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Historical Bibliography Updated: April 28, 2021

Anatomical and pathological observations.

Publication Details

Edinburgh: Myles Macphail & London: Simpkin, Marshall, 1845 CE.

John Goodsir’s paper on “Centres of nutrition” anticipates to a certain extent the cell doctrine afterwards developed by Virchow (see No. 2299). Virchow dedicated the first edition of his Cellularpathologie to Goodsir. Goodsir’s paper on the bone-forming properties of certain corpuscles found within osseous tissue represent the foundation of the study of osteogenesis, as distinct from descriptive osteology.

Harry Goodsir, brother of John Goodsir, "served as surgeon and naturalist on the ill-fated Franklin expedition. His body was never found, but forensic studies in 2009 on skeletal remains earlier recovered from King William Island in Canada suggest that they may be those of Harry Goodsir" (Wikipedia article on Harry Goodsir).

Thematic Classifications

Catalog MetadataReference Information
Entry Number#2294.1
Permanent Linkhttps://staging.historyofmedicine.com/entry/2928
Author Bio LinkWikipedia ↗
External URLanatomical-and-pathological-observations

Geographic Context

Publication places: Edinburgh; London