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  2. Visible Human Project - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visible_Human_Project

    The Visible Human Project is an effort to create a detailed data set of cross-sectional photographs of the human body, in order to facilitate anatomy visualization applications. It is used as a tool for the progression of medical findings, in which these findings link anatomy to its audiences. [1] A male and a female cadaver were cut into thin ...

  3. Bodies: The Exhibition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bodies:_The_Exhibition

    Bodies: The Exhibition is an exhibition showcasing human bodies that have been preserved through a process called plastination and dissected to display bodily systems. [ 1 ] It opened in Tampa, Florida on August 20, 2005. [ 2 ] It is similar to, though not affiliated with, the exhibition Body Worlds (which opened in 1995).

  4. National Museum of Health and Medicine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Museum_of_Health...

    medicalmuseum.health.mil. The National Museum of Health and Medicine (NMHM) is a museum in Silver Spring, Maryland, near Washington, D.C. [1] The museum was founded by U.S. Army Surgeon General William A. Hammond as the Army Medical Museum (AMM) in 1862; [2] it became the NMHM in 1989 and relocated to its present site at the Army's Forest Glen ...

  5. Body Worlds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Body_Worlds

    Body Worlds (German title: Körperwelten) is a traveling exposition of dissected human bodies, animals, and other anatomical structures of the body that have been preserved through the process of plastination. Gunther von Hagens developed the preservation process which "unite [s] subtle anatomy and modern polymer chemistry", [1] in the late 1970s.

  6. Human body - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_body

    Human anatomy is the study of the shape and form of the human body. The human body has four limbs (two arms and two legs), a head and a neck , which connect to the torso . The body's shape is determined by a strong skeleton made of bone and cartilage , surrounded by fat ( adipose tissue ), muscle, connective tissue , organs, and other structures.

  7. National Gallery of Art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Gallery_of_Art

    www.nga.gov. The National Gallery of Art is an art museum in Washington, D.C., United States, located on the National Mall, between 3rd and 9th Streets, at Constitution Avenue NW. Open to the public and free of charge, the museum was privately established in 1937 for the American people by a joint resolution of the United States Congress.

  8. History of anatomy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_anatomy

    History of anatomy. Dissection of a cadaver, 15th-century painting. The history of anatomy extends from the earliest examinations of sacrificial victims to the sophisticated analyses of the body performed by modern anatomists and scientists. Written descriptions of human organs and parts can be traced back thousands of years to ancient Egyptian ...

  9. Frank H. Netter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_H._Netter

    Frank H. Netter. Frank Henry Netter (25 April 1906 – 17 September 1991) was an American surgeon and medical illustrator. The first edition of his Atlas of Human Anatomy — his "personal Sistine Chapel " [1] — was published in 1989; he was a fellow of the New York Academy of Medicine where he was first published in 1957. [2]