194 



THE. AMERICAN NATURALIST 



[Vol. LI 



omy lias been and is of more interest than the form in 

 which it is presented. 



There have been a number of classical studies in the 

 history of anatomy, the latest and best of which is that 

 by Toply.^ Other and earlier studies to be mentioned are 

 the productions of Lauth,^ Haller,^" Portal/^ LeClerc 

 and Manget/2 Tarin^^^a janies Douglas/^* Goelickius and 

 many other early attempts at bringing together the re- 

 sults of anatomical study. 



More recently the work of Daremberg in France,^*^ 

 Carus,^^ Wieger/^ Weindler,^^ and Hopf^'^ in Germany; 

 Osawa^^ in Japan, Bardeen^^ in America, and Chievitz^" 

 in Denmark are to be especially mentioned. 



Besides the results contained in the above-mentioned 

 works there is much information to be gleaned' from the 

 numerous histories of medicine and especially from the 



sGeschichte der Anatomie, in "Handbuch der GeschicMe der Medizin," 

 begriindet von Th. Puschmann, herausgegeben von Max Neuberger und 

 Julius Pagel, Bd. II, pp. 155-326, 1903. 



Thomas Lauth, 1815, "Histoire de 1 'anatomie," Strassburg. Up to the 

 time of Thomas Bartholin, 1671. 



10 Albrecht von Haller, 1774-1777, "Bibliotheca Anatomica," Tomes I-II. 



chirurgie, ' ' Paris, Tomes I- VI. 



chirurgie et 



