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From Embryology
  • File:Spaulding-fig46.jpg
    ==Fig. 46. Human Embryo 69 mm== Carnegie No. 1542, 69 mm., female. X 4.
    (430 × 599 (26 KB)) - 22:51, 28 May 2015
  • ===All Carnegie Embryos listed=== [[Category:Carnegie Embryo 6]]
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  • File:Streeter1957 stage 22 plate01.jpg
    Figs. 63-65 [[:Category:Carnegie Embryo 6701|No. 6701]]. Figs. 66-68 [[:Category:Carnegie Embryo 6832|No. 6832]].
    (1,500 × 2,179 (423 KB)) - 17:42, 6 November 2016
  • ...Template]][[Category:Reference]][[Category:Historic Embryology]][[Category:Carnegie Collection]][[Category:Genital]][[Category:Male]][[Category:Female]][[Categ
    407 bytes (43 words) - 15:31, 8 November 2017
  • File:Hertig1956 fig70.jpg
    ...to lack of or early death of the embryo. [[:Category:Carnegie Embryo 7771|Carnegie 7771]], Section 34-1. X 100.
    (1,124 × 723 (157 KB)) - 13:32, 25 February 2017
  • File:Hertig1956 fig69.jpg
    ==Fig. 69. Abnormal Implanted Ovum== ...ugh there were many other polyps present. [[:Category:Carnegie Embryo 7771|Carnegie 7771]], Sequence 1. X 1-1.
    (360 × 738 (31 KB)) - 13:29, 25 February 2017
  • ...yo''']]. (1926) Carnegie Instn. Wash. Publ. 362, {{Contrib. Embryol.}}, 17:69-88.<noinclude>[[Category:Template]][[Category:Reference]][[Category:Genital
    352 bytes (49 words) - 23:55, 16 May 2018
  • ...Category:Reference]][[Category:1930's]][[Category:Human Embryo]][[Category:Carnegie Stage 7]][[Category:Week 3]][[Category:Gastrulation]]</noinclude>
    547 bytes (64 words) - 11:53, 8 February 2020
  • ...e>[[Category:Template]][[Category:Reference]][[Category:Neural]][[Category:Carnegie Stage 10]][[Category:Historic Embryology]][[Category:1980's]]</noinclude>
    455 bytes (61 words) - 12:37, 19 May 2017
  • File:Hertig1956 fig06.jpg
    There are 8 definite large vacuolated formative (embryonic) cells, 69 mural and 30 polar trophoblastic cells. Possibly -1 of the latter are actua Carnegie {{CE8663}}, Section 9. X 500.
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  • EMBRYO Department of Embryology, Carnegie Institution of Washington
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  • File:Hertig1956 plate13.jpg
    ...nd a small chorionic cavity but no embryo and a third with trophoblast and embryo but no chorionic cavity. It is, perhaps, conceivable that abnormal morulae ...ial wrinkling of its endometrial surface. [[:Category:Carnegie Embryo 8329|Carnegie 8329]], Sequence 2. X 22.
    (1,280 × 1,896 (487 KB)) - 15:35, 25 February 2017
  • ! colspan=6|[[Carnegie Collection|Carnegie Fetal]] - [[Paper - The early development of the meninges of the spinal cor ! width=100px|Embryo<br>no.
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  • File:Streeter1922-fig44.jpg|Fig. 44. No. {{CE2118}} 69 mm </gallery><noinclude>[[Category:Carnegie Embryo]][[Category:Gallery]][[Category:Template]][[Category:1920's]][[Category:Hea
    772 bytes (98 words) - 14:11, 22 November 2017
  • File:Streeter1922-fig44.jpg
    ==Fig. 44. Embryo No. 2118, 69 mm CRL== Specimens are from the Carnegie Collection, and length given is crown-rump.
    (589 × 780 (101 KB)) - 08:52, 28 January 2013
  • ! colspan=6|[[Carnegie Collection|Carnegie Embryos]] - [[Paper - The early development of the meninges of the spinal c ! width=100px|Embryo<br>no.
    8 KB (659 words) - 23:19, 31 January 2019
  • ! width=100px|Embryo<br>no. | [[Carnegie stage 10|'''X''']] (20-22 days)
    6 KB (582 words) - 11:45, 4 October 2017
  • ! colspan=6|[[Carnegie Collection|Carnegie Embryos]] - [[Paper - The early development of the meninges of the spinal c ! width=100px|Embryo<br>no.
