View allAll Photos Tagged Embryo

Little baby in a shot glass womb...

Embryos collected from a black tip shark. Black tip sharks reproduce by a method called placental viviparity. This means the embryos gather nutrients from the mother through a placenta and the females give birth to live, free-swimming young. The gestation period for black tip sharks is approximately 10-12 months and females typically give birth to 1-10 pups.

A vitamin A-deficient quail embryo. Without vitamin A, the heart fails to develop an inflow track, which it

needs to join the cardiovascular system. The scientists can restore

normal development by adding vitamin A to the embryos.

Zebrafish (Danio rerio) embryo about 24 hours after fertilization. Visible are the chorion surrounding the embryo, yolk, somites, chorda, and brain and eye vesicles.

coming soon?

 

カミングスーン!なのか!?謎!w

Note the brain vesicles in the head and the eye. Developmental biology lab - chicken embryo anatomy.

Coupe transversale effectuée dans un embryon de souris, montrant au milieu la moelle épinière, avec en son centre un canal bordé par des cellules (mauve foncé - voir E_005) ; de chaque côté, ventralement, deux masses mauves représentent des ganglions nerveux (x). Autour de la moelle, on voit 3 masses cartilagineuses hyalin (= à l'origine des futures vertèbres). Les autres structures de la coupe sont surtout du mésenchyme et du tissu musculaire (haut de l'image).

 

- Afin de ne pas surcharger les images, celles-ci ne comportent qu'un minimum d'annotations, voire aucune. Pour plus de détails ou précisions, référez-vous à la littérature spécialisée ou contacter Franck Genten : fgenten@gmail.com

- Site internet : histologie-histology.be

- Toutes les images originales HR sont disponibles sans annotations

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Cross section of mouse embryo, showing in the middle the spinal cord, with a the spinal canal lined by ependymal cells at the center (dark purple - see E_005); on each side, ventrally, two rounded masses (x) represent ganglia. Around the spinal cord, one can see three cartilaginous masses (hyaline cartilage). The other structures are mostly mesenchyme and muscle tissue (top of the image).

 

- In order not to overload the images, the latter do not contain any annotations, or the bare minimum. For more information or details, please refer to specialized literature or contact Franck Genten : fgenten@gmail.com

- Website : histologie-histology.be

- All the original pictures HR are available without annotations

- If you notice any mistake in the English text, please let me know. Thank you.

   

Developmental biology lab - chicken embryo anatomy.

Snapshots of Roomie 3

That's a rat embryo , that little guy and 5 others could fit into a little test tube...

It seems to be taking so long for them to hatch. Every day i think "today could be the day". So far it has not been that day. I am currently hoping that tomorrow is the day they hatch. *fingers crossed*.

Accidentally smashed this poor gecko's egg. :/

A clone at his first stage of development.

J'espère que tu aimeras, Abby :) Ca m'a fait plaisir de te rencontrer :))

 

Here : www.flickr.com/photos/25541276@N06/

My dog had attacked the nest of a bird that had made a little home in some tall grass by the house. I found the nest laying out by the front porch and all of the eggs were laying around it. I put them back in the nest and put the nest back in the grass, hoping that the mother would come back to care for them. After two days, she still hadn't returned, so I figured that they weren't going to make it- something would eat them or they would just rot. So me and my sisters thought we could blow out the eggs and keep them since they were speckled and pretty. But one had a hole in the side of it and we could see that the inside was already formed. We opened a few up so that we could look at the embryos of the dead chicks and I took a few pictures.

Life embryo

Paint on canvas

Carly Sheil

 

I wanted to portray both security and also a sense of insecurity in this piece, as though the girl was in a protective womb yet had to curl up into herself to feel safe. I felt that the womb had to be green instead of red because it was cold and still living, almost like a plant, whereas her, and her ribbons are warm colors, to bring them to stand out and show their difference from the harsh, yet safe, surrounding womb. These insecurities are also portrayed in her almost nakedness.

She has alien eyes because she isn’t quite human, or doesn’t feel as such. She is not a part of this safe haven and this reflects not only in her coloration, but in her eyes as well. A womb generally matches its occupant, red walls to a flesh toned fetus, which is the norm. I chose red and green because they contrast each other and bring each other out. They are the only colors I chose and thus stand out more.

The red ribbons, I like to feel, represent the string of fate; a long, red cord that connects someone with their destiny and future mate. Hers is twisting around her, the path is untraceable and this leads to further confusion.

 

A range of images demonstrating the increased macro effect of using my standard 18-55mm Canon lens with a set of macro extension tubes. Pictures are all of a set of six chicken embryos at various stages in their development, encased and preserved in acrylic.

In a magnificent microscope.

Medicine abstract background with embryo

A Mirrored automatic image with another auto image added.

Developmental biology lab - chicken embryo anatomy.

Various stages of human embryo development

Devonshire Park

Skokie IL

24 hr c.s. of chicken embryo. Visible neural grooves.

Available at; www.hypefortype.com/?page=22&ID=140

 

Embryo is a custom font which is applicable for any type of graphic design - web, print, motion graphics etc and perfect for t-shirts and logos.

 

Industar 61 L/D 55mm f/2.8 LTM

Outlines of a poster about abortion.

Go to Page 54 in the Internet Archive

Title: Manual of antenatal pathology and hygiene : the embryo

Creator: Ballantyne, J. W. (John William), 1861-1923

Publisher: New York : Wood

Sponsor: Open Knowledge Commons

Contributor: Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine

Date: 1905

Language: eng

 

If you have questions concerning reproductions, please contact the Contributing Library.

 

Note: The colors, contrast and appearance of these illustrations are unlikely to be true to life. They are derived from scanned images that have been enhanced for machine interpretation and have been altered from their originals.

 

Read/Download from the Internet Archive

 

See all images from this book

See all MHL images published in the same year

See all images from Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine

My dog had attacked the nest of a bird that had made a little home in some tall grass by the house. I found the nest laying out by the front porch and all of the eggs were laying around it. I put them back in the nest and put the nest back in the grass, hoping that the mother would come back to care for them. After two days, she still hadn't returned, so I figured that they weren't going to make it- something would eat them or they would just rot. So me and my sisters thought we could blow out the eggs and keep them since they were speckled and pretty. But one had a hole in the side of it and we could see that the inside was already formed. We opened a few up so that we could look at the embryos of the dead chicks and I took a few pictures.

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