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Male Forearm Body Slice Specimen
Health and Medicine
CHENHALL - Tools & Equipment for Science & Technology - Biological T&E - Biospecimen
Object Description: Cross section of a forearm. Specimen has a general oval shape. At the center are two (2) quarter-sized circles, each with an off-white center and thick yellowish perimeter. Surrounding the circles is a red, fibrous material with white lines sporadically running through. The perimeter of the specimen is a thin band of off-white and yellow.
human tissue
Measurements: Object:
Height: 3.5 in, Width: 2.5 in, Depth: 0.5 in
Gift of Loyola University Medical Center, 43.51.2.12
On Exhibit
This is a body slice of the forearm of a male. In the center of this slice is the radius bone, neighbored by the ulna bone. Colored wax has been used as a stain to highlight the different components. These body slices served as teaching tools for medical students in the 1930s and 1940s. They were provided by the Loyola University School of Medicine and the University of Illinois Department of Anatomy, and were refurbished by Michael Reese Hospital and Medical Center. The man and woman died of natural causes. Their bodies were frozen, cut into sections, and then preserved in glass containers filled with a formaldehyde solution.
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