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  • ! colspan=6|[[Carnegie Collection|Carnegie Embryos]] - [[Paper - The early development of the meninges of the spinal c ! width=100px|Embryo<br>no.
    6 KB (591 words) - 11:41, 4 October 2017
  • File:Streeter1922-fig42.jpg
    Specimens are from the Carnegie Collection, and length given is crown-rump. File:Streeter1922-fig42.jpg|Fig. 42. Embryo No. 1724, 66.2 mm.
    (581 × 778 (88 KB)) - 08:06, 28 January 2013
  • File:Streeter1922-fig43.jpg
    Specimens are from the Carnegie Collection, and length given is crown-rump. File:Streeter1922-fig42.jpg|Fig. 42. Embryo No. 1724, 66.2 mm.
    (583 × 780 (94 KB)) - 08:06, 28 January 2013
  • File:Streeter1922-plate05.jpg
    Specimens are from the Carnegie Collection, and length given is crown-rump. File:Streeter1922-fig42.jpg|Fig. 42. Embryo No. 1724, 66.2 mm.
    (900 × 1,200 (315 KB)) - 10:19, 21 January 2014
  • ...1996. There are also sets of [[Carnegie stage 22 - serial sections]] and [[Carnegie stage 22 - selected serial sections]]. ...ks:''' [[Carnegie stage 13]] | [[Carnegie stage 22 - serial sections]] | [[Carnegie stage 22 - selected serial sections]]
    4 KB (508 words) - 18:51, 14 May 2020
  • File:Hertig1956 plate01.jpg
    ...from the dish to which it was adherent. See figure 2 for section. Carnegie Embryo {{CE8698}}, Sequence 12. X 500. ...il, difference in size and shape of blastomeres and loss of zona. Carnegie Embryo {{CE8698}}, Section 4. X 500.
    (1,280 × 1,904 (351 KB)) - 00:15, 7 June 2018
  • File:Streeter1922-fig45.jpg
    ==Fig. 45. Embryo No. 981, 85 mm CRL== Specimens are from the Carnegie Collection, and length given is crown-rump.
    (581 × 781 (91 KB)) - 08:51, 28 January 2013
  • File:Streeter1922-fig46.jpg
    ==Fig. 42. Embryo No. 1724, 66.2 mm CRL== Specimens are from the Carnegie Collection, and length given is crown-rump.
    (592 × 779 (95 KB)) - 08:50, 28 January 2013
  • File:Streeter1922-fig47.jpg
    ==Fig. 47. Embryo No. 1449, 87.3 mm CRL== Specimens are from the Carnegie Collection, and length given is crown-rump.
    (581 × 777 (95 KB)) - 08:48, 28 January 2013
  • ! Length of Embryo (mm) ! Embryo No.,
    3 KB (282 words) - 12:25, 6 February 2018
  • File:Streeter1922-fig48.jpg
    ==Fig. 48. Embryo No. 2003, 103.5 mm CRL== Specimens are from the Carnegie Collection, and length given is crown-rump.
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  • ! width=100px|Embryo<br>no. | 69 .0
    2 KB (248 words) - 23:05, 31 January 2019
  • ...o.69|Text]] | [[Book_-_Contributions_to_Embryology_Carnegie_Institution_No.69#Glossary|Glossary]] ...s|Plates]] | [[Book_-_Contributions_to_Embryology_Carnegie_Institution_No.69#Glossary|Glossary]]
    5 KB (522 words) - 22:33, 25 April 2016
  • File:Streeter1922-fig50.jpg
    ==Fig. 50. Embryo No. 2274, 113 mm CRL== Specimens are from the Carnegie Collection, and length given is crown-rump.
    (582 × 781 (97 KB)) - 08:45, 28 January 2013
  • File:Streeter1922-fig49.jpg
    ==Fig. 49. Embryo No. 1858, 100 mm CRL== Specimens are from the Carnegie Collection, and length given is crown-rump.
    (592 × 770 (97 KB)) - 08:43, 28 January 2013
  • ...re are also sets of [[Carnegie stage 22 - selected serial sections]] and [[Carnegie stage 13 - serial sections]]. | [[:File:Stage 22 image 069.jpg|69]]
    8 KB (1,005 words) - 10:19, 13 March 2014
  • [[File:Carnegie_Institute_of_Washington_logo.jpg|thumb|Carnegie Institute of Washington]] ...The papers documented not only early human development, using mainly the [[Carnegie Collection]] of embryos, but also that in animal models of development.
