Search Results
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Wheeled war engine with face and spikes
- Part of Vier Bücher der Ritterschafft
- 1529 (M.D.XXIX)
War engine with wheels, face, and spikes, apparently used to break up enemy ranks or crush enemy troops.
- Author Vegetius Renatus, Flavius
- Publisher Stayner, Heinrich, -1548
- Subject Engines of war, Military art and science
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Title page from Vegetius' Vier Bücher der Ritterschafft
- Part of Vier Bücher der Ritterschafft
- 1529 (M.D.XXIX)
Illustrated title page with a woodcut after Hans Weiditz by Jörg Brou the elder of Schoeller, showing a military scene with men in armor, some of whom are carrying long swords and spears in front of decorated tents.
- Artist Weiditz, Hans, approximately 1495-approximately 1536
- Author Vegetius Renatus, Flavius
- Contributor Brou, Jörg
- Publisher Stayner, Heinrich, -1548
- Subject Military art and science
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3 items
Plate XXXVII (Fig. 6): Pneumonia confined to one lobe and appearing as large yellow abscesses on the surface in dog dying 5 days after exposure.
- 1920
Poisoning from organic arsenic compounds.
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Plate XLI (Fig. 2): Hemorrhages in wall of damaged bronchus 6 days after chlorpicrin gassing. (Fig. 3) Higher magnification of hemorrhage in wall of bronchus shown in Fig. 2.
- 1920
Hemorrhages in residual pulmonary lesions from respiratory irritating gases.
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Plate XL (Fig. 1): Hemorrhages in lung of dog killed 10 days after phosgene gassing.
- 1920
Hemorrhages in residual pulmonary lesions from respiratory irritating gases.
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Plate XXXVIII (Figs. 8, 9): Congestion and hemorrhage about the bronchial tree standing out sharply against relatively normal lung tissue.
- 1920
Poisoning from organic arsenic compounds.
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Plate XXXIX (Fig. 10): Hemorrhage into peribronchial sheath without extension to alveolar tissue; also perivascular edema.
- 1920
Poisoning from organic arsenic compounds.
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Plate XXXVI (Fig. 4): Pneumonia arising diffusely throughout tissue full of edema.
- 1920
Poisoning from organic arsenic compounds.
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Plate XXXV (Fig. 3): Great congestion of capillaries in alveolar walls and edema fluid in alveoli.
- 1920
Poisoning from organic arsenic compounds.
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Plate XXXIV (Fig. 2): Trachea with edematous membrane in dog dying 19 hours after exposure to phenyldichlorarsine.
- 1920
Poisoning from organic arsenic compounds.
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Plate XXXIII (Fig. 1): Trachea and lungs from dog dying 1 day after exposure to ethyldichlorarsine.
- 1920
Poisoning from organic arsenic compounds.
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3 items
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Plate XXVIII (Fig. 3): Lungs of dog surviving 7 hours after a lethal dose of cyanogen bromide.
- 1920
Cyanogen (chloride and bromide) poisoning.
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Plate XXVII (Fig. 1): Lungs of dog, surviving 5 hours, gassed with a high concentration of cyanogen chloride.
- 1920
Cyanogen (chloride and bromide) poisoning.
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Fig. 9: Red cells ingested by macrophages. Fig. 10: Bronchus showing extent of damage.
- 1920
Preliminary studies in intratracheal therapy.
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Fig. 5: Congestion in alveolar walls. Fig. 6: Bronchus showing extent of damage.
- 1920
Preliminary studies in intratracheal therapy.