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The Anatomical Basis of Mouse Development
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Binding: Hardcover
Dewey Decimal Number: 571.335
EAN: 9780124020603
Edition: 1st
ISBN: 0124020607
Label: Academic Press
Manufacturer: Academic Press
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 291
Publication Date: March 15, 1999
Publisher: Academic Press
Studio: Academic Press
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Editorial Review: This book is an essential anatomical resource for developmental biologists who need to know about any aspect of mouse developmental anatomy, as well as for geneticists using the mouse embryo as a model. The book is a companion to Kaufman's The Atlas of Mouse Development, and details the developmental anatomy of the early embryo, the transitional tissues, and all the major organ systems. It also provides extensive comparisons with human developmental anatomy, both normal and abnormal. The book has extensive reference indexes detailing developmental stage criteria. The Anatomical Basis of Mouse Development will be a key reference work for anyone who needs to understand developmental anatomy in normal and mutant mice.Key Features * Complements Kaufman's The Atlas of Mouse Development * Gives anatomical descriptions from oogenesis to birth, at a level of detail that goes beyond that found in most literature * Provides detailed explanations for geneticists and molecular biologists with limited anatomical background to help them understand the emergence of all the major structures in the mouse embryo * Contains comprehensive indexes detailing the appearance of over 1000 organs, tissues, and their components at different stages of mouse embryogenesis * Includes comparisons with normal and abnormal human development * Contains over 100 clear line diagrams showing mouse developmental anatomy as well as lineage relationships for the major organ systems
Customer Reviews
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Rating: - weighty but informative
This book is an sourcebook for the embryological orign of tissues in mammals. Its information is too detailed and dense for use as a textbook but is a neccessary addition to your library as an excellent reference book if you are studying vertebrate development (or have knocked out a gene and can't figure out what is wrong with the resulting animals). I also use it as a backup reference for preparing lectures for the developmental biology course I teach since it often has information that can ... Read More
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