    13 KB (1,652 words) - 13:55, 11 August 2020
  • ==Carnegie Stages== Historic [[Carnegie Stages]] 1 to 4.
    15 KB (2,010 words) - 10:31, 16 March 2020
  • ..., St. Louis University, Missouri until 1969 when he became Director of the Carnegie Laboratories of Embryology in Baltimore, Maryland. ...ogy History - Fabiola Müller|Fabiola Müller]] based upon studies of the [[Carnegie Collection]] of human embryos.
    12 KB (1,473 words) - 18:05, 16 March 2020
  • ...cess of implantation and early differentiation of cells that will form the embryo and the placenta. ...to all material derived from this fertilized zygote and includes both the embryo and the non-embryonic tissues (placenta, fetal membranes).
    17 KB (2,289 words) - 09:41, 30 July 2016
  • This {{Embryology}} category shows pages and media related to Carnegie stage 7 of embryonic development. In human development this stage occurs du {{Carnegie stage 7 links}}
    148 members (9 subcategories, 84 files) - 15:32, 6 August 2017
  • ...studies on the specimens of the Kyoto Collection as well as of other human embryo collections worldwide. Permanent preservation of the Kyoto Collection is, t Anatomy; Embryo/fetus; Embryology human; Histology human; Image analysis; Image analysis me
    19 KB (2,499 words) - 09:24, 12 May 2020
  • [[Carnegie stage 3]] ...eeding stage in development. It is to be remembered that at all stages the embryo is a living organism, that is, it is a going concern with adequate mechanis
    13 KB (1,877 words) - 15:40, 26 June 2019
  • Embryo Liverpool II was later described in - {{Ref-HarrisonJeffcoate1953}} =A Presomite Human Embryo showing an early stage of the Primitive Streak=
    16 KB (2,452 words) - 16:24, 7 August 2017
  • ...blood development, including the fact that the red corpuscles in the early embryo are nucleated and that the later cells lack a nucleus. Specific informatio ...red blood cells begins to be evident during the second month in the human embryo and (2) that few nucleated red cells are found by the middle of the third m
    13 KB (2,081 words) - 21:13, 31 May 2018
  • ...es, blastocyst formation and hatching, and the generation of the bilaminar embryo. There will also be an introduction to the uterine changes at implantation | valign="bottom"|{{Embryo 1.6mm movie 1‎}}
    20 KB (2,612 words) - 15:45, 24 September 2019
  • ...to age fetuses based upon their bone ossification using embryos from the [[Carnegie Collection]]. ...ength range length (months) group (millimeters) (millimeters) 2 3 Up to so 69 3 19 81-135 115 ‘ 4 32 136-175 157 5 54 176-215 194 6 74 216-255 233 41 M
    22 KB (3,279 words) - 22:35, 27 May 2018
  • ...function of long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) and small RNAs during oocyte-to-embryo transition in mammals. LncRNAs are an assorted rapidly evolving collection ...miR-183) are differentially expressed in the CVG compared to NC and OV at Carnegie developmental stage {{CS13}}. We further identified transcription factors t
    20 KB (2,753 words) - 08:01, 31 July 2018
  • resulting brain in the human embryo. Cells Tissues Organs. 2013;197(3):178-95. 10: O'Rahilly R, Müller F. Spina bifida, somitic count and carnegie stage twelve.
    29 KB (3,670 words) - 11:12, 23 July 2015
  • [[File:Human Carnegie stage 10-23.jpg|thumb|300px|Carnegie Embryos]] ...collection numbering also incorporated the Blechschmidt embryo collection (Carnegie Nos. 10315-10434 ) in 1972, the collection embryos have now been returned t
    43 KB (5,162 words) - 16:44, 28 April 2018
  • ...}</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
  • ...of the human embryo between Carnegie stage 19 to 23 in week 8 using the [[Carnegie Collection]] embryos. {{Carnegie stage 19 links}}
    34 KB (5,269 words) - 14:20, 3 December 2021
  • ...y of fertilization and early cleavage in the human. In vitro fertilization embryo. London: Churchill Livingstone. ...e human. In Trounson, A.O. and Wood, C. (eds.). In Vitro Fertilization and Embryo Transfer. Churchill Livingstone, London.
