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HOME, Everard. John Hunter. ListingsIf you cannot find what you want on this page, then please use our search feature to search all our listings. Click on Title to view full description
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HOME, Everard. EIGHTEEN EXTRACTS AND ONE OFFPRINT FROM THE PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY 1798-1826. London: Royal Society, 1798. Paperback Eighteen extracts and one offprint in Very Good to Very Good++ condition, disbound but including all engravings, as follows: "An Account of the Orifice in the Retina of the Human Eye, Discovered by Professor Soemmering. To Which are Added, Proofs of this Appearance Being Extended to the Eyes of Other Animals" (1798); "Observations on the Structure of the Tongue; Illustrated by Cases in Which a Portion of That Organ has Been Removed by Ligature" (1803); "An Account of a Small Lobe of the Human Prostate Gland, Which has not Before Been Taken Notice of by Anatomists" (1806); "Observations on the Shell of the Sea Worm Found on the Coast of Sumatra, Proving it to Belong to a Species of Teredo; with an Account of the Anatomy of the Teredo Navalis" (1806); "Observations on the Camel's Stomach Respecting the Water it Contains, and the Reservoirs, in Which that Fluid is Inclosed; with an Account of Some Peculiarities in the Urine" (1806); "On the Nature of the Intervertebral Substance in Fish and Quadrupeds" (1809); "An Anatomical Account of the Squalus Maximus (of Linnaeus), Which in the Structure of its Stomach Forms an Intermediate Link in the Gradation of Animals Between the Whale Tribe and Cartilaginous Fishes" (1809); "The Case of a Man, Who Died in Consequence of the Bite of a Rattle-snake; with an Account of the Effects Produced by the Poison" (1809); "Experiments to Prove that Fluids Pass Directly from the Stomach to the Circulation of the Blood, and From Thence Into the Cells of the Spleen, the Gall Bladder, and Urinary Bladder, Without Going Through the Thoracic Duct." (1811); "Observations Intended to Show that the Progressive Motion of Snakes is Partly Performed by Means of the Ribs" (1812); "Experiments to Ascertain the Coagulating Power of the Secretion of the Gastric Glands" (1813); "On the Formation of Fat in the Intestines of Living Animals" (1813); "Additions to an Account of the Anatomy of the Squalus Maximus. Contained in a Former Paper; with Observations on the Structure of the Branchial Artery" (1813); "An Account of the Circulation of the Blood in the Class Vermes of Linnaeus, and the Principle Explained in Which it Differs from that in the Higher Classes" (1816); "Some Farther Observations on the Use of the Colchicum Autumale in Gout" (1817); "The Cronian Lecture. On the Changes the Blood Undergoes in the Act of Coagulation" (1817); "On the Difference of Structure Between the Human Membrana Tympani and that of the Elephant" (1822); "The Croonian Lecture. On the Internal Structure of the Human Brain, when Examined in the Microscope, as Compared with that of Fishes, Insects and Worms" (1823); "The Croonian Lecture for 1826" (1826).
Price:
200.00 USD
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