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The masseter muscle of mastication reflected back to expose the jawbone (mandible) and the related vessels, nerves and muscles.
By injecting the arteries and veins with red and blue material, Bassett demonstrates their distribution in these dissected kidneys. The image provides a detailed view of the lymphatic drainage of the region.
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.
This is my cane toad's stomach, which contained 5 actually identifiable different types of beetle. There were probably more species, but the rest of it was all beetle bits and since I could identify so much I didn't have to go further than that. Most of my classmates had toads with very little in their stomachs and had to get out the microscopes and identify what they could. She couldn't have eaten any more, her stomach was packed and very hard before dissection. As my professor put it, "Wow! She was on to a REALLY good thing!"
This photo was taken by Alan Radecki.
Alan shot this image of a 747 being scrapped at Adelanto, near Victorville, California, on Sept 20, 2005.
Most of the planes I've seen scrapped have been crudely sliced vertically, perpendicular to the axis of the fuselage -- end to end, in other words. But notice that this 747 is being cut up horizontally, top to bottom, deck by deck -- and carefully too.
Why? I'm not certain, but I suspect that the top sections of this widebody fuselage may retain some value for use as outdoor storage sheds -- basically, 747 Quonset huts. I've seen that done before.
Meanwhile, the hulk that remains looks kind of like a 747 flatbed.
UPDATE: The mystery is explained. This 747 is the one that is being used to create a "747 house" in Southern California.
The left chest wall has been removed to display the heart and the aorta and its branches, as well as the intercostal nerves and vessels between the ribs. The phrenic nerve, which operates the visible diaphragm, is prominently shown, as is the autonomic nerve chain and nodular ganglia over the intercostals.
Designed and folded by me. Folded from one uncut square of Lama Li paper backed wit some tissue paper. designed from around the middle of September/ beginning of October to the start of November. I've just been busy so I didn't have a lot of time to fold it :B
well the paper isn't perfect and the colors look splotchy but whatever :/ I'm pretty happy with it :P
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.
As per an image I saw on www.spidron.hu/
Each half is folded from a single uncut hexagon. The lock on the "bottom" is actually extremely strong, since the tabs/pockets have a flanged shape.
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.
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.
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.
A superficial dissection of the back of the head, neck and shoulder region displays the tough fascia beneath the skin, and the vessels and nerves penetrating it to the skin.
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.
This is my cane toad dissection. We normally have to do them in groups so I was pretty pleased to be able to do one on my own. I picked a good specimen who turned out to have some interesting bits. We were collecting a variety of data from them, including: sex, mass (g), SVL (Snout-to-Vent Length in mm), Snout-to-Urostyle Length (mm), Lung Parasites (presence and number), Stomach Contents (weight and type), Reproductive Organs (weight in g, including egg mass in females) and Fat Bodies (g).
The bony roof of the orbit and muscles from the top of the eye have been removed and the optic nerve has been cut across to display the blood vessels and nerves of the eye, orbit and eye muscles. Relationships to the middle cranial cavity (fossa), the temporal fossa and the sinuses in the ethmoid bone of the wall of the nose are well displayed.
The dura mater has been cut away so that the left cerebral hemisphere is visible lying inside the arachnoid membrane. The tentorium appears in the lower right part of the view and the transverse sinus is opened along its posterior border. The superior sagittal sinus has been opened by removing a strip of dura from its superficial wall. The superior cerebral veins ascend on the surface of the frontal and parietal lobes to empty into this sinus at various points. A number of anastomoses are present between these veins, none being particularly large in this specimen. In general the superior cerebral veins are divided into anterior and posterior groups. In this case there appear to be several anterior vessels, a group of large veins intermediate in position (overlying the region of the central sulcus) and several posterior veins (not visible in this view).
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.
J'ai eu envie de savoir ce qu'il y avait dans un petit pois. J'ai donc effectué une dissection d'un de ces légumes verts.
Voici le résultat.
Je pense recommencer sur d'autres légumes.
explore : 264 on Wednesday, November 26, 2008
The dissection tables in the crematorium at Terezin. Bodies were removed of their gold teeth and jewelry prior to being burned.
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.
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 Anatomist (Der Anatom), Gabriel von Max, 1869
Found on Jahsonic's Flickr Page.
(This image resides in the Morbid Anatomy library.)
Images of, or related to, the Morbid Anatomy blog.
The sclera and cornea have been cut away on the medial side of a right eye to display the anterior chamber, iris, ciliary body and outer surface of the choroid. Although none of the vessels has been injected, the branches of the superior and inferior medial vorticose veins are clearly visible. The long posterior ciliary artery was cut across in the resection of the sclera but its course can be traced nearly to the ciliary body.
Dissections: Yoko Ono
www.facebook.com/events/2896716340553918
«Dissections» est une série d’événements présentée dans le cadre de la programmation publique du Département de l’éducation et de l’engagement public de la Fondation Phi.
Avec «Dissections», nous souhaitons susciter un dialogue interdisciplinaire sur les expositions en cours et encourager un engagement renouvelé avec l’art contemporain.
«Dissections: Yoko Ono», présenté en partenariat avec Festival Quartiers Danses, propose un déambulatoire dansé au cœur de l’exposition «LIBERTÉ CONQUÉRANTE/GROWING FREEDOM» de Yoko Ono.
Cette performance sera offerte par un duo de la Beaver Dam Company / Edouard Hue (le danseur et chorégraphe Edouard Hue et la danseuse Yurié Tsugawa), le danseur Cai Glover, ainsi que la danseuse Janelle Hacault et la musicienne Coralie Gauthier.
La performance sera suivie d’une discussion entre Laure Barrachina, responsable de la médiation culturelle au Festival Quartiers Danses, Janelle Hacault et Edouard Hue, ainsi que d’une période d’échange entre le public et tous les artistes.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Were there any bodies or skeletons in the morgue?
This is a stupid question, but also one I actually asked out guide. The answer was, disappointingly, no.
In the photo, lonely dissection table in the morgue.
Full gallery: www.m1key.me/photography/chernobyl_questions_answers_2/