    46 KB (6,369 words) - 07:52, 30 December 2018
  • [[Carnegie stage 1|Stage 1]] | [[Carnegie stage 2|Stage 2]]
    33 KB (4,172 words) - 11:49, 12 May 2018
  • [[Carnegie stage 1|'''Stage 1''']] | [[Carnegie stage 2|'''Stage 2''']]
    29 KB (3,738 words) - 01:06, 28 October 2019
  • ...of true embryonic stem cells capable of forming all cell types within the embryo. In mammals, the {{trophectoderm}} will form key cells ({{trophoblast}}) of ...({{GA}} week 3 and 4) and is described initially as [[Carnegie stage 3|'''Carnegie stage 3''']]. This stage is followed by blastocyst hatching and implantatio
    23 KB (3,112 words) - 17:50, 7 December 2021
  • '''Fig. 1''' Reconstruction of part of the right mesonephros of a human embryo of 36 mm. '''Fig. 2''' Reconstruction of part of the right mesonephros of a human embryo of 31 mm.
    19 KB (3,067 words) - 12:39, 15 June 2018
  • :''Any condition characterized by implantation of the embryo outside the endometrium and endometrial cavity during pregnancy.'' ...athologist in Houston, Texas) section of ectopic (tubal) pregnancy about [[Carnegie stage 7]] in [[Week 3]].
    16 KB (2,039 words) - 12:35, 1 June 2019
  • ...ric 1955 paper by Mckay and co-authors describes human [[Carnegie stage 14|Carnegie horizon (stage) 14]] embryos. Currently only a brief abstract is included o '''Modern Pages:''' [[Carnegie stage 14]] | [[Week 5]] | [[Embryology History - Arthur Hertig|Arthur Herti
    35 KB (5,398 words) - 16:53, 18 April 2018
  • ...les of the development of the systemic Jymphatic vessels in the manmialian embryo. Anat. Rec, vol. 4, no. 2, pp. 399-423. ...lymphatiques chez les mammif^res. Archives d'Anai. microscop.. Tome 1, pp. 69-81.
    10 KB (1,402 words) - 10:33, 6 December 2019
  • ...uld be clearly timed in the mouse and found in the literature on the human embryo. ...lation and fertilization times were unascertainable so that the age of the embryo is determined by the mating time plus or minus 30 minutes. The time for mat
    31 KB (4,942 words) - 14:24, 21 August 2018
  • |[[File:Mark_Hill.jpg|50px|left]] This historic 1956 paper describes using [[Carnegie Collection]] early human development in week 2 and 3. [[Carnegie Embryos|Carnegie Embryos in this paper]]: {{CE8698}} | {{CE8794}} | {{CE8663|}} | {{CE8663}
    95 KB (14,051 words) - 11:00, 4 October 2018
  • ! Carnegie Stage ...phalic Excencephaly. {{cleft lip}}. Low implantation of the ear. Lost part embryo flow, you have to reverse the order to this and the next
    41 KB (4,622 words) - 05:56, 15 September 2019
  • ...:Stage10_neural_sm.jpg|thumb|300px|Neural groove closing to neural tube<br>Embryo early week 4 ([[Carnegie_stage_10|Stage 10]])]] ...transverse section week 8|Spinal cord transverse section<br>Embryo week 8 (Carnegie Stage {{CS22}})]]
    29 KB (4,176 words) - 12:51, 25 July 2020
  • embryo? with a crown-rump length of 14.5 mm. The embryo was in Streeter’s
    22 KB (3,505 words) - 11:40, 31 January 2020
  • ...35 paper by Florian and Hill describes an early human embryo in [[Week 3]] Carnegie Stage {{CS7}}. '''Modern Notes:''' Carnegie Stage {{CS7}} | {{gastrulation}} | [[Week 3]]
    31 KB (4,830 words) - 07:33, 10 February 2020
  • ...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
  • ...ht, Sitting Height, Head Size, Foot Length, and Menstrual Age of the Human Embryo= Published by the Carnegie Institution of Washington Washington, 1920
    45 KB (7,551 words) - 13:26, 29 January 2019
  • |+ '''[[Carnegie stage 22 - serial sections|Stage 22]] (serial labeled images)''' | [[:File:Stage 22 image 069.jpg|69]]
    72 KB (10,194 words) - 10:45, 24 August 2010
  • ...in the embryo as at birth, but the deformities of the head and neck of the embryo are of such a nature that it can not survive long enough to admit of compar ...xomphaly. Other anomalies, however, are more difficult to recognize in the embryo as sharply defined malformations.
