Myographia nova, or, A graphical description of all the muscles in humane body, as they arise in dissection : distributed into six lectures ... : and illustrated with one and forty copper plates, accurately engraved after the life, with their names on the muscles, as much as can be expressed by figures: as also, with their originations, insertions, uses, and divers new observations of the authors, and other modern anatomists : together with an accurate and concise discourse of the heart, and its use, as also of the circulation of the blood, and the parts of which the sanguinary mass is made and framed, written by the late learned Dr. Lower / digested into this new method, by the care and study of John Browne.
- Browne, John, 1642-approximately 1700
- Date:
- 1697
- Books
- Online
Online resources
About this work
Also known as
Compleat treatise of the muscles
Publication/Creation
London : Printed by Tho. Milbourn for the author, 1697.
Physical description
41 unnumbered pages, 109 pages, 47 leaves of plates : illustrations, portrait
Notes
First published in 1681 under title: A compleat treatise of the muscles. The description of the muscles is based on William Mollins' Myskotomia, and the plates partly on Guilio Casserio's Tabula anatomicae.
Errata: p. [41].
Reproduction of original in Huntington Library.
Includes index.
References note
Wing B5128
Reproduction note
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Mich. : UMI, 1999- (Early English books online) Digital version of: (Early English books, 1641-1700 ; 129:13) s1999 miun s