Mouse foetus diaphonised in resin block (alizarin red)
Maker
Department of Histology, University of Melbourne
Date
1980s-Early 1990s
Description
Mouse foetus diaphonised and preserved in a resin block. The foetus has been stained with alizarin red dye to highlight the bone. Diaphonisation is a biological staining process first developed by scientists G. Dingerkus and L.D. Uhler in 1977. The specimen – usually a small vertebrate – is made transparent by soaking in trypsin, a digestive enzyme, and then stained with specialised dyes that adhere to specific types of tissues, such as bone, muscle or cartilage.
See full details
Do you know something about this object?
Be the first to comment on this object record.