File:John Rock.jpg: Difference between revisions
mNo edit summary |
|||
(2 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 5: | Line 5: | ||
They also worked together with the technician Miriam Menkin. Both Rock and Menkin looked clinically within the surgically removed uterine tubes and uterus for the earliest stages of human development the "products of conception". John Rock was also the main subject of a recent book on changes in reproduction.was a Boston gynaecologist and human fertility researcher. In 1938 he began a collaboration with Arthur Hertig. They worked together with the technician Miriam Menkin. Both Rock and Menkin looked within the surgically removed uterine tubes and uterus for the earliest stages of human development the "products of conception". John Rock was also the main subject of a recent book on changes in reproduction. | They also worked together with the technician Miriam Menkin. Both Rock and Menkin looked clinically within the surgically removed uterine tubes and uterus for the earliest stages of human development the "products of conception". John Rock was also the main subject of a recent book on changes in reproduction.was a Boston gynaecologist and human fertility researcher. In 1938 he began a collaboration with Arthur Hertig. They worked together with the technician Miriam Menkin. Both Rock and Menkin looked within the surgically removed uterine tubes and uterus for the earliest stages of human development the "products of conception". John Rock was also the main subject of a recent book on changes in reproduction. | ||
:'''Links:''' [[Embryology History - Arthur Hertig|Arthur Hertig]] | [[Carnegie Collection]] | |||
:'''Links:''' [[Embryology History - Arthur Hertig#John Rock|John Rock]] | [[Embryology History - Arthur Hertig|Arthur Hertig]] | [[Carnegie Collection]] | [[File talk:John Rock.jpg|Rock Reference list]] | |||
===Reference=== | ===Reference=== |
Latest revision as of 13:48, 23 February 2017
John Charles Rock
John Charles Rock (1890-1984) was a Boston gynaecologist and human fertility researcher. In 1938 he began a collaboration with Arthur Hertig, a pathologist and embryologist. They published many studies of the Carnegie Collection embryos.
They also worked together with the technician Miriam Menkin. Both Rock and Menkin looked clinically within the surgically removed uterine tubes and uterus for the earliest stages of human development the "products of conception". John Rock was also the main subject of a recent book on changes in reproduction.was a Boston gynaecologist and human fertility researcher. In 1938 he began a collaboration with Arthur Hertig. They worked together with the technician Miriam Menkin. Both Rock and Menkin looked within the surgically removed uterine tubes and uterus for the earliest stages of human development the "products of conception". John Rock was also the main subject of a recent book on changes in reproduction.
- Links: John Rock | Arthur Hertig | Carnegie Collection | Rock Reference list
Reference
Image modified from Library of Congress photograph.
Cite this page: Hill, M.A. (2024, June 26) Embryology John Rock.jpg. Retrieved from https://embryology.med.unsw.edu.au/embryology/index.php/File:John_Rock.jpg
- © Dr Mark Hill 2024, UNSW Embryology ISBN: 978 0 7334 2609 4 - UNSW CRICOS Provider Code No. 00098G
File history
Yi efo/eka'e gwa ebo wo le nyangagi wuncin ye kamina wunga tinya nan
Gwalagizhi | Nyangagi | Dimensions | User | Comment | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
current | 11:36, 23 February 2017 | 401 × 500 (33 KB) | Z8600021 (talk | contribs) | ==John Charles Rock== John Charles Rock (1890-1984) was a Boston gynaecologist and human fertility researcher. In 1938 he began a collaboration with Arthur Hertig. They worked together with the technician Miriam Menkin. Both Rock and Menkin looked wit... |
You cannot overwrite this file.
File usage
The following 17 pages use this file:
- Assisted Reproductive Technology
- Embryology History - Arthur Hertig
- Embryology History - John Rock
- Paper - A description of 34 human ova within the first 17 days of development
- Paper - In vitro fertilization and cleavage of human ovarian eggs
- Paper - In vitro fertilization and cleavage of human ovarian eggs 1948
- Paper - Information regarding the time of human ovulation derived from a study of 3 unfertilized and 11 fertilized ova
- Paper - On a human blastula recovered from the uterine cavity 4 days after ovulation (1946)
- Paper - On a normal human ovum not over 7.5 days of age (1945)
- Paper - On the development of the early human ovum, with special reference to the trophoblast of the previllous stage (1944)
- Paper - Some aspects of early human development
- Paper - The human conceptus during the first two weeks of gestation
- Paper - Two human embryos showing early stages of the definitive yolk sac
- Paper - Two human ova of the pre-villous stage, having a developmental age of about eight and nine days respectively
- Paper - Two human ova of the pre-villous stage, having a developmental age of about seven and nine days respectively (1945)
- Paper - Two human ova of the previous stage, having an ovulation age of about eleven and twelve days respectively
- Category:USA