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In 1873, Camillo Golgi developed a breakthrough method for viewing neurons microscopically. He came to believe, however, that all neurons were fused together, making one vast reticulum or Nerve Organ.
A FIRST LOOK: Camillo Golgi’s original black-and-white drawing of a dog’s olfactory bulb appeared in a paper in the Rivista Sperimentale di Freniatria e Medicina Legale in 1875. Colored plates ...
It was a surprise find for Italian biologist Camillo Golgi in 1898, who was researching the nervous system at the time, so it’s fitting that University of California Riverside (UCR) scientists ...
At the ceremony, Camillo Golgi, an Italian anatomist and the elder of the pair, spoke first—and shocked the audience by slamming his rival’s theory. When the other laureate spoke, ...
BRANCHING BEAUTIES: Ramón y Cajal used Camillo Golgi’s stain to visualize the fine-scale morphology of neurons in several areas of the brain. In this stunningly detailed illustration of a Purkinje ...
Olfactory bulb. In 1875 the physician Camillo Golgi invented the reazione nera (black reaction) cell-staining technique, which allowed anatomists to view individual neurons in their entirety for ...
(These first glimpses weren’t discovered all that long ago; the passage explains how Camillo Golgi, the Italian physician who is the namesake of the Golgi apparatus, was the first to clearly ...
The Golgi organelle is named for Camillo Golgi, the Italian scientist and Nobel Prize winner who discovered the structure in 1898. It is composed of a network of sacs, stacked like a deck of ...
Rather, he improved the method of Camillo Golgi (1843–1926), his Italian rival and the champion of a competing hypothesis, which held that the central nervous system (CNS) did not involve cells ...