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76 results on '"Teratology history"'

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1. "The Logic of Monsters:" Pere Alberch and the Evolutionary Significance of Experimental Teratology.

5. The arrogance of teratology: A brief chronology of attitudes throughout history.

6. History and highlights of the teratological collection in the Museum Anatomicum of Leiden University, The Netherlands.

7. 57th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Teratology Society: Seeking a contact between humans and experimental animals.

8. Thomas H. Shepard, M.D., pioneer in embryology and teratology.

11. Obituary.

12. [POETRYAND TERATOLOGY: LORENZO MASCHERONI'S "INVITO A LESBIA CIDONIA" IN ANATOMICAL PREPARATIONS].

13. Obituary.

14. Professor David Poswillo CBE (1927-2003): Skilled oral and maxillofacial surgeon, influential scientist, teacher and adviser.

15. Teratology in Mexico. 19th Century.

16. The monstrous metallic in medicine and horror cinema.

17. Semantics of monstrosity in the ninenteenth century.

18. Retrogressive development: transcendental anatomy and teratology in nineteenth-century Britain.

19. "Monstre". Etienne Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire and the science of monstrosity.

20. INTRODUCTION: The nature of monsters. Sketches of the history of teratology.

21. Falsehood on the move. The Aztec children and science in the second half of the 19th century.

22. [Medical research through historical resources. Talking objects: a case of a parasitic perineal monstrosity].

24. OTIS special issue preface.

25. Teratology on the crossroads: historical aspects and modern approaches.

27. [From teratology to mythology: ancient legends].

30. The principles of teratology: are they still true?

33. In honor of the Teratology Society's 50th anniversary: The role of Teratology Society members in the development and evolution of in vivo developmental toxicity test guidelines.

34. Holoprosencephaly: A mythologic and teratologic distillate.

35. [Monsters of Phlegon--hermaphrodites, sex-changers and other strange beings in Phlegon's marvellous stories].

37. Monstrous births and medical networks: debates over forensic evidence, generation theory, and obstetrical authority in France, ca. 1780-1815.

38. A tribute to Lewis B. Holmes: mentor and scholar.

39. A glance at Spanish embryology and teratology during the XX century through the academic life of Francisco Orts-Llorca (1905-1993).

43. A hitchhiker's guide to the older literature of descriptive teratology.

44. Blind ambition: Geoffroy St-Hilaire's theory of everything.

45. Teratology public affairs committee position paper: Pregnancy labeling for prescription drugs: Ten years later.

46. Holoprosencephaly in Mexico: first reported autopsy case by Dr. Agustín Arellano.

48. The contribution of new findings and ideas to the old principles of teratology.

50. L'Ecole de Nogent: the contributions of Etienne Wolff and Nicole Le Douarin.

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