    32 KB (4,425 words) - 11:17, 22 November 2012
  • Department of Embryology, Carnegie Institution of Washington, Baltimore, Maryland, and Department of Zoology, ...rvated by the oculomotor. Bonnet (1901) likewise found, in a 16-somite dog embryo, a pair of mesodermal condensations derived from a medial mass of cells at
    66 KB (10,270 words) - 10:56, 9 August 2020
  • ...he United States Public Health Service and Department of Embryology of The Carnegie Institution of Washington. The three smaller embryos were fixed in toto. The 23 mm embryo was cut into three blocks and the 35 mm fetus was cut into 6 blocks before
    23 KB (3,702 words) - 08:21, 8 June 2017
  • ! Carnegie Stage ...phalic Excencephaly. {{cleft lip}}. Low implantation of the ear. Lost part embryo flow, you have to reverse the order to this and the next
    21 KB (2,334 words) - 06:10, 15 September 2019
  • ...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
  • ...he United States Public Health Service and Department of Embryology of The Carnegie Institution of Washington. The three smaller embryos were fixed in toto. The 23 mm embryo was cut into three blocks and the 35 mm fetus was cut into 6 blocks before
    24 KB (3,726 words) - 11:11, 26 July 2020
  • ...are not Carnegie stages, use the embryo CRL to approximately convert to [[Carnegie Stages]]. ...bryology_15|Historic - Urogenital Development]] | [[Carnegie Embryos]] | [[Carnegie Collection]]
    72 KB (11,235 words) - 23:39, 3 June 2019
  • ...e 19|stage 19]]; {{CE1584}} [[Carnegie stage 19|stage 19]]; {{CE1535}} [[Carnegie stage 23|stage 23]]. '''Modern Notes:''' {{embryonic}} | {{CRL}} | [[Carnegie Collection]]
    47 KB (7,839 words) - 09:00, 20 November 2018
  • ...d the development of the thoracic vertebrae using human embryos from the [[Carnegie Collection]]. [[Embryology History - Charles Bardeen|Charles Bardeen]] | [[Carnegie Embryos]]
    32 KB (4,876 words) - 21:19, 21 October 2020
  • | [[Carnegie stage 6|'''Stage 6''']] | [[File:Stage6_bf03.jpg|90px|link=Carnegie stage 6]][[File:Chorion 001 icon.jpg|90px|link=Development Animation - Chor
    54 KB (6,884 words) - 16:12, 12 May 2018
  • ...genesis of the thyroid follicles (Norris, ’16), has been carried on at the Carnegie Institute of Embryology and at the University of Minnesota under the superv This study is based upon the collection of human embryos in the Carnegie Institute of Embryology at Baltimore and upon those in the Anatomical Labor
    38 KB (6,084 words) - 00:22, 13 May 2017
  • ...es lack horns, as in some of the fat-tailed sheep of Africa and Asia (Fig. 69). Fig. 69. — Fat-tailed hornless sheep (Ovis aries steatopyga persicci).
    32 KB (5,483 words) - 16:35, 1 March 2020
  • =Chapter III. The Human Embryo= ==Calculation of the Age of the Human Embryo==
    85 KB (14,483 words) - 23:07, 19 June 2019
  • series in the G. L. Streeter ( ‘ollection, Carnegie Laboratory, Figs. 4 and 9, X 69; Figs. 14 and 15, X 81; Fig. 16.
    39 KB (6,040 words) - 08:25, 25 December 2018
  • ...es lack horns, as in some of the fat-tailed sheep of Africa and Asia (Fig. 69). Fig. 69. — Fat-tailed hornless sheep (Ovis aries steatopyga persicci).
    33 KB (5,641 words) - 16:29, 1 March 2020
  • ...y Atlas of the 13-mm. Pig Embryo. (Prefaced by younger stages of the chick embryo.) The Wistar Institute Press, Philadelphia, iv & 104 pp. ...nancy as it is in swine. Carnegie Inst., Contrib. to E-mbryoL, Vol. 2, pp. 69-94.
    69 KB (10,455 words) - 22:14, 1 January 2020
  • =An Early Human Embryo (No. 1285, Manchester Collection), with Capsular Attachment of the Connecti ...tive purposes, an account of the head-process and prochordal plate of this embryo and provided a graphic reconstruction of the dorsal view of the embryonal s
    30 KB (4,779 words) - 16:48, 11 August 2017
  • {{Carnegie No.59 Header}} =Relative Weight and Volume of the Component Parts of the Brain of the Human Embryo at Different Stages of Development=
    54 KB (8,414 words) - 20:36, 16 August 2017
  • ...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 .... 42, p. 311 (Evol. of Palate) ; G. Schorr, Anat. Hefte, 1908, vol. 36, p. 69 (Dev. of Palate) ; E. Fawcett, Journ. Anat. and Physiol. 1906, vol. 40, p.
