File:Some apostles of physiology - being an account of their lives and labours, labours that have contributed to the advancement of the healing art as well as to the prevention of disease (1902) (14784120362).jpg

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English: Portraits of William Harvey, Gaspare Aselli and Richard Lower

Identifier: someapostlesofph00stir (find matches)
Title: Some apostles of physiology : being an account of their lives and labours, labours that have contributed to the advancement of the healing art as well as to the prevention of disease
Year: 1902 (1900s)
Authors: Stirling, William, 1851-1932
Subjects: Physiology Physiologists Physiology
Publisher: London : Priv. print. by Waterlow and sons limited
Contributing Library: West Virginia University Libraries
Digitizing Sponsor: LYRASIS Members and Sloan Foundation

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PANCREAS ASELLI (l) AND LACTEALS (lCONVERGING TO IT. ASELLIS FIGURE SHOWING LACTEALS PASSINGTO THE LIVER. FOLKESTONE and Dieppe are not so far apart—the one the birth-place of Harvey, the other of JEAN PECQUET (1622), thediscoverer of the receptaculum chyli and its continuation as thethoracic duct. Pecquet announced his discovery in his Experimenta hock
Text Appearing After Image:
( 15 ) A natomica (Paris 1651). He tells us that whilst studying at Montpellieras a pupil of Vesling in 1648, he left that mute and frigid scienceanatomy, and betook himself to the study of true science, organs inaction. Whilst experimenting on a dog, he removed the heart, whenhe saw, amidst the blood in the pericardium, a white fluid, which at firsthe mistook for pus. He soon saw that it was chyle, that it came froma tube or canal which ended at the subclavian vein, that the duct—thoracic duct—began in a kind of reservoir or pouch, receptaculumchyli—that all the lacteals pass to it, and not to the liver. Chyletherefore does not go to the liver. He describes accurately thelacteal veins of Aselli, shows that they end in the receptaculumchyli, and that the thoracic duct pours its contents into the venoussystem at the junction of the jugular and sub-clavian veins.J. VAN HORNE, a year later, made the same discovery quiteindependently and published it in his Novus Ductus chyliferus(L

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  • bookid:someapostlesofph00stir
  • bookyear:1902
  • bookdecade:1900
  • bookcentury:1900
  • bookauthor:Stirling__William__1851_1932
  • booksubject:Physiology
  • booksubject:Physiologists
  • bookpublisher:London___Priv__print__by_Waterlow_and_sons_limited
  • bookcontributor:West_Virginia_University_Libraries
  • booksponsor:LYRASIS_Members_and_Sloan_Foundation
  • bookleafnumber:40
  • bookcollection:west_virginia_university
  • bookcollection:americana
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30 July 2014

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current12:54, 31 August 2015Thumbnail for version as of 12:54, 31 August 20153,232 × 1,636 (1.33 MB)SteinsplitterBot (talk | contribs)Bot: Image rotated by 90°
17:52, 6 August 2015Thumbnail for version as of 17:52, 6 August 20151,636 × 3,246 (1.33 MB) (talk | contribs)== {{int:filedesc}} == {{subst:chc}} {{information |description={{en|1=<br> '''Identifier''': someapostlesofph00stir ([https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Special%3ASearch&profile=default&fulltext=Search&search=insource%3A%2Fsomeapostlesofp...

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