LEIDY, Joseph (1823 – 1891)
1823 – 1891
7 entries in the GMN corpus.
Image source Gilbert Studios · University of Pennsylvania Archives · Public domain
1846 CE
#5338
Entozoon in the superficial part of the extensor muscles of the thigh of the hog. Abstract
First description of trichinosis in the pig.
1848 CE–1849 CE
#3450
On the existence of Entophyta in healthy animals, as a natural condition.
Discovery of the bacterial flora of the intestines.
1851 CE
#2614
Transplantation of malignant tumors.
First experimental transplantation of tumors.
1857 CE
#8825
Indigenous races of the earth; or new chapters of ethnological enquiry: Including monographs on special departments of philology, iconography, cranioscopy, palaeontology, pathology, archaeology, comparative geography and natural history: Contributed by Alfred Maury, Francis Pulszky, and J. Aiken Meigs. With contributions from Jos. Leiden and L. Agassiz. Presenting fresh investigations by J. C. Nott and Geo. R. Glidden.
Expensively produced, and sold in both standard and large paper subscriber editions, Nott and Gliddon's work was one of the most egregiously racist publications in the history of physical anthropology. Nott, a promine…
1861 CE
#421
An elementary treatise on human anatomy.
Leidy illustrated this book himself. He was professor of anatomy at Philadelphia and the leading American anatomist of his time.
1886 CE
#5359
Remarks on parasites and scorpions.
Leidy found the hookworm in the cat and suggested that it might also be found in man as a cause of pernicious anemia.
1904 CE
#2459
Researches in helminthology and parasitology. With a bibliography of his contributions to science.
In vol. 46 of Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections. Leidy was called the greatest descriptive naturalist in mid-19th century America.