Human Embryo Collections

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Introduction

While many universities hold collections of embryos from many species, very few have well-characterised collections of embryos showing human development. Many of those that are available are historic in nature, consist of histological sections, some with limited information about the embryo history.

There are groups now taking advantage of new imaging techniques to either re-evaluate these historic collections, or analysing new embryonic material. Some of these new databases are being made available online for research purposes.


Remember that this current site is for educational use only.

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
Carnegie Stages: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | About Stages | Timeline


Carnegie Collection

Carnegie Embryos

(Carnegie Institution, USA)

Franklin Mall Links: Franklin Mall | 1891 26 Day Human Embryo | 1905 Blood-Vessels of the Brain | 1906 Human Ossification | 1910 Manual of Human Embryology 1 | 1912 Manual of Human Embryology 2 | 1911 Mall Human Embryo Collection | 1912 Heart Development | 1915 Tubal Pregnancy | 1916 Human Magma in Normal and Pathological Development | 1917 Frequency Human Abnormalities | 1917 Human Embryo Cyclopia | 1918 Embryo Age | 1918 Appreciation | 1934 Franklin Mall biography PDF | Mall photograph | Mall painting | Mall painting | Carnegie Stages | Carnegie Embryos | Carnegie Collection | Category:Franklin Mall | Carnegie Embryos | Contributions to Embryology Series

Harvard Collection

This historic collection of human and other embryos was originally collected by Charles Minot (1852–1914), and sometimes referred to as the Minot Collection, now forms part of the larger Carnegie Collection.


Links; Carnegie Collection | Harvard Collection

Kyoto Collection

Kyoto Embryos

(Kyoto University, Japan)

  • Begun by Dr. Hideo Nishimura in 1961 and has over 44,000 human embryo specimens.
  • Developed and managed by Kohei Shiota.
  • Currently managed by Shigehito Yamada.

Prof. Kohei Shiota, Dr Mark Hill, Prof. Shigehito Yamada and Prof. Mineo Yasuda

  • Polydactyly in human embryos[1]
    • 129 embryos with polydactyly in 36,380 human conceptuses obtained through induced abortion during the period from 1962 to 1974.
  • Human embryo imaging with a super-parallel magnetic resonance (MR) microscope[2]


Links: Kyoto Collection | Japan - Kyoto Collection

Hamilton-Boyd Collection

(Cambridge University, UK)

  • Collected by Professor JD Boyd, Professor of Anatomy at the University in the 1950s and 1960s.
  • Held at the University of Cambridge.
  • Professor Boyd wrote the monographs 'Human Embryology' (Hamilton, Boyd and Mossman) and 'The Human Placenta' (Boyd and Hamilton).
  • Collection is only histological sections (no tissue blocks remain)


Links: Boyd Collection
Boyd collection placenta section

Blechschmidt Collection

Blechschmidt model on display.

(University of Goettingen, Germany)

  • Erich Blechschmidt (1904–92) independently developed new methods of embryo reconstruction.
  • Director of Göttingen University’s Anatomical Institute from 1942 until 1973.
  • 200,000 serial sections of embryos and 64 models.
  • Some of the embryological collection were assigned Carnegie Nos. 10315-10434 in 1972.

Hill Viebahn Blechschmidt Collection.jpg

Links: Blechschmidt Collection | The Human Embryology Collection | Collections of the University Medical Center

Hubrecht Collection

Giere Hill - Hill Collection.jpg

(Netherlands Institute for Developmental Biology in Utrecht, Hubrecht Laboratory)

In 2004 was relocated to the Museum fur Naturkunde, Berlin. Incorporating the Hill collection.

  • The Hubrecht Laboratory[3] was founded in 1916 from Ambrosius Arnold Willem Hubrecht (1853-1915) personal collection[4].
  • The collection is for comparative embryology of vertebrates and includes a large number of animal embryos (also an associated historical library).
  • 600 species of chordate, in 175 families and 10 classes.
  • 2,000 wet specimens.
  • histological sections (A. Dohrn - Pisces, Amphibia, Reptilia; L. Bolk - Vertebrates; and W. Kückenthal - Cetacea)
  • material blocked out in paraffin but not sectioned.


