Anatomies and Anatomical Illustrations
- Anatomia 1522-1867: Anatomical Plates from the Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library -This site comprises approximately 4500 full page plates and illustrations of human anatomy.
- Anatomical Fugitive Sheets: Digital Collections, Duke University Libraries – These printed illustrations are single sheets that depict the body using layers or flaps that can be lifted to reveal internal organs and other body parts, mimicking what one would find upon a dissection
- Anatomical Texts: The Texas Medical Center Library Digital Commons – A collection of anatomical texts primarily from the 17th and 18th centuries
- De Humani Corpus Fabrica, Vesalius: British Library – Digitized version of De Humani Corporis Fabrica(On the Fabric of the Human Body), one of the most influential works in the history of Western medicine.
- Digital Library: The College of Physicians of Philadelphia – An image database of nearly 1,000 images with strengths in the history of anatomy and botanical medicine. Highlights include images from rare incunabula previously unavailable online, unusual selections from more popular early modern anatomists, and over 300 photos from the Philadelphia General Hospital Photograph Collection
- Historical Anatomies on the Web: National Library of Medicine – Images from important anatomical atlases in the library’s collection
- Medical Illustrations Collection: University at Buffalo Libraries – 90 illustrations created between 1935 and 1945 for the School of Medicine at the University at Buffalo
- Museum of Neuroanatomy: University at Buffalo Libraries – 80 illuminated brain specimens
- Pathology Teaching Collection: Cushing-Whitney Medical Library, Yale University –anatomical illustrations depicting rare and unusual medical conditions
- The Four Seasons: David M. Rubenstein Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Duke University – a unique set of seventeenth-century copperplate engravings with moveable flaps illustrating human anatomy along with allusions to alchemy, astronomy and botany
- Turning the Pages Online: National Library of Medicine – digitized images of rare and historic books in the history of medicine including De Humani Corpus Fabrica
- Visible Human Project: National Library of Medicine – complete, anatomically detailed, three-dimensional representations of male and female human bodies