Myographia nova, or, A graphical description of all the muscles in the humane body, as they arise in dissection : distributed into six lectures : at the entrance into which, are demonstrated the proper muscles belonging to each lecture, now in general use at the theatre in Chirurgeons Hall, London, and illustrated with two and forty copper-plates accurately engraven after the life, not only with their names, but their uses, fairly delineated on each plate, as much as can be exprest by figures, with an explanation of their names throughout the whole discourse : as also with their originations, insertions, and uses, at large, in their proper descriptions, and various useful annotations, and curious observations both of the author's and other modern anatomists ... /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Browne, John, 1642-approximately 1700.
Imprint:London : Printed by Tho. Milbourn for the author, 1698.
Description:1 online resource ([10], viii, [20], x, 9-186 pages, 42 unnumbered pages of plates) : illustrations
Language:English
Subject:
Format: E-Resource Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/11828784
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Other title:Myographia nova.
Graphical description of all the muscles in the humane body, as they arise in dissection.
Compleat treatise of the muscles.
Other uniform titles:Casseri, Giulio Cesare, approximately 1552-1616. Tabulae anatomicae.
Molins, William. Myskotomia.
Notes:From t.p.: Together with a philosophical and mathematical account of the mechanism of muscular motion, and an accurate and concise discourse of the heart and its use, with the circulation of the blood, &c. and with a compleat account of the arteries and veins, as to their outward coats, proving them to be made with circular fleshy fibers, by whose contractions their trunks become narrowed, and the fluid particles of the blood are sent forwards into all the parts of the body.
Reproduction of original in Cambridge University Library.
Originally published in 1681 under title: A compleat treatise of the muscles. The description of the muscles is based on William Molins' Myskotomia, and the plates partly on Guilio Casserio's Tabula anatomicae.
Index: p. 184-186
Wing B5129

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