    53 KB (8,863 words) - 23:33, 30 December 2014
  • The adult human cerebellum contains 69,030,000,000 ± 6,650,000,000 (sixty-nine billion thirty million) neurons an ...er birth. This development generates the most complex structure within the embryo and the long time period of development means in utero insult during pregna
    33 KB (4,668 words) - 08:32, 19 August 2020
  • ...dia Differentiate by Following a Precise Timeline in Human Embryos Between Carnegie Stages 11 and 13=== ...d primordia in human somite-stage embryos. We selected 37 human embryos at Carnegie Stage (CS) 11-CS13 (28-33 days after fertilization) and three-dimensionally
    44 KB (6,445 words) - 23:23, 24 August 2020
  • {{Carnegie stage 5 links}} ..., the terminology employed by Ramsey (1938) in her description of the Yale embryo will be used. Thus we are able to recognize central cytotrophoblast, periph
    41 KB (6,431 words) - 14:35, 28 September 2018
  • =Development of the Auricle in the Human Embryo= [[Book_-_Contributions_to_Embryology|Carnegie Institution of Washington - Contributions to Embryology]]
    94 KB (15,136 words) - 12:43, 18 January 2020
  • Human crown rump length Probable age ' Method of embryo no. in millimeters in weeks preparation H. 1360 17 7 Pyridine silver H. 119 ...’08) has shown that the motor elements in the brain stem of a 10 mm. human embryo form a continuous column which extends from the spinal cord into the medull
    31 KB (4,912 words) - 15:36, 8 June 2020
  • ...struments, he could make exceedingly minute dissections of the tiny living embryo, removing or transplanting various organs. In this very considerable enrich ...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
    63 KB (9,798 words) - 12:50, 17 June 2017
  • ...n, F. D. 1963. Observations on the organizer areas of the human pre-somite embryo. Anat. Rec, 145, 199. ...LJ. 1930. Human tubal ova; related early corpora lutea and uterine tubes. Carnegie Instn. Wash. Publ. 414, Contrib. Embryoi, 22, 45-76.
    85 KB (12,344 words) - 12:40, 5 September 2015
  • namely, is there a separate germinal plasm set apart in the early embryo which used to refer to those germ cells which possibly segregate early in the embryo,
    124 KB (19,012 words) - 13:00, 30 August 2017
  • ...a critical function in the transport and development of the oocyte and/or embryo. In most vertebrates, both sexes initially develop Müllerian ducts during :'''Carnegie stage 18''' - Mullerian duct to the coelomic cavity was formed as the resul
    33 KB (4,632 words) - 17:50, 5 April 2020
  • Department of Embryology, Carnegie Institution of Washington, Baltimore, Mn. ...th its associated tiny mass of protoplasm, which alone will make the chick embryo, becomes all but lost on the surface of the yolk. But that speck of protopl
    53 KB (7,837 words) - 12:53, 29 July 2019
  • ...series [[Book_-_Contributions_to_Embryology|Contributions to Embryology]] (Carnegie Institution of Washington). Of the Department of Embryology, Carnegie InslUulion of Washington.
    35 KB (5,398 words) - 20:02, 16 August 2017
  • ...of the lower axial skeleton and lower limbs using human embryos from the [[Carnegie Collection]]: {{CE2}}, {{CE22}}, {{CE45}}, {{CE62}}, {{CE109}}, {{CE144}}, [[Embryology History - Charles Bardeen|Charles Bardeen]] | [[Carnegie Embryos]]
    95 KB (15,257 words) - 11:27, 13 August 2020
  • ...use of the intrinsic nature of the subject, for the functions of which the embryo or fetus is capable at various times are determined by the growth of the ne ...representation, then, allows us to observe the general growth picture from embryo to adult, and gives us a basis upon which to establish a more detailed anal
    41 KB (6,507 words) - 14:46, 31 January 2018
  • * [[BGDA Lecture - Development of the Embryo/Fetus 2​​]] - 81,984 * [[Trisomy 21​​]] - 69,630
    125 KB (13,482 words) - 13:15, 5 September 2015
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