Metal casts showing the three-dimensional structure of the human inner ear were converted into jewelry.

Otol Neurotol

Department of Molecular Biology, Cell Biology and Biochemistry, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, U.S.A.

Published: June 2015

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Article Abstract

This article describes a straightforward method for making metal casts of the human inner ear developed in 1937 by M. Wharton Young of Howard University College of Medicine. These casts were used to study anatomy, but there do not appear to be any published photographs of the casts. Inner ear casts converted into jewelry provide the only known images of this work. Later, Young studied the inner ear in living rhesus monkeys by injecting mercury into their membranous labyrinths. Young's investigations indicated a blind-ending perilymphatic sac that was not in continuity with the subarachnoid space.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/MAO.0000000000000463DOI Listing

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