 23|Streeter’s Horizon XXIII]]). Both of these embryos had been cut '''Fig. 1''' Ventrocephalic aspect of heart of 31.5 mm embryo showing the superficial cardiac vessels. The arch of the aorta has been rep
    89 KB (13,955 words) - 12:02, 28 July 2020
  • ...[[Carnegie stage 22|Streeter’s Horizon XXII]]), and EH 377, 31.5 mm C-R ([[Carnegie stage 23|Streeter’s Horizon XXIII]]). Both of these embryos had been cut '''Fig. 1''' Ventrocephalic aspect of heart of 31.5 mm embryo showing the superficial cardiac vessels. The arch of the aorta has been rep
    90 KB (14,100 words) - 20:01, 11 April 2018
  • WASHINGTON, D. C. Published by the Carnegie Institution of Washington 1911 Carnegie Institution of Washington, Publication No. 142
    195 KB (32,783 words) - 00:15, 22 April 2014
  • ...viously primitive character was seen in the thoracic cord of a 5—mm. human embryo, it seemed worth While to examine the suitable younger specimens available ...by grants from the Penrose Fund of the American Philosophical Society, the Carnegie Corporation of New York and the University of Pittsburgh.
    108 KB (17,823 words) - 16:12, 4 February 2017
  • Carnegie Institution of Washington ...n of data was made by the statistical staff of the Department of Genetics, Carnegie Institution of Washington (Cold Spring Harbor, Long Island), and by Mr. Wil
    76 KB (12,382 words) - 12:33, 16 March 2020
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