The physiology and pathology of the blood : comprising the origins, mode of development, pathological and post-mortem changes of its morphological elements in mammalian and oviparous vertebrates / by Richard Norris ... With microphotographic illustrations.
- Norris, Richard, 1830-1916.
- Date:
- 1882
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: The physiology and pathology of the blood : comprising the origins, mode of development, pathological and post-mortem changes of its morphological elements in mammalian and oviparous vertebrates / by Richard Norris ... With microphotographic illustrations. Source: Wellcome Collection.
Provider: This material has been provided by the Augustus C. Long Health Sciences Library at Columbia University and Columbia University Libraries/Information Services, through the Medical Heritage Library. The original may be consulted at the the Augustus C. Long Health Sciences Library at Columbia University and Columbia University.
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![LIST OF MICEO-PHOTOGRAPHS AND ILLUSTRATIONS. Fig. 1. Barrier of Newton's rings to show colourless discs, 200. „ 2. Arrangement for viewing adhering inatters after removal of liquor sanguinis, 200. ,, 3. Arrangement for submitting adhering corpuscles, &c., to the action of fixing vapours, 200. ,, 4. Arrangement for removing surplus blood by means of air or other gases, 200. Photo 1. Ordinary red biconcave discs, 201. ,, 2. Ordinary white blood corpuscles, 201. ,, 3. Curvilinear indentations of red discs by invisible discs, 201. ,, 4. Invisible or colourless discs packed round by red discs, 201. ,, 5. Example of less complete packing of colourless discs by red discs, 201. ,, 6. Invisible discs as seen in liquor sanguinis, the refractive index of which is altered, 201. ,, 7. Contracting effects of long continued action of saline and staining of invisible discs by haemoglobin, 202. „ 8.] ,, 9. > Mosaic groups of young discs isolated from the blood, 202. „ 10. J ,, 11. Colourless discs undergoing fusion and granulation, 202. ,, 12. Isolated colourless discs in smooth and granular state, 202. ,, 13. Isolated colourless and faintly-coloured discs, 203. „ 14. Intermediate and fully-coloured discs, with colourless discs lying as liquid in the interstices between them keeping them asunder, 203. „ 15. 1 Intermediate and colourless discs preserved with osmic acid, 16. ) 203. ,, 17. Corpuscles submitted to dry osmic acid vapour at the ice-cold temperature, which preserves more or less perfectly the biconcave form of the colourless discs, 203. ,, 18. Bo-called hsematoblasts, resulting from granulation of some of the intermediate discs, 203. ,, 19. Mosaic group of coloured, surrounded by colourless corpuscles, 204. ,, 20. Background of invisible discs brought into view by the penetration of aniline brown into the interstices between them, 204. ,, 21. ) Invisible and slightly-coloured discs fusing into liquid ,, 22. J masses or pools, 204. ,, 23. 1 Difference in the appearance of spread blood when dried ,, 24. [ spontaneously or rapidly, 204. ,, 25. Invisible discs brought into view in the liquor sanguinis by staining with carmine, 205. ,, 26. Debris of red discs undergoing disintegration {vide also Photograph 23), 205. 27 1 28* ' Lymph and splenic discs obtained quickly after death, 205. ,, 29. ) Changes which occur in the lymph and splenic discs by ,, 30. 1 the time these organs are cold, 205.](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b2121184x_0025.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)