Skip to content

Please be aware that some material may contain words, descriptions or illustrations which will not reflect current scientific understanding and may be considered in today's context inaccurate, unethical, offensive or distressing.

Description

Plate 13, figures 6-10 showing the distribution of blood vessels and articular cartilage during the development of the femur. Inscribed with figure, publication, and plate details. An ink inscription at top of plate reads 'No. 4.' Signed in ink bottom right 'N. I. Holmes. Dec. 1840.'

Subject: Physiology / Anatomy

Published in Philosophical Transactions as part of paper titled 'Researches, tending to prove the non-vascularity and the peculiar uniform mode of organization and nutrition of certain animal tissues, viz. articular cartilage, and the cartilage of the different classes of fibro-cartilage; the cornea, the crystalline lens, and the vitreous humour; and the epidermoid appendages' by Joseph Toynbee.

Received by the Royal Society on 21 April 1841. Read 20 May 1841.

Reference number
PT/75/1/14
Earliest possible date
01 December 1840
Physical description
Watercolour on artists' board
Page extent
1 page
Format
Watercolour

Creator name

Joseph Toynbee

View page for Joseph Toynbee

Use this record

Citation

Joseph Toynbee, Paintings, development of inferior femoral epiphysis by Holmes, 01 December 1840, PT/75/1/14, The Royal Society Archives, London, https://makingscience.royalsociety.org/items/pt_75_1_14/paintings-development-of-inferior-femoral-epiphysis-by-holmes, accessed on 17 June 2025

Link to this record

Embed this record

<iframe src="https://makingscience.royalsociety.org/embed/items/pt_75_1_14/paintings-development-of-inferior-femoral-epiphysis-by-holmes" title="Paintings, development of inferior femoral epiphysis by Holmes" allow="fullscreen" frameborder="0" width="100%" height="500px"></iframe>

Related Fellows

Explore the collection

  • Philosophical Transactions

    The 'Philosophical Transactions' collection comprises manuscript versions of papers published in The Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, the world’s first and longest continuously running journal dedicated to science.

    Dates: 1802 - 1865

    View collection