File:Barry Joseph Anson.jpg: Difference between revisions
(Barry Joseph Anson (b. 21 March 1894; d. 13 November 1974) received his masters and medical degree from Harvard in 1923 and 1926, respectively. He started teaching at Northwestern University Medical School in 1926 and became the Chair of the Anatomy Department in 1956. After retiring from his professorship there, he became Research Professor in the Department of Otology and Maxillofacial Surgery at the College of Medicine of the University of Iowa in 1962. Anson was a member of many professio...) |
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== | ==Barry Joseph Anson (1894-1974)== | ||
Barry Joseph Anson (b. 21 March 1894; d. 13 November 1974) received his masters and medical degree from Harvard in 1923 and 1926, respectively. He started teaching at Northwestern University Medical School in 1926 and became the Chair of the Anatomy Department in 1956. After retiring from his professorship there, he became Research Professor in the Department of Otology and Maxillofacial Surgery at the College of Medicine of the University of Iowa in 1962. Anson was a member of many professional societies and authored or co-authored several books including An Atlas of Human Anatomy, The Temporal Bone and Ear, and Surgical Anatomy. He also spent twenty years as editor for the Quarterly Bulletin of Northwestern University Medical School and contributed to numerous other publications. | |||
Barry Joseph Anson (b. 21 March 1894; d. 13 November 1974) received his masters and medical degree from Harvard in 1923 and 1926, respectively. He started teaching at Northwestern University Medical School in 1926 and became the Chair of the Anatomy Department in 1956. | |||
After retiring from his professorship there, he became Research Professor in the Department of Otology and Maxillofacial Surgery at the College of Medicine of the University of Iowa in 1962. Anson was a member of many professional societies and authored or co-authored several books including An Atlas of Human Anatomy, The Temporal Bone and Ear, and Surgical Anatomy. He also spent twenty years as editor for the Quarterly Bulletin of Northwestern University Medical School and contributed to numerous other publications. | |||
(text modified from Faces of Anatomy) | |||
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[[Category:People]][[Category:USA]] |
Revision as of 13:23, 18 January 2020
Barry Joseph Anson (1894-1974)
Barry Joseph Anson (b. 21 March 1894; d. 13 November 1974) received his masters and medical degree from Harvard in 1923 and 1926, respectively. He started teaching at Northwestern University Medical School in 1926 and became the Chair of the Anatomy Department in 1956.
After retiring from his professorship there, he became Research Professor in the Department of Otology and Maxillofacial Surgery at the College of Medicine of the University of Iowa in 1962. Anson was a member of many professional societies and authored or co-authored several books including An Atlas of Human Anatomy, The Temporal Bone and Ear, and Surgical Anatomy. He also spent twenty years as editor for the Quarterly Bulletin of Northwestern University Medical School and contributed to numerous other publications.
(text modified from Faces of Anatomy)
Cite this page: Hill, M.A. (2024, June 20) Embryology Barry Joseph Anson.jpg. Retrieved from https://embryology.med.unsw.edu.au/embryology/index.php/File:Barry_Joseph_Anson.jpg
- © Dr Mark Hill 2024, UNSW Embryology ISBN: 978 0 7334 2609 4 - UNSW CRICOS Provider Code No. 00098G
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current | 13:22, 18 January 2020 | 600 × 812 (121 KB) | Z8600021 (talk | contribs) | Barry Joseph Anson (b. 21 March 1894; d. 13 November 1974) received his masters and medical degree from Harvard in 1923 and 1926, respectively. He started teaching at Northwestern University Medical School in 1926 and became the Chair of the Anatomy Department in 1956. After retiring from his professorship there, he became Research Professor in the Department of Otology and Maxillofacial Surgery at the College of Medicine of the University of Iowa in 1962. Anson was a member of many professio... |
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File usage
The following 20 pages use this file:
- Embryology History - Barry Anson
- Paper - Adult form of the human stapes in the light of its development
- Paper - Development of the incus of the human ear - illustrated in atlas series
- Paper - Development of the malleus of the human ear - Illustrated in atlas series
- Paper - Development of the otic capsule of the human ear - illustrated in atlas series
- Paper - Major features in the developmental history of the human stapes (1940)
- Paper - Stapes, fissula ante fenestram and associated structures in man 1
- Paper - Stapes, fissula ante fenestram and associated structures in man 2
- Paper - The development of the cochlear fenestra, fossula and secondary tympanic membrane
- Paper - The development of the first branchial arch in man and the fate of Meckel's cartilage
- Paper - The development of the otic capsule in the region of surgical fenestration 1
- Paper - The development of the otic capsule in the region of surgical fenestration 2
- Paper - The development of the otic capsule in the region of the vestibular aqueduct
- Paper - The development of the second branchial arch (Reichert's cartilage), facial canal and associated structures in man
- Paper - The distal projection of the endolymphatic sac in human embryos
- Paper - The early development of the membranous labyrinth in mammalian embryos
- Paper - The early embryology of the auditory ossicles in man
- Paper - The early relation of the auditory vesicle to the ectoderm in human embryos
- Paper - The form and structure of the endolymphatic and associated ducts in the child
- Category:USA