Embryology History - Florence Sabin: Difference between revisions

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Revision as of 14:58, 10 September 2017

Embryology - 28 Mar 2024    Facebook link Pinterest link Twitter link  Expand to Translate  
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Introduction

Florence Rena Sabin (1871 - 1953)
Florence Rena Sabin (1871-1953)

Florence Rena Sabin (1871 - 1953)

NLM - Profiles in Science

"Sabin entered the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine in 1896, one of fourteen women in a class of forty-five. Her skill and originality in laboratory classes attracted the attention of anatomist Franklin P. Mall, one of Hopkins' outstanding scientists. Mall became Sabin's mentor, advocate, and intellectual role model, encouraging her pursuit of "pure"(rather than applied) science, and suggesting two projects which would help establish her research reputation. One of these was a three-dimensional model of a newborn baby's brainstem, which became the basis of a widely used textbook, An Atlas of the Medulla and Midbrain, published in 1901. The other project was an investigation of the embryological development of the lymphatic system."
Sabin1901 titlepage.jpg


Florence Sabin in Rockefeller lab

Florence Sabin in Rockefeller lab between 1925 and 1938 (image - U.S. National Library of Medicine).

References

Sabin FR. and Knower H. An atlas of the medulla and midbrain, a laboratory manual (1901) Baltimore: Friedenwald.

Sabin FR. The lymphatic system in human embryos, with a consideration of the morphology of the system as a whole. (1909) Amer. J Anat. 9(1): 43–91.

Sabin FR. The Development of the Lymphatic System in Keibel F. and Mall FP. Manual of Human Embryology II. (1912) J. B. Lippincott Company, Philadelphia.

Sabin FR. Origin and development of the primitive vessels of the chick and of the pig. (1917) Contrib. Embryol., Carnegie Inst. Wash. 6: 61–124.

Sabin FR. Studies on the origin of blood-vessels and of red blood-corpuscles as seen in the living blastoderm of chicks during the second day of incubation. (1920) Contrib. Embryol., Carnegie Inst. Wash. No. 9 36: 213-262.

Sabin FR. Direct growth of veins by sprouting. (1922) Contrib. Embryol., Carnegie Inst. Wash. No. 65 14: 1–10.


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



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http://profiles.nlm.nih.gov/ps/retrieve/Narrative/RR/p-nid/89


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Cite this page: Hill, M.A. (2024, March 28) Embryology Embryology History - Florence Sabin. Retrieved from https://embryology.med.unsw.edu.au/embryology/index.php/Embryology_History_-_Florence_Sabin

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