Observations on the natural history and structure of the Proteus anguinus / by Sig. Configliachi and Dr. Rusconi. on Flickr.
Publication info Edinburgh :Printed for A. Constable,1821 BHL Collections: Ernst Mayr Library of the MCZ, Harvard University

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@fuckyeahanatomica
Observations on the natural history and structure of the Proteus anguinus / by Sig. Configliachi and Dr. Rusconi. on Flickr.
Publication info Edinburgh :Printed for A. Constable,1821 BHL Collections: Ernst Mayr Library of the MCZ, Harvard University
Natural history of the fish, or general ichthyology / by Aug. Duméril; on Flickr.
Publication info Paris: Librairie encyclopedic Roret 0.1865 to 1870. BHL Collections: Smithsonian Libraries
Arteries of the face and nasopharynx by Nicolas Henri Jacob from ‘Traité complet de l’anatomie de l’homme’ by Marc Jean Bourgery, 1831.
I am trying to draw an outer/inner ear and coming up short. There’s something so beautiful about old anatomical illustrations like this. I have a Beltone butter dish from my great grandparents with this exact drawing!
The human brain, its nervous projections, layers, and cortical blood vessels
Though we’re probably subconsciously aware of our brains on a day-to-day basis, most of us generally don’t pay much direct attention to them. Of course, lots can go wrong in the mind, resulting in mental illness, physical illness, and in the worst cases, death. But aside from everything that can go wrong in the brain, did you know that the mind, despite being only 2% of the average body mass, uses almost 25% of the oxygen we consume, and over 70% of the glucose we ingest? It’s a tiny organ, but it manages almost everything outside of the parasympathetic nervous system, and it requires a relatively high energy input (especially compared to other organs in the body) just to function on a daily basis. The cells in the brain require, on average, twice as much pure energy as other cells, just to function, and when you’re focusing hard on a big paper, or trying to brainstorm and be creative, your mind is in overdrive! Even if you haven’t moved in two hours, if you’re focusing hard on an essay and coming up with lots of great ideas, your lunch isn’t going to last long, with what your brain is demanding. Since it’s not a muscle, and you’re not necessarily doing anything physical when you think, it can be hard to believe that the brain needs so much energy. However, the cerebellum, and especially the frontal and prefrontal cortices (where our personality and “creative minds” exist, for the most part) demand more energy than our stomachs, livers, spleens, and kidneys combined! Depending on how your brain is wired, that fact can make it extremely exhausting to deal with other people, as you’re engaging your prefrontal cortex to a high degree. Thinking hard and being creative can sap your energy, too - that’s why I always had an apple or banana to eat midway through my morning courses!
Tabulae Anatomicae. Bartholomeo Eustachi, 1570 (Published 1783).
The Anatomy of the Brain, Explained in a Series of Engravings. Charles Bell, 1803.
japanese anatomical drawing from the Edo period
source
one of last years tasks at the University of Fine Arts in Budapest.
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Pull On Me Watercolor, Graphite, and Spray Paint
Anatomical Flipbook, L.W. Yaggy & James J. West, 1885
Manual of the Diseases of the Eye for Students and General Practitioners, Charles H. May M.D., (1939 edition, orig, 1900)
Francis Sibson, anatomist, and William Fairland, artist, 19th C by astropop on Flickr.
Human thorax and pectoral girdle with isolated arteries and veins
The abdominal (or thoracic) aorta and the inferior vena cava are the major artery and vein, respectively, that follow the spine down to the pelvis.
Traité complet de l’anatomie de l’homme comprenant la medecine operatoire, par le docteur Marc Jean Bourgery. Illustrated by Nicolas Henri Jacob, 1831.