k Nerve structures of the retina, 1894 illustration Diagrams of the nerve structures of the retina, a thin layer of neural cells that lines the back of the eyeball, by Santiago Ramon y Cajal. Cajal 18521934 was a Spanish histologist and neuroscientist. From 1885 he became interested in the microscopic structure of the brain. By using and improving Camillo Golgis recentlyinvented staining methods, Ramon y Cajal studied the brain, spinal cord and retina. He showed the great complexity of the system and argued that the cells in the nervous system were discrete, having no physical continuity between them. He also studied the degeneration and regeneration of nerves. In 1906 he shared the Nobel Prize for Medicine with Golgi. Published in Die Retina der Wirbelthiere The Vertebrate Retina, in 1894., by US NATIONAL LIBRARY OF MEDICINESCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY Stock Photo - Afloimages
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Nerve structures of the retina, 1894 illustration Diagrams of the nerve structures of the retina, a thin layer of neural cells that lines the back of the eyeball, by Santiago Ramon y Cajal. Cajal  1852 1934  was a Spanish histologist and neuroscientist. From 1885 he became interested in the microscopic structure of the brain. By using and improving Camillo Golgi s recently invented staining methods, Ramon y Cajal studied the brain, spinal cord and retina. He showed the great complexity of the system and argued that the cells in the nervous system were discrete, having no physical continuity between them. He also studied the degeneration and regeneration of nerves. In 1906 he shared the Nobel Prize for Medicine with Golgi. Published in Die Retina der Wirbelthiere  The Vertebrate Retina , in 1894., by US NATIONAL LIBRARY OF MEDICINE SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY
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Nerve structures of the retina, 1894 illustration

Diagrams of the nerve structures of the retina, a thin layer of neural cells that lines the back of the eyeball, by Santiago Ramon y Cajal. Cajal (1852-1934) was a Spanish histologist and neuroscientist. From 1885 he became interested in the microscopic structure of the brain. By using and improving Camillo Golgi's recently-invented staining methods, Ramon y Cajal studied the brain, spinal cord and retina. He showed the great complexity of the system and argued that the cells in the nervous system were discrete, having no physical continuity between them. He also studied the degeneration and regeneration of nerves. In 1906 he shared the Nobel Prize for Medicine with Golgi. Published in Die Retina der Wirbelthiere (The Vertebrate Retina), in 1894., by US NATIONAL LIBRARY OF MEDICINE/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY

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