Page:A descriptive catalogue of the Warren Anatomical Museum.djvu/71

 ��SERIES VI. SKIN AND APPENDAGES.

482. Skin of the face of a child, minutely injected, and dissected off, in the form of a mask. By Dr. Estes Howe. In spirit. 1847. Dr. J. G. Warren.

483. Skin injected, and the cuticle partly removed ; in spirit. 1847. Dr. J. C. Warren.

484. The same; dried. "With a power - of fifty diameters the free inosculation of the vessels is finely shown. By Dr. D. 1860. Dr. Silas Dunkee.

485. The same ; in turpentine. 1847. Dr. J. G. Warren.

486. Skin from the sole of the foot, with the cuticle partially removed ; in spirit. 1847. Dr. J. G. Warren.

487. Skin of a negro ; cuticle partially raised with the pigment ; in spirit. 1847. Dr. J. G. Warren.

488. A piece of human skin, from the nates ; tanned as hides usually are} in hemlock bark. 1856.

Dr. Ephraim Gutter, of Woburn.

489-92. Skin of an adult male, dissected off from the umbilicus to the knees ; the whole being most elaborately tattooed to this extent, and not excepting the penis ; cuticle removed. Secondly, a portion of subcutaneous cellular tissue col- ored. Third, several of the inguinal glands, quite darkly colored externally ; but some of them having been cut open, are seen to be colorless within, in part. Fourth, carbon removed from some of these last, by Dr. John Ba- con ; portions of the lymphatic vessels containing coloring matter so as to render them visible.

Virchow describes and figures this passage into the lym- phatics of the carbonaceous matter, in the case of tattooing. 1857.

493. The same. Red and black ; cuticle removed ; in spirit. 1862. Mr. W. B. Gibson, med. student-

494. Section of the skin of a sperm whale ; in spirit. About

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