Links: Hubrecht Collection | Museum fur Naturkunde - Embryological Collection

Hill Embryological Collection

No relation to this Website's author/editor.

In 2004 this collection was relocated to the Museum fur Naturkunde, Berlin.

  • James Peter Hill (1873-1954)
  • University of Edinburgh, Royal College of Science in London, 1892 demonstrator in Sydney, Australia.


Links: Hill Collection | Museum fur Naturkunde - Embryological Collection


Madrid Institute of Embryology Human Embryo Collection

Francisco Ort-Llorca (1905-1993)

Complutense University of Madrid, Institute of Embryology.

Hill Arraez-Aybar Madrid Collection.jpgOrts Llorca Madrid embryo catalogue


Links: Madrid Collection

Domenech-Mateu Collection

Bellaterra Collection

(Anatomy and Embryology Unit, Morphological Science Department, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona)

Links: Domenech-Mateu Collection

Hinrichsen Collection

(Department of Anatomy and Molecular Embryology, Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Germany)

Human specimens were collected by Hinrichsen's team between 1969 and 1994. Some material from this collection was published in Hinrichsen's embryology textbook (Humanembryologie, 1990).


Links: Hinrichsen Collection | Ruhr-Universität Bochum
Klaus Volquardt Hinrichsen
Klaus Volquardt Hinrichsen (1927-1997)

HDBR and HuDSeN Collection

Human Developmental Biology Resource

The HDBR is a MRC-Wellcome Trust funded resource to provide human embryological research materials (tissues, cells, slides, RNA, cDNA, DNA, protein) to registered users.

Human Developmental Studies Network

HuDSeN is a new collection from optical projection tomography that links gene expression patterns to a specific set of previously scanned human embryos.


The HuDSeN atlas is based on 12 optical projection tomography (OPT) models covering the range of Carnegie Stage 12 to 23.[5][6][7]

Human embryo tomography Carnegie stage 17.jpg
 ‎‎Stage 17 Embryo
Page | Play


Links: HUDSEN Database | Wellcome Human Developmental Biology Resource | HDBR and HuDSeN Collection

Central Laboratory for Human Embryology

(University of Washington, USA)


  • begun August 1963.
  • after 18 years consists of 5,200 specimens.
  • range from very young embryos to full-term fetus.

Normal Plates of the Development of the Human Embryo

A historic 1908 book by Franz Keibel (Normentafeln zur Entwicklungsgeschichte der Wirbeltiere - homo sapiens) documenting a range of available human embryonic materials.


Links: Normal Plates of the Development of the Human Embryo | Franz Keibel


Ziegler Models

Ziegler Models

Not a collection as such, but a historic series of wax models made in the 1880s based upon the embryos of Prof. Wilhelm His, Leipzig. Wilhelm His had earlier prepared a series of freehand models. These Ziegler models are the basis of some teaching models still commercially available and used today.

The Carnegie Institute later in the early 1900's developed many additional models based upon their own collection. (More? Carnegie Models)


Links: Ziegler Models | Wilhelm His

References

  1. <pubmed>691840</pubmed>
  2. <pubmed>18037794</pubmed>
  3. <pubmed>10668967</pubmed>
  4. <pubmed>10668968</pubmed>
  5. <pubmed>15298700</pubmed>
  6. <pubmed>16154230</pubmed>
  7. <pubmed>20979583</pubmed>

Reviews

<pubmed>14193295</pubmed>

Articles

<pubmed>19521537</pubmed> <pubmed>17183461</pubmed>| Int J Dev Biol. <pubmed>5681297</pubmed>


Glossary Links

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Cite this page: Hill, M.A. (2024, March 28) Embryology Human Embryo Collections. Retrieved from https://embryology.med.unsw.edu.au/embryology/index.php/Human_Embryo_Collections

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