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Happy #SkeletonSaturday! Have you listened to our eastern equine encephalitis episode yet?
From Die Anatomie des Pferdes. NIH
Happy #SkeletonSaturday! The title of this dark little comic from 1815 is "The Honeymoon". There's a lot going on here, but can someone explain what's up with the dog?
By Thomas Rowlandson. In book The English Dance of Death, Vol 1, 1815. Getty Research Institute.
Wowza, this one is a beaut. And also slightly horrifying, just how we like it. Happy #SkeletonSaturday!
From Atlas d'anatomie descriptive du corps humain by Bonamy & Broca, 1844. Found on https://t.co/ACTFGEk05J.
Happy #SkeletonSaturday! Check out this magnificent illustration by J. Bisbee from 1837 showing the blood vessels of the body.
From NLM
This beautiful, unusual, and frankly kind of terrifying cross-section of the head comes from Braune's Atlas of Topographical Anatomy, published in 1872 . Happy #SkeletonSaturday!
Drawing by C. Schmiedel. From NIH.
Things have been a bit busy for us so we’ve been slacking on our social media.. but we’d never miss a #skeletonsaturday!
This gorgeous illustration is from a Persian medical encyclopedia published in the 1600s. From National Library of Medicine.