Bassett Online Dissection Atlas
I’m Dr. Bob Chase, Emile Holman Professor of Surgery and Anatomy, Emeritus, here at the Stanford University School of Medicine. I am writing to you today from the Anatomy Department at Stanford’s Clinical Sciences Research Center to introduce you to the remarkable eHuman Dissection system based, in part, on the work of Dr. David L. Bassett.
Here at Stanford, I serve as curator of the famous Bassett Collection, consisting of magnificent, high-resolution stereo images of human dissections. These exquisite photographs were developed over a 17-year period by William B. Gruber—master photographer and inventor of the famous View-Master system. This collection represents one of the world’s most extraordinary collections of 3-D images of human dissections. These dissections were prepared by Dr. David Bassett himself, resulting in an atlas with more than 1,550 stereo photographs such as you’ve never seen before.
The collection, and eHuman Dissection system built upon it, represents the most detailed and accurate display of human structure ever developed. The audio-enabled annotations and roll-over identification features used with the eHuman Dissection system provide unique functionality for the medical professional and the merely curious, alike. Take a few moments to sample our free gallery pages and come back again as we bring the complete Bassett Collection online with new and exciting navigational tools. Or just subscribe here to receive alerts and free updates.
Thanks for visiting and for enjoying the incomparable, lifetime work of David Bassett and our eHuman.com services. There has never been a more remarkable human dissection series prepared, and probably there never will be again.
I’m Dr. Bob Chase. We hope to see you again soon.
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