Download this stock image: A visitor observes a fetus during the exhibit Body Worlds in Mexico City, Friday. March 10, 2006. The cadavers in Body Worlds were donated to science and preserved through plastination, a process developed by Gunthervon Hagens and replicated in several labs across the world. The skin is removed to expose various muscles, bones and organs, and liquid plastic then hardens and preserves the corpses. (AP Photo/Eduardo Verdugo) - 2PDA59B from Alamy's library of millions of high resolution stock photos, illustrations and vectors.
A visitor observes a fetus during the exhibit "Body Worlds" in Mexico City, Friday. March 10, 2006. The cadavers in "Body Worlds" were donated to science and preserved through "plastination," a process developed by Gunthervon Hagens and replicated in several labs across the world. The skin is removed to expose various muscles, bones and organs, and liquid plastic then hardens and preserves the corpses. (AP Photo/Eduardo Verdugo)
Body Worlds' returns to OMSI to dissect the Cycle of Life
Body Worlds' returns to OMSI to dissect the Cycle of Life
Anatomy for All: Medical Knowledge on the Fairground in Fin-de-Siècle Vienna, Central European History
Anatomy for All: Medical Knowledge on the Fairground in Fin-de-Siècle Vienna, Central European History
Anatomy for All: Medical Knowledge on the Fairground in Fin-de-Siècle Vienna, Central European History
Popular 'Body Worlds' exhibit returns – Orange County Register
Body Worlds' returns to OMSI to dissect the Cycle of Life
PDF) Should we display the dead?
A visitor observes a cadaver during the exhibit Body Worlds in Mexico City, Friday. March 10, 2006. The cadavers in Body Worlds were donated to science and preserved through plastination, a process developed by Gunthervon Hagens and replicated
Official Ancient Egypt(Archeology) Group
Body Worlds' returns to OMSI to dissect the Cycle of Life