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Only the few survivors of several dozen soft toys that have been thrown towards the stage during Dissections 2005 Wacken gig. Those few were "saved" by the stage crew - Jon Nödtveid & Co kicked most of them off stage.
Genevieve Mihalko, 4th year undergrad, School of Art & Design
These photographs were taken in the plastination lab in the medical school.
I accompanied by friend Dana Nowak to the plastination lab while she completed her frog dissection assignment. She has created her very own major here at Michigan: Perspectives on Death and Dying. She works st a funeral home and is studying the physiology as well as the psychology of death. She takes many classes that other pre-med students would take so that she can better understand the processes of the human body. She is the only person I have known to have had an interest in working with the deceased and the families of the deceased. I noticed that other students in the lab were working on the same assignment even though their career aspirations differ from Dana’s. Her major is undoubtedly very important and very specialized. These photos illuminate the University’s scientific resources that are essential for Dana to realize her dream of running a successful funeral home.
for bowb, who was interested in seeing what a slice from damiano's looked like after reading about it. wheeeee.
Photoseries designed for exhibition at Knot, a gallery and retail in Bergen.
See the whole project at Behance: www.behance.net/gallery/Disseksjon-Veikadaver/672318
And se the timelaps at Vimeo: vimeo.com/14475664
Taking apart an electric toothbrush for design analysis in MCHE201: Introduction to Engineering Design.
For more info, see: www.ucs.louisiana.edu/~jev9637/MCHE201.html
Which is better a human anatomy dissection course using a cadaver or just via pictures. Join a course today offered by idissect.ca/ to know the difference.
Photos from a recent session spent dissecting lionfish. These lionfish were brought in by local Bahamian fishermen for CEI's "You Slay We Pay" campaign.
Students in Marine Biology (BIOL 250), taught by Mikelle Nuwer, learn about fish anatomy by dissecting different fish species at the UW Seattle campus on Monday, August 6th 2012. Katherine B. Turner/UW Admissions
Photos from the MCHE201 Mechanical Dissection Lab in the Fall 2015 semester.
For more information see: www.ucs.louisiana.edu/~jev9637/MCHE201.html
Students in Dave Potter's Ichthyology class at Unity College dissect a variety of fish species during a lab period. They weighed, measured, and identified the specimens before removing the pharyngeal bone for further examination.
Photos from a recent session spent dissecting lionfish. These lionfish were brought in by local Bahamian fishermen for CEI's "You Slay We Pay" campaign.
The cameras are propped up such that you can see the capacitor wires -- the bits that need to be shorted out to drain the capacitors.