56 results
- Archives and manuscripts
Microscopy Notebook: 1309-1379
Date: 1966Reference: WF/M/I/PM/01/17Part of: Wellcome Foundation Ltd- Digital Images
- Online
Reduced oxygen affects human organs, conceptual artwork
Nestor Pestana- Digital Images
- Online
Reduced oxygen affects human organs, conceptual artwork
Nestor Pestana- Digital Images
- Online
Green Fluorescent Protein transfected cells
Li Jun Tian & Linda Sharp- Digital Images
- Online
Reduced oxygen affects human organs, conceptual artwork
Nestor Pestana- Digital Images
- Online
Reduced oxygen affects human organs, conceptual artwork
Nestor Pestana- Pictures
Neurilemmoma of bone in a 50-year old woman: detail of tumour in left hand. Watercolour by Barbara E. Nicholson, 1950.
Nicholson, BarbaraDate: 1950Reference: 33772iPart of: Barbara Nicholson medical illustration collection.- Videos
Experiment : biology.
Date: [date of publication not identified]- Archives and manuscripts
Lab Lore - Volume 4
Date: 1970-1972Reference: WF/M/PB/02/03/04Part of: Wellcome Foundation Ltd- Books
Posthumous works of Sakae Saguchi.
Saguchi, Sakae, 1885-Date: 1956- Archives and manuscripts
Abbott Laboratories - Aghajanian
Date: 1953-1988Reference: PP/MLV/C/1/1Part of: Vogt, Dr Marthe Louise (1903-2003)- Videos
Medical motion picture.
Date: 1947- Film
Medical motion picture.
Date: 1947- Books
Robbins pathologic basis of disease.
Cotran, Ramzi S., 1932-2000.Date: [1999], ©1999- Digital Images
- Online
Papanicolaou stained smear of a clival chordoma, microscopy. Chordomas are cancers formed of cells which resemble those of the notochord (spine) of a developing foetus. Although they can present anywhere within the spine and skull, the majority grow in the sacral region of the spine, corresponding to the lower back. This image shows a Papanicolaou (Pap) stained smear obtained from a needle biopsy of a chordoma in the clivus, a part of the cranium at the base of the skull.
William R. Geddie- Digital Images
- Online
Papanicolaou stained smear of a C2 vertebral chordomal mass, microscopy. Chordomas are cancers formed of cells which resemble those of the notochord (spine) of a developing foetus. Although they can present anywhere within the spine and skull, the majority grow in the sacral region of the spine, corresponding to the lower back. This image shows a Papanicolaou (pap) stained smear obtained from a needle biopsy of a chordoma of the C2 vertebrae, located at the top of the neck just underneath the base of the skull.
William R. Geddie- Videos
My amazing twin.
Date: 2016- Archives and manuscripts
Vogt, Dr Marthe Louise (1903-2003)
Vogt, Dr Marthe Louise (1903-2003)Date: 1895-1988Reference: PP/MLV- Archives and manuscripts
- Online
Reprints, 1937-1950
Date: 1937-1950Reference: PP/PBM/E.1-36Part of: Medawar, Sir Peter Brian (1915-1987)- Books
Minds behind the brain : a history of the pioneers and their discoveries / Stanley Finger.
Finger, Stanley.Date: [2000], ©2000- Archives and manuscripts
Papers of William Sharpey
Date: 1850-1870Reference: PP/ESS/B.2Part of: Sir Edward Albert Sharpey-Schafer (1850-1935)- Books
The birth of modern neuroscience in Turin / Edited By Stefano Sandrone and Lorenzo Lorusso.
Date: [2022]- Digital Images
- Online
MGG stained smear of a C2 vertebral chordomal mass
William R. Geddie- Books
Robbins pathologic basis of disease / Ramzi S. Cotran, Vinay Kumar, Stanley L. Robbins.
Cotran, Ramzi S., 1932-2000Date: [1994]- Archives and manuscripts
Weaver - Wellcome Physiological Research Laboratories
Date: 1936-1983Reference: PP/MLV/C/23/2Part of: Vogt, Dr Marthe Louise (1903-2003)